Monthly Archives: August 2013

Warship Wednesday: Aug 8, 2013, The Lost Wake

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday:  Aug 8, 2013

120904302

Here we see the river gunboat USS Guam steaming down the Yangtze river in old China. Unlike most of Uncle’s warships, she never once sailed US waters.

Built in China at the Kiangnan Dock and Engineering Works, Shanghai specifically for the US Navy, she was one of the first new-built Chinese gunboats for the US. Uncle had for generations maintained a fleet of coastal and river gunboats in Chinese waters. These boats, immortalized in the book and film the Sand Pebbles, were known as the Yangtze Patrol (COMYANGPAT), after the huge river system they commonly haunted. The first modern patrol started in 1901, was with three captured Spanish shallow draft gunboats (USS Elcano, Villalobos, and Callao) that had previously been used in the Philippines. Two more gunboats, USS Palos and Monocacy, were built at Mare Island in California in 1913 and shipped across the Pacific. By 1926 these five boats were all worn out and the navy went shopping for replacements.

The_Sand_Pebbles_film_poster

With dollars always short in the Navy budget, it just made sense to build these new boats in China, to save construction and shipping costs. These new ships consisted of two large 500-ton, 210-foot gunboats (USS Luzon and Mindanao); two medium-sized 450-ton, 191-foot boats (USS Oahu and Panay) and two small 350-ton, 159-foot boats (USS Guam and Tutuila).

Guam was commissioned 28 December 1927 and carried a designation as a patrol gunboat number 43 (PG-43), then reclassified the next year as patrol-boat, river, number 3 (PR-3) six months later. This change was due to the flat-bottom hulled craft being incapable of at-sea operations. Her 5-foot draft meant she could travel all over the inland river systems and she spent the next 14-years of her US Navy career doing so.

USS TUTUILA (PR-4) or USS GUAM (PR-3) Ship’s officers and crew, photographed at Hankow, China, on 14 July 1930. Note armored covers of bridge windows, awning frames, 3″/23 gun. Description: Courtesy of Ted Stone, 1977 Catalog #: NH 85840

She had a quiet life but it was exotic. Warlords, bandits, White Russian refugees, Communist rebels, and corrupt local governments changed every few miles along the river. By 1931, Japanese interests in the country meant a dangerous future for the Yangtze Patrol.

When Americans in China were in sticky situations from 1901-1941, this is how the brown-water sailors of the US Navy's YANGPAT came ashore.

When Americans in China were in sticky situations from 1901-1941, this is how the brown-water sailors of the US Navy’s YANGPAT came ashore.

In December 1937, 12 Japanese fighter-bombers attacked and sunk the larger USS Panay in Nanking, China as the boat was evacuating Americans from the embattled city.

Ichang, China view taken 18 May 1937, showing USS GUAM (PR-3), moored astern of USS PANAY (PR-5) prior to their inspection by the Commander in Chief Asiatic Fleet. British river gunboat GANNET (1927) is in the background, seen above PANAY. Description: Courtesy of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Yarnell, 1975 Catalog #: NH 81615

Following this incident tensions grew between the Japanese and US Navy ships in Chinese waters and Guam wandered around, decked in as many US flags as could be found, keeping quiet tabs. Just before Pearl Harbor, the four larger ships were withdrawn to the Philippines but Guam and her sister Tutuila were forced to remain behind, planned to be turned over to the Chinese.

On December 5, 1941, two days before the US entered WWII, COMYANGPAT was disbanded and the USS Guam renamed USS Wake earlier in the year, was the last US Navy ship in Chinese waters. Most of her crew had already left, transferred to the larger boats, and were in the Philippines. Just the captain and 14 crewmen remained aboard, destroyed vital papers, and wired the ship with scuttling charges.

120904305

On December 8, 1941, the USS Wake surrendered to the Japanese military as crack marines of the Special Naval Landing Force stormed the ship before news of Pearl Harbor reached the naval vessel. Trapped in a no-win situation at the start of WWII, her captain did what he could to ensure the safety of his sailors who were marched off into five years of Japanese imprisonment.

Capture of USS WAKE (PR-3), 8 December 1941 Japanese special naval landing force personnel celebrate after they captured USS WAKE on the first day of World War II in the Pacific. The Shanghai “Bund” is in the background. Description: Courtesy of the Naval Historical Foundation. Catalog #: NH 96568

Japanese naval infantrymen aboard a ship off Shanghai, China, 8 Dec 1941 note captured American flag, 1928 Thompson sub-machine guns, and 12 gauge M1897 Winchester riot guns, all likely from USS Wake

She is the only US Navy ship to surrender in modern times.

It is perhaps this fact that has kept the US Navy from commissioning another USS Wake. As of this date, there has never been another. The captain and two other men escaped confinement in 1944 and walked 700 miles to Allied lines.

gunboat

The Japanese used her as a gunboat manned by their local Chinese surrogates under the name of Tatara. Surviving multiple US air raids during WWII, she was captured by the US Army in 1945 and given to the Nationalist Chinese who used her as the Tai Yuan.

In a final, and fitting chapter of her life, she was captured by Mao’s Red Chinese in 1949. They kept the old girl poking around until at least the late 1960s.

Her final disposition is unknown.

Specs:
Displacement: 350 long tons (360 t)
Length:     159 ft 5 in (48.59 m)
Beam:     27 ft 1 in (8.26 m)
Draft:     5 ft 3 in (1.60 m)
Installed power:     1,900 ihp (1,400 kW)
Propulsion:     2 × triple expansion steam engines
2 × screws
Speed:     14.5 kn (16.7 mph; 26.9 km/h)
Complement: 59
Armament:     1927: 2 × 3in guns (2×1) 8 × .30-06 Lewis machine guns (8×1), infantry weapons
1942: US-made 3″ guns replaced with Japanese 3″ AA guns.
Jan 1945 several Type 93 13.2mm M.G.s installed
1946 more light machineguns added. Presumably, refit with Soviet weapons in the 1950s.

Specs:
If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO)

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval lore http://www.warship.org/naval.htm

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

Nearing their 50th Anniversary, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

I’m a member, so should you be!

SAS Raiders of the Falklands War

War nerd confession: I’ve always thought the Falklands campaign was fascinating. Its one of the few instances where two western militaries have fought each other in all-out combined war in land sea and air in modern times. Found this pretty neat 45-min. documentary on the SAS and SBS in the Falkland Islands War (1982). Includes interesting and such little-known stuff as the Top Malo house fight, the covert SAS/SBS intel teams in Argentina itself, the Pebble Island Raid, and others.

 

 

 

The Joy of a Broomhandle Mauser

In military service for more than a half century with some of the most unlikely of people, the C96 Mauser Military Pistol began a new era of semi-automatic pistols on the modern battlefield.
In the 1890s, most if not all handguns in the world were revolvers of either single action (Colt 1873) or double action (Smith and Wesson) type. These types of guns equipped gentlemen officers, travelers, and law enforcement personnel around the world. This was fine, but in Germany, there was a team of three brothers by the name of Feederle that felt they could do better.
Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk.com

c96_poster

Union Captures Hamptons Flag…..again

130731-N-CS953-001

WASHINGTON (July 31, 2013) A Confederate flag captured from the CSS Hampton lies on a protective sheet during a ceremony celebrating the transfer of ownership of the flag from the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Historical Society to Navy History and Heritage Command. The note attached to the flag reads “That of Confed gun boat Hampton burnt in James River at the taking of Richmond. The flag was taken from the burning ship by Liet. Ladd (13th N. Hampshire), Gen. Devens staff.” The flag has been in the historical society’s possession since the 1960s. The museum plans to preserve the flag and make it a part of their Civil War exhibit. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Tim Comerford/Released)

 

 

file_13

The Hampton was a Confederate gunboat built at Norfolk in 1862 then participated in significant river actions including the battle at Dutch Gap on August 13, 1864; operations against Fort Harrison on September 29-October 1; and the engagement at Chaffin’s Bluff on October 22.

Hampton was burned by the Confederates as they evacuated Richmond, Virginia on April 3, 1865.

Displacement:     166 tons
Length:     106 ft (32 m)
Beam:     21 ft (6.4 m)
Draft:     6 ft (1.8 m)
Propulsion:     Steam engine
Armament:     1 9″ cannon, 1 32-pounder cannon

Disney Insignia from WWII

You may or may not know that Disney and the guys in the art studio over there did thier part in the Big One back 70+ years ago. Walt had served  in France during WWI as a infantryman amongst the mustard gas so when WWII came about, he offered his studios services. They made all sorts of insignia (over 3000) for the military and the USNI has a gallery of it over at their website

Enjoy!

 

Get it, “Mine…Sweeper”
HAaaa

Vampire Cemetery Found in Poland

I know I know, we’re a zombie blog, but you have to admit, this is kinda cool.

 

Skelettfund in Polen
In Poland constrction workers found 17 ancient skeletons buired with their skulls severed and placed between thier knees.

Why?

Vampires they  say.

Zombies I counter.
For more

US Artillery Archive up for Free

The Fires Bulletin is up in archived format at Ft Sills website. This runs from 1911 to 2007 and is an amazing time capsule of the US Army’s artillery arm.

Its here, save the link ! http://sill-www.army.mil/firesbulletin/archives/

Im gonna need a bigger harddrive.

(The Model 1908 US 6-inch howitzer on carriage. Frontpiece to The Field Artillery Journal of Octoner 1911. How often have you bumped into one of these?)

(The Model 1908 US 6-inch howitzer on carriage. Frontpiece to The Field Artillery Journal of October 1911. How often have you bumped into one of these?)

Old F-4 Bounces off Highway 98

The drone drivers at Tyndall lost a QF-4, a converted F-4 Phantom modded to fly as an unmanned drone for target practice. Said robot plane wound up crashing near Highway 98 just outside of PC. Its  large target indeed at 68-feet long and 38 feet wide, they could take off weighing as much as twenty tons. The 1958-designed Phantom is still in service with Greece, Turkey and Japan while Germany just retired thier last models in the past few months. The German F-4s were so smokey that they called them Luftverteidigungsdiesel (“Air Defense Diesel”) fighters.

Well the one in Bay County sure is smokin baby Boom!

This is not a manned fighter bomber any more. It is a remote control drone..and sometimes they go slightly off course

This is not a manned fighter bomber any more. It is a remote control drone..and sometimes they go slightly off course

Why Won’t the Single Shot Shotgun Die?

For many shooters, the one shot wonder that is the single-barreled hinge break shotgun is their first experience with any sort of gauge. This simple design predates almost everything on the market today and is arguably obsolete.  It however is one design that just refuses to go away.
Remember the crazy looking trumpet-barrel guns you have always seen illustrations of the pilgrims strutting around with? Well those were
blunderbusses and, while the Mayflower colonists actually didn’t have any, they were one of the first shotguns.
Large caliber smooth bored muzzleloaders, these guns were great for self-defense at close range or taking deer with large shot.  With smaller shot, they could make a decent fowling piece for birds and varmints. Versatile as they were, these guns required users to load each shot manually, measuring and tamping down charges of blackpowder, wads and projectiles in what amounted to a fairly clumsy and sometimes unsafe procedure.
By 1836, a character named Lefaucheux developed a breech-loading shotgun that took a self-contained pinfire cartridge. Lefaucheux’s scattergun used a hinged break-open design to give access to the chamber for loading and unloading and by the 1870s paper-hulled break-action singled-barreled shotguns (with half the firepower of their double-barreled brothers) abounded on the market. A number of companies, including Stevens and H&R built their name on a foundation of these guns way back then and are still around today because of the design. The thing is, even when passed up by the rapidly appearing technology of the pump action (1882 Spencer) and the semi-auto (1898’s Browning Auto Five); the single shot hinge break has still found a place in shooters’ gun closets.
Read the rest in my column at Guns.com

single shots and squierrl dirt napping

Virginia Tech to track ‘zombie virus’ at Boy Scout Jamboree

” If researchers from Virginia Tech’s Virginia Bioinformatics Institute have their way, 50,000 Boy Scouts might just turn into zombies as part of an educational game called “Virus Tracker” during the national Boy Scout Jamboree from July 16 to July 22 at Summit Bechtel Reserve in West Virginia.

Virus Tracker was developed by researchers at the Network Dynamics and Simulation Science Laboratory to help people understand the spread of disease and the public health response required for disease outbreaks. The data collected by playing Virus Tracker can be used to understand how social contact networks are pathways for transmission of infectious diseases.

Designed to show how disease spreads, Virus Tracker allows participants to use scannable bar codes to “infect” other players. They’ll get points for infecting one another, but they will also strive to become and stay human…”

More here…

(Unfortunately, looking at the charts, infection seems to be inevitable in a zombie outbreak)

virus tracker

« Older Entries Recent Entries »