Category Archives: US Navy

Whelp, that’s it for FD2030

In March 2020, U.S. Marine Corps Commandant, Gen. David H. Berger, debuted his transformative Force Design 2030 which, within a decade, intended to recast the Corps from its traditional expeditionary Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF) model that it had used since the 1950s to something, well, a lot different.

First, the plan called to “divest to invest” which translated to cutting 12,000 billets, disbanding all seven of the Corp’s tank companies (dialing the clock back to 1941), getting rid of 16 of 21 cannon artillery batteries (thus losing over 2/3rds of its proven 155mm howitzers), halving the number of Assault Amphibian companies (from six big to four small), jettisoning all of the Corp’s bridging units, shuttering all three law enforcement battalions, casing the colors of three active and two reserve infantry battalions (and reducing each battalion left by over 200 billets), cutting the number of aircraft in its 18 fighter attack squadrons– converting from exhausted F-18C/Ds and AV-8Bs to F-35s– from 16 frames to just 10, and cutting eight entire tiltrotor/helicopter squadrons. Plus the Corps lost its famed Scout Sniper program.

U.S. Marines with 4th Tank Battalion, 4th Marine Division, Marine Forces Reserve, salute during the 4th Tank Bn. deactivation ceremony on Navy Operational Support Center and Marine Corps Reserve Center San Diego, in San Diego, California, May 15, 2021. The Marines bid their final farewell to the battalion as it was deactivated in accordance with the Marine Corps’ Force Design 2030 modernization and capabilities-realignment efforts in order to stay prepared for the future fight against near-peer enemies. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Jose S. GuerreroDeLeon)

Jesus wept.

But the payoff was supposed to be big.

The three active component infantry battalions would be recast as “Littoral battalions” in three new Marine Littoral Regiments, a sort of expeditionary anti-ship missile force, and 14 new rocket artillery (HIMARS) batteries would be stood up.

A Navy Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System launcher, a command and control vehicle and a Joint Light Tactical Vehicle are transported by a U.S. Navy Landing Craft Air Cushion from Pacific Missile Range Facility Barking Sands, Hawaii, out to U.S.S. San Diego, Aug. 16, 2021. The movement demonstrated the mobility of a Marine Corps fires expeditionary advanced base, a core concept in the Marine Corps’ Force Design 2030 efforts. U.S. Navy and Marine Corps units came together from across 17 time zones as they participated in Large Scale Exercise 2021. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Luke Cohen, released)

At the same time, the number of drone squadrons (VMUs) would be doubled (from three to six) and an extra aerial refueler squadron (VMGR) of KC-130s would be added to give the Corps some longer legs in the air. Three new Light Armored Reconnaissance (LAR) companies would be added, presumably to provide the three Littoral battalions some added muscle.

But the thing is, the big linchpin on moving these missile-armed Littoral Regiments around scattered atolls in the Western Pacific, would be a new breed of between 18 and 35 cheap and simple (remember that) shallow-draft amphibious landing ships akin to the old LSMs and LSTs of WWII and Korea.

Dubbed the Light Amphibious Warship by the Marines and the Landing Ship, Medium by the Navy, the idea would be a beachable 4,000-ton/200-400 foot vessel capable of landing 75 Marines and 8,000 sq. ft. of kit, with a cost of $100 million a pop.

A force of nine LAW/LSMs would be required to deploy a single Marine Littoral Regiment in one lift.

And there lies the rub.

The Congressional Research Service and GAO have been sounding the alarm on the progress of FD2030, which has been quick to get rid of the old Corps but slow to recast the new one.

Meanwhile, the Navy, tasked with buying and fielding the new class of LAW/LSMs, has all but iced the program, at least for now, canceling the RFP issued to the shipbuilding industry for plans as estimates are now putting the cost at something like $400+ million per hull.

As reported yesterday by USNI News:

“We had a bulletproof – or what we thought – cost estimate, pretty well wrung out design in terms of requirements, independent cost estimates,” Assistant Secretary of the Navy for research, development and acquisition Nickolas Guertin said at an American Society of Naval Engineers symposium last week.

“We put it out for bid and it came back with a much higher price tag,” he added. “We simply weren’t able to pull it off. So we had to pull that solicitation back and drop back and punt.”

On the bright side, the Navy earlier this Fall (perhaps seeing the writing on the wall) issued a big, fat $9.4 billion contract to Ingalls for three new big-deck LPDs and an LHD.

If only the Marines had the tanks, howitzers, and infantry to form the landing teams and aircraft to carry them to form the MAGTFs for these new ‘phibs to carry…

Basic math tells you that the 21 remaining non-MLR Marine infantry battalions, on a 3:1 workup, would only be able to field 5.25 Battalion Landing Teams, the core of a deployable Marine Expeditionary Unit– now without any scout snipers, law enforcement personnel, bridging gear, or tanks, with fewer Amtracs, and possibly without howitzers. The number of helicopters on hand is fewer and even the prospect of having the MV-22 available at all is in the air. For the Navy’s lift part of that equation, only nine LHA/LHDs exist, augmented by 13 LPDs and 10 soon-to-be-decommissioned LSDs which, on the same 3:1 workup, allows just 2.6 three-ship Amphibious Ready Groups at sea on deployment. Even that number is going to tank in a couple of years with the retirement of the used-up LSDs. 

As noted by Compass Points on the saga of the LSM being pulled.

This may spell the end of the Landing Ship Medium and is also, at a minimum, a tremendous setback for the Marine Corps’ long-stalled and controversial program to place small missile units on islands in the Pacific. If the value of building the LSM was clear, it would be built. But the value of the current LSM is not clear. This is a negative vote for the entire SIF concept. It is becoming accepted that the Marine missile concept is duplicative of missile capabilities the Navy, Air Force, and Army have already deployed. The Navy may be trying to get out ahead of DOGE by cutting the LSM now. There are still too many questions about the Marine Corps’ entire plan for island-based missile units.

Redfish Amok!

Some 80 years ago today, the Balao-class fleet submarine USS Redfish (SS-395), on only her Second War Patrol, under the command of T/CDR Louis Darby McGregor, Jr., torpedoed and sank the brand spanking new 20,000-ton Japanese carrier Unryu while about 200 miles south-east of Shanghai. The carrier was loaded with 30 spooky Kugisho MXY7 Ohka (Cherry Blossom) kamikaze rocket bombs and Kokusai Ku-8s of the 1st Glider Squadron (Kakkūhikō dai ichi sentai), ready to ruin the day of American ships operating in the Philippines.

Periscope shot of the newly-built IJN aircraft carrier Unryū 雲龍, (Cloud Dragon) sunk by the submarine USS Redfish on 19 December 1944.

Notably, Redfish, in conjunction with the submarines USS Sea Devil (SS-400) and Plaice (SS-390), just 10 days earlier, had pumped the 30,000-ton Japanese aircraft carrier Jun’yō full of torpedoes but the flattop had survived.

Japanese aircraft carrier Jun’yō after hits by torpedoes from submarines Sea Devil, Plaice, and Redfish early in the morning of 9 December 1944

McGregor, who had sent several Japanese transports and tankers to the bottom as skipper of USS Pike (SS-173) and on Redfish’s first war patrol, was determined to scratch a carrier all the way off the Emperor’s naval list.

Redfish’s report on Unryu:

As detailed by Combined Fleet:

  • 1635: The torpedo hit abreast the forward generator room on the Hold Deck and the Main Control Center on No.2 platform deck, approximately frame 98 close to the bulkhead aft. As a result, No.1 boiler room flooded, and because the bulkhead dividing them failed, so did No.2 boiler room to port. All boilers except No.8 lose pressure. A main steam line was fractured and UNRYU temporarily lost power and went dead in the water. A fire broke out in No.2 ready room, but is put out by closing firewalls. REDFISH – having expended stern tubes at 1642 trying to hit HINOKI – hastily re-loaded a stern tube while UNRYU Chief Engineer Capt. Saga Tetsuo’s engineers extinguished fires, brought online No.s 5, 6, and 7 boilers, and successfully replaced damaged pipes and restored power.
  • 1650: The carrier was just getting back underway when hit by second torpedo at starboard side, forward of the bridge. This was abreast the bomb and torpedo magazines. Induced explosions from them and the volatile cargo of Ohkas on the lower hangar deck exploded, devastating vessel. The bow began to settle rapidly and UNRYU list steeply to starboard. Captain Kaname ordered Abandon Ship. Carrier sank very quickly – about ten minutes or less.
  • 1657-1701: (Times vary slightly) UNRYU sank sharply upended with stern raised and nearly on her starboard side – with the loss of her captain Konishi Kaname, XO Capt. Aoki Tamon, Navigator LtCdr. Shinbori Masao, sixty officers and 1,172 petty officers and men and six known civilians. Only one officer, Assistant Navigator Morino Hiroshi (was also injured) and eighty-seven petty officers and men (7 injured); fifty-seven passengers, and one civilian employee survived for a total of only 146 saved. Among these survivors of the passengers there are only twelve of the 1st Glider cadre. MOMI moves in immediately to rescue while HINOKI and SHIGURE depth-charge REDFISH.

20 December 1944

  • 0938: With no more survivors in sight, all three destroyers are still hunting and occasionally depth charging the submarine. After this, MOMI and HINOKI leave the scene and SHIGURE remains still hunting REDFISH. The two-Matsu class proceed to Takao to off-load survivors. (MOMI rescued senior survivor Morino)

McGregor would be awarded his second of two Navy Crosses in command of Redfish for the sinking of Unryu, along with a previous Silver Star in command of Pike, and would retire as a rear admiral. 

Redfish finished the war with 123,000 tons listed on her tally sheet after just two patrols and earned two battle stars and a Presidential Unit Citation.

She later had a distinguished movie career as the fictional Nautilus in Disney’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea in 1954 and as Nerka in Run Silent, Run Deep in 1958, along with several appearances in the TV series The Silent Service. Her final reel, recorded by an S-2 in 1970, was a snuff film. 

USS Redfish attending the Rose Festival in Portland, postwar.

Warship Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024: Ignore the orders, we will save the Sailors

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.

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Warship Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024: Ignore the orders, we will save the Sailors

U.S. Navy photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-299180

Above we see, some 80 years ago today, the cramped deck of the tiny “WGT” (John C. Butler-class) destroyer escort USS Tabberer (DE-418), crowded with shocked and waterlogged survivors of the lost destroyers USS Spence (DD 512) and USS Hull (DD 350). LCDR James A. Marks, USN, the former skipper of Hull, is being brought aboard to the left.

How had Tabberer survived the tempest that sent a trio of three larger greyhounds to the bottom? Keep reading.

The Butlers

At just 306 feet long overall, the 1,750-ton Butlers were not built to slug it out in surface actions, as they only mounted a pair of 5″/38 DP guns and a trio of 21-inch torpedo tubes, which was about half the anti-ship armament of contemporary U.S. Navy destroyer. Alternatively, they did come to war with an impressive anti-submarine armament for their size in the form of two Mk 9 depth charge racks, and eight Mk 6 K-gun projectors, along with 100 “ash cans” to keep them at work, making them popular in convoy escort in the Atlantic. A fixed 24-spigot Mk 10 Hedgehog ASW rocket launcher rested in a box between the No. 1 5-inch gun and the forward 40mm twin.

Likewise, they had a decent AAA suite for their to include a mix of 15 to 20 40mm and 20mm cannons, which would come in handy in smoking attacking Japanese planes at low level. The typical fit was two twin Bofors, one forward and the other aft, along with 10 Oerlikon singles clustered in four mounts around the bridge wings, four amidships around the stack, and two aft sandwiched between the stern 5-inch mount and the depth charge racks.

Camouflage Measure 32, Design 14D prepared by the Bureau of Ships for a camouflage scheme intended for escort ships of the DE-339 (John C. Butler) class. This plan, showing the ship’s starboard side, stern, superstructure ends and exposed decks, is dated 17 May 1944 and was approved by Commander William C. Latrobe, USN. 80-G-109627

Using a pair of “D” Express boilers and a matching set of two Westinghouse geared turbines (hence the WGT designation), they had 12,000 shp installed, allowing the Butlers to run up to a theoretical maximum of 24 knots (although one of the class, USS Samuel B. Roberts, made an estimated 28.7 knots while on a torpedo run against impossible odds by raising pressure on her boilers past the safe limit and diverting steam to the turbines.)

USS John C. Butler (DE-339) underway, possibly off Boston Navy Yard

While not fast enough for fleet operations, this was enough for convoy and patrol work. It also allowed them to have a nice, long range of some 6,000 nm when poking along at 12 knots.

Capable of being produced rapidly, some 293 Butlers were on the drawing board at one time or another from four shipyards (Boston NSY, Brown SB, Federal SB, and Consolidated Steel), with many constructed in fewer than six months apiece.

However, “just” 83 were completed, ranging from USS John C. Butler (DE-339), which was laid down on 5 October 1943 to USS Vandiver (DER-540) which, although laid down only a month later, languished on the builder’s ways until she was finally commissioned in 1955.

Meet Tabberer

USS Tabberer (DE-418) was the first vessel named in honor of Lt. (jg.) Charles Arthur Tabberer.

Born in 1915, he enlisted in the USNR’s aviation cadet program in 1939 and, a newly minted ensign with a set of gold wings on his chest, was assigned to Fighting Squadron 5 (VF-5) in early 1941, flying first the pokey F3F biplane and then the F4F Wildcat.

Making j.g. on 29 May 1942, Tabberer and his squadron flew from the old USS Saratoga (CV-3) for the invasion of Guadalcanal and he perished on 7 August during a swirling dogfight under near suicidal odds.

Lt. (jg.) Tabberer earned the Distinguished Flying Cross, posthumously:

DE-418 was one of 23 Butlers built at Brown Shipbuilding Company, Houston, Texas. Laid down on 12 January 1944 she was launched on 18 February 1944, sponsored by Mrs. Mary M. Tabberer, widow of the late Lt. (j.g.) Tabberer.

Tabberer’s sister, the famed future USS Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413) leaving the ways at Brown Shipbuilding Company, Houston, Texas, 20 January 1944. All 23 of the Butlers built at Brown were side-launched.

USS Tabberer was commissioned on 23 May 1944, her construction period spanning just 132 days.

USS Tabberer (DE-418) underway near Houston, Texas (USA), circa in May 1944. She is painted in Camouflage Measure 31, Design 22D. U.S. Navy Bureau of Ships photo BS 95010A

Tabberer’s first skipper was LCDR Henry Lee Plage, USNR (Georgia Tech NROTC ’37). A Florida insurance adjuster who volunteered for active duty and sea service in 1941, Plage had already picked up some solid chops as a small escort sailor, commanding the subchaser USS PC-464 in 1942, then serving as XO on the Evarts-class destroyer escort USS LeHardy (DE-20) and then skipper of her sister, USS Donaldson (DE 44), until just two months before Tabberer was commissioned.

Following an abbreviated shakedown cruise across the Gulf Coast and up the East Coast to Boston NSY– one of the yards where her sisters were built– Tabberer spent two weeks in post-shakedown availability then left for Hawaii via the “Ditch.”

She arrived at Pearl Harbor on 7 September, to spend a month working up with the ships she would deploy with to the West Pac. Of her 225 officers and men, only about 10, primarily chiefs, were regular Navy.

On the night of 9 October, while acting as a plane guard for the Casablanca-class escort carrier USS Anzio (CVE-57), Tabberer made her first rescue at sea in the form of one of the flattop’s aviators.

It would be just one of many for our tin can.

War!

On 16 October 1944, with sequential escort sisters USS Lawrence C. Taylor (DE 415), Melvin R. Nawman (DE 416), Oliver Mitchell (DE 417), and Robert F. Keller (DE 419) of Escort Division 72, Tabberer joined the new anti-submarine Hunter Killer group (T.G. 12.3, later T.G. 30.7) built around Anzio and her embarked air group. The overall commander of the group was Captain George Cannon Montgomery (USNA ’24), a tough career naval aviator from Alabama.

USS Anzio (CVE-57) underway at sea, on 21 May 1945, with an Avenger (TBM-3E) and three Wildcats on deck. NH 96548

The Anzio group– consisting entirely of ships that were all just barely off their shakedowns– would be responsible for at least five confirmed “kills” of Japanese submarines in the eight months between 18 November 1944 and 16 July 1945: I-41 (Kondo), RO-43 (Ts’kigata), I-368 (Irisawa), I-361 (Matsuura) and I-13 (Ohashi). Using Anzio’s embarked Wildcats and Avengers of VC-82/VC-13 to spot and pin the Japanese boats in place, the greyhounds would get to finish off the carcass and sift through the wreckage to find out which of the Emperor’s boats they killed.

This type of work was extremely dangerous for small escorts such as the Tabberer and her sisters as their compact hulls couldn’t shrug off a torpedo hit of any sort. At least two Butlers were lost to Japanese subs in October 1944 alone: USS Shelton sunk by RO-41 off Morotai, and USS Eversole by I-45 east of Leyte.

Besides her task in helping to send Japanese subs to the cold and dark embrace of Poseidon, Tabberer continued to perform the yeoman work long familiar to escorts in a carrier group– that of plane and lifeguard to the flattop’s aircrews. On at least two further occasions (7 July and 12 July 1945) she plucked soggy Anzio aircrews from the drink after water landings and delivered them back “home” via breeches buoy.

USS Anzio pilot and observer began to extricate themselves after their TBM-1C (Bu# 73282) crashed on take-off, 21 December 1944. 80-G-298075/80-G-0298071

Pacific maelstrom

While at Ulithi Lagoon with the rest of the Anzio group, on 6 December 1944, the group logged 39-knot winds in squalls and high seas.

With the weather slacking, and operations in the Philippines looming (the landings at Mindoro), the group left Ulithi on Sunday 10 December on orders from Com3rdFlt (Halsey), linking up with a replenishment group of oilers (T.G. 30.8) along the way. The next few days saw Anzio’s DEs race at flank speed to investigate sonar contacts as the skies grew grey.

As detailed by NOAA

The Navy’s Fleet Weather Center in Pearl Harbor had analyzed the sparse data in the area to show the typhoon much further east than it was and forecast it to move northward, avoiding the Fleet. However, the U.S. Army Air Force forecast center on Saipan sent a reconnaissance flight and found the storm heading toward Halsey and with estimated winds of 140 knots (260 km/hr). Capt. Reid Bryson tele-typed the observations to Pearl Harbor, but the Navy forecasters didn’t believe him and did not forward the information to the Third Fleet. Halsey’s chief aerologist, CDR George Kosco, who would later dub the storm “Cobra”, also believed the typhoon was closer than Pearl Harbor was depicting but still thought their southeastern course would avoid the worst of the storm.

By the 17th, the jeep carrier observed that a “tropical typhoon was developing and approaching during the day, with wind and sea increasing in intensity and Anzio laboring heavily. The northerly course toward the rendezvous assigned, 15 30′ N, 127 40′ unfortunately led near the path of the typhoon.”

That afternoon, she lost an Avenger on approach, with the crew picked up by Oliver Mitchell, and three planes in her hangar broke loose during a 19-degree roll to port. One of her escorts, Melvin Nawman, noted the ship’s barometer was dropping at .02 per hour, every hour.

USS Anzio. Rolling heavily while trying to maintain course and speed during a typhoon east of the Philippines, 17 December 1944. Note TBM Avenger heavily lashed to the flight deck. 80-G-298079

By 0629 on the 18th, Capt. Montgomery signaled Halsey that the Anzio group, along with the refueling group, were giving up on heading northeasterly to their assigned rendezvous point– into the storm– and instead reversed course south for safety. The 512-foot/11,000-ton jeep carrier had difficulty that morning holding a steady course against the wind abeam even with a 30-degree rudder and turns for 5 knots on one engine and 15 on the other.

Typhoon Cobra, as observed by radar. NOAA photo

The worst of the storm hit the two groups around 1000 and, losing radio and visual contact with the rest of her group, Anzio measured winds of 90 knots sustained before the vanes on her anemometer were carried away. Her Met department estimated she was taking 120-knot winds and seeing 60-foot seas. She rolled 36 degrees to starboard then 38 to port, losing two planes stored topside overboard while 11 others cracked up. By 1400 the seas became calmer, the winds dropped to gale force, and soon she was able to start maneuvering again. However, as the storm went by, she was only in contact with one of her five escorts who had somehow managed to remain on station– Lawrence C. Taylor.

The other DEs had suffered indeed.

Robert Keller and Oliver Mitchell, blown several miles off by the cyclonic force and heavy seas, remained out of contact with Anzio over the horizon until 1903. Keller had narrowly avoided a collision with Tabberer who was sighted around 0930 in the trough of a 60-foot swell and then vanished from radar. Mitchell lost TBS and radar contact with Melvin Nawman at 0908 and with Tabberer at 1213.

Nawman rolled an amazing 62 degrees and she lost her mast including all her radar and TBS gear. She only managed to ride best at 4 knots, right full rudder, to the NW. Steaming alone and blind back toward Ulithi at 15 knots, she contacted a passing PBM via blinker to ask the flying boat to relay that she was still afloat and headed in. Later that afternoon she spotted a different refueling group, TG 30.8.6, and fell in with it. She arrived back at Ulithi on 23 December, coming alongside the tender USS Markab to begin immediate repairs.

As for our Tabberer, her top weight was removed where possible and, fully ballasted and battened down on orders from her skipper, she survived an amazing roll of 72 degrees to starboard while visibility fell to about 30 feet and wind speed came at over 100 knots. The ship’s barometer bottomed out at 27.92 inHg (921 millibars, within the range considered “Category 4” on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale) at 1230 on the 18th. At 1351, she lost the top of her mast and by 1828 the entire mast buckled while the escort was on a 50-degree roll, with the ship having to stop all engines and break out a cutting torch and axes to cut away the offending wreckage– at the loss of her radio, radar, and TBS ability.

In the darkness, CRM Ralph Tucker climbed to the highest point remaining on Tabberer— her stack– to rig a makeshift TBS radio antenna– good for a couple of miles– and saw a light in the still-heaving seas. A light attached to a voice. A voice attached to QM3 August Lindquist, of the destroyer USS Hull (DD-350), one of the escorts of the Anzio group’s adjacent T.G. 30.8 refueling group.

As retold by LCDR Plage, Tabberer’s skipper:

Hull, under the somewhat controversial command of LCDR James A. Marks, (USNA ’37) had been lost during the storm after suffering 80-degree rolls as her bunkers were almost empty. Without getting too much into the weeds, Marks is thought by many to be the basis of the fictional LCDR Queeg of Caine Mutiny fame.

Besides Hull, USS Monaghan (DD-354) and USS Spence (DD-512), both also riding light with the refueling group, were lost in the storm. Monaghan rolled to starboard at least six times and on her final roll continued and capsized. Spence succumbed to a 72-degree roll that flooded her electrical system, killing her pumps and lights, leaving a follow-on roll to deliver the coup de grace.

Between the Hull, Spence, and Monaghan, no less than 718 souls perished on the sea on or about 18 December 1944. Nimitz noted later that “It was the greatest loss that we have taken in the Pacific without compensatory return since the First Battle of Savo.”

Besides the skippers of Spence (LCDR James Andrea, USNA ’37) and Monaghan (LCDR Floyd Garrett, USNA ’38), several newly minted ensigns of the Annapolis Classes of ’44 and ’45 were lost on their first assignments. 

Over the next several days, 3rd Fleet ships scoured the seas for survivors.

Just 24 men were recovered from Spence, 10 of those by the destroyer escort USS Swearer (DE-186), part of the screen for the jeep carrier USS Rudyerd Bay (CVE-81).

USS Brown (DD-546), part of the screen for the light carriers of TG 38.1, rescued the six survivors from Monaghan as well as 13 men of Hull’s ship’s company from a life raft on 21 December, delivering them to Ulithi on Christmas Eve.

Anzio group escort Robert Keller found four additional survivors of the Hull on the 21st. The same day, Mitchell and Lawrence C. Taylor each recovered three men who were “beyond human help” and later consigned them to the deep with honors.

As for our Tabberer, she picked up 55 living men at peril on the sea: 41 from Hull including her skipper and four other officers, and 14 from Spence on the 20th. The latter came due to Plage disobeying orders to retire.

Keep in mind that Tabberer was using her big 24-inch searchlights only about 150 miles off the coast of Japanese-occupied Luzon, in waters thought crawling with enemy submarines.

With the waves still too high to launch small boats, Tabberer went for the recovery in the old-fashioned way and used her cargo nets and close-in maneuvering to get near enough for the survivors to grab on.

Volunteers with safety lines and lifejackets went over the side to help those who could not.

Typhoon Cobra (Halsey’s Typhoon), December 17, 1944. Survivors of USS Spence (DD 512) and USS Hull (DD 350) were rescued by USS Tabberer (DE 418) after the typhoon had capsized the U.S. destroyers on December 17, 1944. Shown: Tabberer’s gunnery officer Lieutenant Howard J. Korth, USNR, in water where he added to the rescue. Note, the other destroyer lost was the USS Monaghan (DD 354). Photograph released on January 21, 1945. U.S. Navy photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-299181

As a twist of fate, Tabberer had Escort Division 72’s only doctor, LT Frank W. Cleary, aboard going into the storm, and all of the 55 men she pulled from the ocean survived.

Typhoon Cobra (Halsey’s Typhoon), December 17, 1944. Survivors of USS Spence (DD 512) and USS Hull (DD 350) were rescued by USS Tabberer (DE 418) after the typhoon had capsized the U.S. destroyers on December 17, 1944. Shown: Officers and men of USS Hull (DD 350) recuperating from their ordeal onboard USS Tabberer (DE 418). Note, the other destroyer lost was the USS Monaghan (DD 354). Photograph released on January 21, 1945. U.S. Navy photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-299182

The seriously damaged, blind, and mute Tabberer remained on station for 40 hours.

Plage sent the below memorandum to all hands on the 20th after the escort made her belated turn to Ulithi:

When she rolled into the immense 3rd Fleet anchorage, she looked pretty rough.

Almost unidentifiable.

USS Tabberer demasted after Typhoon Cobra

Legend has it that, when passing the mighty battlewagon USS New Jersey, Halsey’s flagship, she was signaled:

“What type of ship are you?”

Weary and exhausted, his vessel packed with 55 survivors he had to fight both the sea and the brass to save, Plage had his signalmen proudly reply: “Destroyer escort. What type are you?”

In addition to the serious damage to Tabberer and Nawman, three light carriers, another three escort carriers, three destroyers, and the cruiser USS Miami also sustained yard-worthy injuries, with many losing men to the sea during the storm. For example, on the light carrier USS Monterrey (CVL 26), three men were killed and another 34 seriously injured. At least 19 other vessels logged lesser damage.

USS Santa Fe (CL 60) rolls heavily, 53 degrees, as she rides out of a wave encountered in the South China Sea during Typhoon Cobra, December 1944. 80-G-700024

Destroyer in heavy seas during heavy weather in the China Sea. Possibly taken during a typhoon in December 1944. Photographed from USS New Jersey (BB-62) by LCDR Charles Fenno Jacobs, USNR. The destroyer wears camouflage design 9d. 80-G-470284

The entire Third Fleet was sidelined for 18 days following Cobra.

Nimitz noted, “Some 146 planes on various ships were lost or damaged beyond economical repair by the fires, by being smashed up, or by being swept overboard.”

It was a hell of a lick.

Plage was presented a Legion of Merit by Halsey himself during a 20-minute visit and inspection on 29 December.

In the name of the President of the United States, the Commander, Third Fleet, United States Pacific Fleet, takes pleasure in awarding the Legion of Merit to 

LIEUTENANT COMMANDER HENRY L. PLAGE

UNITED STATES NAVAL RESERVE

for service as set forth in the following

CITATION

For exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding service to the Government as Commanding Officer of the U.S.S. Tabberer operating in the Western Pacific war area from December 18, 1944 to December 20, 1944. During this period, while his ship was combating a storm of hurricane intensity and mountainous seas causing severe damage, Lieutenant Commander PLAGE directed the rescue of fifty-five survivors from two destroyers which foundered as a result of the same storm. In spite of seemingly insurmountable hardships and adverse conditions, he persisted in the search for survivors for fifty-one hours. Lieutenant Commander PLAGE’s courageous leadership and excellent seamanship through treacherous and storm-swept seas and his timely reports aided materially in the rescue of additional survivors by other ships which later arrived at the scene. His outstanding conduct was in keeping with the highest tradition of the United States Naval Service.

W. F. Halsey

Admiral, U.S. Navy

In addressing the assembled crew, Halsey was frank:

Your seamanship, endurance, courage, and the plain guts that you exhibited during the typhoon we went through are an epic of naval history and will long be remembered by your children and their children’s children. It is this spirit displayed throughout the world by the American forces of all branches that is winning the war for us.

Plage had recommended decorations for those who had spent considerable time in the water aiding men who were either too weak or injured to climb the boarding nets unassisted. These included the ship’s XO, LT Robert M. Surdam, the ship’s gunnery officer, LT Howard L. Korth, TM1/C Robert Lee Cotton, and BM1/C Louis Anthony Purvis. The brass authorized the Navy & Marine Corps Medal, the highest non-combat decoration awarded for heroism by the United States Department of the Navy, for these four men.

Dressed in their best and gathered in the wardroom of USS Tabberer after the Typhoon Cobra rescue are seated (left to right): LT Robert M. Surdam, USNR; LCDR Henry L. Plage, USNR, and LT Howard L. Korth, USNR. Standing, (left to right): TM1/C Robert Lee Cotton and BM1/C Louis Anthony Purvis. This photo was likely taken on 29 December 1944 during Halsey’s visit to the battered ship at Ulithi Atoll. 80-G-299183

Tabberer, and all hands, were the first to receive the new Navy Unit Commendation (although others would receive it retroactively for past service that predated the honor).

THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY

WASHINGTON

The Secretary of the Navy takes pleasure in commending the

UNITED STATES SHIP TABBERER

For service as follows:

For extremely meritorious service in the rescue of survivors following the foundering of two United States Destroyers in the Western Pacific Typhoon of December 18, 1944. Unmaneuverable in the wind-lashed seas, fighting to maintain her course while repeatedly falling back into the trough, with her mast lost and all communications gone, the U.S.S. TABBERER rode out the tropical typhoon and, with no opportunity to repair the damage, gallantly started her search for survivors, steaming at ten knots, she stopped at short intervals and darkened her decks where the entire crew topside, without sleep or rest for 36 hours, stood watch to listen for the whistles and shouts of survivors and to scan the turbulent waters for small lights attached to kapok jackets which appeared and then became obscured in troughs blocked off by heavy seas.

Locating one survivor or a group, the TABBERER stoutly maneuvered windward, drifting down to her objective and effecting rescues in safety despite the terrific rolling that plunged her main deck underwater. Again and again, she conducted an expanding box search, persevering in her hazardous mission for another day and night until she had rescued fifty-five storm-tossed and exhausted survivors and had brought them aboard to be examined, treated, and clothed.

Brave and seaworthy in her ready service, the TABBERER, in this heroic achievement, has implemented the daring seamanship and courage of her officers and men.

All personnel attached to and serving on board the TABBERER, during the above-mentioned operation, are hereby authorized to wear the NAVY UNIT COMMENDATION RIBBON.

James Forrestal

Secretary of the Navy

Continued Service

Sent to Pearl Harbor NSY on 30 December in company with her storm-damaged sisters Nawman and Conklin (DE 439), the three patched-up tin cans escorted another Cobra survivor, the light carrier USS Monterey (with future President Gerald Ford aboard as a junior officer) to Oahu via Eniwetok for repairs. Proceeding at 15 knots, they made Pearl on 10 January 1945, with Tabberer docking at Berth Baker 17.5.

The workers at Pearl worked fast in 1945 and, just a fortnight later, both Nawman and Tabberer, fresh and looking new, set out for Eniwetok as part of T.U. 16.8.5, the covering force for Convoy PD-275-T.

Transferring to the 5th Fleet on 28 January 1945 saw the Anzio group switch numbers from TG 30.8 to TU 50.7.1. Tabberer and Nawman rejoined the group at Saipan on 7 February– the first time back with Anzio since Cobra hit some seven weeks prior.

Joining up with other baby carriers– including USS Rudyerd Bay, Saginaw Bay (CVE 82), Makin Island (CVE 93), Luga Point (CVE 94), and Bismarck Sea (CVE 95), the force, under RADM G.R. Henderson, headed for Iwo Jima.

Tabberer was present for the five-plane kamikaze attack during the night of 21-22 February that hit the latter carrier, sending her to the bottom with 318 gallant sailors. The destroyers of the screen rescued 625 men from the water that night.

Large explosion on board Bismarck Sea (CVE-95), after she was hit by a kamikaze during the night of 21-22 February 1945, while she was taking part in the Iwo Jima operation. She sank as a result of her damage. Photographed from Saginaw Bay (CVE 82). 80-G-335103.

Regrouping, the force continued their operations off Iwo for 42 days, with Tabberer typically spending burning the midnight oil (and jo pots full of coffee) running nightly ASW sweeps of the area while rousing her sleepy gun crews back to GQ during daylight as enemy planes came in close.

Given a short few days of downtime in San Pedro Bay in mid-March, Tabberer would spend the next six weeks screening assorted TF38 vessels during the invasion of Okinawa, again in night-time ASW sweeps supporting Anzio, spending another 52 days at sea under combat situations.

USS Tabberer (DE 418) underway replenishment, taken from the escort carrier USS Makin Island (CVE-93) on 25 March 1945. 80-G-323053

Sent to Guam for a short yard period in early May, by the 23rd of that month she was back on station off Anzio, sanitizing shipping and supply routes between the Marianas and Okinawa of Japanese submarine activity.

This continued for the next several weeks, with the Anzio group ordered closer to Tokyo in July to screen replenishment ships just offshore of the Japanese Home Islands. This saw Tabberer’s crew engage in target practice on assorted floating mines belonging to the Emperor and rescue aviators from both an F4F and a TBM. 

TBM lost from Anzio, July 1945

Post VJ Day, she was sent to Korean waters on occupation duties, berthing at Jinsen (Incheon) on 11 September for nine days before being sent to Okinawa.

On 7 October, steaming out of Buckner Bay with her fellow tin cans of Escort Div 72 (without Anzio for once), they made for Tsingtao, China, the treaty port that had been under Japanese control since they wrested it from the Germans in 1914, followed by the troopship USS Dade (APA 99), filled with U.S. Marines returning to China for the first time since 1941. From there, the force went to Taku, China on the 12th, with Tabberer sinking two floating Japanese mines via gunfire– the mines apparently missing the memo that the war was over. On the 15th she saved a lost Allied aviator from the water off Taku anchorage and then escorted a convoy of LSTs and LSMs from Chinese waters to Okinawa.

Detonating three more floating mines on 19 October, she then escorted USS Blue Ridge (AGC2) to Tsingtao and Taku, sinking another mine on the 23rd and a 75-foot derelict coaster on the 29th. Remaining in Taku at the disposal of Com7thPhib until 15 November, she was sent as an escort for three auxiliaries returning to Okinawa before heading back to Taku by the end of the month with her old friend, Melvin Nawman.

Tabberer would remain in Chinese waters until 22 December 1945 when she was ordered back to to CONUS for the first time since August 1944, stopping at Okinawa, Eniwetok, and Pearl Harbor before entering San Francisco on 15 January 1946 with her homeward-bound pennant whipping overhead.

“With over 110,000 miles of steaming behind her, the Tabberer has contributed her share to the records set and glory earned by the ships of the Navy’s Pacific Fleet,” ended her official War History.

She was placed out of commission, in reserve, at San Diego on 24 April 1946.

In her 15 months of WWII service and four months on occupation duty, Tabberer earned four battle stars, received the Navy Unit Commendation, and survived the Navy’s worst storm suffered at sea.

Cold War

With the Korean War mobilization, Tabberer was dusted off and recommissioned on 7 April 1951. Ordered to the East Coast, she was homeported at Newport for the next decade.

September 1953. USS Tabberer (DE 418) at sea off Newport, Rhode Island. Note the Cold War-era big hull numbers, her twin 40mm Bofors behind mount No. 1, and her WWII-era sensors. Note there are two rockets loaded in her deck-mounted Mk 10 Hedgehog. 80-G-626823

Her taskings were typically being used as an ASW exercise vessel for subs out of New London and in taking Annapolis and NROTC midshipmen on summer cruises to the Caribbean and back, interspersed with trips down south to get her annual gunnery tables at Vieques to help beat the old smoke boats at Key West.

Speaking of which…

In November 1954, she suffered a collision with the submarine USS Diablo (SS-479) while in ASW exercises off Block Island that caused no casualties and left both vessels still afloat.

In the mid-1950s our DE underwent a series of modifications including landing her 20mm guns along with her fixed Mk 10 Hedgehog as well as her surface torpedo tubes, installing a remotely trainable 24-spigot Mk 15 Hedgehog device forward. Her 40mm twins were moved to platforms amidship, instead of twin 3″/50s which would have added too much weight.

She also picked up accommodations for a squadron commodore and his staff to allow Tabberer to serve as the flagship of an escort squadron. She rated more modern radar (SPS-6), sonar, and communications upgrades.

USS Tabberr (DE-418) seen 1950s after her modernization. Note her trainable 24-spigot Hedgehog ASW system, just behind her No. 1 mount and more modern radar package on her mast. Courtesy of Mr. Ted DiCecco, Avondale, Pennsylvania. NH 73660

Same as above. Note her hull number repeated on her No.1 mount. You can also make out the two twin Bofors mounts aft of her stack. NH 73661

On 30 August 1957, as part of Operation Deep Water, a test of Atlantic convoy duty should WWIII break out, Tabberer got operational from Key West, bound for Europe as the flagship of CortRon12.

Her outbound squadron comprised four other WWII-era DEs including her old bosom buddy, Melvin Nawman. By 2 September, the escorts linked up off the Virginia Capes with a mixed group of nine troopships, auxiliaries, and phibs, packed with a reinforced Marine brigade, to shepherd over to Europe at the regal speed of 12 knots. Engaging Allied OPFOR submarines along the way, the circular convoy stepped it up to 14.5 knots and made it successfully to Naples by noon on 14 September.

Attached to PhibGroup2, Tabberer, and company spent the next seven weeks in a series of amphibious warfare exercises and friendly port calls in the Mediterranean ranging from Saros Bay, Turkey (the country had joined NATO in 1952) to Patras, Greece; Suda Bay, Crete; Palermo, Sicily; Palma, Spain, and Gibraltar.

The exercise saw 8,000 Marines hit the beach in Gallipoli, linking up with a Turkish Army corps, simulating a response to a Soviet attempt to seize the straits. It was notable as it was both the first Marine vertical envelopment during an overseas deployment and the first time that a U.S. Marine joint air-sea-ground task force had been used in a NATO exercise. Supported by three full carrier battle groups, it sent a message.

Leaving “The Rock” late in the night of 7 November, the five aging but still operable DEs set out across the Atlantic again. Without having to shepherd a convoy, they made Bermuda without issue on the morning of 15 November, pulling up to the British colony at 19.5 knots. Following a couple days of libo, the DEs, led by Tabberer with ComCort12 still aboard, made Key West on the 19th. It was her last operational deployment.

Transferred to Philadelphia, she would spend the next two years in the same sort of laid-back semi-reserve service she had before Operation Deepwater.

Effective Friday, 2 September 1960– the 15th anniversary of VJ Day– USS Tabberer was decommissioned at Philadelphia, having been towed, cold iron, under the bridge to the Reserve Basin and, placed in mothballs for the second, and final, time on the 1st.

The Butler class listing in the 1960 Janes. Most of these vessels were in mothballs. 

On 1 July 1972, Tabberer’s name was struck from the NVR and in October 1973 she was sold for scrapping to Mr. David Hahn, of Key West.

Navy destroyer escorts USS Raymond (DE-341), USS Oswald (DE-767), USS Melvin R. Nawman (DE-416), USS Tabberer (DE-418), and USS Coffman (DE-191) laid up at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard, Pennsylvania (USA), circa in early 1973. By Jim Cunliffe via Navsource

Epilogue

Few lingering relics remain of Tabberer.

Her War History and deck logs are in the National Archives. 

No Butler class destroyer escort is preserved or remains in service.

She has a tribute marker at the National Museum of the Pacific War (the Nimitz Museum) in Texas.

The Navy, in its wisdom, has not elected to reuse the name Tabberer for another vessel.

For the men associated with the vessel, her most famous wartime skipper, LCDR Henry Lee Plage, remained on sea duty after the war and gave the Navy 17 years of service before retiring in 1954. Returning to Florida, he passed in 2003, aged 88, leaving behind a batch of children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.

Plage. The Navy could use a destroyer named in his honor.

Of the 92 survivors rescued from the sea after Typhoon Cobra, 55 were saved by Tabberer. Those men went on to lead their own lives and create children to carry on their own stories.

The most senior of those survivors, LCDR Marks, the lightning rod skipper of the ill-fated USS Hull, committed suicide in 1986.

Capt. George Montgomery, the gold wing-wearing leader of the Anzio group that gave the order counter to Halsey to turn his ships south, earned a Legion of Merit of his own for his group’s work off Iwo and Okinawa in 1945.

Basketball team, USS Anzio, 1945. “Over two years, undefeated.” Capt. Montgomery at center.

Post-war, Montgomery joined the staff of the Naval War College and was commander of a fleet air wing in the Caribbean then capped his career, appropriately, as Chief of Naval Air Safety before retiring in 1954 after 30 years in the Navy. RADM Montgomery passed in 1992, aged 92. He was survived by a son, retired Navy Capt. George C. Montgomery Jr., three grandchildren; and a great-grandson. It seems the salt was in the blood.

Meminisse est ad Vivificandum – To Remember is to Keep Alive


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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Sub and Yippy Tie Up

“In a quiet inlet of the Bering Sea, a YP Boat gets a coat of paint and a sub ties up for fuel and provisions. The short Alaskan day is ending and lights may be seen in the barracks until total darkness requires a blackout.”

Painting, Oil on Board; by William F. Draper; 1942; Framed Dimensions 20H X 24W NHHC Accession #: 88-189-N

While the naval aspect of the Aleutians Campaign ended strong for the US, with RADM Charlie McMorris’ victory off the Komandorski Islands in March 1943 and the swansong of Operation Cottage five months later, it started rough, at the raid on Dutch Harbor in June 1942, and was a long uphill slog that, considering Nimitz’s big fleet problems in Guadalcanal, 5,000 miles on the other side of the Pacific, was always a backwater.

It was a war of the Sugar Boats, the Yippies, PT boats, Canadian armed merchant cruisers, and muddy PBYs.

Ward’s Pearl Harbor Gun May Get New Home

USS WARD NH-50261 Mare Island 1918

At 0637 on 7 December 1941, the Wickes-class flush-decker, USS Ward (Destroyer No. 139), was detailed to Pearl Harbor’s Inshore Patrol Command and was on picket duty off the anti-submarine nets at the entrance to the huge Pacific Fleet naval base.

“Captain come on the bridge” rang out from the Officer of the Deck. A conning tower with a periscope of a submarine was visible, trailing close behind a ship heading into the harbor entrance. It is now believed that sub was HA-18 (I-20 tou), a Japanese Type A midget.

Three minutes later, Ward’s attack started, and, jumping from 5 to 25 knots by 0645 her No. 1. and No. 3 4″/50 guns were ringing out.

As noted from her action report: 

The shot from No. 3 gun fired at a range of 560 yards [a typo, it should have read 50-60 yards] or less struck the submarine at the waterline which was the junction of the hull and coning tower. Damage was seen by several members of the crew. This was a square positive hit. There was no evidence of ricochet. The submarine was seen to heel over to starboard. The projectile was not seen to explode outside the hull of the submarine. There was no splash of any size that might results from an explosion or ricochet.

Immediately after being hit the submarine appeared to slow and sink.

USS Ward, The First Shot, by Tom Freeman

Ward dutifully called in the engagement but the alarm, on a sleepy Sunday morning, never made it to the rest of the base in time enough to do anything and, at 0755, the first wave of Japanese carrier aircraft flew over Diamond Head and began the attack on Battleship Row and other targets.

Afterward, looking for silver linings in the dark clouds of the attack, Ward and her No. 3 gun and its nine-member crew became heroes for sending the sub– only confirmed in 1992— to the bottom.

A Shot for Posterity The USS Ward’s number three gun and its crew-cited for firing the first shot the day of Japan’s raid on Hawaii. Crew members, all recently mobilized were members of the Minnesota Naval Reservists are R.H. Knapp – BM2c – Gun Captain, C.W. Fenton – Sea1c – Pointer, R.B. Nolde – Sea1c – Trainer, A.A. De Demagall – Sea1c – No. 1 Loader, D.W. Gruening – Sea1c – No. 2 Loader, J.A. Paick – Sea1c – No. 3 Loader, H.P. Flanagan – Sea1c – No. 4 Loader, E.J. Bakret – GM3c – Gunners Mate, K.C.J. Lasch – Cox – Sightsetter. (quoted from the original 1942-vintage caption) This gun is a 4/50 type, mounted atop the ship’s midships deckhouse, starboard side. NH 97446

Removed from Ward, the No. 3 gun survived when the tin can was sunk via kamikaze on 7 December 1944 (notice the date?).

Still owned by the Navy, since 1956, the gun and a plaque detailing the event associated with it have been on exhibit on the State Capitol grounds at St. Paul, Minnesota, in a salute to the home state of the gun crew.

Now, plans are afoot to relocate the historic gun from the Capitol Mall, where it has been exposed to the weather, to an indoor display at the new Minnesota Military & Veterans Museum, outside the state’s National Guard base at Camp Ripley.

The public comment period has begun for the USS Ward Gun removal application. Interested persons may comment on whether conditions have been met for the Capitol Area Architectural and Planning Board to consider the application to remove the USS Ward Gun from the Capitol Mall. All comments must be received by 4:30pm on January 7, 2025. You can voice your opinion by email, phone, or mail.

  • Email: Tina.Chimuzu@state.mn.us
  • Phone: 651-757-1508 (leave message if no answer)
  • Mail: 
    Attn: Tina Chimuzu, CAAPB Planner-Fellow
    Capitol Area Architectural and Planning Board
    Freeman Building
    625 Robert Street North
    Saint Paul, MN 551555

CAAPB will also be holding a public hearing to gather questions and feedback regarding the removal of the USS Ward Gun. The meeting will be held in room 116c of the Administration Building at 3:30 pm on Thursday, December 19, 2024. There will also be an option to attend virtually here. Check back regularly for updates!

Unaymit!

80 years ago this month. December 1944. “Unaymit” (White 15), a behemoth Martin PBM-3D Mariner flying boat of the “White Lightnings” of Patrol Bombing Squadron (VPB) 17 refueling on a flat sea around Ulithi atoll from the 311-foot Barnegat-class light seaplane tender USS Onslow (AVP-48). Note the multi-colored fender between the plane and the ship and the lack of safety and PPE gear that would drive an OSHA guy out of his skull these days.

Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command. Catalog #: NH 97673

Established 3 January 1944 at Norfolk, just five months later VPB-17 had made it 6,500nm to NAS Kaneohe in Hawaii and was quickly brought up to operational status.

By September, the squadron had leapfrogged to Eniwetok and Saipan then Ulithi with AVP support. The Lightnings then began conducting anti-shipping patrols as well as sector searches, Dumbo missions, mail delivery, and air cargo missions in the region until February 1945 when it was deployed to San Pedro Bay, Philippines, and would operate in the Lingayen Gulf on a series of night searches and raids against Japanese shipping and positions.

By July 1945, the squadron was over Balikpapan in Borneo, supporting the Australian push to liberate the Dutch East Indies. September brought missions to the recently liberated Korea and northeast China coast.

Shipping back to the West Coast aboard one of Onslow’s sisters, the tender USS Barataria (AVP 33), VPB-17 was disestablished at NAS San Diego in January 1946, having a very busy two-year lifespan.

Warship Wednesday Dec. 11, 2024: Cathedral Slugger

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

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Warship Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024: Cathedral Slugger

Above we see the magnificent modified York-class heavy cruiser HMS Exeter (68), entering Grand Harbour, Valetta, Malta, likely during her service with the Mediterranean Fleet’s 1st Cruiser Squadron at Alexandria, during the Abyssinian crisis between October 1935 and July 1936.

Simultaneously the final British warship to be built with 8-inch guns and the last “Washington” treaty cruiser built for the Royal Navy, she would use her guns to good effect against a tough “pocket battleship” some 85 years ago this week.

The Yorks

Sometimes referred to as the “Cathedral” class cruisers, York and her near-sister HMS Exeter (68) were essentially cheaper versions of the Royal Navy’s baker’s dozen County-class cruisers, the latter of which were already under-protected to keep them beneath the arbitrary 10,000-ton limit imposed by the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922. Weighing in at 8,250 tons, the Yorks were intended not for fleet action but for the role of sitting on an overseas station and chasing down enemy commerce raiders in the event of war.

York mounted six 8″/50 (20.3 cm) Mark VIII guns in three twin Mark II mounts. Fairly capable guns, they could fire a 256-pound SAP shell out past 30,000 yards at a (theoretical) rate of up to six rounds per gun per minute. Importantly, they carried 172 rounds per gun, up from the 125-150 carried by the preceding County class, a factor which allowed a slightly longer engagement time before running empty.

Bow turrets of HMS York. Photograph by Mrs. Josephine Burston, via Navweaps

Notably, Exeter was completed with the same main gun but in Mark II* mounts, which allowed for a shallower 50-degree elevation.

Cruiser HMS Exeter training her 8-inch guns to starboard

Exeter vessel also had a slightly different “straight” arrangement for her funnels and masts, whereas York’s carried a slant, giving each sister a distinctive profile.

Exeter’s 1930 rigging plan

HMS York. Note the slant to her masts and stacks. Photograph by Walter E. Frost, City of Vancouver Archives Photo No. 447-2863.1

Rounding out the cruisers’ offensive armament was a half-dozen deck-mounted 21-inch torpedo tubes a battery of DP 4-inch guns and a few Vickers machine guns to ward off aircraft.

Built with overseas service in mind, they could cover 10,000nm at 14 knots. Able to achieve 32.3 knots due to having 80,000-ship via Parsons geared steam turbines, they sacrificed armor protection for speed and magazine space, with just 1 inch of steel on their turrets and a belt that was just 3 inches at its thickest.

Exeter, Janes 1931

As noted by Richard Worth in his excellent tome, Fleets of World War II:

In trimming down the County layout, designers managed to retain several features, though sea keeping suffered. Protection also received low priority; the armor scheme (similar in proportion to the County type) included some advances, but all in all, the Yorks seemed even more vulnerable, especially in the machinery spaces.

 

Meet Exeter

Ordered as part of the 1926 Build Programme, Exeter was the fifth RN vessel to carry the name since 1680 and carried forth a quartet of battle honors (Adras 1782, Providien 1782, Negapatam 1782, and Trincomalee 1782) from these vessels. Constructed for £1,837,415 by HMNB Devonport Dockyard, Plymouth, she launched on 18 July 1929.

Her sponsor at the christening was Lady Madden.

Anchored off Plymouth, England, during her builder’s trials in May 1931. NH 60806

 

Bestowed with the familiar motto, Semper fidelis, Ever Faithful, she long maintained a relationship with her ancient namesake cathedral city along the River Exe.

On 23 May 1931, just before she was commissioned, HMS Exeter’s skipper and officers visited the town’s Mayor H W Michelmore, at the Exeter Guildhall. By tradition, Royal Navy ships named after a town are given a small gift by the town, and the Mayor announced that a model of the hall, paid for by public subscription, would be made of silver. Michelmore and a crowd of local dignitaries presented the finished model, about the size of a breadbox, three months later.

“On behalf of myself, my officers and ships crew, and of those who will come after us, I thank you most heartily and sincerely for the beautiful gift you have given us,” her plankowner skipper, Captain (later RADM) Isham W. Gibson, told the delegation. “We hope that you will count us as citizens of Exeter, afloat.”

NH 60803

Exeter, August 1931. NH 60804

Peacetime idyllic cruising

She was a striking vessel for her age. A true peacetime cruiser.

For the next decade, she would embark on a series of “waving the flag” port visits around the globe as she shifted between North America and West Indies Station, based in Bermuda, to the Mediterranean Fleet. This would involve roaming along the coast of Latin America, trips through the Panama Canal with corresponding port calls on the West Coast of America as far north as Esquimalt, BC, and cruising along the Caribbean.

On one such port call, the U.S. Navy dutifully took lots of close-up photographs of her armament and layout that were no doubt forwarded to the ONI, hence their preservation for posterity.

Exeter, .50 cal quad Vickers anti-aircraft machine gun mount. Note the Bluejackets aboard. NH 60811

Shagbats! Exeter with Supermarine Walrus amphibians on catapults. NH 60809

Same as above, NH 60810

Exeter 4″ anti-aircraft gun. NH 60808

Exeter At Montevideo, Uruguay in 1934. NH 60816

Exeter in Balboa harbor, canal zone, 24 April 1934. NH 60812

HMS Exeter, Panama Canal, 1930s. 33rd infantry honor guard at the Miguel locks. N-173-3

HMS Exeter, Northbound, Gamboa Signal Station, March 8, 1935, 185-G-2031

HMS Exeter returning to Devonport from the Mediterranean in July 1936, note her “homeward bound” pennant.

British heavy cruiser HMS Exeter, 1936

HMS Exeter at the Royal Naval Dockyard, on Ireland Island, Sandys Parish, in the British Imperial fortress colony of Bermuda, with Gibb’s Hill Lighthouse beyond, circa 1936

Aerial view of HMS Exeter, Panama Canal Zone, circa early 1939. NH 60807

Exeter off Coco Solo canal zone, circa 1939. NH 60814

Get the Graf!

Skipping a planned dockyard period at Devonport in early August 1939 due to rising tensions in Europe, Exeter’s crew was recalled from leave and prepared to return to service with the South Atlantic Division of the West Indies Squadron, escorting the troopship Dunera to Cape Verde before diverting to Freetown.

On her bridge was newly promoted Capt. Frederick “Hooky” Secker Bell, a fighting sailor who served as a mid on HMS Challenger in the Cameron Campaign in 1914, on board the battleship HMS Canada at the battle of Jutland in 1916, and, as a young lieutenant in 1918, was one of only two survivors of his destroyer when it was sunk from under his feet by one of the Kaiser’s U-boats. He had been XO of the battlewagon HMS Repulse just before moving into Exeter’s captain’s cabin– a battleship man in a cruiser.

When Hitler sent his legions into Poland in September, Exeter was in passage to Rio de Janeiro, and, clearing for war service, she soon took up station off Rio for the purpose of trade defense and interdicting German shipping.

By early October, with German surface raiders afoot in the South Atlantic, Exeter joined Hunting Force G along with the older but more heavily armed County-class heavy cruiser HMS Cumberland (9,750 tons, 8×8″ guns, 31 knots, 4.5-inch belt) and the Leander-class light cruisers HMS Ajax and HMNZS Achilles (7,270 tons, 8×6″/50s, 32.5 knots, 4-inch belt), with the force ranging from the Brazilian coast to the Falklands.

These hounds would eventually find fruit in the chase for the German Deutschland-class panzerschiff cruiser KMS Admiral Graf Spee (14,890 tons, 6×11″/52, 8×5.9″, 28.5 knots, 3.9-inch belt), however, its strongest asset, Cumberland, was in the Falklands under refit at the time, leaving our Exeter and the two lighter cruisers, Ajax and Achilles, to fight it out.

Kriegsmarine Panzerschiff Admiral Graf Spee im Spithead U.K. 1937. Colorised photo by Atsushi Yamashita/Monochrome Specter http://blog.livedoor.jp/irootoko_jr/

A detailed retelling of what is now known to history as the Battle of the River Plate would be out of the scope of this post, but, beginning with Graf Spee’s sighting of Force G at 0520 on the morning of 13 December, and ending when the engagement broke off around 0730 with the big German cruiser retreating into the River Plate estuary, is the stuff of legend.

In those swirling two hours, Graf Spee had been hit at least 70 times by British 8- and 6-inch guns, with the German suffering 36 killed and another 60, including her captain, Hans Langsdorff, wounded– in all about a fifth of her complement. While in no danger of sinking and still very much able to fight– albeit with only a third of her 11-inch shells left in her magazines– the panzerschiff had her oil purification plant, desalination plant, and galley destroyed, factors that would make a 6,000 mile run back to Germany likely impossible.

Graf Spee also gave as good as she got, with Exeter, pressing the fight against the larger ship repeatedly, getting the worst punishment in the form of hits from seven 660-pound 11-inch shells– ordnance she was never expected to absorb. Listing and with her two front turrets knocked out, Exeter had 61 dead and 23 wounded crew members aboard and could only make 18 knots. With only one turret still operable– and under local command only– Captain Bell had vouched that he was ready to ram Graf Spee before the German had retired.

As detailed by Lt Ron Atwill, who served in Exeter during the battle:

  • ‘A’ and ‘B’ turrets were out of action from direct hits.
  • ‘Y’ turret firing in local control.
  • The Bridge, Director Control Tower, and the Transmitting Station were out of action.
  • A fire was raging in the CPO’s and Serving Flats.
  • Minor fires were burning on the Royal Marine messdeck and in the Paint Shop.
  • There were no telephone communications – all orders had to be passed by messengers.
  • The ship was about four feet down by the bows due to flooding forward and had a list to starboard of about eight degrees due to some six hundred and fifty tons of water which had flooded in splinter holes near the waterline plus accumulations of fire fighting water. This degree of list is quite considerable and makes movement within the ship very difficult when decks are covered with fuel oil and water.
  • Only one 4-inch gun could be fired.
  • Both aircraft had been jettisoned.
  • W/T communications had completely broken down – mostly due to aerials having been shot away.

HMS Exeter (68) as seen in 1939, shows splinter damage to ‘A’ and ‘B’ turrets and the bridge from the German cruiser Admiral Graf Spee. While her rear ‘Y’ turret was intact, its electrical system had suffered a short from saltwater intrusion and was down to manual control. CDR RD Ross photo IWM HU 43488

Swiss cheese splinter damage to Exeter’s stacks. Splinters had riddled the ship’s funnels and searchlights, wrecked the ship’s Walrus aircraft just as it was about to be launched for gunnery spotting, and slaughtered her exposed torpedo tube crews. Shrapnel swept the bridge, killing or wounding almost all the bridge personnel and knocking out most of the ship’s communications and navigational tools, forcing the vessel to be directed by one of the compasses pulled from a launch. CDR RD Ross photo IWM HU 43505

With no means to fight left at her disposal other than the single 4-inch open mount still working, Exeter remained on watch with the lighter Ajax and Achilles, both damaged and nearly out of shells, keeping station at the Plate’s mouth should Graf Spee attempt to escape. Cumberland, rushed 1,000 miles from the Falklands in just 34 hours, arrived to reinforce the force late on the night of 14 December and relieve Exeter, who was ordered to retire to the Port Stanley for emergency repairs.

Ordered by Berlin not to have his ship interned in Uruguay, options were limited to Langsdorff, Graf Spee’s skipper. Partially due to his ship’s damage, and partially because the three British cruisers at the river’s mouth could bird-dog him should he put to sea, a factor acerbated by openly exaggerated signals that RN carriers and battlewagons were rapidly inbound (they were in fact still five days away), Langsdorff landed his crew– who he refused to sacrifice in vain– scuttled his ship in Montevideo, and then blew his brains out.

Admiral Graf Spee in flames after being scuttled in the River Plate estuary, 17 December 1939. IWM 4700-01

Later Allied inspection of Graf Spee’s hull showed Exeter got in at least three hits from her “puny” 256-pound 8-inchers, including the key destruction of her oil purification plant, the blow that cut off the big cruiser’s legs.

Admiral Graf Spee, ship’s port bow, taken while she was at Montevideo, Uruguay in mid-December 1939, following the Battle of the River Plate. Note crew members working over the side to repair damage from an eight-inch shell fired by the British heavy cruiser Exeter. The notation The ‘Moustache’ refers to the false bow wave painted on Admiral Graf Spee’s bows. The original photograph came from Rear Admiral Samuel Eliot Morison’s World War II history project working files. NH 83003

Admiral Graf Spee photograph of a shell hole in the ship’s forward superstructure tower, made by an eight-inch shell fired by the British heavy cruiser Exeter. The sketch below shows the location of the hole, and describes it as large enough to crawl through. Taken on board the ship’s wreck in the River Plate, near Montevideo, Uruguay, where she had been scuttled in December 1939. Page from an intelligence report prepared by USS Helena (CL-50) during her shakedown cruise to South America. The photograph was taken on 2 February 1940 by Ensign Richard D. Sampson, USN. NH 51986

Admiral Graf Spee photograph of the interior of the ship’s forward superstructure tower, showing damage caused by an eight-inch shell fired by the British heavy cruiser Exeter during the Battle of the River Plate. Cut wires and the absence of a fire control tube were noted on the original report in which this image appeared. Taken on board the ship’s wreck in the River Plate, near Montevideo, Uruguay, where she had been scuttled in December 1939. Photographed on 2 February 1940 by Ensign Richard D. Sampson, USN, for an intelligence report prepared by USS Helena (CL-50) during her shakedown cruise to South America. NH 51987-A

Arriving at Port Stanley on 20 December, Exeter would remain there for a month, patched up with steel plate salvaged from the old Grytviken whaling station while her wounded were cared for in local homes, until the battered cruiser began her slow voyage back to England. She arrived at Plymouth on 15 February 1940.

HMS Exeter arrives back in the UK after emergency repairs at Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands following the battle of the river Plate. Lighter paintwork can be seen where the damage was patched up.

Churchill, at the time First Lord of the Admiralty, visited the cruiser and addressed the crew. The bulldog had come “to pay my tribute to her brave officers and men from her shattered decks in Plymouth Harbor”

Arrival at Plymouth with Churchill coming aboard. IWM HU 104428

On 23 February, her celebrated crew marched through the City of London. Bell was made a companion knight of the Bath while the other members of the crew would pick up two DSOs, seven DSCs, and nearly 40 DSMs.

Leap Day 1940 saw Bell lead 87 members of his crew on a Freedom of the City parade with fixed bayonets through Exeter, where seemingly the entire town turned out. The cruisermen brought with them a host of souvenirs to hand over to the city including Exeter’s shell-torn White Ensign and her bell, left with the city for safekeeping.

Pacific maelstrom

Exeter’s extensive repair would stretch for a year and included rebuilding her gun houses, installing new catapults and torpedo tubes, as well as modernization that saw a Type 279 search radar, Type 284 gunnery control radar, tripod masts, and improved anti-aircraft armament shipped aboard. The latter included landing her old 4.1-inch singles for four twin 102/45 QF Mk XVIs along with two massive octuple 40mm 2-pounder MK VIII mounts.

In that period, her near-sister, York, was lost to MTMs of Xª Flottiglia MAS in Suda Bay.

HMS Exeter, off Devonport after refit, March 1941, by Harold William John Tomlin. IWM A3553

HMS Exeter, off Devonport after refit, March 1941 hoisting Walrus, by Harold William John Tomlin. IWM A 3555

Stern view, same place and time as above. A 3552

Exeter’s ninth and final skipper, Capt. Oliver Loudon Gordon, took command on 11 March 1941.

Following post-refit workups with the Northern Patrol in April 1941, Exeter was transferred to the East Indies Squadron, which was beefing up as tensions with the Empire of Japan were at an all-time high. Likewise, Bell was ordered to a new position as Flag Captain to the Flag Officer, Malaya,

Sailing south with a military convoy on 22 May– while keeping an eye out for the raiding Bismarck and Prinz Eugen— she arrived in Freetown on 4 June and Durban two weeks later before spending the next six months as escort a series of different slow convoys (CM 014, BP 012, CM 017, and MA 001) shuttling around the Indian Ocean.

On 7 December 1941, she was ordered to Singapore to join the ill-fated Force Z– the battleship HMS Prince of Wales and the battlecruiser HMS Repulse. She didn’t make it to join the force before it was destroyed by Japanese land-based bombers three days later in the South China Sea.

Instead, Exeter leaned into her speed and, under the combined ABDA Command in Java, she spent January and February 1942 as part of several different Allied convoys (DM 001, BM 010, BM 011, BM 012, JS 001, and SJ 5) running troops to Singapore and around the Dutch East Indies.

HMS Exeter firing at Japanese aircraft which unsuccessfully attacked convoy JS1 in the Bangka Strait during the 14/15 February 1942, NIMH 2158_017924

A harbor tug crosses the bow of the 8-inch gun cruiser HMS Exeter as she lies anchored in the congested harbor of Tanjong Priok, the port for Batavia, now Jakarta, in the first days of February 1942. Exeter helped clear the congestion, taking thirty merchant ships to sea. AWM P04139.003

On 25 February, Exeter, along with the RAN Leander-class light cruiser HMAS Perth (sister to Ajax and Achilles) and destroyers HMS Electra, Encounter, and Jupiter, were detailed to join the ABDA’s Eastern Striking Force under Dutch RADM K.W.F.M. Doorman at Soerabaja, which was then renamed the Combined Striking Force. Doorman’s force was slight, made up of just the Dutch light cruisers HrMs De Ruyter and HrMs Java, the heavy cruiser USS Houston (CA-30), and a mix of nine Dutch and American destroyers, mostly old “flush deckers” from the Great War.

Of the five allied cruisers, only Houston was more powerful than Exeter, carrying nine cramped 8″/55 guns in her thin hull. However, only six of Houston’s 8-incher were operable as her aft turret had been knocked out in an earlier air attack. Further, only Exeter had radar.

Rushing out to confront a force of 30 Japanese troops transports on 27 February 1942 protected by RADM Takeo Takagi’s two heavy cruisers, two old light cruisers, and 14 destroyers, things got pear-shaped pretty fast in what became known as the First Battle of the Java Sea.

A flurry of over 90 Long Lance torpedoes sank a Dutch destroyer while a lucky 7.9-inch hit from the Japanese Myoko-class heavy cruiser Haguro penetrated to Exeter’s aft boiler room and knocked six of her eight boilers offline, dropping the British cruiser’s speed to just five knots.

Retiring South towards Surabaya via the Sunda Strait with Encounter and the American destroyer USS Pope (DD-225) escorting, Exeter had the supreme misfortune of running into the four Japanese heavy cruiser sisters Nachi, Haguro, Myoko, and Ashigara, along with their four escorting destroyers, supported by the carrier Ryujo over the horizon, on the morning of 1 March.

Although Exeter had managed to increase her speed to 23 knots by this time, it was far too slow to avoid being overtaken by the armada of bruisers and fast greyhounds. The disparity in ordnance in big guns alone– 40 7.9″/50s vs six 8″/50s– was staggering before even taking into account smaller guns and torpedo tubes.

Japanese shells rain down around HMS Exeter during her ill-fated encounter in the Java Sea

Despite Encounter and Pope bravely making smoke and attempting torpedo runs against impossible odds– the same sort of bravery later seen by American escorts in the defense of Taffy 3 in October 1944– it was all over in about three hours and all of the Allied vessels were sent to the bottom piecemeal.

Exeter sinking on 1 March 1942 after engagement with Japanese Cruisers off Java. This Japanese photo was captured by U.S. Forces at Attu in May 1943. Collection of Admiral T. C Kinkaid, USN. NH 91772

NH 91773

Exeter sinking after engaging Japanese heavy cruisers in the Java Sea, 1 March 1942. Image taken from the captured Japanese wartime booklet “Victory on the March” 80-G-179020

Exeter earned three battle honors (River Plate 1939, Malaya 1942, and Sunda Strait 1942) to add to the four she carried forward.

Epilogue

Over the next two days, Japanese destroyers would pick up some 800 Allied survivors from the three lost warships in the water after the battle including 652 men of the crew of Exeter, the cruiser remarkably “only” losing 54 in the battle itself. A large reason why so many of Exeter’s crew survived the battle was that Capt. Gordon, his ship lost, ordered her evacuated before the final bloody game could play out. Like Capt. Langsdorff at Montevideo, Gordon owed it to his men not to ask them to perish in vain.

Tossed into the hell that was the Japanese POW camp systems no less than 27 of Pope’s sailors, 37 of Encounter’s, and 30 from Exeter died in the prison camps, usually from either malaria or pneumonia. When it came to Japanese camps, they typically lost a full quarter of those housed within.

Recovered from camps in the Celebes, Macassar, and Nagasaki in September 1945, Exeter veterans were given emergency medical care and repatriated. AWM photos

The wrecks of Encounter, Exeter, and Pope have been extensively looted by illegal salvagers.

Capt. Gordon, while being removed from Japan on USS Gosper (APA-170) in October 1945, finally had a chance to deliver his 12-page report on Exeter’s final battles to the Admiralty, via U.S. channels. With the traditional English gift of understatement, he noted that, during the evacuation of the cruiser, “The ship was evidently leaking oil fuel considerably, which, with a slight lop, made conditions in the water decidedly unpleasant, at first.”

July 1942 portrait of Capt. Oliver L Gordon, RN, HMS Exeter, who was captured in the Java Sea. Capt Gordon was a prisoner of war in Zentsuji Camp, Shikoku, Osaka, Japan. He later wrote of his experiences both in command of the Exeter and as a prisoner of war in Japan in the book Fight It Out, published in 1957, and passed in 1973. AWM P04017.059

As for “Hooky” Secker Bell, Exeter’s commander during the fight with Graf Spee, he escaped Singapore before the fall in 1942 and survived the war. In January 1946 he took command of the battleship HMS Anson, was named an ADC to King George VI, and retired on health grounds in January 1948.

In 1956, he served as an advisor to the film The Battle of the River Plate which included the huge Des Moines class heavy cruiser USS Salem as the Graf, Achilles as herself, the light cruiser HMS Sheffield as Ajax, and the light cruiser HMS Jamaica as our Exeter.

Her 1931-marked bell and River Plate battle-damaged ensign, along with a scale model of the cruiser, are in Exeter as part of the city’s archives.

St Andrews Chapel in Exeter has several relics and a memorial stained glass window which incorporates the ship’s badge.

She is celebrated in maritime art, and for good reason.

HMS Exeter at Plymouth in 1940: Back from the Graf Spee action, by Charles Ernest Cundall. IWM (Art.IWM ART LD 1848)

Battle of the River Plate, 13 December 1939 watercolor by Edward Tufnell, RN (Retired), depicting the cruisers HMS Exeter (foreground) and HMNZS Achilles (right center background) in action with the German armored ship Admiral Graf Spee (right background). NH 86397-KN

Admiral Graf Spee vs Ajax, Achilles, and Exeter painting by Adam Werka

The Battle of the Java Sea, painting by Van der Ven. From left to right two American destroyers (Four stackers), cruiser Hr.Ms. De Ruyter, HMAS Perth, HMS Exeter, Hr.Ms. Witte de With, Hr.Ms. Kortenaer (sinking) and HMS Jupiter. NIMH 2158_051001.

The Royal Navy, when passing through the Sunda Strait, typically holds a memorial service for the lost cruiser and her escorts.

HMS Montrose showers the now-calm waters of the Java Sea with poppies over the site where 62 men lost their lives when cruiser HMS Exeter and destroyer HMS Encounter fell victim to the Japanese, 2019. MOD photo

In 1980, a Type 42 destroyer, HMS Exeter (D 89), joined the fleet to perpetuate the name. She earned the ship her eighth battle honor (Falklands- 1982) and was only decommissioned on 27 May 2009.

October 1987. Gulf Of Oman. A starboard beam view of the British destroyer HMS Exeter (D-89) underway on patrol while stationed in the region as part of a multinational force safeguarding shipping during the war between Iraq and Iran. PH1 T. Cosgrove. DN-ST-93-00902

A veterans organization for all the past Exeters endures. 

Meminisse est ad Vivificandum – To Remember is to Keep Alive


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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Storis to Return, Zumwalt Floats, Arkansas Launches

U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker Storis during the run for a short-cut Northwest Passage prepares to send helicopters aloft on ice reconnaissance before proceeding eastward through Amundsen Gulf to Dolphin and Union Straits, Canadian Northwest Territory (July 23, 1957). 26-G-5782

The name USCGC Storis is one of the most hallowed to the Coast Guard.

Commissioned in 1942, the heavily-armed 230-foot icebreaker earned her chops in the “Weather War” against the Germans in Greenland, later became the first U.S. vessel to circumnavigate the North American continent after she cleared the Northwest Passage, and stood watch over Alaska– supporting the DEW Line and rebuffing Soviet interlopers during the Cold War. Once it thawed, she became the first foreign warship to visit the Russian Pacific Fleet bastion of Petropavlovsk since 1854.

Only narrowly escaping preservation as a museum ship following her decommissioning in 2007, the service has apparently bestowed the name on a much less noble successor.

Rather than holding out to name one of the big new Polar Security Cutters currently under construction, the USCG is apparently renaming the third-hand 360-foot oilfield support vessel Aiviq as USCGC Storis (WAGB-21), as detailed by images coming from Tampa Ship LLC in Florida, where she is undergoing a rushed conversion before entering federal service sometime in 2026.

Icebreaker Aiviq is now in USCG Icebreaker Red and carries the name Storis on its transom. (Source: GCaptain)

Icebreaker Aiviq is now in USCG Icebreaker Red and carries the name Storis on its transom. (Source: GCaptain)

The Coast Guard intends to permanently homeport the vessel in Juneau, Alaska, a departure from its longstanding tradition of basing icebreakers in Seattle.

China trembles. 

Meanwhile, in DDG-1000 news…

Some 16 months after arriving in Pascagoula, and with her original twin 155mm Advanced Gun Systems replaced with 12 new Conventional Prompt Strike missile tubes, USS Zumwalt (DDG 1000) undocked on 6 December and returned to the water of the Pascagoula River.

Zumwalt undocking, 6 December 2024, Pascagoula, HII photo

Zumwalt undocking, 6 December 2024, Pascagoula, HII photo

She will now undergo testing in the Gulf of Mexico before returning to the fleet and the (hopeful) IOC of her new hypersonic boost-glide weapon system.

Keep in mind that Zumwalt was laid down in 2011 and commissioned eight years ago, so it will be nice to finally see her with a set of teeth…eventually.

A deeper dive by Alex Hollings. 

Welcome Back, Razorback!

The 27th Virginia-class submarine, the future USS Arkansas (SSN 800), was christened Saturday at Newport News.

USS Arkansas was christened on the 83rd anniversary of Pearl Harbor. HII photo

It is a great name and it’s nice to see it on the NVR again, after a 26-year absence.

When commissioned, likely in 2026, the advanced Block IV boat will be the fifth warship to carry the name of The Natural State including the mighty Wyoming-class battleship (BB-33) and a Virginia-class nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser (CGN-41).

Of note, BB-33 was at anchor in Casco Bay on the sleepy Sunday morning of 7 December 1941, part of the Atlantic Neutrality Patrol, a task that spared her a spot on Battleship Row in Pearl that day.

She would be in the gunline off Normandy.

Opening the Attack Painting, Watercolor on Paper; by Dwight C. Shepler; 1944 D-Day. Arkansas is in the foreground, and French cruisers George Leygues and Montcalm are in the background. NHHC 88-199-ew

Once her work was done in Europe, she of course returned to the Pacific to support the landings at Iwo Jima and Okinawa.

Navy Husky on Ice

Official caption: Field technicians with the Arctic Submarine Laboratory prepare to remove ice from the Los Angeles-class attack submarine USS Hampton (SSN-767) at Ice Camp Whale on the Beaufort Sea, Arctic Ocean, during Operation Ice Camp in March 2024.

USN Photo 240308-N-JO245-1316A Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Justin Yarborough

One of the dwindling 688is left in operation, Hampton was commissioned in 1993 and is part of SubRon 11 out of San Diego.

Besides the Husqvarna seen above, the Navy and Coast Guard have often used four-legged huskies for work in the polar regions, such as in the Great Alaska Overland Expedition in 1897, the Northeast Greenland Sledge Patrol during WWII, and Operation Deep Freeze.

For reference, Task Force 43 in the 1955-56 Deep Freeze expedition had no less than 28 such dogs as part of the crew– which sometimes required some extra fresh meat, harvested from local sources.

Period caption: “Ensign David E. Baker adjusts the sled harness of an Eskimo Husky on the training grounds for Antarctic-bound dogs at Wonalancet, New Hampshire, in addition to comfortable sled harness, the dogs will be rigged with “shoes” to protect their feet from the ice when they begin their trail rescue work in the land of the South Pole. They are part of Operation Deepfreeze and will sail in ships of Task Force 43.” Photograph released October 10, 1955. 330-PS-7528 (USN 681173):

The Brown Water Navy’s 81mm Mortar Mark 2

In a recent Warship Wednesday (Coast Guard Ron Three) we touched on the use of the 81mm mortar in two fixed emplacements behind the main 5-inch gun mount on a series of USCG cutters that deployed to Vietnam between 1967 and 1972.

The 81mm mortar was mounted on either side of the No. 1 (5-inch) mount, seen here on USCGC Campbell in 1967.

Developed by the Navy and Coast Guard in two different models (Mark 2 Mod 0 and Mark 2 Mod 1) in the early 1960s, the thought behind such mounts was that they could be used for illumination quicker and easier than shooting star shells from the main gun (which also could conceivably leave the main gun slow to switch gears from lofting illum shells to hitting surface/shore targets with HE).

Plus, the mortars could be used for near-shore naval gunfire support as well.

Campbell’s mortar team “hanging an 81” ashore

These mortars were also used extensively by the USCG’s 26 82-foot Point class cutters as part of CGRON One during the war, typically piggybacked with an M2 air-cooled Browning .50 cal BMG.

Rel. No. 6135: USCGC POINT LOMAS FIRED AT SUSPECTED VIET CONG CAVE HIDEOUT: An 81mm mortar shell fired from the 82-foot U.S. Coast Guard Cutter POINT LOMAS (WPB-82321) shatters rocks over the entrance to a suspected Viet Cong cave hideout along a beach in a Viet Cong controlled area near Danang. Rounds from a .50 caliber machine gun, mounted piggyback on the mortar gun also were fired into the cave. Commanding the POINT LOMAS is Lieutenant Keith D. Ripley, USCG of Baltimore, Md. The 82-footer was stationed at Port Aransas, Texas, before reporting for duty with Coast Guard Squadron One’s Division 12, based at Danang, Vietnam, in July 1965. 

The Navy also heavily used them on just about everything that moved that was smaller than 165 feet in length, as detailed by Bob Stoner GMCM (SW) Ret. over at Warboats.org.

Navy 50-foot coastal patrol craft (PCF); Navy 75-foot fast patrol boats (PTF, “Nasty”-class); Navy 95-foot fast patrol boats (PTF, “Osprey”-class); Navy 164-foot patrol gunboats (PG, “Ashville“-class); miscellaneous riverine craft which were mostly converted LCM-6 landing craft: MON (monitor); CCB (command and control boat); Zippo (flame thrower boat); ASPB (assault support patrol boat); HSSC (heavy SEAL support craft); and advanced tactical support bases such as SEA FLOAT/SOLID ANCHOR (Nam Can) and BREEZY COVE (Song Ong Doc).

Cam Ranh Bay, Republic of Vietnam. Gunner’s Mate Second Class Robert Phalen, left, and another crewmember of Fast Coastal Patrol Craft 42 (PCF 42) prepare to fire an 81mm Mortar while on patrol, 18 October 1968. 428-GX-K60314

South Vietnam. Engineman Second Class McCune drops a projectile into a mortar on the deck of the fast coastal patrol craft (PCF-3) of Coast Division 11 as Boatswain’s Mate First Class Byerly stands by to fire on the Viet Cong unit position. Photographed by F. L. Lawson, 17 July 1967. 428GX-K40159

GMCM Stoner:

The mortar itself is mounted on a very robust tripod and uses clamps to control traverse and elevation angles. Unless fitted with NO FIRE zone mechanical stops, the mortar has 360 degrees of traverse and -30 degrees of depression, and +71.5 degrees of elevation. Its rate of fire is 18 rounds/minute at 45 degrees elevation in DROP FIRE mode and 10 rounds/minute in TRIGGER FIRE mode. Sights for the mortar are attached to the left side of the elevation arc. The weight of the Mk 2 Mod 0 was 593 pounds; the weight increased to 677 pounds in the Mk 2 Mod 1 (with machine gun). The range of the 81mm (direct) was 1,000+ yards; (high angle, indirect) was 3,940 yards. The maximum effective range of the .50 Browning machine gun was 2,000 yards; the maximum range was 7,440 yards.

From the 1966 manual, OP 1743, of the Mark 2 Mod 0:

Post-Vietnam, the Navy’s nascent riverine and littoral capability transitioned to Boat Support Units which later changed their name to become Coastal River Squadrons, then later the Special Boat Squadrons and SBTs, with some Mark 2s remaining in service, especially in reserve outfits, into the mid-1980s.

Likewise, the USCG kept their Mark 2s on stateside cutters– both on small 82- and 95-footers as well as high endurance 255-to-378-foot cutters– into the early 1980s.

USCGC Cape Jellison (WPB-95317) getting some time in off Seward Alaska in the early 1980s with their 81/.50 cal mount

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