USS PERCH (SS 176) began her second combat cruise in February Initially patrolling off Celebes, she received damage in an attack on an enemy

Similar documents
To perpetuate the memory of our shipmates who gave their lives in Submarine Warfare and in the pursuit of their duties while serving their country

A Brief History of the USS Blenny (SS-324)...

Lost Submarines September

Lost Submarines - July

Subj: SUBMISSION OF BASIC HISTORICAL NARRATIVE FOR CALENDAR YEAR 1997

IPMS Toronto Presents:

Lighthouses Hot Chocolate & You 2010

Stories from Maritime America

Beasts of the Atlantic. Game Book

JAPAN S PACIFIC CAMPAIGN. Chapter 16 section 2

SOURCE: The Canberra Times, Thursday December 4, 1941, pages 1 and 2

World History since Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History

World War II in Japan:

COMMANDING OFFICER USS CHICAGO (SSN-72 1 FLEET POST OFFICE SAN FRANCISCO

History of the USS DeHaven (DD-469)

International Journal of Naval History December 2005 Volume 4 Number 3

Charleston South Carolina First in Submarines first target sunk Housatonic, WWII Swamp Fox and USSVI Chapters

USS VESTAL (AR-4)...

Spike. by Don Branson January 7, 2006

The Personal War History by Robert Bob Carlile as provided by his Surviving Wife Olga Carlile

6 Sydney Morning Herald

USS Salt Lake City at Wake Island, 1942

remembrance ni In Arctic waters - 2 The loss of Glorious

John Thomas DeVaney. U.S. Navy WWII & Korean War USS Nevada Pearl Harbor. extremely noteworthy and John DeVaney was part of that history.

Japanese Potentially Polluting Wrecks in the Pacific Ocean

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII

Lost Submarines November

1. USS Bronstein named for Ben Richard Bronstein killed aboard the Jacob Jones off Cape N., New Jersey, He was an assistant surgeon.

Larne man survived sinking of destroyer which was almost called HMS Larne

Navy Cross Citation Awarded to Admiral Visser for role in Battle of Surigao Straits

Director of Naval History (OP-09B9), Washington Navy Yard, Washington, DC

3.2.5: Japanese American Relations U.S. Entry into WWII. War in the Pacific

HMCS REGINA K234. Breadth: 33.1 Feet # of Officers: 6

The North Africa Campaign:

Great Britain Japan United States France Italy

RoR Step-by-Step Review * USS Lionfish Submarine 1:180 Revell Review

On this day in the Canadian Navy! MAY

2/6/11! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater!

The disposal of all nine true Leahy Class ships went like this:

Battle of the Eastern Solomons

Major Battles During WWII Events that Changed the Course of the War

Packet B: Submarine Technology

Taking a Stand in The Pacific: Fighting The Empire of Japan During World War II Patrick Fisher Senior Division Historical Paper Paper Length: 2044

Subj: SHIP'S HISTORY SUBMISSION FOR USS HURRICANE (PC-3) Acting

The U-boat War off the South Hams Coast

Submersible Goliath Dispatched by Down-Under Davids

On this day in the Canadian Navy! JUNE

Australian Sailors in the Battle of the Atlantic

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY USS HONOLULU (SSN-718) FPO AP

Jump Chart Main Chart flagship Ship List

Commanding Officer, USS HALYBURTON (FFG-40) Director of Naval History, (OP-09BH), Washington Navy Yard, Washington, DC 20374

BARTREAD USS LEXINGTON FOUND AFTER SHE WAS SUNK IN THE BATTLE OF CORAL SEA

The Tragic Triangle of Valletta

George Beeching a St John hero

2. Name and birth date of the veteran or civilian being interviewed at is appears on the Biographical Data Form:

Captain Robert Norman A desire to see the world through a porthole, landed him right in the middle of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.

4 Picture of USS BREMERTON (SSN698) ( 5 ) USS BREMERTON (SSN698 ) Commissioning Program

USS AUGUSTA (SSN 710) FPO AE To: Director o f Naval History (OP-09BH), Washi

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY! r" USS COLUMBUS (SSN 762) FPO AP

Type: Built: Specs: Sunk: Depth: 260 ft

AURUM. Newsletter of the Gold Museum Society Volume No Travels with Elaine

In Memory of Norbert Eugene Rau Our Father. April 24, 1924 August 8, 2008

B I K I N I A T O L L

CARRIER STRIKE GROUPS

2009 runner-up Northern Territory. Samuel van den Nieuwenhof Darwin High School

AMERICAN MARINER. Sturdy Ship of Several Services Still Survives

8 still missing - Can you help put a face to a name?

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY USS MARYLAND (SSBN 738) FPO AA Ser NAV/ Mar 94 From: Commanding Officer, USS MARYLAND (SSBN 738) (GOLD) To

Theodore J. Smith. U.S. Navy USS Spangler, Pacific Theatre

the first effort of corking the base by blockships SAMPLE Russian cruiser Bayan. Russian cruiser Askol d.

In The Shadow Of The Battleship: Considering The Cruisers Of World War II By Richard Worth READ ONLINE

Hey, Buddy, Wanna Buy a Piece of the Empire State Building?

Naval activities in the Baltic Sea 1941 (3_21)

From: Commanding Officer, USS CHOSIN (CG 65) To: Director, Naval Historical Center (NOgBH), Washington Navy Yard ) Subj: COMMAND HISTORY FOR 1997

Us navy decommissioned ships for sale

FRCSE team makes emergency helo repairs on deployed ship

Princess Matoika and the Doors She Can Open

John Henry Burrows Flowers naval record (notes and photographs from various Wikipedia web pages)

Fleet Airship Wing Five

Lavern Meemken. Vern at Great Lakes, Ill.

J{b_",fl (, j j?j ) UL

The Blockade! Virtual Walls of Naval Warfare! Michael W. Harris! Cold Wars 2007! Admiralty Trilogy Seminar!

The Battle for Louisbourg- 1758

A New Kind of War. Chapter 11 Section 2

GALLIPOLI THE WICKHAM CONNECTION

The Catalina Flying Memorial Ltd

5750 Ser C0/ May 02. From: Commanding Officer, USS McCLUSKY (FFG 41) To : Chief of Naval Operations (N09BH)

OPERATION CHARIOT The Greatest Raid of All

Ser 728~ (495)/036. c. c. HA~ES Acting. Copy to: GOLD CREW CINCPACFLT PA0 COMSUBPAC PA0 DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY

Inport Pearl Harbor, HI, pier M-1&2. Underway for SILENT FURY. Inport Pearl Harbor, HI, pier B-18. Hull Cleaning. Underway for CART 11.

!'. S. Sixi/.il Carps Phnto U. S. Army Air r/i'ct.i Photo

d. u. -Q" W- W * SPO'TTS

USS FLORIDA (SSGN 728) FLEET POST OFFICE AE 0956S2099

- 31 December LSD 42. From: Commanding Officer, USS GERMANTOWN (LSD 42) To: Director of Naval History (OP-09BH)

u s CH~~ORSVILLE (CQ 62) FPO APm Code Apr 99

Diving Subic Bay. San Quintin Dive Site Subic Bay. History of the Armed Transport San Quintîn

Into the Modern Era Palmerston s Forts

Vintage Aeroplane Europe presents Aircraft of Historical Significance

Use pages to answer the following questions

DEPARTMENTOFTHENAVY USS LOS ANCELES ( SSN 688)

Transcription:

1

USS PERCH (SS 176) began her second combat cruise in February 1942. Initially patrolling off Celebes, she received damage in an attack on an enemy ship on the 25th, and was then transferred to the waters north of Java. During the night of 1 March she was the object of a depth charge attack by two destroyers, which left her in a crippled condition. Another depth charging the next day made her problems grow even worse. Perch attempted to leave the area, but was trapped half submerged in shallow water. Surrounded by enemy ships, her Commanding Officer ordered the submarine abandoned and scuttled early on 3 March 1942. Her officers and men were promptly taken captive, and six of them did not survive the more than three years they spent as prisoners of war. (Bell & slide) 2

USS GRAMPUS (SS 207) left Brisbane, Australia, in mid February 1943 to begin her sixth patrol, in the Solomons. GRAMPUS did not return from this mission and was subsequently declared lost with all hands. It is possible that she was sunk by the Japanese destroyers MINEGUMO and MURASAME in a battle fought in the Blackett Strait, near Kolombangara Island, on 5 March 1943, shortly before those enemy ships were sunk in a night action with U.S. cruisers and destroyers. 71 men lost. (Bell & slide) 3

USS H 1 (SS 28) was lost on March 12, 1920 with the loss of 4 men as they tried to swim to shore after grounding on a tricky shoal off Santa Margarita Island, off the coast of Baja California, Mexico. VESTAL (AR 4), pulled H 1 off the rocks in the morning of 24 March, only to have her sink 45 minutes later in some 50 feet of water. She was originally named the USS SEAWOLF before becoming H 1. (Bell & slide) 4

In late January 1943, USS TRITON (SS 201) was sent to operate against enemy shipping north of the Solomon Islands. She sank one cargo ship in early March and attacked others, but was not heard from after the 11th of the month and in April was reported overdue and presumed lost. Postwar analysis concluded that USS TRITON, with her entire crew of seventy four officers and men, was probably sunk by Japanese destroyers off the Admiralty Islands on 15 March 1943. 74 Men Lost. (Bell & slide) 5

USS KETE s (SS 369) second war patrol, under the command of Lieutenant Commander Edward Ackerman, commenced in early March and took her to the waters off Okinawa. She sank three small cargo ships during a 10 March, 1945, attack on an enemy convoy and sent a weather report on the 20th, the date she was supposed to depart the patrol area. KETE was not heard from again and was finally reported as lost. She may have been the victim of a Japanese submarine's torpedoes. Her entire crew of 87 officers and men was lost with her. (Bell & slide) 6

During submarine maneuvers off Honolulu, Hawaii on 25 March 1915, USS F 4 (SS 23) sank at a depth of 306 feet, 1.5 mi from the harbor. Despite valorous efforts of naval authorities at Honolulu to locate the missing boat and save her crew, all 21 perished. F 4 was the first commissioned submarine of the U.S. Navy to be lost at sea. She was raised in August 1915. The remains of F 4 were buried as fill in a trench off the Submarine Base, Pearl Harbor, HI. Investigation concluded that acid corrosion of the lead lining of the battery tank let seawater into the battery compartment, causing loss of control. 21 Men Lost. (Bell & slide) 7

USS TULIBEE (SS 284) was sent to the Palaus area for her fourth patrol, which began early in March 1944. On the 26th of that month, while attacking a convoy, USS Tullibee was sunk when one of her own torpedoes apparently circled back and hit her. Only one Sailor survived from her crew of eighty. (Bell & slide) 8

On 24 March 1945, USS TRIGGER (SS 237) was ordered to join a wolf pack and to acknowledge receipt of the message. A weather report came from the submarine that day but no confirmation of her having received the message. The weather report was TRIGGER's last transmission. Postwar records indicate she torpedoed and sank a Japanese repair ship, but the next day, Japanese planes and ships joined in a two hour attack on a submarine heard by other boats in the wolf pack. Japanese records showed a Japanese aircraft detected and bombed a submarine on 28 March 1945. Destroyers were then guided to the spot and delivered an intensive depth charging. After two hours, a large oil slick appeared. 89 Men Lost. (Bell & slide) 9

And we should remember those sub sailors whose boats may have survived but who themselves departed on Eternal Patrol. Sailors, rest your oars. (Bell) 10