Down to the Sea (47 page)

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Authors: Bruce Henderson

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Saratoga

Savo, First Battle of; and

Schultz, John R.

seasickness

Seattle

Sebec

Sellers, William I.

Sendai

Severn

Shalkowski, Louis

sharks

Sharp, George H.

Shaw
; and

Sherman, Frederick C.

shipbuilding

Shiratsuyu

Shupper, Burton H.

Sibuyan Sea, Battle of

Slaughter, Layton

Small, Norman

Smith, Ralph C.

Solomon Islands

sonar; and

Spanish-American War

speeds, on naval ships; and

Spence

abandon-ship drill

Battle of Cape St. George

Battle of Empress Augusta Bay; and

Bismarcks operations

capsized

commissioning of; and

crew muster roll for

fuel

launch of

overhaul of

survivors; and

typhoon and

Spence, Louis

Spence, Robert T.

Stahlberg, Ernest

Stanley

Stanton

Stassen, Harold E.

Stealey, Thomas A., Jr.

Stephen Potter

Stockham

storms
See also
typhoon (1944)

Story, James T.

Strait of Juan de Fuca

Strand, Robert

Strauss, Maury M.

submarines; and

Japanese; and; and; and

Sumner

Sumner
-class destroyers

Sundin, Lawrence D.

Surdam, Robert M. “Dusty”

urigao Strait, Battle of

Swearer
; and

 

Tabberer
; and

christening of

mascot

Navy Unit Commendation awarded to

typhoon and search for survivors; and; and

Tabberer, Charles Arthur; and

Tarawa invasion; and

Task Force 38

Tassafaronga, Battle of

Taussig

Thatcher

Thompson, Frank

Thurber, Harry R.

Time
magazine

Tokyo

Tokyo Rose

Toland, E. M.

Tonga

Torkildson, Keith

torpedo boats

torpedo juice; and

torpedoes

Traceski, Edward F.

Trippe

Truk

Tucker, Ralph E.

Turner, Claude

typhoon (1944)

casualties

court of inquiry investigation and findings

Hull
in

Kosco's forecast on

Monaghan
in

Spence
in

survivors; and; and; and

Tabberer
and search for survivors; and; and

typhoon (1945)

 

Ulithi

U.S. Air Force; and; and in.

U.S. Army

Seventh Infantry Division

U.S. Army Air Corps

weathermen; and

U.S. Naval Academy; and

U.S. Naval Reserve Midshipman School

U.S. Naval War College; and

U.S. Navy; and at-sea collisions

Attu and Kiska invasions

Battle of Cape St. George

Battle of Empress Augusta Bay; and

Battle of Komandorski Islands; and

Battle of the Philippine Sea

court of inquiry on 1944 typhoon

Guadalcanal campaign; and; and; and

Guam invasion

Leyte invasion; and; and

Little Beavers

Luzon invasion; and

Marshall Islands invasion

Mindoro invasion

nighttime tactics; and

U.S. Navy (
continued
) in 1944 typhoon, see typhoon (1944) in 1945 typhoon

Pearl Harbor attack; and

Tawara invasion; and

Wildcats, F4F fighters

See also specific ships and officers;
typhoon (1944); U.S. Navy

Utah

 

Valverde, John

Vaughan, Archie L.

 

Wake Island; and

Ward
; and

War of 1812

Warrington

Washington

Wasp

Watkins, C. Donald

WAVES, 100

weather forecasting, military; and; and; and

Weaver, William D.

Webb, Carl

Wedderburn

Welles

Wendt, Waldemar F.

West Virginia

Wilson

Wiltsie, Irving D.

Wohlleb, Charles

Wordan

World's Fair (1939)

World War I

World War II
See also Pacific War; specific battles

Wrigley chewing gum; and

Wyoming

 

Yamamoto, Isoroku

Yamato

Yap

Yarnall

Yorktown

Yosemite

Yugiri

 

Zasadil, Ramon

Zero fighters; and

Zimny, Stanley M.

About the Author

B
RUCE
H
ENDERSON
is the author or coauthor of more than twenty nonfiction books, including the #1
New York Times bestseller And the Sea Will Tell,
which was made into a highly rated network miniseries, and
True North,
about the discovery of the North Pole. He served as a U.S. Seventh Fleet weatherman aboard an aircraft carrier in the Vietnam War, during which his ship rode out a typhoon in the South China Sea. Henderson, who teaches writing at Stanford University, has four children and lives in Menlo Park, California, with his wife, Laura Jason.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.

Jacket design by Nick Bilardello.f

Jacket photograph of stormy sea by Allan Davey/Masterfile;

American flag by Garry Black/Masterfile; USS Hull, U.S. Navy

DOWN TO THE SEA
. Copyright © 2007 by Bruce Henderson. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub Edition © OCTOBER 2007 ISBN: 9780061866531

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

About the Publisher

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United States
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http://www.harpercollinsebooks.com

*
All ship speeds are given in knots, a nautical unit of speed; one knot equals approximately 1.16 miles per hour.

*
Five inches refers to the width of the barrel; 5-inch guns were the largest weapons on World War II destroyers. U.S. cruisers were armed with 8-inch guns, older battleships with 14-inch guns, and newer ones with 16-inch guns. The largest ship guns on Japan's mighty
Yamato
-class battleships were 18-inch guns. The bigger the gun, the heavier the projectile it can fire, the longer the range, and the greater the destruction upon impact. A bigger ship, therefore, could disable or sink a smaller surface ship in battle before the latter came in range to fire its guns.

*
On December 7, 1944, three years to the day after firing the opening salvo of World War II,
Ward
was taking part in the invasion of Leyte when attacked by several Japanese planes, one of which made a suicide dive into the old destroyer. When the resulting fires could not be controlled,
Ward
's crew abandoned ship. To prevent
Ward
from falling into enemy hands, she was ordered sunk. Carrying out the task was the destroyer
O'Brien
(DD-725), whose skipper, William W. Outerbridge, watched from the bridge as
O'Brien
's guns sank his first sea command.

*
Owing to “unexplained and almost incredible laxness,” the gate to the antitorpedo net at the entrance to Pearl Harbor, which had been opened at 4:58
A.M.
for the entry of two minesweepers, was not closed until 8:40
A.M.
—in spite of
Ward
's report two hours earlier of attacking an intruding submarine near the harbor entrance. None of the five two-man Japanese midget submarines—launched by full-size submarines a few miles off Pearl Harbor—assigned to sneak into the harbor and sink ships succeeded in their mission. All were lost or captured, three of them without firing a torpedo. One small sub beached on Oahu, and a surviving crewman was taken prisoner.

*
Recruit training in the Navy, Marines, and Coast Guard is called boot camp. In the Army and present-day Air Force, it is known as basic training.

*
The U.S. Navy soon discovered it had devoted insufficient practice to nighttime tactics. In contrast, the Japanese practiced night actions “on a scale unheard of in other navies,” most of which avoided night warfare at all costs. As a result, the initial nighttime engagements of the war favored the Japanese, as in the opening months of the Guadalcanal campaign in 1942. By day, the U.S. Navy controlled the seas around Guadalcanal. By night, the waters were controlled by the Imperial Japanese Navy, which when it came to night fighting was “still a couple of semesters ahead of the U.S. Navy.” It took the U.S. Navy time to disseminate the necessary training and equipment and to learn how to fight effectively at night.

*
Approximately forty antiaircraft shells from U.S. guns fell on Honolulu during the attack, including one that landed on the porch of the governor's mansion. Rather than explode in the air among enemy planes, the shells detonated on impact, with tragic consequences in some cases.

*
Tom Stealey never learned the fate of his fellow civilian workers who boarded the ship on December 5, 1941, for Wake Island, one of the loneliest atolls in the Pacific, some 2,300 miles west of Honolulu. The Japanese bombed Wake on the same day as Pearl Harbor and, in spite of a heroic stand by Wake's defenders, captured the island two weeks later. In addition to 470 military personnel, 1,146 civilian workers at Wake became prisoners of the Japanese. The Wake POWs were so brutally treated—98 civilian workers were killed in one mass execution in 1943—that after the war the Japanese Army garrison commander was convicted of war crimes and executed.

*
Shaw
survived to fight another day. After temporary repairs were made at Pearl Harbor, the destroyer sailed to San Francisco, where the work—including installing a new bow—was completed.
Shaw
returned to service with the Pacific Fleet in fall 1942. The destroyer saw extensive action during the war, earning eleven battle stars.

†
Nearly twice as many Americans were killed at Pearl Harbor as died in the first twenty-four hours of D-Day following the Normandy invasion, during which 1,465 U.S. servicemen were killed.

*
Ranking thirteenth in the class of 1904 was Husband E. Kimmel, the commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet at the time of the Pearl Harbor attack. Thereafter, Kimmel was immediately relieved of his command (replaced by Chester Nimitz) and placed on the retired list in March 1942. Halsey later said although he knew the disaster would be formally investigated, he never would have “guessed that the blame would fall on Kimmel” because his Annapolis classmate did not deserve “any part of it.”

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