Category Archives: man card

Backpacking through Italy, with a PIAT

80 years ago today: Canadian Army Corporal Earl Harold Pruner, 19, of The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment, carries both a PIAT anti-tank weapon and an M1 Thompson sub-machine gun through war-torn Motta, Italy, 2 October 1943.

Library and Archives Canada LAC 3229941

The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment, known affectionately as the “Hasty P’s” traces its lineage to seven assorted local militia units dating to 1863 and was only stood up for active campaigning as a regiment in 1939. It went on to be awarded more Battle Honours (31) during WWII than any other Canadian Infantry Regiment, only earning its first in the Husky Landings in Sicily in July 1943– showing just how grueling and nonstop the combat was that the Hastys saw before VE Day.

Illustrating this, the above good Corporal Pruner would have just over two months to live as he was killed in action on 7 December 1943 during the two-day assault over the Moro River. He had lied about his age, dropping out of school and joining up in 1940 at age 16, following in the footsteps of his dad, who had served on the Western Front in the Great War. 

During WWII, one of the unit’s officers, future author and environmentalist Capt. Farley Mowat took detailed notes and made the unit the subject of his historical book, The Regiment, which makes great reading.

The unit endures as an understrength three-company infantry battalion within the Army Reserve’s 33 Canadian Brigade Group, stationed across Ontario.

Grendel in its Cave, 80 Years Ago

Here we see the Kriegsmarine battleship Tirpitz at Kåfjord in German-occupied Norway, in September 1943. Note the triple torpedo nets surrounding the beast and the flotilla of attending patrol and support craft.

The slightly improved sister to the infamous Bismarck, she would be attacked by an unlikely Beowulf in the form of a trio of British midget submarines while the monster was safe in its Kåfjord cave some 80 years ago today.

Termed Operation Source, after passing through the series of protective torpedo nets, one of the miniature subs, HMS X6, placed two mines of two tons each under the battleship’s keel, while X7 set a third.

Operation ‘Source’, 22 September 1943. Johne Makin (b.1947) via the Royal Navy Submarine Museum Collection.

While all three of the daring British X craft were lost in the resulting explosion and Tirpitz was severely damaged, she was back in service six months later and it would not be until November 1944 that the injured beast was finally slain.

Viking Flag Waving

The Royal Danish Navy recently changed out the flag at remote Isbjørneø in Baffin Bay, some 60 miles from Thule AB in Greenland. Uninhabited except for seabirds for at least the past 170 years, the windswept rock is part of the desolate Carey Islands. Importantly for the sake of geography, it is the westernmost point of Greenland and, by extension, the Realm of Denmark. The distance in a straight line from Copenhagen is 2,448 miles, roughly. 

The 1,700-ton Knud Rasmussen class offshore patrol vessel HDMS Lauge Koch (P 572)— appropriately named for a Danish geologist and Arctic explorer who led two dozen expeditions to Greenland in the 1920s and 30s– visited the island on 4 September to swap out the flags.

The annual mission involved heading ashore through the iceberg-filled waters from the OPV by survey launch, climbing a nearly 500-foot cliff, shimmying up the flagpoles, and swapping out the old weather-beaten Dannebrog and Kalaallit erfalasuat for new.

To render honors, the eight-member detachment, led by Captain Per Skov Madsen, changed into the parade uniforms they brought and delivered a proper salute, observed by arctic puffins and seagulls– and the ship’s UAV.

Introducing Captain Patton

This notable oath, via the 1,572-page Official Military Personnel File for George S. Patton Jr., digitized in the National Archives, was signed some years 106 ago today.

When his promotion was announced officially on 17 May, Patton, who had only a few months before had been on detached duty from the 5th U.S. Cavalry Regiment to serve as an aide to Brig. Gen. John J. Pershing for the Punitive Expedition against Villa in the Northern Mexican desert regions, was, much to his dismay, detailed to Front Royal, Virginia, to oversee horse procurement for the Army. After all, for a noted horseman that had represented his country in the 1912 Olympics and had designed the final U.S. martial cavalry saber (the M1913) after becoming a Master of the Sword at the French cavalry school at Namur, it seemed like a good fit. 

However, as old “Black Jack” had recently been promoted himself to major general and named Commander of the nascent American Expeditionary Force upon the unexpected death of General “Fighting Fred” Funston, Capt. Patton would soon be leaving his horses behind for the steel cavalry in France.

Operation Alamo at 80

Markham Valley, Nadzab Airfield, near Lae, New Guinea: An Australian Digger and a U.S. Army Paratrooper link up on 6 September 1943. The day before, the paratroops had taken the valley in a surprise assault by air in conjunction with Allied landings at Lae, about a dozen miles to the East.

U.S. Army Signal Corps image SC 185994 via NARA

Note the Digger’s distinctive Owen submachine gun, which may denote him as a member of 2/6th Independent Company commandos, which was part of the small overland force that set out to rendevous at Nadzab from Tsili Tsili on 2 September. Also of interest is the apparently field-made assault vest worn by the Paratrooper of the 503rd Parachute Infantry Regiment, who had just carried out their first combat jump.

Besides the commandoes, the Australian overland group, primarily engineers and pioneers, consisted of B Company/Papuan Infantry Battalion, 2/2nd Pioneer Battalion, 2/6th Field Company, and detachments from the 7th Division Signals, 2/5th Field Ambulance and ANGAU, along with 760 native porters.

The day after the landing, the Australians and Americans went to work on the airstrip with hand tools. Trees were felled, potholes filled in, and a windsock erected while the waist-high Kunai grass was burned away.

(U.S. Air Force Number 67091AC)

Some 27 miles northwest of strategically important Lae by road and half that by air, it was as if Nadzab was placed in the middle of nowhere for a reason. A godsend to Allied strategists.

Founded in 1910 as a German colonial Lutheran mission station, by 1943, the grassland at Nadzab, at one time cleared from the jungle perhaps for experiments in farming, was some 900 yards long but it was thought it was easily clearable to 2,000 yards with a little work– making it an ideal location for an airfield in the Japanese’s back yard.

The strip to be captured at Nadzab is shown before the landing of the 503rd Parachute Infantry. (U.S. Air Force Number A25418AC)

After much planning, it was hit by 1,700 men of the 503 PIR in a full-scale regimental jump, with 31 Australian gunners of the 2/4th Field Regiment tagging along on what was only their second time leaving an aircraft via parachute. 

The 255-aircraft initial assault on 5 September was dramatic in the extreme, being led by 48 low-level B-25 bombers who blitzed the unoccupied valley with 2,800 20-pound frag bombs and their on-board .50 cals, followed by 7 A-20s laying smoke for the 79 C-47s that carried the paratroopers. Five B-17s brought up the rear, dropping supplies. Fighter cover was provided by a mix of 108 P-38s, P-39s, and P-47s. Another three B-17s filled with command observers– including MacArthur himself who received an Air Medal for the act– along with five more B-17s carrying weather and nav teams, kept everyone in line.

The 31 Ozzies of 54 Battery, 2/4th Field Regt, with only one practice jump under their belt, parachuted into Nadzab later that day with two dismantled 25-pounder-Short guns and 192 boxes of ammunition to provide the Americans some more support than their organic 60mm mortars, dropped by a mix of five C-47s and two B-17s.

This picture shows the attack on Nadzab at its height, with one battalion of paratroops descending from Douglas C-47s in the foreground, while in the distance (left) another battalion descends against a smokescreen. Coming in at 400-500 feet at 100 knots, each aircraft dropped its stick in just 10 seconds. The whole regiment was unloaded in 4.5 minutes (U.S. Air Force Number 25418AC)

“From one of the lowest altitudes ever attempted in battle, paratroopers jump among the trees and 12-ft. high kunai grass of the Markham valley.” (U.S. Air Force Number D25418AC)

While smoke screens build up, paratroopers drop from low-flying Douglas C-47 airplanes on each side, along the column of C-47s and about 1,000 ft. above them, come close-cover fighter support. (U.S. Air Force Number C25418AC)

Jumping unopposed, the 503rd lost three men killed and 33 injured in hard hits while one member of the Australian 2/4th Field Regt was likewise injured. Nonetheless, the results were so good that a follow-on glider force assault was canceled and the first transport aircraft landed at the improvised airstrip the next morning, with more than 40 planes cycling in on D+1 alone.

The next day, air-portable bulldozers and graders began arriving and within a month the airfield was fully functional with four strips. This enabled the Australian 7th and 9th Infantry Divisions to close with the Japanese. 

Natives of New Guinea crowd around supply-laden Douglas C-47’s which have landed at Nadzab Airstrip, New Guinea. In the distance, another plane comes in for a landing. 11 September 1943. (U.S. Air Force Number 67083AC)

Natives, supervised by men of the Australian 7th Division, unload supplies from a Douglas C-47 at Nadzab Airstrip in New Guinea. 11 September 1943. (U.S. Air Force Number 67085AC)

The landing forced the Japanese evacuation of Lae to take a route that proved to be disastrous for them and 3rd Bn/503d had a major skirmish with the rear guard of this exodus.

As noted by the Army, “The successful employment of Parachute troops, in the Markham Valley, has been credited with saving the concept of vertical envelopment from being abandoned following several less than successful engagements in Europe.”

Interior of Douglas C-47 showing Biak wounded, litter and walking cases, to be evacuated to Lae and Nadzab New Guinea. (U.S. Air Force Number D52993AC)

The field, besides being a logistical hub for the Australian-American forces pushing the Japanese out of New Guinea, Nadzab served as a base for assorted 5th Air Force units including the F-7 Dumbos of the 20th Combat Mapping Squadron (20th CMS), the B-25s of the “Air Apaches” of the 345th Bombardment Group, and the 43rd Bombardment Group (Heavy), with “Ken’s Men” flying their big B-24 Liberators from the growing base in 1944. Likewise, Navy units of the FAW-17, including the lumbering PB4Y-1 patrol bombers of VB-106, were stationed there as well.

The crew of the 64th Bomb Squadron, 43rd Bomb Group, pose beside their plane, the Consolidated B-24J-150-CO Liberator “Shining Example” at Nadzab, New Guinea. 25 May 1944. The aircraft, SN 44-40184, got her name as she was the first natural finish B-24 in SW Pacific. (U.S. Air Force Number 68882AC)

Post-war, Nadzab was abandoned by the Allies, almost as quickly as it was occupied.

Aerial View Of Nadzab Airstrip – Nadzab, New Guinea, July 1946. (U.S. Air Force Number 116758AC)

It eventually became a commercial airport, with, ironically, a redevelopment project spearheaded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency.

As for the 503rd, they jumped again in July 1944 at Noemfoor Island in New Guinea as an airborne reinforcement, helping to defend the Kamiri airstrip against Japanese counterattacks. After that operation, the 503rd shifted to the Philippine Islands where, on 16 February 1945, the regiment made its celebrated jump onto Corregidor Island in Manilla Bay, earning its nickname “The Rock.”

Today its first battalion (1–503rd IR) is still on active duty, assigned to the 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team in Vicenza, Italy.

The last of the Class of ’40…

Two great republics lost their final cadets from the “Class of 1940” in the past few days.

BG Paul D. Phillips

Born on March 9, 1918, Brigadier General Paul Phillips (USMA 1940), a red stripe from almost the moment he put on his butter bar, was recognized as the oldest living West Point Graduate earlier this year and was awarded the Ancient Order of Saint Barbara by the United States Field Artillery Association at 105 years old.

His WWII survival story was epic, having been part of the Philippine Defense Force during the Japanese invasion of those islands in 1941 and then enduring 39 grueling months of captivity in multiple camps of which he later said, “I expected the worst and that’s what I got”:

He fought in the Battle of the Philippines on Mindanao and was taken prisoner in 1942 after the Japanese invaded Cebu and General Sharp surrendered. As a POW, General Phillips traveled from Mindanao to Luzon, then to Japan in January 1945, to Pusan, Korea in April, finally ending up in a prison camp near Mukden in Manchuria. During one move he and his fellow POWs were loaded onto two different ships that were bombed by the U.S. forces, unaware that they contained their fellow servicemembers. The prisoners were rescued mid-August of 1945 in Manchuria by a 5-person team that included one of Phillips’ classmates, James Hennessy. After WWII, BG Phillips served as a gunnery instructor at the Field Artillery School and graduated from Command and General Staff College in 1951.

In March 2009 BG Phillips completed a Veterans History Project oral history interview and earlier this year conducted a second, longer, and more candid interview.

The last living graduate for the USMA Class of 1940, BG Paul D. Phillips (USA, Retired) passed away on August 27, 2023.

In 2010, BG Phillips donated his POW-worn West Point class ring to the Class Ring Memorial Program, its steel mingling with those of future members of the Long Gray Line.

Dernier cadet de Saumur

Also remembered this week is Chef d’Escadron (cavalry major) Yves Raynaud, who passed at age 104. He was the final member of the old École de cavalerie Saumur, the famed French cavalry officer’s school that dated to 1763 and once counted a young George S. Patton in attendance.

Raynaud was among an expanded class of 560 young reservists called up to train as officers (Elèves aspirants de reserve) and, during the hectic final days of the Fall of France in June 1940, took to the field to fight the oncoming Germans.

The Saumur cadets, ordered to retreat to the south on June 15th, instead joined a scratch force composed of a similar battalion of cadets from the infantry school at Saint-Maixent, some colonial troops of the 13ᵉ Regiment of Algerian Tirailleurs (13ᵉ RTA), the remnants of the 6ᵉ Regiment engineers, and a reconnaissance squadron of the 19ᵉ Regiment of Dragoons, totaling between 2,000 and 2,500 depending on whose accounts you read.

Their armament was laughable, consisting of just a handful of Panhard armored cars and Hotchkiss light tanks, five old 75mm guns left over from the Great War, and 10 light mortars as well as similarly scarce small arms– the Saumur cadets often had to share rifles as there wasn’t enough to go around and their only organic support weapons were a few St. Étienne Mle 1907 machine guns that the school had for training purposes.

Defying orders to fall back or at least stack their arms, the force of cadets and stragglers instead stood strong for two days –June 19 and 20– in a delaying action for a series of Loire River bridges between Montsoreau and Gennes now known as the Battle of Saumur or the Battle of the Loire.

Forming what was termed La Haie Sainte (The Sacred Line), and no doubt girded by the fact that the action was fought on the 125th anniversary of Waterloo, the French cadets prevented a much stronger German force (which ultimately grew to 40,000) from crossing the Loire and allowed other units to withdraw through them to the south, escaping to fight again another day.

Their commander, Saumur superintendent Colonel Charles Michon, said of their stand when the bulk of the defeated and demoralized French force was retreating and surrendering:

“There was hope in them. Their sacrifice, among others equally pure, will have maintained the soul of the country (aura maintenu l’âme de la patrie). They, dying, ordered France to rebuild itself, on their tombs, to the height of its immortal destinies”.

Of the 560 students from Saumur Cavalry School, 79 were killed and 47 wounded in the fighting.

Post-war, Saumur, no longer a horse cavalry school, reformed as the current armor school.

Raynaud, who later fought with the Resistance and retired from the Army in the 1960s, died in Toulouse on August 29.

His funeral, with full military honors, was conducted on Sept. 5 at the Saint-Hilaire church in Toulouse.

His was saluted by a guard drawn from the 14e Régiment d’infanterie et de soutien logistique parachutiste, the 1er Régiment du train parachutiste, and the 503e Régiment du train.

Gen. Pierre Schill, Chief of Staff of the French Army, closed the events with, “Sleep in peace my commander, the army pays homage to you.” (Dormez en paix mon commandant, l’armée de Terre vous rend hommage)

Warship Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2023: Of Mustaches, Stars, and Condemned Cannons

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, Sept. 6, 2023: Of Mustaches, Stars, and Condemned Cannons

Photograph by J.S. Johnston, New York. Naval History and Heritage Command NH 63251

Above we see a beautiful large format photograph of the early protected cruiser, USS Newark (Cruiser No. 1, later C-1) — the first modern steel-hulled cruiser in the U.S. Fleet, in the Hudson in 1891. You can clearly see her broadside of a half dozen 6″/30 guns, the ornately adorned ram bow, the extensive array of whaleboats and gigs to include a steam launch in the water, as well as her three-masted auxiliary sailing rig. A true warship caught between the end of the canvas and iron Navy and the beginning of the one made of steel.

She would have a unique place in American naval history.

The Squadron of Evolution

The Navy’s first run of steel-hulled ships, all mounting modern rifled breech-loading naval guns, protected by at least a modicum of armor, relying on steam engineering plants as their main means of propulsion, and even lit by electric lights, started with the famed “ABCD” ships– the protected cruisers USS Atlanta, Boston, and Chicago, joined by the smaller dispatch boat USS Dolphin (later PG-24)-– all ordered from the same shipyard, John Roach & Sons of Chester, Pennsylvania.

While the ABC part of this quartet was built to fight, running 3,200 tons in the case of Atlanta and Boston and 4,500 tons for Chicago, with as much as 4 inches of armor plate and a total of eight 8-inch, 20 6-inch, and two 5-inch guns between them, Dolphin was a lot less of a bruiser. That was OK, because their demonstration unit, the so-called Squadron of Evolution, or “White Squadron” was soon augmented by three smaller 1,900-ton Palmer and Cramp-built Yorktown class gunboats including USS Bennington and USS Concord.

Although the ABCD boats and the Yorktowns were all ordered and built between 1883 and 1890, it is Newark, ordered 3 March 1885 and not delivered until 1891, that is classified by the Navy as Cruiser No. 1 as Atlanta and Boston never received “C” series hull/pennant numbers while Chicago, by a twist of fate, earned a somewhat retroactive “CA-14” only in 1920 when she was hopelessly obsolete. The follow-on protected cruisers USS Charleston, USS Baltimore, USS Philadelphia, and USS San Francisco, therefore, became C-2, C-3, C-4, and C-5 although their orders and construction roughly overlapped Newark.

The Squadron of Evolution, including Newark on the top center and right across from Atlanta. So pretty she made the poster twice! LOC 79-HPS-9-1339

The “White Squadron” or “Squadron of Evolution” was underway off the U.S. East Coast, circa 1891. Ships are, (I-R): YORKTOWN (PG-1), BOSTON (1887) CONCORD (PG-3), ATLANTA (1887), NEWARK (C-1) CHICAGO (1889) NH 47026

Anywhoo…

Meet Newark

Our subject was the first warship commissioned to honor the largest city in New Jersey (as well as towns in Delaware, New York, and Ohio).

Some 328 feet long overall (311 at the waterline) she was considered a considerable improvement on Chicago. With a displacement of just over 4,000 tons, she carried a complete protective deck that ran two inches thick amidships with three inches at the slopes as well as splinter shields for her main guns and a conning tower with three-inch armor on the sides.

USS Newark (C-1) unofficial plans, published in the Transactions of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, 1893. Published in the Transactions of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, NH 70105.

As a sailing ship, she was rigged as a barque without royals or headgear while her main propulsion was via a set of HTE engines propelled by four coal-fired boilers, sufficient to gin up 8,500 hp and able to drive the fighting ship at a healthy 18 knots.

The immaculate USS Newark (C-1) in harbor with other warships, during the early 1890s, showing off her wide and very functional yardarms. Glass lantern slide original from the A.S. Murray Collection. NH 45473

Her ornate rounded bow, Newark shown at the New York Navy Yard, 23 March 1899. Courtesy of the Skerritt Collection, Bethlehem Steel Co. archives. NH 45475

Dynamo Room Library of Congress Photograph ID det.4a14464

USS Newark (C-1) engine room. Detroit Photographic Company, circa 1891-1912. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. Lot 3000-F-10

Her primary armament was a full dozen 6″/30 Mark 3 Mod 0 breechloading guns, an upgrade from the 6″/30 Mark 1s carried by the ABCD squadron and the Yorktowns. Black powder “bag” guns, they were capable of firing 105-pound AP shells out to 18,000 yards at maximum elevation/charge, with a rate of fire of about one shell every other minute or so. 

A barefoot member of Newark’s crew poses by the breech of a 6″/30 gun, 1898. Copied from the collection of WM. D. Edwards, courtesy of Robert W. Edwards, 1974. NH 80844

USS Newark (Cruiser #1), gunners loading a 6-inch gun. Photographed by Edward H. Hart, published by Detroit Publishing Company, between 1891-1901. LC-DIG-DET-4a14471

USS Newark C-1, 6 inch gun

To zap small steam torpedo launches and small craft capable of coming in close and under her broadside’s minimum depression arc, Newark carried an array of small pieces.

This included four 57mm/40cal Hotchkiss Mk I/II 6-pounders, a quartet of 47mm/40cal 3-pounder Hotchkiss Mk Is, and two 37mm/20cal Hotchkiss Mk I revolving Gatling-style guns.

USS Newark. Electrician 1/c Sullivan with one of the ship’s six-pounder guns, in 1898. NH 80783

Newark. The ship’s Marines operating a 3-pounder gun and Gatling gun during a drill in the 1890s. Description: NH 75458

USS Newark (C-1) crew member on the forecastle, with two 37mm Hotchkiss revolving guns in 1898. Description: NH 80779

Like most naval vessels of her day, she could muster about a third of her 384-man crew who, joined with her Marine detachment, could disembark for extended landing force service ashore, equipped with rifles and field gear as a light infantry company. More on this later.

USS Newark (C-1) ship’s Marine Guard, photographed during the 1890s. Note the blue sack coats and kepis not much removed from Civil War days, and what look to be M1884 Springfield Trapdoor rifles, weapons that would remain in service even when supplanted by the Winchester M1895 Lee-Navy bolt-action repeater. For instance, six Springfield M1884 Trapdoor rifles were recovered from the wreck of the USS Maine in 1900. NH 75457

Marching order, seen here by Marines of USS Maine in 1895, would consist of Mills cartridge belts, haversacks, canteens, leg gaiters, and day packs for both the Marines and the ship’s Naval company. From the Wendell C. Neville Collection (COLL/2985) in the Marine Corps Archives & Special Collections.

USS Newark (C-1) ship’s Marines at action stations, on the poop deck, during the 1890s. Note the drummer in the center, with the ship’s wheel below. Also, note the ventilator. NH 75459

Newark, gunners with 6-inch gun and crew gathering boarding/landing gear including rifles, Mills belts, bayonets (right), and cutlasses (left) LOC LC-DIG-DET-4a14473v

Cutlass practice-1890s-aboard the early protected cruiser USS Newark (C-1). LOC photo via Shorpy colorized by Postales Navales

Then of course the ship herself was a weapon, a massive ram capable of smashing into the hull of an opponent and crashing her strengthened bow into the bulkheads of an enemy vessel.

How about that ram bow! USS Newark (C-1) In dry dock, Winter of 1898. NH 80799

And a shot of her bow from the same dry dock period, just for continuity. Note by this time her rigging had been reduced for the SpanAm war and she wears haze gray. NH 80798

Among her boats were plans for a 28-foot steam whaleboat, a 24-foot twin-masted sail cutter, two 28-foot sail cutters, a 30-foot whale gig, and two 29-foot whaleboats.

U.S. Navy protected cruiser, USS Newark (C-1), boat drill at Hampton Roads, Virginia. Detroit Photographic Company, circa 1891-1912. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. Lot 3000-F-12

Another J.S. Johnston, New York image from 1891 of Newark, this time from the bow, showing her with boats alongside. NH 69195

USS Newark (C-1) hoisting in the steam launch, preparatory to going to sea, 9 August 1898. Note her dark wartime topside scheme. NH 80793

USS Newark (C-1) view on the deck, looking aft, in 1898, showing the 45-star flag and a cutter. NH 80780

Happy service

Ordered from William Cramp and Sons, Philadelphia– the yard that had built Yorktown and would likewise build the cruisers Baltimore (C-3) and Philadelphia (C-4) alongside– Newark was laid down 12 June 1888, launched 19 March 1890, and commissioned on Groundhog’s Day 1891.

Her first skipper was Capt. Silas Casey Jr. (USNA 1860), a future admiral who had learned his trade during the Civil War on the blockade line aboard the famed Unadilla-class gunboats Wissahickon and Winooski. Her next eight skippers, some of whom only held command for a few months to cap a career, were all Civil War veterans– the end of an era.

This 1891 photograph via the Detroit Photographic Company shows Captain Silas Casey (USNA 1860), skipper of the cruiser USS Newark (C-1), sitting in his well-furnished stateroom with his Old English Bulldog sleeping quietly on the floor. Casey doubled down on being a dog lover as shown by his taste in art as the picture behind him is an illustration used for the “No Monkeying” brand of cigars, which depicts two bulldogs playing poker with a monkey. LOC LC-USZ62-71185 https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2003656056/

Newark from her starboard bow, showing the size of her fighting tops. Halftone photo, published in “Uncle Sam’s Navy.” NH 45474

The next half-decade, until she entered ordinary for a well-deserved refit in March 1896, saw Newark showing the flag in West Indies ports then ranging to South Africa and Europe, often serving as an admiral’s flagship, and taking part in numerous international naval activities such as the 400th Anniversary of Columbus’ sailing which included port calls in Genoa (the explorer’s birthplace), towing a replica of the humble caravel Nina across the Atlantic from Spain, and attending the myriad of naval reviews in Hampton Roads and New York in 1893.

This left several great images of our cruiser.

USS Newark (C-1) photographed in 1892 at Genoa with a beautiful view of her 6″/30s and boat davits. Courtesy of Arrigo Barilli. NH 45476

USS Newark at Barcelona, 1892

Torpedo Boat USS Cushing TB-1 New York USS Newark C-1 USS Chicago

USS Newark, Detriot Photo 020641

Period photographers likewise captured some great shots of her crew that stand as absolute time capsules for the era, saved in a scrapbook from the vessel collected by William D. Edwards and via the Detroit Postcard company.

USS Newark (Cruiser # 1) Two African American members of the cruiser’s crew, 1898. The man on the left is wearing a steward’s uniform. Copied from the scrapbook of William D. Edwards, courtesy of Robert W. Edwards, 1974. NH 80782

USS Newark (C-1) Officer and crew member pose by the wheelhouse, in 1898. Copied from the scrapbook of William D. Edwards, Courtesy of Robert W. Edwards, 1974. NH 80845

USS Newark (C-1) crew members by a searchlight, in 1898. Copied from the collection of William D. Edwards, courtesy of Robert W. Edwards, 1974. NH 80843

U.S. Navy protected cruiser, USS Newark (C-1), shown: quarter-deck. Note the old Tars. Detroit Photographic Company, circa 1891-1912. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. Lot 3000-F-9

U.S. Navy protected cruiser, USS Newark (C-1), shown: berthing deck. Detroit Photographic Company, circa 1891-1912. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. Lot 3000-F-4

USS Newark bridge LOC LC-D4-20065

USS Newark Petty Officers Mess LC-D4-20070

War!

Following an extensive 14-month overhaul, Newark recommissioned on 23 May 1898, just weeks after the U.S. declaration of war on Spain. When she emerged, she looked much more like a 20th Century warship rather than one of the 19th, having removed her original mainmast as well as her sails and rigging to leave two short military masts topped with searchlights, and donned a heavy coat of gray paint. She was swathed in splinter nets and landed much of her ornate woodwork from below decks. 

USS Newark (C-1) view on deck, 9 August 1898, showing splinter netting rigged and a 6″/30 mount. Note that this was just after the Spanish-American war, when the cruiser was made very much ready for combat. NH 80778

USS Newark (C-1) in port, Antonio Harbor, Jamaica, 11 October 1898. Note she is in her gray warpaint with a much-reduced rigging and just two military masts. NH 80792

Her wartime skipper was Capt. Albert Smith Barker (USNA 1861), who had served in the Civil War aboard the old USS Mississippi and held command of the early battleship USS Oregon and, leaving his position on the Army-Navy Board eagerly accepted command of Newark. Her new navigator, late of the armored cruiser USS New York, was LT William F. Halsey Sr.– yes, that Halsey’s old man.

Sailing on 13 June for Key West and then Cuba, she joined the blockade on 30 June and served intermittently as the flagship of Commodore John Crittenden Watson, Commander, Eastern Fleet. Cruising in Cuban waters throughout the summer, Newark bombarded the port of Manzanillo on 12 August and on the following day accepted its surrender.

Carrying part of the First Marine Battalion with its commander, Col. Robert W. Huntington, aboard, Barker noted the sadness displayed by the Marine colonel at the sight of the white flags over Manzanillo on 13 August, saying, “As part of the contemplated plan of operations was the landing of some or all of the marines of Colonel Huntington’s command. This officer’s regret at the loss of an opportunity to win additional distinction for his corps and himself was only equaled by his careful study of the necessities of the case and his zealous entrance into the spirit of the enterprise.”

After the Battle of Santiago, she participated in the final destruction of Admiral Cervera’s fleet, bombarding the burned Spanish hulks.

USS Newark (C-1) coaling from a schooner, 1898. Though deteriorated, this photo shows an activity that was a frequent, and very dirty, reality of Spanish-American War naval operations. Copied from the collection of William D. Edwards, by courtesy of Robert W. Edwards, 1974.NH 80841

A hunting party from USS NEWARK (C-1) in the ruins of a Spanish building on Windward Point, entrance to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, 3 September 1898– it looks like they are armed with M1895 Lee Navy rifles. NH 80791

With the war over, Newark was needed on the other side of the globe where the Philippines, a former Spanish colony, was ablaze.

After a short trip back to New York, Newark steamed through the Straits of Magellan to San Francisco then across the Pacific for the Philippines arriving in Cavite on 25 November 1899. By the end of the year, her landing forces were moving ashore, receiving the surrender of insurrectionists in the provinces of Cagayan, Isabela, and Bataan.

Philippine Insurrection, 1899. The garrison of Aparri from the USS Newark after the Surrender. McCalla collection, presented to Library by Captain D.W. Knox, USN. (Ret) 1926. NH 123421.

Boxing the Boxers

Having had little rest since she was recommissioned in May 1898 that took her from Santiago to Bataan, the year 1900 found our cruiser and her seasoned crew still in haze gray on Asiatic Station. She pulled up anchor on 20 May while at Yokohama, bound for China to help land reinforcements to relieve the international legations under siege by the anti-foreign/anti-Christian forces of the “Society of the Righteous Harmonious Fists,” at Peking.

Just two days later, she was in the midst of the mess, arriving at the port of Tientsin and then moving against Taku and Chefoo.

Over the next 11 weeks, Newark and her crew and Marine detachment would be involved in a series of actions, battles, and sieges ranging from running dispatches and medical supplies through bandit territory to outright heavy fighting against the Chinese Imperial Army.

A joint naval force was assembled from eight European navies and placed under the command of VADM Edward Hobart Seymour, Royal Navy, with Newark’s Captain Bowman H. McCalla as the second in command. In all, the 2,100-strong force (including 112 Americans, mostly from Newark) went down in history as the Seymour Relief Expedition, which tried but failed to relieve Peking and had to withdraw back to Tientsin by train, with Peking relieved later in the summer by the successful Gaselee Expedition.

Among Newark’s crew at the time was a young midshipman, Joseph Knefler Taussig, who would go on to become a WWII Vice Admiral– one of a very few individuals who served in the Spanish-American War, World War I and World War II, famously clashing with FDR. Taussig would be in good company, as, included among the British contingent were young Royal Navy officers Capt. John Jellicoe and LT David Beatty.

The cadet was seriously wounded in the leg during the Expedition. He wasn’t the only one. During the battle for the Hsiku Arsenal, Capt. McCalla, along with 25 of his force, was wounded and five were killed.

Seymour Expedition, May 1900. Officers of USS Newark (C-1) on board a ship, ascending the Pei Ho River en route to Tientsin. Present are (left-right): Midshipman C.E. Courtney, Ensign D.W. Wurtzbaugh, Captain N.H. Hall (USMC), Naval Aviation Cadet J.K. Taussig, Assistant Surgeon T.M. Lippitt, and Machinist Daniel Mullan. The McCalla Collection. Courtesy of Captain D.W. Knox. NH 45347

Those who did make it to the Legation Quarter in Peking on 31 May amounted to roughly a light company under Marine Capt. John “Handsome Jack” Myers, who, along with 20 Marines from the battleship USS Oregon also counted a force from USS Newark made up of Capt. Newt Hall and 23 Marines, five Sailors, and U.S. Navy Assistant Surgeon T.M. Lippett.

They arrived with five days rations, an M1895 Colt “potato-digger” machine gun removed from Newark along with 8,000 rounds of ammo for it, and 20,000 rounds for their Navy-Lee rifles. Leaving their kit on their ships, they only had the clothes on their back and the contents of their pockets.

Then began the famed “55 Days in Peking” that lasted from 20 June to 14 August before the Gaselee Expedition arrived and the Boxers were defeated.

One of the bluejackets from Newark during the Peking Siege was Gunner’s Mate First Class Joseph Andrew Mitchell. Born in Philadelphia in 1876, Mitchell grew up tinkering with the flotsam of the Revolutionary and Civil War and was something of a cannon fan, hence his occupation. It was to come in handy when the outnumbered Legation garrison was facing off with upwards of 20,000 besieging Boxers.

As told in an article via the Sextant:

Mitchell and the U.S. legation’s secretary Herbert Squiers had an idea: build a piece of artillery using the cylinder of a pump as the cannon barrel. They began to experiment, but then, on 7 July, a stroke of luck changed their plans. Chinese Christian refugees sheltering in the Legation Quarter discovered a cannon barrel reportedly lying in a junk shop, likely a relic from the Anglo-French expedition during the Second Opium War. Firsthand accounts record that the barrel was rifled and forged from either bronze or steel, but what Mitchell received was a “mass of rust and dirt.” He scraped and cleaned the barrel to give it “a creditable appearance,” one worthy of serving as the centerpiece for his improvised gun.

At first, the barrel was mounted to a heavy pole. When this proved unsatisfactory, the gun carriage was taken from the Italian’s 1-pounder, and the barrel was secured to the carriage with rope. Now, ammunition was needed. The Russian allies had arrived in Beijing with a chest of 3-inch shells but forgotten their gun in the city of Tianjin. When the siege began, they had thrown their shells down a well to prevent them from falling into Chinese hands. The disposed shells were hauled up, but found to be too large for the narrow barrel. Mitchell solved this problem by first removing the shells from their casings, then ramming them into the barrel. Thus, the “International Gun” was born, made of material from Russia and Italy and primarily manned by an American gunner, Joseph Mitchell. Members of the international guard also knew the weapon as “Betsey” or “the Empress Dowager.”

The “International Gun” and its crew. Gunner’s Mate Joseph Mitchell stands second from the right holding a modified Russian shell. (Photograph by Reverend Charles A. Killie. Billie Love Historical Collection and Special Collections, University of Bristol Library, http://www.hpcbristol.net/visual/bl-n033.)

GM1 Joseph Mitchell Boxer depicted during the Rebellion firing “Old International”

‘The International Gun’, an improvised cannon used during the siege of the Legation Quarter, Peking (Photograph by Reverend Charles A. Killie. Billie Love Historical Collection and Special Collections, University of Bristol Library, https://hpcbristol.net/visual/NA05-04)

Mitchell and his crew somehow kept the International Gun and its improvised shells working, moving the artillery piece from location to location within the Legation to make it seem like the garrison had more than just a single pop gun at their disposal.

Of the 56 Sailors and Marines from Oregon and Newark, seven were killed and 10 seriously wounded during the siege, including Mitchell who was shot in the arm on the last day of the action.

Of the 22 Marine and 33 Navy recipients of the Medal of Honor for the Boxer Rebellion, a whopping 35 (12 USMC and 22 USN) came from men assigned to USS Newark, including MitchellKeep in mind that 11 Navy ships (Brooklyn, Monocacy, Nashville, New Orleans, Newark, Solace, and Wheeling) served in Chinese waters during the Rebellion long enough for their personnel to be authorized the China Relief Expedition Medal.

It was a melting pot amalgamation of bluejackets to be sure.

Among Newark’s crew who earned the MoH were German-born Coxswain Karl Thomas, Seaman Hans Anton Hansen and Chief Machinist Carl Emil Petersen; Norwegian Gunner’s Mate Third Class Martin Torinus Torgerson, Finnish-born Seaman Axel Westermark, London-born Seaman William Seach, Sons of Eire to include Belfast-born Seaman Samuel McAllister and Landsman Joseph Killackey of County Cork, and one Boatswain’s Mate First Class Edward G. Allen who, despite his Anglicized name, had a birthplace was listed as Amsterdam, Holland in 1859, making him 41 at the time of the expedition, its “old man.”

Other Newark crewmembers with Boxer Rebellion MoHs:

  • Chief Boatswain’s Mate Joseph Clancy (age 37)
  • Chief Carpenter’s Mate William Francis Hamberger (later LCDR)
  • Oiler Frank Elmer Smith
  • Coxswain Francis Thomas Ryan
  • Coxswain John McCloy
  • Coxswain Jay P. Williams
  • Boatswain’s Mate First Class William Edward Holyoke
  • Machinist First Class Burke Hanford
  • Gunner’s Mate Second Class John Purness Chatham
  • Hospital Apprentice Robert Henry Stanley
  • Landsman James a Smith
  • Seaman George Harry Rose (later LCDR)

Then of course were Newark’s Marines who earned the MoH:

  • Gunnery Sergeant Peter Stewart
  • CPL Reuben Jasper Phillips
  • CPL Edwin Nelson Appleton (later Captain)
  • PVT William F. Zion
  • PVT France Silva
  • PVT Harry Westley Orndoff
  • PVT Henry William Heisch (formerly of Latendorf, Germany)
  • PVT Louis Rene Gaiennie
  • PVT Daniel Joseph Daly (the only enlisted Marine to have won the Medal of Honor twice, for two separate acts of gallantry)
  • PVT William Louis Carr
  • PVT James Burnes
  • Drummer John Alphonsus Murphy (aged 18)

A collection of images of some of Newark’s Marines and Sailors who earned the MoH in the Boxer Rebellion, along with “Handsome Jack” Myers (bottom right), who was played in the 1963 “55 Days at Peking” film by Charlton Heston. On the bottom left is Daly, who picked up his second MoH in Haiti in 1915

The controversial Capt. Newt Hamill Hall, head of Newark’s Marine detachment at Peking. One of only 20 men in history to earn the Marine Corps Brevet Medal, he went on to retire as a colonel and passed in 1939, aged 66. Source: Military Order of the Dragon, 1900-1911 (1912).

Back from the East

Newark sailed for home in mid-April 1901, via Hong Kong, Ceylon, and the Suez, arriving at Boston in July 1901. There, she would be modernized, landing her SpanAm War-era “bag” 6″/30 Mark 3 guns for a dozen new 6″/40 Mark 4s that used fixed shells and had easily twice the rate of fire.

She would put her gleaming white paint scheme back on for at least a half-decade and once again show the flag around the West Indies and off the coast of South America, then clock in as a training ship for the Naval Academy.

USS Newark (C-1) at the review of the North Atlantic Fleet, 1905. Note her newly installed longer 6″/40 caliber Mark 4s, which don’t have shields. Photo by The Burr McIntosh Studio. Courtesy of The Naval Historical Foundation, Rodgers Collection. NH 91219

Venezuela circa 1904. American fleet at La Guaira. The Gunboat/Cruiser at the far left is of the Denver Class (C-14/19) The other two ships, nearest center and farthest out, are two of the three Montgomery Class Gunboats/Cruisers (C-9/11). All three ships have different scroll work on their bows and based on that the nearest is the Montgomery (C-9). The other is the Detroit (C-10). The two 2-stackers on the left are Raleigh (C-8) and Cincinnati (C-7); the 2-stacker farthest away from the camera is the Newark (C-7), and the single-stacker is the Texas. In front of the Texas is the armored cruiser New York (ACR-2) (3 stacks). At right is the armored cruiser Brooklyn (ACR-3) (also with three stacks).

She spent a year on loan (May 1907-May 1908) to the New York Naval Militia and would be the floating home to the organization’s 1st Battalion.

Another good view of her 6″/40 caliber Mark 4s. “New Home Naval Reserve 1st Battalion~USS Newark Cruiser”~Enrique Muller postcard 1904

Then, returning to active service, she was used as a station ship at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay until 1912.

By that time, although she was just 21 years old, the concept of an 18-knot cruiser on the cusp of the Great War was ludicrous and she was marked for decommissioning.

Stricken from the Navy List in June 1913 she served as a Public Health Service quarantine hulk at Providence, Rhode Island, and temporarily as a naval hospital annex there until 1926 when she was disposed of, sold for her value as scrap on 7 September, some 97 years ago this week.

Epilogue

Across her career from February 1891 to June 1912, Newark had 21 skippers, all Annapolis men. No less than seven went on to wear admiral’s stars.

Some of her Mark 4 6″/30s, removed in 1913, were no doubt used to arm merchant ships against U-boats in the Great War.

Newark is well remembered in period artwork from her era, some of it breathtaking.

“Peace” painting by Walter L. Dean, published in “Harper ‘s Weekly”‘ circa 1893. It shows the “White Squadron” in Boston Harbor, during the early 1890s. The ship in the center is the USS Chicago. USS Newark is at left and USS Atlanta is at right. This painting is now in the U.S. Capitol. NH 95137

“U.S.S. Newark, off Santiago Bay, Cuba, 1898, Spanish American War, “1900, Watercolor and gouache on paper. Artist: Worden Wood (American, 1880–1943). Yale University collection. Accession 1941.228

USS Miantonomah and USS Newark at target practice. Watercolor by Fred S. Cozzens, 1892. Lithographed by Armstrong & Co. Copied from “Our Navy- Its Growth and Achievements,” copyright 1897. NH 337

Lithograph of USS Newark with her canvas aloft and electric running lights glowing, 1890.

GM1 Mitchell, who later retired from the Navy as a lieutenant, passed in 1925 and is buried at St. Paul’s Catholic Cemetery in Portsmouth, Virginia.

His work at Peking was commemorated in the DC war comic, “Our Fighting Forces” # 135, Feb. 1972, by Norman Maurer.

As for Mitchell’s International Gun (also known as ‘Old Betsy’, ‘Boxer Bill’, ‘Old Crock’ and the ‘Empress Dowager’), used during the siege of the Legation Quarter in Peking, the cannon was carefully escorted back to the States after the rebellion and has been in storage at the U.S. Naval Academy Museum for decades.

The International Gun barrel is in storage at the U.S. Naval Academy Museum. 230614-N-NH164-005

An icon of “Devil Dog” history right up there with Chesty Puller, Sergent Major Dan Daly’s Medals of Honor, including the one earned at Peking while a part of Newark’s Marine det, are in the National Museum of the Marine Corps at Quantico.

Daly is also attributed with saying, “Come on, you sons of bitches, do you want to live forever?” during the Battle of Belleau Wood in WWI.

For more about the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps in the Boxer Rebellion, please check out Emily Abdow’s new work, “The Boxer Rebellion: Bluejackets and Marines in China, 1900–1901,” at the NHHC in PDF format.

As for the name “Newark” despite the Navy’s best efforts, it just hasn’t been done justice ever since.

During the Great War, a commercial tug by the name was taken into service for the duration for work as a minesweeper patrol craft (S. P. 266) and retained her peacetime moniker. A planned Cleveland-class light cruiser (CL-88) was canceled in 1940 while a second of the same class that was to carry the name (CL-100) was converted during construction to the Independence-class light aircraft carrier USS San Jacinto (CVL-30). Finally, another planned USS Newark (CL-108), a Fargo-class light cruiser was canceled on 12 August 1945 when 67.8 percent completed.

The hulk of what was to be the USS Newark (CL-108) was launched on 14 December 1945, without a name but with her hull number stenciled in, for use in underwater explosion tests, then sold on 2 April 1949 for scrapping.

Today, with the final Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruisers in active service slated to decommission sometime in 2027, and no more “C” hull numbers inbound, the line started with Newark in 1888 is set to close after a glorious 139 years.


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.


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Cheeseburger N48550 and N43320

Just prior to his death, the late flip-flop-clad crooner Jimmy Buffett– a Pascagoula boy like myself–  passed on a pair of his treasured aircraft to live on in posterity to the USS Alabama museum in Mobile.

They included his circa 1941 Boeing E75 Stearman (N43320) which flew with the USAAF in WWII, and his ex-RCAF circa 1939 Grumman Goose G21 amphibian (N48550), both of which he acquired in the early 2000s. Importantly for fans, the Stearman was flown by Buffett in his 2004 video for Trip Around The Sun.

Buffett, who requested that the donation be anonymous, was honored by the USS Alabama museum over the weekend by installing flowers and a Hawaiian-styled shirt on the aircraft, who finally disclosed their provenance.

The Goose has been restored to its RCAF WWII livery from Buffett’s more, um, colorful, paint job

More from the local CBS affiliate.

And with that, I’ll leave you with Son of a Son of a Sailor.

50 Years Ago: A Productive Labor Day Weekend

Dr. Bradford Parkinson (USNA 1957) is a well-respective professor at Colorado State University and Stanford University, as well as the holder of multiple former president and CEO positions in the private sector, including with PlantStar and Trimble Navigation.

However, over Labor Day weekend 1973, he was a career officer with the U.S. Air Force, a colonel at the time, and, as detailed in From the Sea to the Stars: A Chronicle of the U.S. Navy’s Space and Space-related Activities, 1944-2009,” got a lot of work done over the BBQ.

On Labor Day weekend, 1973, Colonel Parkinson met with Aerospace engineers, together with Mr. Roger Easton of the Naval Research Laboratory and Navy Captain Daniel Holmes, to “synthesize” details of the GPS constellation. At one point, Colonel Parkinson reportedly came into the room and said, “Well, we’ve got a problem: our system is too expensive,” and Captain Holmes replied, “Why don’t you take our Timation] system and manage it?” That, in effect, is essentially what happened; the concept settled on was the one designed and demonstrated in Easton’s Timationsatellites.*

*With approved funding from the Joint GPS Program, Roger Easton and his team at the Naval Research Laboratory continued the Timation satellite program – renamed Navigation Technology Satellites (NTS). As NTS-1, the Navy-built Timation-IIIA satellite was launched in July 1974. In addition to further demonstrating the validity of the passive-ranging concept for position determining, NTS-1 carried NRL’s new rubidium time standard into space. NTS-2, launched into the GPS-constellation orbit in June 1977, had as objectives: (1) to demonstrate the feasibility of using a cesium atomic-clock standard developed by NRL in future GPS satellites; (2) to demonstrate the GPS navigation payload, and (3) to function as one of the satellites in the GPS Phase I constellation. NtS-2 achieved the JCS-required three-dimensional accuracy of “less than 60 feet” against aircraft flying over a calibrated test range. The success of NTS-2 helped keep support for the GPS program alive in 1977, when it had serious cost and schedule problems.

Less than five years later, in February 1978, the first Block I developmental Navstar/GPS satellite, Navstar 1, launched, with Parkinson as the head of the program. Three more Navstar satellites launched by the end of the year.

And, the rest, as they say, is GPS history, with Parkinson remembered today as the Chief Architect of GPS.

Honneur à l’Ancien

40 years ago: A throwback to the old Le Poilu (“the hairy one”) of Great War frame is this portrait of a Légionnaire of the 1er Régiment Etranger de Cavalerie (1 REC) at the French military’s Biltine camp in the Wadi Fira region of Chad in September 1983.

Contrast him to the spit and polished white kepi-clad legionnaires in the recruiting poster behind him, which, in a place like Chad, was probably put there with some irony in mind. Réf. F 83-382 LC308 Photo by Bernard Sidler/ECPAD/Défense

The Légionnaire, whose hand is bandaged, is possibly a sapper, which, as with the Canadian army and some other forces, in the French army are traditionally allowed to grow out their whiskers, even in field conditions. The unit was deployed to Chad during the lead-up to the so-called “Toyota Wars” between Gaddafi’s Libya and the French ally over the disputed Aouzou Strip. A Cold War flashpoint of which Africa was full of in the 1970s and 80s. 

Judging from the age of the hard-bitten campaigner in the above image, he may have been a veteran of African combat going back to the French in Algeria and the Kolwezi intervention.

As for the 1st REC, the Legion’s cavalry unit was formed in North Africa just over a century ago and stood up at Sousse in French colonial Tunisia on 8 March 1921. Of the regiment’s inaugural draft of 156 troopers, 128 were exiled White Russians, most former officers and nobles of the deposed Tsar’s cossacks and guards cavalry units, a feature that earned the 1 REC the nickname of “Royal Etranger” for a generation.

I have a vintage 1 REC badge in my collection– part of my regular New Orleans rounds-– made by Arthus-Bertrand and carrying the unit’s motto: Honneur Courage Fidélité.

 

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