Category Archives: hero

Jack Cornwell, the heroic gunner of Jutland, 100 years ago this week

Jack as a 15 year old Boy assigned to the training ship, the old armored cruiser H.M.S. Lancaster which was based at Chatam during WWI to train gunnery crews.

Jack as a 15 year old Boy assigned to the training ship, the old armored cruiser H.M.S. Lancaster which was based at Chatam during WWI to train gunnery crews.

Born 8th January 1900 in Essex, John “Jack” Cornwell attended school for just eight years, dropping out in 1913 to work as a van boy for a baker. Still keeping up his commitment to the Boy Scouts, he won a special award for freeing a young girl from a drain.

He was that kind of kid.

At age 14 he tried to join the Royal Navy in the opening days of WWI, but was turned down. He kept trying and he was accepted as a Ship’s Boy just after his 15th birthday and shipped out aboard the freshly commissioned 5000-ton Town-class light cruiser HMS Chester as a gun layer, manning the sights and relaying firing orders through a headset and microphone at one of the ship’s 10 BL 5.5 inch Mark I (140 mm) /50 guns. The well-drilled RN crews on these exposed guns could fire 12 rounds per minute, lobbing a 82-pound shell out past 16,000m.

Chester and Jack found themselves up to their necks in German warships at the Battle of Jutland on 31 May.

Taking on four German cruisers of the High Seas Fleet’s  II Scouting Group in a night action, Chester was raked by no less than 18 hits. The Mark I guns of the cruiser had just a scant plate of armor on the front of the mount, with the backs and deck areas open to the environment. This meant that shrapnel from the German shells blasted down the decks and killed the exposed gunners at a staggering rate. Within minutes, 3 out of 10 mounts on Chester were out of action, their crews maimed.

At Jack’s mount,  the forward-most 5.5 inch gun on the forecastle, every single sailor had been killed or wounded outright, horribly maimed by the combat.

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During the action, Jack was credited with volunteering to go to the top of the turret to wipe the glass so that the rangefinder could line the target, and another report says that he managed to ram home one last projectile, close the breech and press the firing button and that this projectile exploded on the German ship SMS Wiesbaden, causing damage which led to her sinking. (Later evidence found post-war concluded that the shell that sank Wiesbaden came from HMS Invincible, but it does not make the tale of Jack and HMS Chester any less heroic)

Jack was found after the cruiser had disengaged, standing alone at his gun, still ready to fight. His body was riddled with shellfire, including splinters in his chest. He was still alive but barely, and eager for orders.

Damage to the deck of HMS CHESTER sustained during the battle of Jutland. Several sailors can be seen on deck including one bending down to inspect the hole. Boy (1st Class) Jack Travers Cornwell was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for remaining at the forward gun on board the cruiser. The ship was badly shelled by four German cruisers and Cornwell's position was hit four times, killing all the crew apart from Cornwell. The badly wounded boy sailor was taken back to Grimsby where he died on 2 June. (Surgeon Parkes photographic collection of ships portraits ) https://www.facebook.com/182158581977012/photos/a.182161278643409.1073741827.182158581977012/282071908652345/?type=1&theater

Damage to the deck of HMS CHESTER sustained during the battle of Jutland. Several sailors can be seen on deck including one bending down to inspect the hole. Boy (1st Class) Jack Travers Cornwell was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for remaining at the forward gun on board the cruiser. The ship was badly shelled by four German cruisers and Cornwell’s position was hit four times, killing all the crew apart from Cornwell. The badly wounded boy sailor was taken back to Grimsby where he died on 2 June. (Surgeon Parkes photographic collection of ships portraits )

As British ships came alongside HMS Chester, survivors of other gun mounts sat on deck, limbless, smoking cigarette and cheering the passing fleet. Many would not see the next dawn.

Jack passed away after an agonizing two day ordeal in the ship’s infirmary, giving his last, full, measure.

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His VC, awarded posthumously, states:

The KING has been graciously pleased to approve the grant of the Victoria Cross to Boy, First Class, John Travers Cornwell, O.N.J.42563 (died 2 June 1916), for the conspicuous act of bravery specified below. Mortally wounded early in the action, Boy, First Class, John Travers Cornwell remained standing alone at a most exposed post, quietly awaiting orders, until the end of the action, with the gun’s crew dead and wounded all round him. His age was under sixteen and a half years.

He is the youngest recipient of England’s highest military honor.

His great grandnephew, Alex Saridis, is keeping the family tradition alive and is currently an Able Seaman in the Royal Navy. He asks in the above video only that future generations remember Jack, and those that fell alongside him and share their story.

On Jack’s grave, the epitaph reads

“It is not wealth or ancestry
but honourable conduct and a noble disposition
that maketh men great.”

john travers cornwall

The originator of Zulu Time, as verified by the BBC everyday

Sir Frank Watson Dyson KBE, FRS (8th January 1868 – 25th May 1939).

Sir Frank Watson Dyson KBE, FRS (8th January 1868 – 25th May 1939).

On this day in 1939,  Sir Frank Watson Dyson, KBE, FRS, aged 71, died while traveling from Australia to England in 1939 and was buried at sea, as is proper for a man of such celestial voyages and his importance to how sailors keep time at sea and in far off lands.

An English astronomer and Astronomer Royal (and director of the Royal Greenwich Observatory) from 1910 to 1933, he introduced in the Observatory a new free-pendulum clock, the most accurate clock available at that time and organized the regular wireless transmission from the GPO wireless station at Rugby of Greenwich Mean Time. He is remembered today largely for introducing time signals (“six pips”) from Greenwich (via the BBC which continued at least into 2015), and for the role he played in testing Einstein’s theory of general relativity.

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He was for several years President of the British Horological Institute and was awarded their Gold Medal in 1928. Knighted in 1915, he was the President of the Royal Astronomical Society during the Great War

The crater Dyson on the Moon is named after him, as is the Asteroid 1241 Dysona.

Pearl Harbor relic found in Baltimore basement

The 14,000-ton Naval Auxiliary Service collier Vestal was christened in 1908 and later was redisignated a repair ship in the Navy proper becoming USS Vestal (AR-4).

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Vestal deployed “Over There” in 1918, serving in Queenstown, Ireland with the U.S. fleet during World War I then made her way to the Pacific where she was moored at berth F 7, off Ford Island, to provide services to USS Arizona during the battlewagon’s scheduled period of tender upkeep when the Japanese planes came buzzing into the harbor on that infamous Sunday morning.

Hit by two Japanese bombs of her own, Vestal was nearly pulverized by Arizona‘s magazine explosion. Listing, ablaze and heavily damaged, the old repair ship saved herself and her skipper, Commander Cassin Young, later came away with the MOH for his actions.

Her mooring quay is still a place of honor at Pearl to this day.

USS-Vestal-Memorial

Remarkably, Vestal survived and went on to conduct forward repairs in the war zones of the South Pacific, keeping the battleships South Dakota and Washington; carriers Saratoga and Enterprise; cruisers Minneapolis, St. Louis, HMNZS Achilles, HMAS Hobart, San Francisco, and Pensacola among others in the fight and afloat at desperate times when their loss would have been a great blow to the war effort.

Decommissioned and stricken, she was sold  to breakers and disappeared in 1950.

Now, her bell has been rediscovered in the parsonage of a minister who bought it in Baltimore around 1955.

uss-vestal-bell

Meet Len LeSchack: Spy, scientist, Navy officer and explorer

Seven Days in the Arctic by Keith Woodcock, Oil on Canvas, 2007, CIA collection  https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol52no2/iac/seven-days-in-the-arctic.html

Seven Days in the Arctic by Keith Woodcock, Oil on Canvas, 2007, CIA collection

A true Renaissance man, Leonard A. LeSchack in 1962 jumped out of a perfectly good (CIA-flown) converted B-17 bomber over the Arctic. At the time, he was a lieutenant in the Navy Reserve but before joining up he had already cut his teeth as a petroleum geologist with Shell and some 14 months in the Polar Regions on Air Force Drift Station T-3 and during the International Geophysical Year as an assistant seismologist.

However, the geologist-turned-sailor who was falling through the air from the B-17 was up to something that, when compared to the rest of his epic life story, was altogether unique.

LeSchack was jumping into an abandoned Soviet Ice Station adrift on an ice floe. Then came a week poking through the remnants the Russkis thought would have gone down with the floe to the frigid sea floor looking for secrets and a Fulton Skyhook zip line in reverse pulled him and his Air Force Russian linguist companion back into the safety of a surplus aircraft.

I spoke to Len back in 2006 when I was working on an article about the ice station break in, known appropriately as Project Coldfeet, and have remained in contact with this gentleman and scholar over the past decade.

He even has crossed paths with a relative of mine (Scott) on a few occasions and I penned another piece or two on Coldfeet for Eye Spy Magazine and others to help preserve the sheer elan of the act.

So when he sent me a copy of his memoirs, He Heard A Different Drummer, I devoured it.

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Picking up the presidential Legion of Merit in 1962, LeSchack again returned to the Antarctic with the Argentine Navy, roamed Europe from Paris to Moscow on a number of research assignments, created and led an intelligence unit operating out of the Florida Keys in the years just after the Bay of Pigs.

Then there was service in Panama, Colombia, Siberia; owning his very own yellow research submarine. Hanging out with world leaders, terrorists and scientists all.

Then, there were the women.

Len’s story, his autobiography that could never have been told in real time due to the OPSEC, stretches two volumes but is well worth the read, as he has somehow managed to fit two lifetimes into one and is available over at Amazon in paperback and e-book.

Part James Bond, part Sylvanus Morley, part William ‘Strata’ Smith, part Penguin, my hat is off to you, Mr. LeSchack.

Lost Soviet hero sub found

And no, this is no sandwich.

The Russkis Schuka (Pike) class diesel subs of the 1930s were designed to be one massive class of boats, envisioned by the Revvoensoviet design bureau, to work effectively in all of the Red Banner Fleets (White, Pacific, Baltic, Black) and as such were smallish sized (187-feet oal, 700-tons max) to be able to get around in the confines of some of those near-landlocked waters.

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Capable of carrying a dozen torpedoes and a couple of deck guns, there was supposed to be upwards of 200 of these Stalin U-boats. However, just 87 were completed by 1945 and those in the Baltic and Black Seas saw horrible losses at the hands of Axis sub-busters.

When we say horrible losses, try 34 out of 87.

While most had lackluster and un-noteworthy service save their commissioning and subsequent loss, there was one that stood out.

ShCh-408 soviet submarine 2

ShCh-408 (Щ-408) was built in Leningrad and commissioned 10 Sep 1941, just weeks after Hitler broke his non-aggression pact with Uncle Joe and invaded the Motherland with a few million of his buddies.

Kuzmin

Kuzmin, left, with the swagger

Her claim to fame was in May 1943 when, under the command of LCDR Pavel Semenovich Kuzmin, she tried to thread her way through German/Finnish minefields sewn off Estonia to break out into the Baltic proper and harass shipping between Sweden and Germany.

We say try…

ShCh-408 soviet submarine
In a running battle that evolved over a four-day period, she engaged the Finnish minelayers Riilahti and Routsinsalmi along with a host of German armed trawlers in surface actions, dodged land based aircraft (downing several of them with her deck guns) and just basically put up one heck of a fight before she joined Davy Jones, taking all of her crew with her.

Kuzmin and his crew became something a hero in the dark times in the Soviet Union. A street in Leningrad was named in his honor as were several schools. The boat was posthumously named a “Guards Submarine” and her lost sailors Heroes of the Soviet Union.  Her skipper was even awarded the Order of the British Empire by her Allies.

The story of the boat and her stand, which included enduing hundreds of depth charges while submerged, became the stuff of Soviet Naval mythos.

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Now, apparently, she has been found in (Russian article but has a neat video) 236 feet of water off the Estonian island of Vaindlo.

All of her hatches are dogged down, her conning tower is riddled with shell fire and a PPSh-41 was reportedly observed on the ocean floor, which would seem to indicate a lot of the story is more than myth.

The Attack of the Dead

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One of the most celebrated pieces of Eastern European military lore of the 20th Century came from the tiny fortress of Osowiec (also spelled/spoken variously as Osovets, Ossovetz, Osovetz, Ossowicz, and Ossovets depending on who and when it was mentioned) in what is now Poland.

Back in the late 19th Century, Imperial Russian military thinking was to leave rural Western Poland open to invasion more or less and then let potential Napoleons crash their armies upon a series of fortresses strung across Eastern Poland/Belorussia while the Tsar’s millions of faithful foot soldiers were mobilized behind it to protect the Motherland.

One of these masonry and concrete forts was Osowiec, facing the marshland of German East Prussia.

The thing is, most of these forts were designed to withstand the 1870s era artillery and, by the 1900s, were thoroughly obsolete. It was joked that the outposts were so outdated that their stables held unicorns and the Grand Duke Nicholas, commander of the Russian Army at the beginning of World War I, often referred to the great fortress at Kovno (Kaunas) as “Govno” which is Russian for “shit.”

The better minds on the General Staff advocated abandoning the forts, especially after what the Germans did to Liege in 1914. However, it was not to be, and entrenched Russian military leaders, still stuck on fighting Napoleon, fed men, shells and resources that were desperately needed elsewhere into the old forts, which fell to the Germans and Austrians wholesale.

The massive 10-fort complex at Kaunas, where Lt. Gen. Vladimir Grigoriev had 90,000 men and 1,300 pieces of artillery, fell in just 11-days after it was cut off by four German divisions and a battery of 42-centimeter (17 in) Gamma-Gerät Mörsers pulverized the fortress.

At least the Russians left the guns in good condition...

At least the Russians left the guns in good condition…

Outside of Warsaw, another 90,000 Russians, including some crack Siberian units, under Lt. Gen. Nikolay Bobyr, manned Fortress Novogeorgievsk. Bobyr had 1,600 cannon, an airplane squadron to help spot for them, and a million shells to feed them. Hemmed up by the Germans and churned to gruel by six 16-inch (400mm) and nine 12-inch (300mm) howitzers, the fort was toast in just 10 days.

One of the smartest moves the Russians made was to abandon the fortifications at Ivangorod and Brest-Litovsk Fortress evac-ing what they could and blowing up what they couldn’t.

Surprisingly, one of the smallest of the Russian fortress cities, Osowiec, with but four forts including one modern polygonal one and staffed by just a few thousand reservists from the Voronezh region and some local Polish opolchenie (militia), held out a staggering 190 days against the might of the Kaiser. Russian Maj. Gen. Nikolai Brzhozovsky somehow defied the odds and, ordered to hold the Germans for two days to allow civilians to evacuate, did so from January through August 1915.

A big part of the reason why the fort endured was that Hindenburg was short of troops to assault it. This led the complex to be sieged by 14 battalions of 40 ~-year-old Landwehr sent in from nearby Prussia while heavy artillery was sent for to blow the whole thing down.

Some reports hold that the Germans plastered the fort with over a million shells ranging from 77mm field guns to 420mm Morsers. Between 27 Feb – 3 March alone was a hurricane of over 250,000 shells.

The worst of the assault came at 4 a.m. 6 August 1915, when the Germans released 30 gas cylinder batteries equipped with chlorine and bromide that created a cloud reportedly eight miles wide that drifted and lingered over Osowiec for hours. Leaves on trees were reported to have fallen off. The grass turned yellow and died. Food and water supplies were spoiled. The poison crept into every casemate and magazine, fighting position and artillery position. The defenders, without gas masks, suffered, and died–and that was just the lucky ones.

Then, as the Germans were prepping to sweep over the cursed fortification around lunchtime, some 60 battered and weary survivors of the 13th company, 226th Zemlyansky Infantry Regiment, emerged from their shelter and rushed out to engage the Prussian Landwehr facing them. Wearing improvised gas masks made from undershirts coated with urine, the men hacked blood as they moved, literally coughing up lung tissue into their shirts.

Attack of the Dead. Osowiec, Poland, the Russian Empire. August 6, 1915

Attack of the Dead. Osowiec, Poland, the Russian Empire. August 6, 1915

All of the other officers dead, the company commander at the time was Junior Lt. Vladimir Karpovich Kotlinsky, who perished in the bayonet charge.

Attack of the Dead. Osowiec, Poland, the Russian Empire. August 6, 1915 a

Kotlinsky depicted front and center

The sight led the German line to break and aborted a larger overall attack on the fort.

226 th Infantry Regiment Zemlyansky

The end in sight, Brzhozovsky pulled back, spiking his remaining guns, and blowing the magazine from a distance.

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When the Germans finally moved in, they found nothing but bodies and ruins, abandoning their prize within weeks.

Russian fortress Osowiec.

No impressive lines of pristine captured artillery at Osowiec

Osowiec

Today what is left is a military museum in Poland.

Kotlinsky for his part was awarded the St. George’s Cross, posthumously.

Still, the charge that day of the 226th, remembered as the Attack of the Dead, will remain in the annuals of martial lore forever.

Osowiec-Fortress-History-of-WWI

The tale was metal enough for Swedish power band Sabaton to cover it in The Attack of the Dead Men.

The lyrics include the chorus:
“Osowiec then and again
Attack of the dead, hundred men
Facing the lead once again
Hundred men
Charge again
Die again”

Who needs Vibranium?

Jerry Miculek is a champion shooter that is known for being able to skin a smoke pole as humanly possible. He is also apparently a big Captain America fan and he built his own 12-pound shield solid titanium shield for fun and games.

And the thing is, while it isn’t made out of the mythical Vibranium-iron alloy that the Captain’s is, Jerry’s tests with it being able to stop .45 ball are impressive.

But it does ring a bit when struck, unlike Howard Stark’s prototype for the first Avenger (“It’s stronger than steel and a third the weight. It’s completely vibration absorbent,” said the man with the funny mustache).

Moreover, Jerry’s now bullet-riddled titanium shield is one heck of a melee weapon. And I’m not sure just how old Jerry is, but he can chuck that bad boy pretty good, so I’m not going to ask.

MiG debate still smouldering after 51 years

Kilgus

Traditional wisdom has it that a Navy F-4 splashed the first U.S. air-to-air victory of the Vietnam conflict when it smoked a Chinese MiG-17 on 9 April 1965. However, the Aviationist has the backstory on the fact that a North Vietnamese MiG-17 was shot down by a USAF F-100D, flown by Capt. Donald Kilgus on 4 Apr, achieving both the only Super Sabre air-to-air victory (ever) and predating the Navy MiG kill by almost a week.

The thing is, though Kilgus painted a MiG kill marking beneath the windscreen of the F-100D tail number 55-2894 and another on the F-105G Wild Weasel that he flew later in the war, he was never given offical credit for the kill, although even the Vietnamese say it happened.

More here.

The very sinkable Thomas Oliver Selfridge

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Nice spyglass, Captain

There stands in U.S. Naval History an officer who drew the black bean not once, or twice, but well…let us just get into it.

Born 6 February 1836 in old Charlestown, Massachusetts just a generation past the War of 1812, T.O. Selfridge, Jr. came from a naval family. His father, Thomas Oliver Selfridge, Sr. had been in the Navy since 1818 and at the time of his son and namesake’s birth was a Lieutenant in the Pacific Squadron.

The younger Selfridge soon enrolled at the United States Naval Academy as an Acting midshipman on 3 October 1851, then graduated at age 18 (they minted them young back then) on 10 June 1854 in the Academy’s first class. There were six members, of which Selfridge was curiously the only one whose first name did not start with a “J.”

-John Sanford Barnes
-John Cain
-Joseph N Miller
-Thomas Oliver Selfridge
-John M Stribling
-James Madison Todd

By then his father was a full captain at the Boston Navy Yard and Selfridge the Younger shipped out on the aging 54-gun frigate USS Independence, then in the Pacific Squadron, for two years. Then came service on the 76-foot coastal survey schooner USS Nautilus before heading to the African Squadron for two years as a master on the 18-gun Boston-class sloop-of-war USS Vincennes, fresh off her famous circumnavigation of the globe.

When Vincennes was laid up in 1860, the young Selfridge was assigned to the “razeed” frigate USS Cumberland who had started life as a 50-gun frigate but was given a major overhaul that stripped her top gun deck away and gave her two dozen 9 and 10-inch Dahlgrens. As flagship of the Home Squadron, Mr. Selfridge was probably looking forward to some easy stateside service out of Hampton Roads after spending almost six solid years at sea and abroad.

Then came secession and Civil War.

A gunnery officer on Cumberland, he was part of the men who went ashore in an effort to burn the naval stores and spike 3,000 or so cannon that were scattered about the huge Navy base at Norfolk after Virginia left the Union. Leaving the port just ahead of state militia, Cumberland was soon in action with the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron exchanging pot shots with Confederate positions on the Virginia coast, watching for blockade-runners, and the like.

Cumberland had the misfortune to run into a converted screw frigate scuttled in the retreat from Norfolk– USS Merrimack, turned into ironclad ram CSS Virginia, on the morning of 8 March 1862. The ironclad crippled Cumberland during a furious cannon exchange, and then rammed in her forward starboard bow, sending her to the bottom. While Virginia took a good licking from Cumberland‘s big Dahlgrens, at the end of the day, the ironclad was still afloat and Cumberland was not.

Sinking of the Cumberland James Gurney

Sinking of the Cumberland James Gurney

The survivors of Cumberland, Selfridge included (he was able to slip out of a water filled gun port) soon were dispersed in other assignments throughout the Navy. He briefly commanded USS Monitor, after Lieutenant John L. Worden was wounded, and was soon sent off to another experimental vessel.

Selfridge was sent to the oar-powered submersible (not making this up) Alligator in August where he was the first U.S. Navy officer to command a submarine, though this endeavor tanked miserably. The tests of the green-hulled boat proved unsatisfactory, with the waterlogged ship left adrift as they helplessly floated down the river until rescued, leading Selfridge to pronounce “the enterprise… a failure.”

Alligator in the James. This shows the boat with the steam tug Satelite in the background in the James River in June of 1862 during the Seven Days Campaign. Drawing by Jim Christley.

Alligator in the James. This shows the boat with the steam tug Satelite in the background in the James River in June of 1862 during the Seven Days Campaign. Drawing by Jim Christley via Navsource.

Finding other work for our young mariner, the Navy put Selfridge in his second command, that of the City-class ironclad river gunboat USS Cairo.

The ships, called “Pook’s Turtles” after their designer, were the United States’ first ironclad warship, pre-dating the USS Monitor by several months. Each cost $191,000 (about $5-million in today’s figures) which was a bargain.

The 175-foot long boat could float in just 6 feet of muddy water and motor upstream at over 8-knots, powered by her 2 horizontal steam engines and five oblong coal-fired boilers pushing a 22-foot wide paddle-wheel at her stern.

However, Selfridge would have his command but a few months as Cairo was sunk by a Confederate remote detonated naval mine in the Yazoo River on 12 December 1862. Though she suffered no casualties, it was the second ship Selfridge had blown out from under him in the same year and he expected to be thrown out of the Navy for it.

Her sistership, the equally unlucky USS Cairo, was sunk by a mine in similar fashion 12 December 1862. Raised in 1964, she is now on display at the Vicksburg military park, some about 75-miles from where the DeKalb sits in Lake Yazoo.

From the NPS:

Though no lives were lost, the sinking of the Cairo earned Selfridge considerable criticism.  Admiral Porter accused him of disobeying orders adding, “My own opinion is that due caution was not observed.”  The admiral, apparently impressed with Selfridge’s aggressiveness, however, later withdrew his censure:  “I can see in it nothing more than one of the accidents of war arising from a zealous disposition on the part of the commanding officer to perform his duty.”

With Naval officers short, he was kept in the trade however and given command two subsequent gunboats of the Mississippi Squadron, the sidewheeler tinclad USS Manitou (20 May 1863-12 July 1863) then the larger the timberclad sidewheeler USS Conestoga from 13 July forward.

Conestoga served on the Black, Tensas, and Ouachita Rivers in the Western Department until she was sunk by collision, 8 March 1864, with USS General Price off Bondurant Point while on her way to join the expedition up the Red River.

Doh! Three ships in three years.

Nonetheless, now-Lieutenant Commander Thomas O. Selfridge, Jr. immediately took command of the brand new Neosho-class monitor USS Osage and arguably put her to good use, helping capture Fort DeRussy and then Alexandria, Louisiana, the latter by herself without firing a shot.

Osage, photographed on the Western Rivers during 1863-64

Osage, photographed on the Western Rivers during 1863-64. Selfridge would use this ship to decapitate the Rebel cavalry in the region– literally.

He later used Osage to great effect at Blair’s Landing where bombardment from the monitor killed Confederate Brig. Gen Thomas Green, the swashbuckling Texas cavalry commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department, and most of his staff. It was either that or lose his ship to horse mounted troopers, which would have likely been a bit of a sting to the pride of the Navy.

From Ricky Robinson, SFA State University:

General Green asked the 36th Texas Cavalry to mount and then asked who would follow him to the river. The river was at its lowest level in 10 years and with Texas war whoops and Rebel yells, General Green and these brave men rode right into the Red River, right into the mouths of the Yankee guns. They attacked the Osage and got to within 20 feet of it before being pushed back. Suddenly 6 more Yankee gunboats came around the bend in the river and joined in the fight.

General Green decided to make one more charge on the Osage and he ordered his men to fire directly into the portholes of the vessel in an attempt to capture it. General Green was everywhere encouraging his men and cheering them forward like a true leader does in battle. As he led the Texans to within 40 feet of the Osage, we have all heard that one lucky shot can save or win a battle, which is what happened. Suddenly the Osage fired its guns directly into the charging Texans.

The grape shot scatted like giant buckshot and one ball hit General Green above his right eye, decapitating him on the spot. The Texas cavalrymen saw what had happened and brought the General and his wounded horse from the river. Their beloved general was dead. Slowly, after an hour or so, the firing began to subside and eventually the Confederates pulled back from the river.

Those whiskers! Lieutenant Commander Thomas O. Selfridge Jr., USN Shown at the time he commanded the USS OSAGE on the Red River in April 1864. Catalog #: NH 2858

Those whiskers! Lieutenant Commander Thomas O. Selfridge Jr., USN Shown at the time he commanded the USS OSAGE on the Red River in April 1864. It was the nature of that campaign that pitted cavalry charges against river monitors. Catalog #: NH 2858

However, in May, with Selfridge aboard going on three months, Osage grounded on a sandbar near Helena, Arkansas and could not be refloated due to the rapidly falling water level even when some of her armor was removed. As the water receded, the heavy gunboat began to hog at the ends because the sand just supported her middle. This caused her longitudinal bulkheads to split and broke many rivets in her hull and on her deck.

Osage was repaired in place before being refloated at the end of November– but by then Selfridge had been reassigned to the USS Vindicator from where he commanded the gunboats of the then-quiet Fifth District near Waterport, Louisiana/Natchez, Mississippi.

It was in his district and during his time in that saddle that one of his small boats USS Rattler, the infamous little gunboat, shelled a church in Rodney, Mississippi after they lost a number of their crew during a Confederate cavalry raid at said church.

There is this dispatch he fired off to Adm. Porter.

rattler selfridge

After this, Selfridge found himself reassigned out of the rivers to the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron, where he took command of the Unadilla-class gunboat USS Huron and was given command of a naval landing party in the disastrous attack on Fort Fisher in early 1865.

Sent ashore to command the fourth battalion of Navy’s 1,600-sailor brigade in what was to be an “easy” attack on Fisher’s Northeast Bastion, the force was greeted instead by murderous fire from entrenched and protected elevated positions, in short, walking right into tactical disadvantage of the kind shown in the first 25 minutes of Saving Private Ryan— only Selfridge had bluejackets and not Rangers, and no bangalores. A small force of Marines were attached to the brigade, but were in the rear to provide covering fire– because all the bluejackets had were handguns and boarding weapons!

Photo-Navy-Charging-Fort-Fisher

From the Army’s Center for Military History’s take on the Navy Brigade’s attack at Fisher, part of the overall Wilmington Campaign

Already under sporadic cannon and rifle fire, the naval brigade charged in an elongated mass of shouting sailors and marines, with the officers quickly losing control. When the naval bombardment shifted to the sea face to prevent firing into their own troops, the unsupported sailors advanced down the open beach into a deadly hail of rifle fire and canister from Confederates on the fort’s parapets. The sailors and marines moved in bounds, fewer getting up to go forward each time. Confusion reigned as officers fell and order disintegrated. With no covering naval gunfire to suppress them, Confederate defenders stood in the open and fired into the mass below. It became a slaughter. A few sailors reached the foot of the Northeast Bastion, only to be cut down from above. Under withering fire and without direction, the sailors and marines broke, degenerating into a disorganized mob and fleeing back up the beach

Of the action, Selfridge said, “expecting a body of sailors, collected hastily from different ships, unknown to each other, armed with swords and pistols, to stand against veteran soldiers armed with rifle and bayonets” amounted to a tragic and “fatal” mistake.

Indeed, his force lost nearly a quarter of the men who hit the beaches that day as casualties within minutes and accomplished little.

Post war shuffles

When peace broke out in April, Selfridge was soon moved to a desk job at the Naval Academy and married Ellen F. Shepley.

The officer was 29 years of age and had 11 years of sea service under his belt including seeing more elephants than an African game warden, leaving hulls scattered around Southern coastlines and river beds and cannonballs in the occasional church.

It was while at the Academy that Selfridge’s father, the Commodore Selfridge, retired from the Navy after 48 years on 24 April 1866, having spent the Civil War in command of Mare Island Naval Yard. He was later elevated to the rank of Rear Admiral on the retired list.

In 1867, Selfridge the Younger was made commander of the Academy’s training ship, the old sail frigate USS Macedonian, took mids out on cruises from Newport and Annapolis, and then in 1869 was tapped to become something of an explorer.

He led the two year long Selfridge Expedition to the Isthmus of Darien (Panama), dropped off by USS Nipsic. The purpose of the expedition was to determine a canal route and a collection of photographs taken by Timothy O’Sullivan is in the Library of Congress.

Darien Selfridge Survey. The First Reconnoitering Expedition, upon its return from the Isthmus of Darien Survey, No. 1 Commander Selfridge. No. 2. Captain Houston, USMC. No. 3. Lieutenant Goodrell, No. 4. Lieutenant Commander Schulze, No. 5 P.A. Surgeon Simonds, No. 6 P.A. Paymaster Loomis, No. 7 Lieutenant Jasper, No. 8 Mr. Sullivan Asst C.S. , No. 9 Lieutenant Allen, USMC: NH 123343

Darien Selfridge Survey. The First Reconnoitering Expedition, upon its return from the Isthmus of Darien Survey, No. 1 Commander Selfridge. No. 2. Captain Houston, USMC. No. 3. Lieutenant Goodrell, No. 4. Lieutenant Commander Schulze, No. 5 P.A. Surgeon Simonds, No. 6 P.A. Paymaster Loomis, No. 7 Lieutenant Jasper, No. 8 Mr. Sullivan Asst C.S. , No. 9 Lieutenant Allen, USMC: NH 123343

Close up of Selfridge from the above. That's a pimp in a big hat, tall boots and a carbine among the palm trees there.

Close up of Selfridge from the above. That’s a pimp in a big hat, tall boots and a carbine among the palm trees there. Now that is a man who knows how to swim! –*In a sidenote, this photo was taken by renowned early photographer Timothy H. O’sullivan who accompanied Selfridge on the expedition and has some 1,700 of his plates in the Library of Congress from the trip and other travels. O’sullivan was second possibly only to Brady in his images of the Civil War, and was at Fort Fisher at the same time Selfridge was, taking a number of images that endure of the fort to his day (once it was captured.)

Upon returning from Panama, Selfridge was given his father’s old position as commander of the Boston Naval Yard, led a surveying expedition of the Amazon River, was sent to France on a diplomatic mission, and commanded the Torpedo Station at Newport (after all, he had been sunk by a naval mine once before, so he was an expert.)

He made full commander 31 December 1869 and captain 24 February 1881.

The same Civil War whiskers now on Captain Thomas O. Selfridge, USN. Catalog #: NH 2779 Naval History and Heritage Command J. Ludovici, photographer

The same Civil War whiskers now on Captain Thomas O. Selfridge, USN. Catalog #: NH 2779 Naval History and Heritage Command J. Ludovici, photographer. Likely while he was in command of the Newport Torpedo Station.

Then came his final sea command of an individual vessel, that of the Algoma-class screw sloop USS Omaha in the Asiatic Squadron, which he assumed in 1885. It was on Omaha that he decided to give her 9 and 11-inch guns some trigger time within 3-miles of the Japanese coast using the Japanese island of Ikeshima as a backstop on 4 March 1887 and surrounded by fishing smacks before scouting the impact zone ahead of time or notifying the locals.

This peculiar peacetime shore bombardment resulted in the deaths of four Japanese and the wounding of seven others.

Omaha Starboard Profile at dock

Selfridge was relieved by Omaha‘s Executive officer who took him to Yokohama where a Court of Inquiry kept him in suspense for five months. Publicly humiliated, he was sent before an official court at the Washington Naval Yard the next year and acquitted.

Photograph_of_Rear_Admiral_Thomas_O_Selfridge_Jr

Selfridge was sent back to the Boston Navy Yard, was promoted to commodore 11 April 1894 and placed as the President of the Board of Inspection, commanded the European Squadron the next year and was made a rear admiral 28 February 1896– making the first father and son to be admirals on the Naval List–  then represented the U.S. at the coronation of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia.

At the royal pavilion on the Champs de Mars, Moscow Russia circa 27 May 1898. Rear Admiral Thomas O. Selfridge Jr., USN shown with the tsar and tsarina. NH 1906 Naval History and Heritage Command

At the royal pavilion on the Champs de Mars, Moscow Russia circa 27 May 1898. Rear Admiral Thomas O. Selfridge Jr., USN shown with the tsar and tsarina. NH 1906 Naval History and Heritage Command

He retired from the Navy 6 February 1898, just days before the Maine blew up in Havana. Settling in Massachusetts, his father, the senior Rear Admiral Selfridge died in Waverly, Massachusetts in 1902 at the age of 98 and the Clemson-class destroyer USS Selfridge (DD-320) was named for him in 1919.

Selfridge the Younger joined his father in the Neptune’s wardroom in 1924 at the age of 87 and he had a destroyer of his own, the Porter-class USS Selfridge (DD-357), named in his honor in 1936. She earned four battle stars during World War II.

NH 63121

NH 63121

The junior RADM Selfridge has gotten a bad wrap from the history books.

Notably, Selfridge was not just a bad omen for ships he remained on, but those he departed as well.

While Osage was eventually put back into service after being pulled off her sandbar, she was sunk at Mobile Bay in 1865 and both the USS Monitor and submarine Alligator, which Selfridge commanded back-to-back then left for other postings, were later lost at sea. USS Nipsic, the Panama expedition ship, was almost destroyed in a hurricane in Apia Harbor, Samoa in 1889. The school ship he commanded after the Civil War, USS Macedonian, was later converted into a private hotel in New York and burned to the keel while employed as such in 1922. Even the church shelling gunboat Rattler, who he only commanded by proxy, was run aground and lost.

He has been called “The Best Swimmer in the Navy” suffering from the “Selfridge Jinx” and described as The “Jonah Man” of the Civil War Navy which in the end could be all a little harsh.

After all, he was in the first Naval Academy class, served his country for a hair under 47 years, and accomplished a number of notable deeds during the Civil War– though he did have three ships blown out from under him, left a fourth broken on a sandbar, and had his naval landing party mauled for no good result. Yes, he was court marshaled, but he beat the wrap, and in the end the Navy kept him around for another decade after, even promoting him to admiral– something that was exceedingly rare in the fleet of the 1890s.

While the destroyer named after him was scrapped, there are some relics of Selfridge that escaped time. His papers, some 1,900 documents, are preserved in 8 boxes at the Library of Congress, donated by the Naval Historical
Foundation in 1949.

Moreover, Cairo was raised from her muddy grave in the 1960s and has been preserved at the Vicksburg Military Park. When they penetrated the captain’s cabin, they found a number of Selfridge’s belongings preserved by the freshwater mud for 104 years. Several of them are on display at the park including his misspelled stamp and a Colt 1849 revolver.

COLT 1849 POCKET REVOLVER. SIX SHOT. OCTAGONAL BARREL. ON LEFT SIDE OF FRAME IS PRINTED "COLTS PATENT" SERIAL NUMBER "75447" PRINTED IN 4 PLACES. WALNUT GRIP, BRASS TRIGGER GUARD. BRASS BACK-STRAP DOWN BACK OF GRIP HAS 'T.O. SELFRIDGE, U.S.N., SEPT. 1861" INSCRIBED ON IT IN FANCY SCRIPT, SLIGHTLY WORN. NOTE; FUNCTIONAL MOVING PART

COLT 1849 POCKET REVOLVER. SIX SHOT. OCTAGONAL BARREL. ON LEFT SIDE OF FRAME IS PRINTED “COLTS PATENT” SERIAL NUMBER “75447” PRINTED IN 4 PLACES. WALNUT GRIP, BRASS TRIGGER GUARD. BRASS BACK-STRAP DOWN BACK OF GRIP HAS ‘T.O. SELFRIDGE, U.S.N., SEPT. 1861″ INSCRIBED ON IT IN FANCY SCRIPT, SLIGHTLY WORN. NOTE; FUNCTIONAL MOVING PART

Thomas O. Selfridge stencil recovered from the Cairo in the 1960s on display at the Vicksburg military park

Oh yeah, and they did wind up building that canal as well.

Last Naval Aviator with an air-to-air kill leaves the service

On Jan. 17, 1991, LCDR Mark I. Fox was flying an F/A-18 Hornet with Strike Fighter Squadron 81 (VFA-81, “Sunliners”) off USS Saratoga (CV-60). On that day, Fox shot down an Iraqi MiG-21.

Fox and his wingman, Lt. Nick Mongillo, were heading into Iraq on a bombing mission in the opening salvos of the Operation Desert Storm campaign to drive Saddam Hussein’s army out of Kuwait.

Alerted by an Air Force AWACS of enemy aircraft in their path, the two aviators switched their mission control systems to air-to-air, acquired the approaching bogeys on radar, and shot both of them down with AIM-7M Sparrows .

The MiG kill of Cdr. Mark Fox during Desert Storm. An FA-18C of VFA-81. by mark styling

The MiG kill of Cdr. Mark Fox during Desert Storm. An FA-18C of VFA-81. by Mark Styling

Fox and Mogillo then switched back to air-to-ground and went on to drop a quartet of 2,000-pound bombs on an Iraqi airfield before returning to land aboard Sara.

The two MiG kills were the only Navy aerial victories in Desert Storm, and the last, despite 25 years of almost contact combat. Fox was awarded the Silver Star for that achievement.

Now, Vice Adm. Mark Fox (USNA 1978), after 100 combat sorties and 4,900 hours including 1,300 traps on 15 carriers, is retired.

Can I get a BZ.

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