Category Archives: hero

The blade knows no gender

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Tomoe Gozen , lady Samurai (onna bugeisha) during the 12th Century Genpei War.  The above woodblock illustration print by Yōshū Chikanobu, done in 1899, is of her decapitating the Samurai Honda no Moroshige of Musashi during the Battle of Awazu.

According to an account, the English translation of Heike,

Tomoe was especially beautiful, with white skin, long hair, and charming features. She was also a remarkably strong archer, and as a swordswoman she was a warrior worth a thousand, ready to confront a demon or a god, mounted or on foot. She handled unbroken horses with superb skill; she rode unscathed down perilous descents. Whenever a battle was imminent, Yoshinaka sent her out as his first captain, equipped with strong armor, an oversized sword, and a mighty bow; and she performed more deeds of valor than any of his other warriors.

Fleet week salutes!

uss cole fleet week

May 21, 2014 Fleet week: Participants at Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, N.Y., render honors while the guided-missile destroyer USS Cole (DDG 67) passes under the Verrazano Bridge during Parade of Ships. Fleet Week New York, now in its 26th year, is the city’s time-honored celebration of the sea service. The Week-long celebration is an opportunity for the citizens of New York and the surrounding Tri-State area to meet Sailors, Marines, and Coast Guardsman, as well as witness firsthand the latest capabilities of the maritime service. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Julio Rivera/Released)

Note to the gun junkies out there, is this a M102 105mm light howitzer? UPDATE: Gun in question is a 75mm Pack Howitzer and the crew is composed of members of the Veteran Corps of Artillery, State of New York (for more info click here). The unit was founded in November, 1790 and is the second oldest Historic Military Command in America.

Thanks Phil and VCASNY!

Remember the reason for Memorial Day please.

bar us army pacific
U.S. Army infantryman, Pfc. Terry Moore of  “F” Company, 184th Regiment, 7th Infantry Division, takes cover as incoming Japanese artillery fire explodes nearby during the fight to take island of Okinawa during the Battle of Okinawa (Operation Iceberg). Moore survived with severe injuries to his face and hand. Okinawa, Okinawa Prefecture, Ryukyu Islands, Japan. June 1945. Image taken by W. Eugene Smith. 

Remember to thank a veteran today, even if you are one yourself.

D-Day : A detailed illustration of a typical platoon leader in full battle dress.

D-Day-Dress

“This drawing by combat historian Lt. Jack Shea, who was attached to the 29th Infantry Division, gives a sense of just how prepared these
troops needed to be, both for their initial amphibious assault, and for days of slogging through the potentially treacherous Normandy
countryside.”

For the Marines, the 1911 never goes out of style

One of the longest standing military traditions is the sight of a US Marine with a 1911-style .45ACP Government Issue semi-automatic. From Mexico to France and Okinawa to Afghanistan, for the past 103 years the Marines have put their faith in John Browning’s single-action longslide. Now, with a few sweet 21st century tweaks, the Colt 1911 is still the choice of Devil Dogs deployed in the world’s hotspots.

Don’t tell anyone in the Marines, but it was the US Army who adopted, after an epic and legendary series of tests, the Colt prototype semi-automatic .45ACP pistol on n March 29, 1911 and dubbed it the M1911, a designation that it retains to this day. Well, by 1913, the Navy Department likewise adopted the Army’s pistol to replace underpowered 38S&W caliber revolvers that no one, especially the marines, liked. This began a nearly 100-year love affair with the distinctive .45 longslide.

Through two world wars, the Korean conflict, Vietnam, and dozens of forgotten Banana Wars, the Marines carried the M1911 in combat and in peacetime service. Some of the Corps most famous, including Smedley Butler and Chesty Puller performed some of their greatest deeds with a 1911 at hand.

Future General Smedley Darlington Butler in 1915 earned his *second* Medal of Honor with only two Marines beside him, against a force of insurgents in Haiti. That’s Butler, as a 34-year old Major– he’s the one with the 1911.

Future General Smedley Darlington Butler in 1915 earned his *second* Medal of Honor with only two Marines beside him, against a force of insurgents in Haiti. That’s Butler, as a 34-year old Major– he’s the one with the 1911.

Read the rest in my column at University of Guns

Big SIXTY from Dixie: Returning there to become razorblades

From the end of World War Two until the late 1960s when the current Nimitz-class of carriers were designed, the US Navy was big into oil-fired super carriers. These eight ships, of the Forrestal and Kitty Hawk-class, with the single nuclear-powered USS Enterprise thrown in for good measure, were the carriers that flew the bulk of the million sorties from Yankee Station during the Vietnam conflict, went toe-to-toe with the Red Banner Fleet during the Cold War, and dropped it like it was hot during the original Gulf War.

And another one of those eight magnificent flat tops is now headed to the scrappers.

The USS Saratoga, CV-60, was sold to ESCO Marine in Brownsville, Texas this week for the ripe old cost of one penny ($0.01). ESCO will have to pay millions to tow the Sara from her current berth on Red Lead Row in Newport, Rhode Island to Texas, remove the 1950s era asbestos and other TICS and TIMs from her hull, and cut her into manageable pieces to be sold on the commercial market for her value as recycled materials.

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Sara was named after the legendary 1927-1945 era carrier who helped win WWII and establish the US Navy’s aviation legacy. That old carrier itself was the 5th ship to carry the name for the country to commemorate the famous Revolutionary War victory. These prior namesakes being sloops, corvettes, and cruisers who fought in the War of 1812, the Civil War, Spanish-American War, and WWI.

Commissioned 14 April 1956, Saratoga was the second of four Forrestal-class aircraft carriers. These huge 1070-foot, 81,000-ton beasts were the largest warships ever made up until that time. She served on the front line of the Cold War, treating the survivors of the Liberty incident during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, hammering targets off Vietnam, and forcing down the terrorists who assaulted the Achille Lauro in 1985. During Desert Shield/Storm, she conducted some 11,000 launch and recovery cycles, seeing some very hard use.

She was home-ported in Mayport, FL (Jacksonville) most of her career and as such carries the nickname “Big 60 from Dixie” (among others.)

Decommissioned following the outbreak of peace and the completion of more Nimitz class carriers, she was stricken on 20 August 1994. Maintained for a few years in Reserve condition as an emergency asset, she has for the past 15 years been so much rusting metal, receiving little in maintenance.

Her slightly older sister-ship Forrestal was sold a few months ago to the breakers for the same cost and it is expected that sisters Ranger (CV-61), decommissioned in 1993, and stored at Bremerton, Washington, and Independence (CV-62) in mothballs at  Puget Sound Naval Shipyard will soon join the class on the heap.

Of the four Kittyhawk-class ships, Constellation (CV-64), 11 years in mothballs is likely to be scrapped in coming months. The America (CV-66) was sunk in testing in 2005 to help design the new Ford-class carriers, Kennedy (CV-67) is on donation hold and may become the only US super carrier on display as a museum ship, and the aging Kitty Hawk (CV-63), her hull now some 53-years old, is still a Reserve asset until at least 2015 when the Ford comes online. It is likely that she will follow to the scrappers soon after.

For now, three cheers for the Saratoga and lets soon see her name on the Naval List again.

Invictus Gallus Gladiator

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Warship Wednesday May 7: Archer the giant killer and her pink sistership.

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off 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, May 7. Archer the giant killer and her pink sister ship.

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Here we see the United States Ship Archerfish, SS-311, a diesel-electric fleet submarine of the USS Balao-class with a bone in her mouth in open waters. The Archerfish had a safe and happy life, with an earned a reputation as the Jack the Giant Killer of the US WWII sub force.

A member of the 128-ship Balao class, she was one of the most mature US navy diesel designs of the World War Two era, constructed with knowledge gained from the earlier Gato-class. US subs, unlike those of many navies of the day, were ‘fleet’ boats, capable of unsupported operations in deep water far from home. Able to range 11,000 nautical miles on their reliable diesel engines, they could undertake 75-day patrols that could span the immensity of the Pacific. Carrying 24 (often unreliable) Mk14 Torpedoes, thee subs often sank anything short of a 5000-ton Maru or warship by surfacing and using their 4-inch/50 caliber and 40mm/20mm AAA’s. They also served as the firetrucks of the fleet, rescuing downed naval aviators from right under the noses of Japanese warships.

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Laid down at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine 22 JAN 1943, she was commissioned just over eight months later on 4 September and promptly sailed for the Pacific to join the fray. She left Pearl Harbor two days before Christmas, 1943 on her first of seven war patrols. Her first four patrols were entirely uneventful, detailed to scan regions of the Pacific that were largely devoid of Japanese activity by 1944. Her fifth one, however, struck pay-dirt.

Standing off Tokyo Bay in November 1944, she was positioned to rescue downed B-29 crews who were bombing the Japanese Home Islands in preparation for the huge planned invasions in 1945-46. Then on the evening of November 28th, she was what appeared to be a huge naval tanker with a strong destroyer escort nudge out of the bay. This ‘tanker’ soon picked up 23-knots and started to zig-zag, which meant she was something altogether different.

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Following closely, Archerfish worked her way through the screen of escorts, aligned her six forward tubes amidships of the immense target, and let rip a half-dozen improved Mk14 torpedoes, four of which found purchase on the hull of the largest aircraft carrier ever built in the world up until that time– the 73,000-ton, 872-foot long Imperial Japanese Naval ship Shinano. Capable of carrying up to 120 aircraft, including 47 in an armored hangar, she was the largest warship built until the USS Forrestal was completed in the 1950s.

 

shinano

Originally laid down as a super-battleship of the Yamato-class, she was converted following Japanese losses at Midway Island to a flattop. She had just been commissioned nine days before and was, when Archerfish found her, on her sea trials before entering service. Her existence was a secret and she was being moved in the middle of the night to Kure to complete her fitting out (she didn’t even have most of her watertight hatches installed). She was such a secret, in fact, she is the only major warship built in the 20th century to have avoided being officially photographed during its construction, with just two known photos, taken by chance, existing of her.

The Japanese didn’t even send radio messages about her sailing, much less her sinking.

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Since the US Navy didn’t even think she existed, Archerfish and her skipper, Commander Joseph F. Enright, were not recognized for the feat of killing the huge carrier– which to this day is the largest ship ever sunk by a submarine in warfare– until after the war ended and post-war analysis of Japanese records. It was then that Enright picked up the Navy Cross and Archerfish was given the Presidential Unit Citation.

Her citation reads:

“For extraordinary heroism in action during the Fifth War Patrol against enemy Japanese combatant units in restricted waters of the Pacific. Relentless in tracking an alert and powerful hostile force which constituted a potential threat to our vital operations in the Philippine area, the Archerfish (SS-311) culminated a dogged six and one-half-hour pursuit by closing her high-speed target, daringly penetrated the strong destroyer escort screen, and struck fiercely at a large Japanese aircraft carrier Shinano with all six of her torpedoes finding their mark to sink this extremely vital enemy ship. Subjected to devastating air and surface anti-submarine measures, the Archerfish skillfully evaded her attackers by deep submergence and returned to port in safety. Handled with superb seamanship, she responded gallantly to the fighting determination of the officers and men and dealt a fatal blow to one of the enemy’s major Fleet units despite the most merciless Japanese opposition and rendered valiant service toward the ultimate destruction of a crafty and fanatic enemy.”

After this her sixth and seventh war patrols were back to being much less exciting, performing lifeguard duty for pilots and watching the almost-empty sea lanes for the occasional ship. U.S. submarines rescued 504 downed airmen– to include future President George Bush–  during WWII lifeguard duty.

Archerfish was part of the US Fleet anchored in Tokyo Bay on Sept 2, 1945, for the Japanese surrender and end of WWII.

Submarines of the 20th Squadron dock in Tokyo Bay for the official surrender of Japan on Sept. 2nd, 1945

(Above) Archerfish and the rest of Subron 20 in Tokyo Bay at the surrender of Japan being nursed by the Fulton-class submarine tender, USS Proteus (AS-19). The hard-serving Proteus would remain as a submarine tender as late as 1992 and used as a berthing ship for sub crews for another decade after that, only being scrapped in 2007.

Future actor Tony Curtis, who was then a bluejacket by the name of Bernard Schwartz, had been inspired by Cary Grant’s role as a submarine skipper in the film Destination Tokyo to join the navy, was aboard Proteus at the time.  Archerfish, Curtis, and Grant would all meet again 14-years later.

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Decommissioned soon after World War Two, she sat in mothballs until Korea when she was reactivated. Unlike more than 90 WWII-era US diesel subs, she was not updated in the Guppy program with a new sail, snorkels, and improved batteries and fire control systems, keeping her old retro look until the end of the career– which helped make her a movie star.

Archerfish (inboard) and Balao (outboard), Key West 1959.

Archerfish (inboard) and Balao (outboard), Key West 1959.

She was famously used in 1959 along with two of her sisters to simulate the fictional USS Sea Tiger in the Cary Grant/Tony Curtis film Operation Petticoat. USS Balao SS-285 was painted pink and was used for exterior shots in and around Key West while USS Queenfish SS-393 was used in opening and closing scenes, and was used for the “at sea” shots filmed in and around San Diego. Archerfish herself retained her standard haze grey and black trim and was used for interior and exterior shots in and around Key West.

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It was at Key West, loaned out to the hydro-graphic command, that Archerfish was visited by then 44-year old Dr. George “Papa Topside” Bond who, along with EMC C. Tuckerfield ascended to the surface from a depth of over 322-feet over a 52-second time period, testing emergency escape protocols from the sub while she was bottomed on the Gulf of Mexico. Bond later grew famous for his work with the Sealab program in the 1960s and is considered the father of saturation diving techniques used today.

1962

Finding further use for her, the Navy kept Archerfish around as an auxiliary submarine (AGSS-311), and, trading in her deck-guns and torpedoes for hydro-graphic gear and naval scientists, she conducted a series of ‘sea-scan‘  cruises around in the Atlantic and Pacific through 1968.

Balao Class Submarine USS Archerfish pictured at Hammerfest, Norway in 1960.

Then, on 1 May of that year, at the age of just under 25 years, she was condemned, decommissioned, and struck from the Navy List. She was one of the last unconverted WWII diesel boats in service in the US Navy.

On October 19th, stripped of anything useful, she was towed out to sea and sunk by the new Pascagoula-built Skipjack-class nuclear submarine USS Snook (SSN-592).

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Archerfish survived the first two torpedoes until sunk appropriately by an old-school WWII-era Mk 14-5 in 52 seconds.

The ship still has a very active veterans association at ussarcherfish.com. Although she is no longer afloat, eight Balao-class submarines are preserved as museum ships across the country.

Please visit one of these fine ships and keep the legacy alive:

  • USS Batfish (SS-310) at War Memorial Park in Muskogee, Oklahoma.
  • USS Becuna (SS-319) at Independence Seaport Museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
  • USS Bowfin (SS-287) at USS Bowfin Submarine Museum & Park in Honolulu, Hawaii.
  • USS Clamagore (SS-343) at Patriot’s Point in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.
  • USS Ling (SS-297) at New Jersey Naval Museum in Hackensack, New Jersey.
  • USS Lionfish (SS-298) at Battleship Cove in Fall River, Massachusetts.
  • USS Pampanito (SS-383) at San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park in San Francisco, California, (which played the part of the fictional USS Stingray in the movie Down Periscope).
  • USS Razorback (SS-394) at Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum in North Little Rock, Arkansas.

 

 

Specs:

0821209
Displacement, Surfaced: 1,526 t., Submerged: 2,424 t.
Length 311′ 10″
Beam 27′ 3″
Draft 15′ 3″
Speed, Surfaced 20.25 kts, Submerged 8.75 kts
Cruising Range, 11,000 miles surfaced at 10kts; Submerged Endurance, 48 hours at 2kts
Operating Depth Limit, 400 ft
Complement 6 Officers 60 Enlisted
Armament, ten 21″ torpedo tubes, six forward, four aft, 24 torpedoes, one 4″/50 caliber deck gun, one 40mm gun, two .50 cal. machine guns
Patrol Endurance 75 days
Propulsion: diesels-electric reduction gear with four Fairbanks-Morse main generator engines., 5,400 hp, four Elliot Motor Co., main motors with 2,740 hp, two 126-cell main storage batteries, two propellers.
Fuel Capacity: 94,400 gal.

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/

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!

Calling cards..

DAS DICKE ENDE KOMMT NOCH” –Used by the First Special Services Force, also known as the Black Devils Brigade’s, upon calling cards left on the bodies of dead Nazi soldiers as a means of psychological warfare. Translated: the worst is yet to come

1st special service force

Lucky no. 46

mustang no 46 paul mantz

North American P-51C-1-NA NX-1204, racing number 46 flown by Stanley Reaver in the 1949 Bendix Transcontinental Race with an average speed of 450.2 mph…and finished 2nd. Paul Mantz had flown the same plane in the 1948 Bendix and won first place in just over 7 hours from coast  to coast. NX-1204 was donated to the International Flight and Space Museum in Santa Ana, California and now is in the Fantasy of Flights collection, still in flying conditon, but in WWII livery.

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