Author Archives: laststandonzombieisland

Back to Alto su barco!

The crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Waesche (WMSL 751) offloaded a little over 9 tons of Colombia’s finest, worth something like $239 million, on Wednesday in San Diego after the conclusion of her latest 89-day East Pac patrol.

The 418-foot cutter– with a Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron (HITRON) MH-65 Dolphin helicopter and aircrew, members from Law Enforcement Detachment (LEDET) 101 and 102, and contractors who flew a Scan Eagle UAV embarked– patrolled more than 19,750 nautical miles conducting law enforcement and search and rescue operations in international waters off Central and South America.

The 9-ton dope haul came from six interdictions at sea– four by Waesche and two by the smaller 210-foot USCGC Active who transferred her impounds to the larger national security cutter to bring in.

The biggest of the interdictions, on 20 November, was from a narco sub, officially a “self-propelled semi-submersible” (SPSS) that was shipping more than 5,500 pounds of blow. Of note, the interdiction of the SPSS was the first (caught) in the Eastern Pacific since 2020.

11th District released many great images from the narco sub-bust, showing just how big it is with the cutter’s 26-foot RHIB as a size reference.

Members of the Coast Guard Cutter Waesche (WMSL-751) law enforcement boarding team inspect a self-propelled semi-submersible (SPSS) in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, Nov. 20, 2023. The interdiction of the SPSS yielded more than 5,500 pounds of cocaine. (U.S. Coast Guard photo)

Members of the Coast Guard Cutter Waesche (WMSL-751) law enforcement boarding team inspect a self-propelled semi-submersible (SPSS) in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, Nov. 20, 2023. The interdiction of the SPSS yielded more than 5,500 pounds of cocaine. (U.S. Coast Guard photo)

Members of the Coast Guard Cutter Waesche (WMSL-751) law enforcement boarding team inspect a self-propelled semi-submersible (SPSS) in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, Nov. 20, 2023. The interdiction of the SPSS yielded more than 5,500 pounds of cocaine. (U.S. Coast Guard photo)

Members of the Coast Guard Cutter Waesche (WMSL-751) law enforcement boarding team inspect a self-propelled semi-submersible (SPSS) in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, Nov. 20, 2023. The interdiction of the SPSS yielded more than 5,500 pounds of cocaine. (U.S. Coast Guard photo)

Note the MH-65 on her heli deck with her two-door hangar open. The Legend-class cutter can accommodate an MH-65 or MH-60T and two vertical-launch unmanned aerial vehicles (U.S. Coast Guard photo)

If you ask me, those brainstorming about using more advanced (unmanned) narco subs to supply Marines on remote West Pac islands in the event of a China dustup make some sense.

Of note when it comes to the WMSL program, the 10th member of the class, the brand new USCGC Calhoun (WMSL 759), departed Pascagoula on 19 November for her homeport in Charleston.

Warship Wednesday, Dec. 6, 2023: One Hearty Brazilian

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, Dec. 6, 2023: One Hearty Brazilian

Photo by LT CH Parnall, Royal Navy official photographer, IWM A 20897

Above we see a scene from the life of the modified H-class destroyer HMS Hesperus (H57), some 80 years ago today on 6 December 1943, with Ordinary Seaman P. S. Buckingham, of Norwich, freshening up the ship’s record of U-boat kills on the side of the wheelhouse as the greyhound was docked at Liverpool.

While many ships would see their scoreboard whittled down greatly following post-war analysis, Hesperus went down in the books as going five for five.

The H-class

The British Royal Navy would order some 27 assorted “G”, “H” and “I” Class destroyers between 1934 and 1936 as part of the rearmament to safeguard against the growing German, Italian, and Japanese fleets in the uneasy peace leading up to WWII. They were slight ships, of just 1,800 tons and 323 feet overall length with a narrow 33-foot beam, giving them a dagger-like 1:10 length-to-beam ratio. With a speed of 35 knots and a 5,000 nm range at half that, they could keep up with the fleet or operate independently and had long enough legs for North Atlantic convoy work, should such a thing ever be needed in the future.

The differences between the three classes were primarily in engineering fit, minor superstructure changes, and armament. They were typically fitted with a quartet of QF 4.7-inch (120 mm) Mk IX guns, a few AAA mounts, between 8 and 10 anti-ship torpedo tubes, and depth charges for ASW work.

HMS Grenade (H86), a G-class destroyer. Note her layout which was like all her sisters. Grenade would be sunk in May 1940 off Dunkirk by German Stukas.

The 27th and last of the type delivered to the RN from the ships the Admiralty ordered was HMS Ivanhoe (D16) on 24 August 1937, completing the classes built out in just four years, which is not bad for peacetime production.

The G/H/Is would prove so successful of a design that the British exported it, accepting prewar orders for 19 ships for overseas allies: Argentina (seven Buenos Aires class ships delivered in 1938), Greece (two Georgios class delivered in 1939), Turkey (four desperately needed Inconstant class delivered in 1942, largely to keep Istanbul friendly at a crucial time in the war) and a half-dozen Jurua-class tin cans for the Brazilian Navy…that’s where Hesperus comes in.

Meet Hesperus

The Brazilian Navy in early 1938 ordered six modified H-class destroyers, spread across the Vickers, White, and Thornycroft yards. They would be named Jurua, Javary, Jutahy, Juruena, Jaguaribe, and Japura after rivers and towns in Brazil. Construction proceeded along nicely, and all were christened with their intended names by visiting dignitaries from the Latin American country and afloat in the summer of 1939.

Then, with the war in Europe, London made a deal to purchase the six nearly complete Juruas from Rio while they were still fitting out in a deal that would include providing assistance and plans for Brazil to build another six H-class destroyers domestically at the government’s Ilha das Cobras shipyard.

Rather than a fit for four 4.7-inch guns, these six former Brazilian destroyers in British service would carry only three with the extra deck space freed up to be used for more depth charges– capable of toting as many as 110 ash cans across three rails and eight throwers. They would enter service between December 1939 and June 1940 as the Havant class (Havant, Handy, Havelock, Hearty, Highlander, and Hurricane) keeping with the “H” class naming sequence.

Our subject, the former Brazilian Juruena, was at first dubbed HMS Hearty on 15 January 1940 and then became the first of HM’s warships to be named Hesperus on 27 February 1940 in honor of the Greek name for the planet Venus in the evening, son of the dawn goddess Eos, and half-brother of Phosphorus– the latter the name for the same planet in the morning. This latter name change came to avoid confusing HMS Hearty with near-sister HMS Hardy (H87) in signals.

War!

In March 1940, after a rushed shakedown, Hesperus was assigned to convoy escort duty in the Northwest Approaches, a duty that would take up most of her wartime experience. In all, she would serve on no less than 74 crossings from Convoy AP 001/3 in April 1940 to Convoy MKF 042 in April 1945.

Hesperus underway at sea, resplendent in her war paint. IWM A 7101

In this work, Hesperus made five (two shared) high-profile confirmed “kills” on Donitz’s steel sharks inside of 18 months:

  • Type VIIC U-208 (Oblt. Alfred Schlieper) on 7 December 1941, west of Gibraltar, shared with sister HMS Harvester.
  • Type VIIC U-93 (Oblt. Horst Elfe) on 15 January 1942 north-east of Madeira
  • Type VIIC U-357 (Kptlt. Adolf Kellner) on 26 December 1942, north-west of Ireland, shared with HMS Vanessa
  • Type IXC/40 U-191 (Kptlt. Helmut Fiehn) on 23 April 1943, south-east of Cape Farewell, Greenland
  • Type IXC/40 U-186 (KrvKpt. Siegfried Hesemann) on 14 May 1943, northwest of the Azores.

She plucked Oblt. Elfe and 40 survivors from U-93 out of the water and delivered them ashore at Gibraltar to finish their war in a POW camp, providing useful intelligence when interrogated. U-357 went down with only six survivors fished from the drink by the British. Meanwhile, U-208, U-191, and U-186 went down with all hands.

Waterlogged survivors of U-93 leaving HMS Hesperus at Gibraltar on 16 January 1942. IWM A 8116

Prisoners from the U-boat, likely U-357, disembarking from HMS Hesperus at Liverpool. Note the rope stays used by the guards as clubs. IWM A 13978

The fight with U-357 was particularly rough, ending on the surface with the boat electing to fight it out after depth charges and Hesperus finishing her off by ramming– the oldest of ASW techniques.

HMS Hesperus entering Liverpool harbor, on 28 December 1942, showing damage to her bows caused by ramming U-357. IWM A 13987

Same as the above, IWM A 13986

In addition to her ASW work, Hesperus also took breaks from her convoy work to escort HMs battlewagons and carriers including HMS Resolution and HMS Ark Royal to Norway (in a campaign that also saw Hesperus ferry men of the Scots Guards ashore at Bodo in May 1940).

She would again team up with Ark Royal for the Malta relief convoys in 1941 (Operations Tiger and Splice) and as a screen for the battlecruiser HMS Renown during the hunt for the Bismarck. She screened the Churchill-carrying HMS Prince of Wales to Newfoundland for him to meet with FDR in August 1941.

Kodachrome of HMS Hesperus H57 in Canadian waters, circa 1942. Library and Archives Canada MIKAN 4821059

Aerial photo of HMS Hesperus, September 1942. Note her extensive depth charge fit. IWM A 20376

In May 1945, with the endgame in Europe, she escorted surrendered U-boats from Lochalsh to Loch Foyle for disposal as part of Operation Deadlight then, on the 29th, headed back to Norway to assist with the demobilization of German troops there.

By mid-June 1945, she was tasked with supporting aircrew training, a role that meant she was an OPFOR for coastal command bombers and patrol planes. She endured this until May 1946 when she was reduced to Reserve status at Rosyth.

Hesperus, post-war, sans camouflage and most of her depth charges. IWM A 30688.

Nominated for sale and, after removal of equipment and stores, laid up at Grangemouth awaiting demolition, ex-Hesperus was broken up there in May 1947 by G W Brunton.

End of a U-boat by Norman Wilkinson via Royal Museums Greenwich, depicting a GHI-type destroyer next to a German U-boat in its death throes amid a convoy– a sight seen by Hesperus and her sisters many times. 

As for her 27 British, two Greek, and six British via Brazil sisters that saw combat, a whopping 25 were lost during the war to assorted causes, most in direct combat with the Germans.

The 10 battle-scarred survivors were either, like Hesperus, scrapped almost immediately post-war or transferred abroad for further service (Garland to the Dutch, Hotspur to the Dominican Navy).

The last G/H/I afloat were the Buenos Aires-class destroyers in Argentine service, scrapped in 1973, with their Turkish sisters preceding them. None of the class members endure or are maintained as museums.

Epilogue

At the helm of Hesperus for three of her U-boat kills was CDR Donald George Frederick Wyville MacIntyre, DSO, RN. He would add two Bars to his DSO and a DSC to his coat before his tour on Hesperus was over. He had been her plank owner skipper and commanded her for the first year of her war, including the Norway campaign, but had taken a break from the ship to command HMS Walker (D 27) in 1941– during which he was responsible for sinking two of Germany’s foremost U-boat aces, Otto Kretschmer and Joachim Schepkle aboard U-100.

MacIntyre would retire from the RN in 1955 after a 33-year career, and pass in 1981, aged 77.

Oh yes, remember Kapitänleutnant Horst Elfe, of U-93? He was the sole U-boat skipper to survive a brush with Hesperus, and survived the war as well by nature of his time as a POW in Canada which only ended in 1947 and included the “Battle of Bowmanville.” He died in Berlin in 2008, aged 91.

Elfe went on eight patrols, four as a skipper, without sinking a ship. He became a noted steel executive in Germany after the war.

HMS Hesperus had been “adopted” by Yeovil and District in its National Savings “Warship Week” that began on 28 February 1942, in which the building cost, more than £300,000 was raised.

The town has a plaque carried aboard the ship during the war as well as her final white ensign in the tower of St John’s church.

War artist William Dring visited Hesperus during the war and painted several pastels of her crew at work.

Engine Room Artificer W Wakefield wearing overalls, turning a large wheel in the engine room. Behind him are two other colleagues at work. IWM ART LD 3536

She is also remembered in modern maritime art.

Jones, C.; HMS ‘Hesperus’; Poole Museum Service; http://www.artuk.org/artworks/hms-hesperus-60183

HMS Hesperus, by Dion Pears

Thus far, the RN has chosen to not reissue the name “Hesperus” to a second ship, which is a shame.


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find. http://www.warship.org/membership.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.

With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO, has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships you should belong.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Frogskins, Reisings, and War Bonnets

These 80-year-old images are for your perusal.

Official caption: Navajo Code Talkers on Bougainville, December 1943 (left to right, front row): Pvt Earl Johnny, Pvt Kee Etsicitty, Pvt John V. Goodluck, and PFC David Jordan. Rear row, left to right: Pvt Jack C. Morgan, Pvt George H. Kirk, Pvt Tom H. Jones, Cpl Henry Bake, Jr.

Note the H&R-made Reising M50 HR submachine gun and newly-issued M1 Garands, two with 1907 bayonets affixed. From the Photograph Collection (COLL/3948) at the Marine Corps Archives and Special Collections

USMC Navajo Code Talkers, Bougainville, December 1943, Note the compact Reising Model 55 SMG

Corporal Henry Bahe, Jr., left, and Pvt. First Class George H. Kirk, Navajo code talkers

While an estimated 420 members of the Navajo nation served in the Marines as Code Talkers, at the same time there were other members of the tribe in USMC units in other roles, while, elsewhere in the theatre, the Army’s 158th Infantry Regiment-– the “Bushmasters” — an Arizona National Guard unit that held members from at least 20 tribes, also had a sizable contingent of Navajo who were photographed at the same time.

Dec. 1943: American Navajo Indians from the Southwest United States, members of the 158th U.S. Infantry, are seen on a beach in the Solomon Islands. They are in their traditional dress for a tribal ceremony at Christmastime. From left to right are, Pfc. Dale Winney, Gallup, N.M; Pvt. Perry Toney, Holbrook, Ariz.; Pfc. Joe Gishi, Holbrook; and Pfc. Joe Taraha, Gallup. (AP Photo/U.S. Army Signal Corps)

Keeping Reagan-era F-15s in the Air Via CNC Mills and 3D Printing

It’s hard to believe, but the McDonnell Douglas F-15 Eagle is a Vietnam-era aircraft that first flew over 51 years ago on 27 July 1972, although the first Eagle bound for a combat squadron wasn’t delivered until January 1976.

U.S. Air Force F-15C Eagles assigned to the 44th and 67th Fighter Squadrons await clearance for their last take-off from Kadena Air Base, Japan, on Dec. 1, 2022. As a part of its modernization plan, the 18th Wing is retiring its aging fleet of F-15C/D Eagles that have been in service for more than four decades. (U.S. Air Force photo 221201-F-PW483-0008 by Senior Airman Jessi Roth)

click to big up. You have to admit, the F-15C was, with the possible exception of the F-14, one of the sexiest air superiority fighters of the past 40 years.

However, with the last USAF F-15C/Ds leaving the assembly line in 1985, those classic air superiority fighters are now all pushing 40 years on their airframe with many being even older and the Air Force is moving full speed ahead with retiring the type on active duty.

Keeping those legacy birds flying until the new F-15EXs arrive starting in 2025 requires out-of-the-box solutions.

Tech. Sgt. Nate Brown, a 142nd Maintenance Squadron metals technology craftsman, observes a CNC (Computer Numerical Control) mill as it carves a piece of solid aluminum into a stringer, an essential aircraft part, Nov. 4, 2023, Portland Air National Guard Base, Oregon. U.S. Air National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Sean Campbell

Via Air & Space Forces:

The average age for America’s fleet of F-15C Eagles is about 38 years old, and many of the aircraft’s spare parts are no longer produced or can take days to order from a manufacturer. Luckily, the Oregon Air National Guard’s 142nd Wing has a metals technology shop at Portland Air National Guard Base where Airmen fabricate parts in-house to keep the wing’s elder Eagles flying.

More here.

48 Years Gone

Check out these images from the National Museum of the U.S. Navy Photograph Collection.

45 caliber Colt automatic pistol, Model 1911 A1, # 207-501-9, engraved by W. Ward, shows Army scenes. This image was taken in 1967.

Same as the above

1967 image of Navy .38 caliber Colt Automatic Pistol, #217-1217, engraved by W. Ward, side view.

1967 image of Navy .38 caliber Colt Automatic Pistol, #217-1217, engraved by W. Ward, side view.

Navy .38 caliber Colt Automatic Pistol, #217-1217, engraved by W. Ward, shows two engraved sailing vessels engaged in combat on the top barrel. 1967 image

Why no newer/better images of the above handguns? Well, they were stolen from the Navy Memorial Museum (now the National Museum of the U.S. Navy) on or about December 4, 1975.

To this date, the pistols have not been recovered.

Did old-school grenades actually work?

Watching Napolean recently (can’t really recommend it, rewatch The Duellists instead), I was reminded by just how prevalent “grenadier” formations were in the Napoleonic Wars and the century that preceded them.

You know, these guys:

And, while not all “grenadiers” by the 1800s actually carried grenades, they were still very much in use, especially on ships and in ramparts. But how well did they work?

To answer that question, the guys over at Ordnance Lab went to work and made a batch of period-correct cast iron black powder hand grenades and compared them to the more modern M67 baseball.

Black powder grenades are the great grandparents of the modern hand grenades we are all familiar with today. Before the days of fancy mechanical-pyrotechnic fuses, steel bodies, and high explosives, our ancestors tossed primitive hulls full of black powder and hoped for the best. Someone asked us to see if these things would work long ago. Well, we finally got to testing out how effective these primitive black powder grenades really are. We made a bunch of these black powder grenades and testing their fragmentation abilities as well as how effective they are as as battle field weapon. I guess this makes us now history experts on ancient weapons.

Enjoy!

Boyko’s No. 29

In 1950, Chief Edward Boyko of the Passaic, New Jersey PD entered a “name that gun” contest at the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) conference in Colorado and submitted “Chief’s Special” as a suggestion for the hard-hitting new Model J revolver.

Smith & Wesson announced the winner in the December 1950 issue of The Police Chief, the IACP journal, and named Boyko as its author. The prize? A specimen of the new gun, complete with factory engraving.

Serial No. 29, it was an early “Pre-36” with a small grip and trigger guard of the I-frame, features that were later changed to make the revolver more comfortable to shoot with full-house loads. It also had a standard latch (later guns had a flat latch) and half-moon front sight, a configuration that only the earliest Chiefs Specials shipped with.

Plus, Chief Boyko’s was factory engraved.

Um, like this:

Yup, read more about the long-lost Boyko Chiefs Special in my column at Guns.com.

Bear Diesels

Bluewater Navy guys are used to turbines. Surface guys know GE LM-2500 gas turbines which have been in just about everything (Sprucans/Kidds, Ticos, OHPs, Burkes, LHD8, etc) made after 1972. Carrier and sub nerds know their very peculiar types of glow-in-the-dark steam turbines. Even before that, you had the old oil-fired steam turbine era of the Knoxes and Adams, Fletchers and Gearings, Brooklyns and Cleavelands. You get the idea.

The Coast Guard, however, is all about diesel (except for the Ingalls-built frigate-sized Legend-class National Security Cutters which use LM-2500s). They are simple. They work. They can be maintained even under tough circumstances in third-world ports.

Take the story of the baker’s dozen Famous (Bear) class 270-foot cutters built in the 1980s. These corvette-sized 1,800 tonners use a pair of turbo-charged Beloit-built ALCO V18 diesel engines that have been dishing it out for 40 years.

Class leader USCGC Bear (WMEC-901) just hit 100,000 service hours on her original #1 Main Diesel Engine throughout 65 operational deployments since 1983.

The USCG Yard at Baltimore recently offered a rare look at the engine room of one of the class, USCGC Spencer (WMEC-905), which was commissioned in 1986. She is at the CGY swapping out her diesels for a new (to her) set.

A CG Yard team of professionals successfully removed two Main Diesel Engines this week, the first time on a 270-foot MEC. Preparations and planning took more than a year. Advance work included removing the “traveling” center section, the fixed hangar and massive accesses in the flight and and main decks. New MDEs will be set in place in the coming months. Congratulations Team on this historical evolution, completing it safely, professionally, and all fantastically before lunch! Wow!

What’s Under the Hood

How about this amazing 80-year-old original Kodachrome.

Official caption: Essex-class fleet carrier USS Lexington (CV-18). Aviation mechanics work on the Pratt and Whitney R-2800 engine of a Grumman F6F-3 “Hellcat” fighter, during a lull between strikes on Mili and Kwajalein, circa early December 1943. [Note: Bill Surgi says this man is AMM 1/c Brannam, of VF-16. (18 May 1993 data)]

Photographed by Commander Edward Steichen, USNR. National Archives Catalog #: 80-G-K-15560

People forget just how big the R-2800 Double Wasp was.

America’s first 18-cylinder radial engine, with water injection and (later) turbo-supercharging, the R-2800 produced more than 46 kW/L (1-horsepower/cubic inch) and, in the R-2800-10 variant as used in the above Hellcat, could cough up a whopping 2,250 hp just before the red line.

Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp at the Ford Aircraft Engine Plant Dearborn, Michigan, 1942. LIFE Gordon Coster

Boxed Ford-made Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp at Brisbane Australia’s 81st Air Depot

Some 125,000 R-2800s were made between 1936 and 1960 and, besides powering all the best Navy/Marine piston aircraft of WWII and Korea (Goodyear FG-1, Vought F4U-1 and F4U-2, F6F, and the F8F Bearcat) also powered the massive P-47 Thunderbolt and was paired up to give the B-26 Marauder, AJ Savage, F7F Tigercat, and P-61 Black Widow their speed advantage.

Two R-2800s were enough to heave the behemoth Martin PBM-5 Mariner flying boat, which had a takeoff weight of 60,000 pounds, out of the water.

Commercially, it was used after the war in the Douglas DC-6A/-6B, Martin 202A, Martin 404, and Convair 340 airliners

The final “E” series R-2800-30W used a water-methanol injection and a single-stage supercharger to give the F8F-2 Bearcat a 2,500 hp powerplant– and could be tweaked to 3,100 hp. There is a good reason F8Fs were prized in air races and broke long-standing speed records for piston-engine aircraft.

1948 Grumman F8F-2P Bearcat BuNo 121710 in her Air Group 19 CAG bird livery at the National Naval Aviation Museum, with her massive R-2800-30W on a stand next to her. (Photo: Chris Eger)

Bittersweet Fairytale

As it is December, thoughts turn to Christmas songs, and one (slightly raunchy) example that I dearly loved for decades– and sometimes belted out when the eggnog flowed too hard– was Fairytale Of New York by The Pogues. I mean, being a quarter Irish, how could I not, right?

Sadly, news has come that flawed and often controversial Irish songsmith Shane Patrick Lysaght MacGowan, who co-wrote and performed the classic, has just passed at age 65.

And before you talk too much smack about him, listen to the Pogues’s version of Waltzing Matilda. 

Pouring out the nog for Shane.

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