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Authors: Oliver L. North

BOOK: War Stories III
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The Japanese juggernaut continued unabated for more than four months until their first defeat in a dramatic engagement, 3–6 June 1942, off the tiny island of Midway. Though American morale was raised by the lopsided victory—the U.S. lost 307 men, 150 planes, and one carrier while the Japanese lost 3,500 men, 325 aircraft, and
four
carriers—it did nothing to improve the situation in the European theater.
By the summer of 1942, as the Wehrmacht renewed its offensive against Russia, German U-boats were operating with impunity off the east coast of the United States—jeopardizing the delivery of war materiel, food, fuel, and clothing that were essential for keeping Britain and the Soviet Union in the fight against Hitler. During June and July 1942—the worst months of losses in the North Atlantic—U-boats sank more than a million tons of Allied and neutral shipping.
These losses prompted American planners to quietly reassess the “Europe First” war strategy that Roosevelt and Churchill had secretly decided at their conference at sea off Argentia, Newfoundland, in August 1941. Without the assurance that massive numbers of troops and huge quantities of supplies could be
safely
moved across the Atlantic, a “Second Front”—so desperately wanted by Stalin—would be too costly.
German U-boat successes in the Atlantic had climbed significantly after they established “home ports” on the Bay of Biscay, following the fall of France in June 1940. But improvements in British radar, sonar, and convoy procedures had diminished losses of Allied ships and cargo in the months immediately prior to Pearl Harbor. On 4 September 1941—three months before the U.S. and Germany were at war with each other—a U.S. destroyer, the USS
Greer,
alerted by a British patrol plane out of Bermuda, had attacked a German submarine off the U.S. east coast, prompting FDR to declare an expanded U.S. “neutrality region” and announce that U.S. ships were authorized to “shoot first” at Axis warships inside the zone. Then, while escorting a convoy to Newfoundland on 17 October—still six weeks before the U.S. declaration of war—the USS
Kearny
was hit by a German torpedo. The U.S. Navy destroyer, with eleven dead sailors aboard, managed to make it back into port—but the action created a firestorm in the
American press. To avoid further provocation, Hitler ordered Admiral Karl Dönitz to move his “wolf packs” of submarines further away from the U.S. coastline.
But once the United States was in the war, all restrictions on U-boat activity were lifted. When the U.S. moved crucial naval forces to the Pacific and geared up for war on two fronts, German U-boats moved in—hugging the east coast and operating with impunity in the Gulf of Mexico.
For eight months after the attack on Pearl Harbor—until the assault on Guadalcanal in August 1942—the U.S. “played defense” against the Axis powers. After the fall of the Philippines, the U.S. Navy had to carry most of the burden. One of the participants, Philadelphia native Charles Calhoun, was aboard the USS
Sterett,
helping shoulder the load.
LIEUTENANT (JG) CHARLES CALHOUN, USN
USS
Sterett
DD-407
16 November 1942
After 1939, the American people began to pay attention to what was going on in Europe. Many U.S. citizens were either immigrants from there or descendents of Europeans—and they were increasingly concerned about Hitler. There was a lot of news about his aggression—and it was alarming.
That's one of the reasons why a lot of us entered the service before the U.S. was in the war—that and the Depression. When our military started to grow—very slowly at first—a lot of young men saw it as an opportunity to get a decent job. The military didn't pay much, but it was work.
I came into the Navy because my father had been a merchant mariner during World War I. He was killed in an accident in 1918. I got a commission in the Navy as a communications officer and was sent to a brand-new destroyer—the USS
Sterett
. She was launched in 1938 so she was one of the newest ships in the fleet. She was initially sent to Hawaii as part of the Pacific Fleet, but in June of '41 she was reassigned to Bermuda
to enforce the U.S. neutrality zone because the German U-boat threat had gotten worse.
German U-boat attacks against British merchantmen had begun in September of '39—shortly after Hitler invaded Poland. By the summer of'41 U-boats were sinking almost 500,000 tons of merchant shipping a month. The
Sterett
did anti-submarine patrols between Bermuda and the east coast from June to December of '41—but shortly after Pearl Harbor, we were ordered to escort convoys to Iceland and England.
Duty on a little destroyer in the North Atlantic is tough. A lot of it is in frigid, terrible weather—and a lot of the guys get seasick. Sometimes it was worse to be at the mercy of the weather and the sea than to get into a fight. On one very stormy transit, in March–April of '42, we had a rear admiral aboard—John W. Wilcox—and in the midst of this rough weather, there was a signal sent that a man had been sighted in the water. We were told to hold muster, and after we took roll call, everyone was accounted for. The officer of the deck told the admiral's orderly to inform the admiral that they had conducted a muster, but found no one missing. But when the orderly went into find the admiral, he wasn't there.
He was the one who had gone overboard!
The “big ship” that we escorted in that convoy was the USS
Wasp
—a carrier. She was transporting aircraft to the British. By then we knew that carriers were a number one priority for Dönitz. Shortly after the Dunkirk evacuation the British carrier HMS
Glorious
had been sunk by German cruisers and later on, in November '41, just a few weeks before Pearl Harbor, a U-boat sank the carrier HMS
Ark Royal
in the Mediterranean. Then in December, a week after the Japanese sneak attack, a U-boat sank HMS
Audacity,
an escort carrier on convoy duty in the North Atlantic.
German U-boat commanders were incredibly audacious throughout the war. In October 1939, the U-47 slipped into Scapa Flow—the Royal Navy's principal anchorage—and sank the battleship HMS
Royal Oak
and then got away! When we pulled into the anchorage, we could see the superstructure of the
Royal Oak
sticking out of the water—just like with our sunken battleships at Pearl Harbor.
At Scapa Flow we came under the command of a British admiral and served with their “Home Fleet” for three months. Toward the end of our deployment, we were part of a big British convoy to Malta. We raced through Gibraltar into the Mediterranean with the
Wasp
to resupply the British garrison on the island and deliver Spitfire aircraft. That trip turned out to be easier than we expected. The Germans apparently never knew we came in. We ran within 300 miles of Malta and launched the Spitfires without incident.
By May we were back in New York, where they slapped radar aboard—we had no idea what it was, or how to use it. I'm not even sure they gave us instruction books. But we figured it out by the time we got through the Panama Canal and up to San Diego, which was where the 1st Marine Division was embarking for combat in the South Pacific. Our job was to get them there.
Guadalcanal, in the Solomon Islands, was the first American offensive of the war—and the battle to take and hold Guadalcanal lasted from 7 August 1941 until February 1943. We had several big engagements during that time frame—the toughest of which occurred between 12 and 16 November against the “Tokyo Express”—the Japanese air and surface action groups that came down “the slot” between the islands to pound the Marines trying to hold Henderson Field on the northeast coast of Guadalcanal island.
We were in action every night and every day. At night it was against Japanese transports, destroyers, cruisers, and battleships and in the daylight it was against Japanese air attacks. The area between Savo Island and Guadalcanal had the wrecks of so many ships in it that we called it “Ironbottom Sound.”
On 13 November 1942, the
Sterett
was credited with shooting down two Japanese torpedo bombers—and an “assist” on two others. One of the damaged Japanese planes hit the
San Francisco
that afternoon, in the after-fire control tower, and killed thirty of their crew.
By the time that battle was over, the crew of the
Sterret
had done it all—“neutrality” duty before Pearl Harbor, anti-submarine patrols off the
U.S. east coast, convoy duty in the North Atlantic, service with the British Home Fleet, escorting a carrier in the Mediterranean, and fighting Japanese surface ships and aircraft in the Pacific. It shows the kind of stuff Americans are made of.
The USS
Sterett's
dramatic entry into World War II—and subsequent service in two theaters of the conflict—may not have been altogether typical, but Charles Calhoun's experience demonstrates the remarkable transformation the U.S. Navy made, once war was thrust upon us. The same thing happened in the U.S. Army. One who was there when it happened was another son of Philadelphia, Charles Hangsterfer. Like Calhoun, he too had “signed up” before the attack on Pearl Harbor.
FIRST LIEUTENANT CHARLES HANGSTERFER, US ARMY
1st Infantry Division, England
16 November 1942
I went to Gettysburg College after high school because my eyes weren't good enough to get into West Point. I'd always wanted to be a soldier—and going to college near where a great battle had been fought less than eight decades before just reinforced the idea.
During the Depression a military career was a pretty good deal. Back then there were relatively few jobs available and duty in the peacetime Army wasn't bad at all—or so I thought. I had a chance to go on active duty under the Thomason Act. That law allowed the Army to take a thousand college graduates from ROTC, and select a hundred for a regular Army commissions.
After receiving my new gold bars as a 2nd lieutenant, I was sent to the first communication officers' class at Fort Benning, Georgia. From there I was assigned to the 16th Infantry, then stationed at Fort Jay, on Governor's Island in New York City.
By the time I got to Fort Jay in early 1941, the war in Europe was on in earnest. But we were doing very little to prepare for the kind of mechanized warfare the Germans were fighting. For several weeks we went to Edgewood Arsenal in Maryland for amphibious training along the Gunpowder River. Since we had no landing craft, we used
rowboats
. Unfortunately, most of the soldiers were from New York City and I don't think they had ever seen a rowboat—much less knew how to row one through the water.
By the summer of '41 it was apparent that people in Washington were getting serious. We moved to Fort Devons, Massachusetts, and started building barracks and training ranges, then went on maneuvers in North Carolina and finally to Puerto Rico for
real
amphibious training—this time with Higgins boats—
real
landing craft. I was in Puerto Rico when Pearl Harbor was bombed.
We returned to Fort Devons for a few months—and the 1st Division was fully “fleshed out” with thousands of new recruits and all kinds of new equipment. That summer the officers were told that we would be deploying overseas and I was sent over with the advance party to Tidworth Barracks in England, to get the place ready for the division. The rest of the division sailed from New York aboard the
Queen Mary
on 2 August 1942.
Training at Tidworth and later in Scotland was very realistic. We had some very good, experienced British instructors. All of them had seen action and many of them had been wounded. We did a lot of long hikes, conditioning exercises, marksmanship training, practice with artillery and air—and the senior officers were almost always there. Our division commander, Major General Terry Allen, and the assistant division commander, Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., were both well-loved by the men. By the time we sailed for North Africa and Operation Torch in November of '42, I was in the 3rd Battalion, 16th Infantry and the 1st Division was ready to take on the Germans

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