Last Full Measure: Wilfred Owen

Some 105 years ago today, poet and soldier LT Wilfred Edward Salter Owen, MC, 5th Bn. Manch. Rgt, was killed, on 4 November 1918, aged just 25. Owen died just a week before the signing of the armistice and is commemorated in Ors Communal Cemetery.

IWM Q 101783

He had earned his MC prior to death, although it was not gazetted until four months later. To quote his Military Cross citation in the Edinburgh Gazette in 1919:

“For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in the attack on the Fonsomme Line on October 1st/2nd, 1918. On the company commander becoming a casualty, he assumed command and showed fine leadership, and resisted a heavy counter-attack. He personally manipulated a captured enemy machine gun from an isolated position and inflicted considerable losses on the enemy.”

A year earlier, Owen had penned his famous work, Anthem for Doomed Youth while recovering from shell shock at Craiglockhart War Hospital, where he had met mentor Siegfried Sassoon.

Owen’s writing does not seek to glorify war, nor does it speak of the honor or bravery of the men he fought alongside, instead it is a bitter tale of soldiers “bent double, like old beggars under sacks, Knock-kneed, coughing like hags” who are hit by gas.

Returning to France in August 1918 after convalescence, he earned the Military Cross in October leading his company then was killed in an action whilst crossing the Sambre–Oise Canal, just a few days before the Armistice.

Discover more poets of the Great War, via the IWM.

Coast Guard Mothballing Cutters Due to Recruiting Shortfalls

It seems the USCG, which is increasingly strung out across the globe backfilling a short-hulled/staffed Navy, is itself running on empty after years of failing to meet recruiting goals through a variety of societal and administrative reasons.

Among the austerity measures in the crew-poor Coast Guard, which is 10 percent understaffed across the board:

  • Three 210-foot Reliance class Medium Endurance Cutters (WMEC) will be placed in layup, pending decommissioning.
  • ​Seven 87-foot Patrol Boats (WPB) will be placed in layup, pending reactivation.
  • Five 65-foot Harbor Tugs (WYTL) will temporarily not be continuously manned but will be kept in a ready status in case icebreaking is needed. 
  • Two 154-foot Sentinel (Webber) class Fast Response Cutters (WPC) will commence uncrewed Recurring Depot Availability Program (RDAP) at the Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore, Maryland. The next 154′ Patrol Craft scheduled for RDAP will deliver the hull to the Coast Guard Yard and swap hulls with a cutter that has completed drydock.  
  • Crews at all 23 seasonal station smalls will transfer to their parent command.
  • The six non-response units (boat forces units without SAR responsibilities) will suspend operations and their crews will be reassigned in assignment year (AY) 2024.
  • The identified 19 stations whose SAR response capabilities are redundant will be deemed Scheduled Mission Units. Three of these 19 stations will be ports, waterways and coastal security (PWCS) level one-Scheduled Mission Units.  

    Maybe this explains why the service is making moves to expand its JROTC units nationwide among other initiatives. It announced its first California-based JROTC unit last week at Mission Bay High School in San Diego.

    SAN DIEGO — The U.S. Coast Guard announces the establishment of its first California-based Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (JROTC) program. Photo by: Photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Nicolas Cavana | VIRIN: 231027-G-LC063-6158

    The Coast Guard established its first JROTC unit in 1992, in Miami. Under recent federal legislation, the Coast Guard is expanding the JROTC program to each of its nine Districts by 2025. Studies show that about 20 percent of all JROTC participants go on to join the military.

    One of our own needs a boost

    Chase Welch, a 0311 Marine with two combat tours in Afghanistan and an all-around good guy who was once a lowly Guns.com writer long ago left GDC for a bigger and better deal over at EoTech where he makes great content.

    Observe:

    Then comes the bad stuff.

    He and his wife were recently in a serious car accident and, after a fight, came through but can use a hand.

    I don’t normally ask for things, but if you can, please think about it.

    Jeep Carrier Pop Gun

    80 years ago today: Testing the 5-inch/38-caliber dual-purpose gun on the newly-commissioned Casablanca-class escort carrier, USS Manila Bay (CVE 61), 3 November 1943. Note fuzed ready shells in the open box and the “Gilligan” style dixie cup on the gun later.

    National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), photo # 80-G-372778.

    Built on freighter hulls, the Casablancas in addition to a AAA battery of 8 Bofors, and 12 Orlekons, these little 7,800-ton ships carried a single Mark 30 Mod 80 open-based ring mount  5″/38 DP gun without a shield, as seen above.

    It ran on three motors: a single 10 hp motor to work both elevation and train, a 7.5 hp motor for the shell hoists, and a 5 hp motor for ramming, allowing a decent rate of fire with a trained crew of some 12-15 round per minute.

    Capable of throwing a 55-pound shell to a theoretical maximum range of 18,000 yards (or to an altitude of 37,220 ft), it used the same core gun as on the rest of the American carriers (Yorktown and Essex class CVs and Independence-class CVLs) but in single mount.

    USS Hornet (CV-12) fires her after 5″ / 38 guns during practice in the Western Pacific, circa June 1945. Hornet’s 5-inch guns fired no less than 7,275 shells in anger during WWII (a figure that was small compared to the 115,179 rounds of 40 mm and 409,580 rounds of 20 mm ammo). 80-G-K-5701 (color)

    USS Hornet (CV-12) firing her starboard 5″ / 38 gun battery in a Western Pacific practice exercise, circa June 1945. The next ship astern, also firing, is USS Bon Homme Richard (CV-31). During their SCB-27C/SCB-125 modernizations in the 1950s, these big twin mounts were removed to free up deck space but the Essexes still carried seven Mk.24 5″/38 DP singles on sponsons for another couple of decades and Hornet still has hers with her as a museum ship.80-G-K-5704 (color)

    As far as effectiveness? In addition to “kills” against aircraft, at least three of the Casablanca class used their single 5-inch popgun in the one-sided action against more superior Japanese surface ships, the cruiser-destroyer force of Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita during the Sacrifice of Taffy 3 in October 1944: this included USS St. Lo (ex-Midway ex-Chapin Bay) (CVE-63) recording a hit on a destroyer, USS Kalinin Bay (CVE-68) landing two hits on a Myōkō-class cruiser, and USS White Plains (CVE-66) claiming to hit the Takao-class heavy cruiser Chōkai with six shells.

    American carriers would continue to carry at least a few 5-inch guns in open mounts well into the Cold War with the Essex and Midway class still keeping some of their teeth into the 1970s (and the Forrestal class supercarriers being commissioned with an eight-pack of more modern 5″/54 Mark 42 guns mounted on sponsons jutting out from the sides of the ship so they did not interfere with the flight deck.

    Aerial starboard bow view of the training aircraft carrier USS Lexington (CVT-16) underway. Although the photo is dated 1985, it must have been taken before 1970, as the ship is still fitted with sponson-mounted Mk.24 Mod. 11 5-inch 38-cal open gun mounts. DN-ST-86-02002.

    Essex-class USS Intrepid (CVA-11), left, with her 5-inch twins deleted from her flight deck but still carrying single mounts on sponsons, and the newForrestal-class supercarrier USS Independence (CVA-62) alongside Pier 12 now Pier 14 Norfolk March 1961, note the 5-inch Mk. 42 guns– the same as on Knox class frigates and Forest Sherman class tin cans–on Indy. These would be deleted in the 1970s

    The first batch of Tarawa-class LHAs even carried two 5″/54 Mark 45 guns that edged out the front of the flight deck into the 1980s. 

    USS Tarawa with bow 5-inch MK45 guns. These were later removed. 

    It wasn’t until 1961 that the first American flattop, USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63) arrived in the fleet without at least a 5-inch gun aboard.

    You gotta love a 6.5 Swede– especially in the hands of a Marine

    Via TGB:

    At the 2023 Western Fall Classic, Julia Carlson, 47, of Lehi, UT, reached a Vintage Military Match event record with her remarkable score of 293-3X. The new score beats out the previous record set in 2010 by just one point. Along with claiming the Vintage Military Match win, Carlson also overtook the Carbine Rifle Match with a score of 353-5X. Though not an event record, her performance was more than 10 points above the second-place competitor – tightly securing a victory.

    Of course, Carlson isn’t just your average competitor.

    A retired Marine MSgt-– whose service included Officer in Charge of the Female Engagement Team under the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade while in Helmand, Afghanistan from 2009 to 2010– and the 2014 individual National Service Rifle Champion, Carlson reportedly shot the match with Patrick McAllister’s “Mac” rifle.

    Carlson’s marksmanship highlights include over 15 Interservice titles, five International titles of which two were Combat Precision against all militaries in the world, over 40 National titles that include four history-making championships by being the first woman to win since the induction of the competition in 1902. She was named Female Athlete of the Year for the Marine Corps in 1998. Carlson earned her Distinguished Rifleman Badge in 1997 and Distinguished Pistol Shot in 2014, and she is one of four known female Marines to become double distinguished.

    Farewell, Gazelle

    The so ugly it’s pretty Aérospatiale Gazelle helicopter, made domestically by Westland, began its British military career on 6 July 1974, and after nearly 50 years of service that spanned all branches of the Forces, the beloved 5-seat whirlybird was retired on Halloween. It is the only helicopter to have been produced for and served with all of the British services.

    In total, Westland produced nearly 300 Gazelle helicopters, with 282 of them being delivered to the British armed forces: 

    • Westland SA.341B Gazelle AH.1, for the Army Air Corps and Royal Marines (Commandos)
    • Westland SA.341C Gazelle HT.2, for the Royal Navy
    • Westland SA.341D Gazelle HT.3, for the Royal Air Force
    • Westland SA.341E Gazelle HCC.4, for the Royal Air Force

    Famously, a handful of RM and AAC “Gazzys” (11 of 3 Commando Brigade Air Sqn, 6 of 656 Sqn Army Air Corps) performed vital reconnaissance, liaison, medivac, resupply, and ersatz gunship roles in the Falklands, where British air power ashore was almost non-existent. For reference, the only other rotary-winged aircraft available to the Marines and Tommys were three squadrons of overworked and aged Fleet Air Arm Wessex HU.5s (CH-34s) that also had to crossdeck troops and supplies across the fleet, 9 tiny Wessex Scouts, and a single magical Chinook.

    THE FALKLANDS CONFLICT, APRIL – JUNE 1982 (FKD 313) The Battle for Tumbledown. A casualty of the Scots Guards is rushed by stretcher to a Gazelle helicopter for evacuation on Goat Ridge, below Mount Harriet. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205189227

    RM SA341B in the Falkland Islands in 1982. Note the dark green-black scheme which really didn’t do any favors in the mossy sub-polar region, and the unguided 68mm SNEB rocket pods mounted, borrowed from RAF Harriers.

    This is in addition to hard service in Northern Ireland, Germany, Hong Kong, Canada, Kenya, Belize, Cyprus, Iraq, Kosovo, Bosnia, Sierra Leone, and Afghanistan.

    To mark this historic end, the last British operator, 5 Regiment Army Air Corps, flew a formation of three Gazelle helicopters from Aldergrove Flying Station to their final resting place at Vector Aerospace International Ltd in Gosport. The flypast included HQ 38 (Irish) Bde in Thiepval Barracks, Lisburn, and various historic locations in GB.

    The Gazelle replaced the H-13 Sioux and in turn, is being phased out in favor of the Airbus H135 (MBB EC135). They continue to fly overseas with something like 20 different operators including the French (along with a dozen French allies across Africa) and the Egyptians.

    Fast, nimble, and agile, it was the “sports car of the air” explains Army Air Corps pilot David Caldwell, who flew Gazelles from 1976 to 2009:

    FFH Group & Surveillance Force Grenada, 1983-84

    As a wrap of our coverage of the 40th anniversary of the 1983 invasion of Grenada, we take a look at the unique surface action group that arrived to assist in the peacekeeping phase of the operation, which ran roughly through November and December when the last U.S. combat troops were withdrawn– that of hydrofoils operating with a frigate mothership.

    Mid-November 1983 found the newly commissioned Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigate USS Aubrey Fitch (FFG-34), along with the two equally new Pegasus-class hydrofoil patrol boats, USS Aquila (PHM-4) and Taurus (PHM-3) in Guantanamo Bay “for the purpose of testing the feasibility of operating those types of ships in the same task organization.”

    As noted by Fitch’s DANFS entry, she assumed tactical control of the hydrofoils and jetted over to Grenada:

    Demands incident to the continuing American presence in Grenada, however, overtook the experiment and sent Aubrey Fitch and her two consorts south to the tiny republic. Duty in the waters adjacent to Grenada lasted until mid-December when the warship returned to Mayport.

    All three were eligible for the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal for Urgent Fury.

    Aquila and Taurus would return to their homeport at Key West on 16 December and spend the rest of their career in unsung law enforcement support work in the Caribbean and off Central America, being decommissioned as a class in 1993 with their sisters and disposed of in 1996.

    Fitch lasted a little longer. Decommissioned on 12 December 1997, the frigate was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 31 May 1999 and sold for scrap shortly after.

    Sadly, there are no photos I can find of Fitch and her two ‘foils operating together in Cuba-Grenada Oct-Dec 1983, which is tragic, but drink in these were taken of the ships separately early in their careers.

    USS AUBREY FITCH (FFG 34) underway 1982 Bath trials DN-SC-85-04417

    USS AUBREY FITCH (FFG 34) underway 1982 Bath trials DN-SC-85-04399

    USS AUBREY FITCH (FFG 34) underway 1982 Bath trials DN-SC-85-04401

    hydrofoils USS AQUILA (PHM 4), front, and USS GEMINI (PHM 6), center, lie tied up in port with a third PHM. The Coast Guard surface effect ship (SES) cutter USCGC SHEARWATER (WSES 3) is in the background. NARA photo

    Hydrofoil patrol combatant missile ship USS TAURUS (PHM 3) race by. Navy hydrofoils are regularly used on Joint Task Force 4 drug interdiction missions.

    DN-ST-90-09381 The patrol combatant missile hydrofoils USS HERCULES (PHM 2) and USS TAURUS (PHM 3) maneuver off of Key West, Florida.

    Seattle pegasus class hydrofoil USS Taurus (PHM-3) during her acceptance trials

    USS Hercules (PHM-2) and Taurus (PHM-3) 1983

    Cue USCG

    As for what happened from a maritime perspective after Fitch and her PHMs returned home, the answer is that the Coast Guard took over the task of policing Grenada’s waters for the next year, and it should be pointed out that two HC-130s and the 378-foot Hamilton-class cutter USCGC Chase (WHEC 718), which was deployed from 23 Oct – 21 Nov 1983, served during the shooting-part of Urgent Fury, earning the deploying units the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal for their service.

    The follow-on Operation Island Breeze USCG Grenada Getaway response was a WWII-era 180-foot Balsam (Iris) class buoy tender that served as the mothership for three rotating 95-foot cutters drawn from the Florida-based Seventh Coast Guard District, allowing the small boat crews to get some showers and better food as well as mechanical support from the tender’s extensive onboard workshop.

    On 8 December 1983, the Cape-class patrol cutters Cape Gull (WPB-95304), Cape Fox (WPB-95316), Cape Shoalwater (WPB 95324), and the tender Sagebrush (WLB-399) arrived off of the island of Grenada to replace U.S. Navy surface forces conducting surveillance operations after the U.S. invasion of the island earlier that year.

    Commissioned on 1 April 1944, Sagebrush spent most of her service life home-ported in San Juan, Puerto Rico, earning four USCG Unit Commendations before she was decommissioned on 26 April 1988.

    USCGC Cape Fox (WPB 95316) celebrating Christmas 1983 off Grenada 1983.

    Note the two mounted M2 .50 cals, rare for Capes in the 1980s, as well as the Christmas tree on deck.

    The Capes used three crews, Green, Blue, and Red, rotating out every 30 days, and used backpack HF radio sets borrowed from the Army to communicate with the forces ashore. Support shoreside for the roughly 100-man force came from two 20-foot containers in port converted into shops.

    For air support, they had HC-130Hs out of Clearwater fly over occasionally, taking off and recovering at CGAS Borinquen, as well as a weekly logistics run.

    They would remain on station until 3 February 1984 when replaced by a similar group, a task that would run through the end of the year.

    The WPB/WLB force was rotated out roughly every three months in 1984 and saw the buoy tender USCGC Mesquite (WLB 305), her sister USCGC Gentian (WLB 290), and the 140-foot icebreaker (!) Mobile Bay (WTGB 103) which sailed from Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. Meanwhile, the number of WPBs was cut from three to two. 

    The sum, as detailed by ADM James S. Gracey, USCG:

    After a few days, the Navy figured out that patrolling around the island to keep people from coming on or going off, additional people coming on or other people from escaping, wasn’t working very well with Navy PCs or whatever they were using, whereas our smaller patrol boats would do the job very well. So we took over. We were there long after everybody else had gone home doing this operation and other things that the Coast Guard always does when we are someplace. That was Grenada.

    A lasting legacy of the USCG in Grenada was the reformation of the Grenadian Coast Guard, an organization that endures today, with a little help from its northern neighbor.

    Warship Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023: Mad Marcus

    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, Nov. 1, 2023: Mad Marcus

    Photographer: PHCM/AC Louis P. Bodine Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command. Catalog #: NH 107602

    Above we see a great 1968 image of the Edsall-class destroyer escort-turned-radar picket, USS Vance (DER-387) underway off the coast of Oahu. At this time in the little tin can’s life, she had left her mark on the end of two German U-boats, frozen in polar expeditions, logged three very trying tours off coastal Vietnam, and survived a real-life Lt. Commander Queeg who, no shit, was named for a Roman emperor.

    She was brought to life on this day in 1943.

    The Edsall class

    A total of 85 Edsall-class destroyer escorts were cranked out in four different yards in the heyday of World War II rapid production with class leader USS Edsall (DE-129) laid down 2 July 1942 and last of class USS Holder commissioned 18 January 1944– in all some four score ships built in 19 months. The Arsenal of Democracy at work–building tin cans faster than the U-boats and Kamikazes could send them to Davy Jones.

    The U.S. Navy destroyer escort USS Edsall (DE-129) underway near Ambrose Light just outside New York Harbor on 25 February 1945. The photo was taken by a blimp from Squadron ZP-12. Edsall is painted in Camouflage Measure 32, Design 3D. U.S. Navy photo 80-G-306257

    These 1,590-ton expendable escorts were based on their predecessors, the very successful Cannon-class boats but used an FMR type (Fairbanks-Morse reduction-geared diesel drive) propulsion suite whereas the only slightly less prolific Cannons used a DET (Diesel Electric Tandem) drive. Apples to oranges.

    edsallArmed with enough popguns (3×3″/50s, 2x40mm, 8x20mm) to keep aircraft and small craft at bay, they could plug a torpedo into a passing enemy cruiser from one of their trio of above-deck 21-inch tubes, or maul a submarine with any number of ASW weapons including depth charges and Hedgehogs. Too slow for active fleet operations (21 knots) they were designed for coastal patrol (could float in just 125 inches of seawater), sub-chasing, and convoy escorts.

    Meet USS Vance

    Our subject is the only U.S. Navy warship to carry the name of Joseph Williams Vance, Jr.. A mustang who volunteered for the Navy Reserve at age 21 in 1940, the young Seman Vance served aboard the old battlewagon USS Arkansas (BB-33) and, as he had university hours at Southwestern and Florida on his jacket, was appointed a midshipman in the rapidly expanding Navy after four months in the fleet. Joining the flush deck tin can USS Parrott (DD-218) in the Philippines on 16 April as an ensign in charge of the destroyer’s torpedo battery. Facing the Japanese onslaught in the Western Pacific, Ensign Vance picked up a Bronze Star at the Battle of Makassar Strait (24 January 1942)– the Navy’s first surface action victory in the Pacific– saw action in the Java sea and the Badoeng Strait, and, by Guadalcanal, had been promoted to lieutenant (junior grade). With the promotion came a transfer– to the ill-fated HMAS Canberra, as liaison officer with the Royal Australian Navy. He was aboard Canberra on that tragic night off Savo Island on 9 August 1942 when the Kent-class heavy cruiser was sent to the depths of “Ironbottom Sound” with 73 other members of her crew.

    His body lost to sea at age 23, his family remembered Joe in a cenotaph at Bethlehem Cemetery in Memphis. He is also marked on the Tablet of the Missing at the Manila American Cemetery and Memorial. The paperwork for Makassar Strait caught up to him eventually and his family was presented his bronze star posthumously.

    The future Vance (DE-387) was laid down on 30 April 1943 at Houston, Texas by the Brown Shipbuilding Co. and launched just 10 weeks later on 16 July 1943.

    She was sponsored by the late Lt. (jg.) Vance’s grieving mother, Elizabeth Sarah “Beth” Harrison Vance, and Joe’s sister, Willie.

    A Coast Guard-manned DE, Vance’s pre-commissioning crew was formed in August 1943 at the sub-chaser school in Miami while their ship was under construction on the other side of the Gulf of Mexico. Consisting of 40 officers and men drawn from across the USCG– most had seen war service chasing subs and escorting convoys across the Atlantic. This skilled cadre left Miami after two months of training and headed to Houston in early October, joining 30 newly minted techs and specialists direct from A schools and 130 assorted bluejackets right from basic.

    All hands moved aboard USS Vance on 1 November 1943 when she was commissioned at the Tennessee Coal & Iron Docks in Houston, LCDR Eric Alvin Anderson, USCG, in command. As noted by her War History, “The shipyard orchestra played for the commissioning ceremonies and later sandwiches and coffee were served to all hands.”

    Following outfitting and shakedown cruises off Bermuda, Vance became the flagship for the all-USCG Escort Division (CortDiv) 45, including the sequentially numbered sisters USS Lansing (DE-388), Durant (DE-389), Calcaterra (DE-390), Chambers (DE-391) and Merrill (DE-392) with Commodore E.J. Roland raising his command pennant aboard on 19 December.

    The CNO, ADM Ernest J. King, had, in June 1943, ordered the Coast Guard to staff and operate 30 new (mostly Edsall-class) destroyer escorts on Atlantic ASW duties, trained especially at the Submarine Training Centers at Miami and Norfolk. Each would be crewed by 11 officers and 166 NCOs/enlisted, translating to a need for 5,310 men, all told.

    By November 1943, it had been accomplished! Quite a feat.

    The USCG-manned DEs would be grouped in five Escort Divisions of a half dozen ships each, 23 of which were Edsalls:

    • Escort Division 20–Marchand, Hurst, Camp, Crow, Pettie, Ricketts.
    • Escort Division 22–Poole, Peterson, Harveson, Joyce, Kirkpatrick, Leopold.
    • Escort Division 23–Sellstrom, Ramsden, Mills, Rhodes, Richey, Savage.
    • Escort Division 45–Vance, Lansing, Durant, Calcaterra, Chambers, Morrill.
    • Escort Division 46–Menges, Mosley, Newell, Pride, Falgout, Lowe.

    These ships were soon facing off with the Germans in the Atlantic and Mediterranean.

    War!

    Celebrating Christmas 1943 at sea “being tossed around like a matchstick,” Vance’s first escort job was to ride shotgun on a group of tankers running from Port Arthur, Texas to Norfolk just after the New Year, then escorting the jeep carrier USS Core (CVE-13) to New York City.

    She crossed the Atlantic with her division to escort a large slow (7-10 knots) convoy, UGS.33, to Gibraltar in February then turned around to the return trip with a GUS convoy, returning to the Med with UGS 39 in May, where she would come face to face with the enemy. On 14 May 1944, the Type VIIC sub U-616 (Kplt. Siegfried Koitschka) torpedoed two Allied merchants– the British flagged G.S. Walden (7,127 tons) and Fort Fidler (10,627 tons).

    From Vance’s war history:

    Eight American destroyers and aircraft from five squadrons hunted U-616 until it was sunk on 17 May, lost with all hands.

    1944 Palermo, Sicily – USS Vance (DE 387) via navsource

    Following her battle with U-616, Vance would recycle and cross the Atlantic again with UGS.46 in June, UGS.53 in September, UGS.66 in January 1945, UGS.78 in March 1945, and UGS.90 in May 1945. The latter dispersed on 18 May as it wasn’t considered needed after the German surrender.

    It was on this last convoy that the advanced Type IXD2 Schnorchel-fitted submarine, U-873 (Kptlt. Friedrich Steinhoff), was sighted on the surface at 0230 on 11 May off the Azores by Vance and her sister, Durant. Finding Steinhoff’s crew, illuminated by 24-inch searchlights and with every gun on two destroyers trained on them, ready to surrender and the boat making no offensive actions, Vance put a whaleboat with the ship’s XO, Lt. Carlton J. Schmidt, USCGR; Ensign Vance K. Randle, USCG; and 19 enlisted aboard to take U-873 as prize. They found seven Kriegsmarine officers and 52 enlisted, about half of whom had come from the gesunken U-604.

    By 0410, a spare U.S. ensign was hoisted aboard the German boat, and Vance, departing the convoy with her prize, made for Bermuda, then was directed to Casco Bay to bring the sub to Portsmouth, New Hampshire, arriving there on the 17th.

    U-873 is under her own power, manned by 2 officers and 19 crewmembers of USS Vance DE 387. Notably, U-873 carried a rare twin 3.7 cm Flakzwilling M43U on the DLM42 mount, seen stern. Photo courtesy of Joe Haberkern, son of Joseph W. Haberkern, Jr., MoMM2/C, Plankowner

    Captain Friedrich Steinhoff (wearing white cap) and Officers and Crew of Surrendered German U-873 on Deck of Tug, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, May 17, 1945. Note the Marine to the right with a Reising SMG at the ready. NARA photo

    Steinhoff under heavy Marine guard

    Crewmembers of USS Vance DE 387. Showing items from their captured German U-boat, U-873. Photo courtesy of Joe Haberkern, son of Joseph W. Haberkern, Jr., MoMM2/C, Plankowner

    Sadly, as detailed by U-boat.net, even though VE-Day was well past, post-war POW life would not be kind to U-873‘s crew.

    Steinhoff and his men were taken, not to POW camp, but to Charles Street Jail, a Boston city jail where they were locked up with common criminals while awaiting disposition to a POW camp. There are many accounts of mistreatment of the U-boat men while they were held there.

    After suffering harsh interrogation, Steinhoff- [brother of rocket scientist and future U.S> Army rocketry bright bulb Ernst Steinhoff] committed suicide on the morning of 19 May 1945, opening his arteries using broken glass from his sunglasses. U-873‘s doctor, Dr. Karl Steinke, attempted to give first aid but was too late.

    Steinhoff was buried in the military cemetery at Fort Devens, age 35, while the rest of his crew were sent to warm their skin in a Mississippi POW camp until repatriated.

    As for U-873, she was placed in dry dock for a design study of her type by Portsmouth Naval Shipyard engineers and then later transferred to the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard for tests. After trials, the U-boat was scrapped in 1948, her lessons being rolled into the Navy’s GUPPY program.

    For Vance, her war in the Atlantic and Med was over.

    She put into Boston Naval Yard for additional AAA guns and departed on 2 July 1945 bound for the Pacific. Crossing through “The Ditch” and putting into San Diego then Pearl Harbor, she was there with orders to sail for the 5th Fleet in Philippine waters when news of the Japanese surrender overtook her.

    Ordered to the Green Cove Springs, Florida reserve fleet, she was decommissioned on 27 February 1946. Her Coast Guard crew returned to their home service, with most being demobilized. Her skipper for five of her eight convoy runs and the capture of U-873, LCDR Frank Vincent Helmer, USCG (USCGA ’35), would go on to retire as a rear admiral during the 1960s.

    The Edsall class, 1946 Janes.

    Break out the White Paint

    With the dramatic surge in air and maritime traffic across some downright vacant stretches of the Pacific that came with the Korean War, the USCG was again tapped to man a growing series of Ocean Stations. Two had been formed after WWII and the Navy added another three in 1950, bringing the total to five.

    These stations would serve both a meteorological purpose– with U.S. Weather Bureau personnel embarked– as well as serve as floating checkpoints for military and commercial maritime and air traffic and communication “relay” stations for aircraft on transoceanic flights crisscrossing the Pacific. Further, they provided an emergency ditch option for aircraft (a concept that had already been proved by the Bermuda Sky Queen rescue in 1947, which saw all 69 passengers and crew rescued by the cutter Bibb.)

    As detailed by Scott Price in The Forgotten Service in the Forgotten War, these stations were no picnic, with the average cutter logging 4,000 miles and as many as 320 radar fixes while serving upwards of 700 hours on station.

    Ocean station duty could be monotonous at one moment and terrifying the next, as the vessels rode out storms that made the saltiest sailors green. One crew member noted: “After twenty-one days of being slammed around by rough cold sea swells 20 to 50 feet high, and wild winds hitting gale force at times, within an ocean grid the size of a postage stamp, you can stand any kind of duty.”

    A typical tour was composed of arriving at Midway Island for three weeks on SAR standby, three weeks on Ocean Station Victor midway between Japan and the Aleutian Islands, three weeks on SAR standby at Guam, two weeks “R and R” in Japan, three weeks on Ocean Station Sugar, three weeks on SAR standby Adak, Alaska, and then back to home port.

    To stand post on these new ocean stations and backfill for other cutters detailed to the role, the Navy lent the USCG 12 mothballed Edsalls (Newell, Falgout, Lowe, Finch, Koiner, Foster, Ramsden, Rickey, Vance, Lansing,  Durant, and Chambers), nine of which the service had originally operated during WWII.

    To man these extra vessels and fill other wartime roles such as establishing new LORAN stations and pulling port security, the USCG almost doubled in size from just over 18,000 to 35,082 in 1952.

    The conversion to Coast Guard service included a white paint scheme, an aft weather balloon shelter (they would have to launch three balloons a day in all sea states), and the fitting of a 31-foot self-bailing motor surfboat for rescues in heavy weather. The USCG designator “W” was added to the hull number, as was the number 100.

    This brings us to Vance, some seven years in Florida mothballs, being recommissioned as the white-painted USCGC Vance (WDE-487) on 9 May 1952. She was stationed at Honolulu, and, assigned to the Commander Philippine Section, served on Ocean Station Queen there from 2-23 August 1953, and again on 4-24 October 1953.

    Coast Guard Cutter Vance WDE 487 working with a Sangley Point USCG-operated PBM-5G, one of two PBM-5Gs and a JRF that were assigned to augment the PBY-5As there in 1951-53. Importantly, one of the Sangley Point PBMs went to attempt the rescue of a VP-22 P2V-5 Neptune (BuNo 127744) crew shot down in the Formosa Strait while the aircraft was on a covert patrol along the Communist Chinese coast near Swatow. USCG photo 211103-G-G0000-002

    Vance was decommissioned for a second time on 3 April 1954 and returned to the Navy.

    DER

    The DER program filled an early gap in the continental air defense system by placing a string of ships as sea-based radar platforms to provide a distant early warning line to possible attack from the Soviets. The Pacific had up to 11 picket stations while the Atlantic had as many as nine. A dozen DEs became DERs through the addition of SPS-6 and SPS-8 air search radars to help man these DEW lines as the Atlantic Barrier became fully operational in 1956 and the Pacific Barrier (which Vance took part in) by 1958.

    To make room for the extra topside weight of the big radars, they gave up most of their WWII armament, keeping only their Hedgehog ASW device and two Mark 34 3-inch guns that would eventually be fitted with aluminum and fiberglass weather shields.

    DER conversion of Edsall (FMR) class ships reproduced from Peter Elliot’s American Destroyer Escorts of WWII

    Detail of masts. Note the WWII AAA suite, one of the 3″ guns, and centerline 21-inch tubes have been landed

    Vance was towed to the Mare Island Naval Shipyard in November 1955 for conversion to a radar picket destroyer escort. Designated DER-378 as a result, she recommissioned for a second time on 5 October 1956, a 12-year-old Navy escort with its first Navy skipper, CDR Albert Martin Brouner (USNA ‘44).

    USS Vance (DER-387) underway in San Francisco Bay, California (USA), on 1 November 1956. Note her 3-inch guns are open, which would change in the 1960s when they would get distinctive weather shields. Photo via Navsource

    As detailed by DANFS:

    Between March of 1957 and the end of the year, Vance was homeported at Seattle, Wash., as a unit of CortDiv 5 and completed eight patrols on various stations of the Radar Early Warning System in the northern Pacific. Each tour lasted approximately 17 days, and the ship maintained a round-the-clock vigil with air-search radars, tracking and reporting every aircraft entering or approaching the air space of the northwestern United States.

    This continued into 1958 when she shifted homeports to Pearl Harbor; and she began operating with CortRon 7, the first ship working the DEW line in the newly organized Pacific barrier patrol. This would continue through early 1965, with a segway to join TF43 for Deepfreeze ’62, serving as the relay ship for aircraft bringing supplies to the Antarctic stations from Dunedin, New Zealand between August 1961 and March 1962. In this duty, she was called “The Loneliest Ship in the Navy.”

    Then came Vietnam.

    Market Time

    With the DEW line service fading as far as the Navy was concerned at the same time the Navy established Operation Market Time (March 1965-1972) to prevent North Vietnamese ships from supplying enemy forces in South Vietnam, recycling the fleet’s increasingly idle shallow-draft DERs into what would be today called a littoral combat ship was an easy choice.

    Vance would complete four WestPac cruises (March-Sept 1965, Jan.-August 1966, Dec. 1966- August 1967, Jan-Aug. 1968) with the 7th Fleet, detached to TF 115 for use in brown water. Of note, she was the first DER to take a Market Time station, reporting for duty to CTU 71.1.1 on 1 April 1965, and soon after was the first U.S. Navy ship to take aboard a Vietnamese Navy Liaison Officer while underway.

    USS VANCE South China Sea 1966. Note the weather shields on her 3-inch mount

    For example, during this time Task Force 115 consisted of an LST mothership, 70 Navy PCFs, 26 Coast Guard 82-foot patrol boats (WPBs), with the support of the “big boys” in the form of eight DERs (including Vance), and 16 smaller minesweepers (six MSCs, and 10 MSOs).

    USS Vance (DER-387) – November 1967. Note her Hedgehog device uncovered and ready to rock 

    A typical breakdown of how one of these deployments would run can be had from Vance’s 220-day 1967 stint which included 62 days on Market Time operations in the Vietnam littoral, 24 days on the tense Taiwan Patrol, and 15 days in Hong Kong as SOPA Admin station ship. To illustrate just how busy a Market Time rotation could be, in her short 1965 deployment which included just 92 days under TF 115, Vance had 1,538 radar contacts, sighted visually 1,001, and investigated 185 vessels.

    USS Vance (DER-387) underway at sea on 26 November 1967 NHHC

    Among the more notable incidents while on Market Time was saving Capt. Leland D. Holcomb, USAF, who had ejected from a burning F-100 Super Sabre in 1965 while on a ferry mission from Danang to Clark AFB in the PI. Her 1966, 1967, and 1968 reports are on file in the NHHC and make interesting and sometimes entertaining reading.

    Vance as radar picket 1960s with her glad rags flying. Note by this time the large EW “pod” on her aft mast.

    Oh yeah, something else happened while off Vietnam as well.

    The Arnheiter Affair

    LCDR Marcus Aurelius Arnheiter entered West Point in 1946 but subsequently resigned, later obtaining an appointment to Annapolis where he passed out as 628th of 783 mids in 1952 and then saw Korean War service on the battleship USS Iowa (BB-61). He later saw much service on destroyers (USS Ingersoll– where he served as XO– Fiske, Coolbaugh, Abbot, and Worden), held a series of staff appointments in the Pentagon where he authored a novel (Shadow of Pearl) under a pseudonym before arriving on Vance’s quarterdeck as her 14th (7th Navy) skipper on 22 December 1965.

    Just 99 days later, he was relieved of his first, and last, seagoing command.

    The scandal over just what happened in those 99 days aboard Vance is lengthy, including a book by NYT writer Neil Sheehan that was the subject of a libel suit filed by Arnheiter. Suffice it to say, there are avenues to dig deeper if you are curious but among the (many) oddities seen on Vance during Arnheiter’s command was the purchase (through MWR funds!) of a 16-foot fiberglass speedboat that was armed with a .30 caliber M1919 machine gun and painted with a shark’s mouth.

    The speedboat was supposed to be for interdiction and patrol work but ended up getting Vance’s crew into problems time after time.

    Other oddities included the skipper’s insistence to blare the Hellcat Reveille over the 1MC while in port rather than a simple bosun call for reveille, follow gun line destroyers into no-go areas while they were performing NGFS ashore to the point that said destroyer’s skipper directed the radio traffic be recorded and incident logged, establishing a “boner box” in the wardroom with mandatory levies of 25-cents per perceived infraction, requiring non-religious personnel to attend services, cruising danger close to shore (like within small arms range) while only one engine was working, doubling the small arms locker from 15 authorized M1 Garands to 30 without permission then holding wild live-fire drills in congested waters (to include reportedly keeping a rifle on the bridge wing that the skipper would use to zip off rounds at random “sea snakes” while VBSS crews were away checking a sampan.)

    Following a six-day non-judicial inquiry at Subic, Arnheiter was removed from his command quietly but not reprimanded or court-martialed, even though he repeatedly requested the latter to clear his name, even lobbying Congress. He ended up retiring from the service in 1971, still as an LCDR, and passed in 2009, aged 83. Sheehan died in 2021, likely closing the matter although both continue to be the subject of much conversation.

    As for USS Vance, her usefulness ended following extensive Vietnam service, she was decommissioned on 10 October 1969.

    Her fellow DERs shared a similar fate, either laid up in mothballs or transferred to overseas allies.

    1973 Janes on the Edsall class DERs.

    Stricken on June 1, 1975, Vance was used as a target for several years off the California coast until finally sent to the bottom in deep water in a 1985 SINKEX.

    Vance in August 1983 when being used as a target ship off San Francisco. The sign amidships reads “Target Ship – Stand Clear.” Photo from Ozzie Henry who acquired them from a sailor at a DESA Convention. Via the USS Vance veterans’ group.

    Vance received seven battle stars for USN service in Vietnam in addition to her USCG service in WWII and Korea.

    Epilogue

    Vance’s war history, plans, and diaries are in the National Archives.

    Vance’s memories are carried forward by a well-organized veterans’ group and they last had a reunion last October in Georgia.


    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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    Triple bruisers

    80 years ago today: A trio of rather different U.S. Navy heavy cruisers: (listed from left to right) the sisters USS Salt Lake City (CA-25) and USS Pensacola (CA-24), along with the lead shp of her class, USS New Orleans (CA-32), nested together at Pearl Harbor, 31 October 1943. Note the varied radar antennas, gun directors, and 8-inch guns on these three cruisers.

    Official U.S. Navy photo 80-G-264236 from the U.S. Navy Naval History and Heritage Command

    Going past the cruisers, Ford Island is at the left, with the sunken (though still in commission) battleship USS Oklahoma (BB-37) under salvage at the extreme left, just beyond Salt Lake City’s forward superstructure. Two New Mexico-class battleships are visible in the background between Pensacola and New Orleans.

    As for the above cruisers, while the New York-built SLC (aka “Swayback Maru”) and P’Cola (the “Grey Ghost”) are sisters and were commissioned within three months of each other, note the different radar fits, with the former carrying a CXAM and the latter an SG, like the newer USS New Orleans (“the NO Boat”) at dockside.

    When it came to main guns, while all three carried the same general 8″/55 cal guns, typically re-gunned during WWII with Mark 14 variants, the Pensacolas had cramped gun houses with fixed below-deck magazine handling rooms to save treaty tonnage (at the sake of poor dispersion patterns) while New Orleans had much more efficient gun turrets with both more room and rotating stalks, albeit at a weight gain of about 50 tons per turret.

    Of note, Salt Lake City had just returned to service in this photo after seven months under repair following heavy damage from Japanese cruiser fire in the Komandorski Islands.

    In all, the three above cruisers would earn no less than 41 battle stars (with New Orleans holding 17 of those) for their WWII service. As a reward, the older two were disposed of as Atomic targets shortly after the war while New Orleans, after 12 years in mothballs, was sold for scrap in 1959.

    Nuclear Winter?

    These three developments are from the Pentagon regarding the next generations of nukes.

    From Monday’s DOD Contracts (emphasis mine):

    Lockheed Martin Corp., King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, was awarded a $996,215,214 contract for the MK21A Reentry Vehicle (RV) program. This contract provides for conducting engineering, manufacturing, and design to provide a low technical risk and affordable RV for Sentinel. Work will be performed in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, and other various locations, and is expected to be completed by Oct. 20, 2039. This contract is a sole-source acquisition. Fiscal 2024 research, development, test, and evaluation funds in the amount of $26,612,031 are being obligated at the time of award. Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center, Hill Air Force Base, Utah, is the contracting activity (FA8219-24-C-0001).

    The Mk21A will carry the future W87-1 warhead, the first newly manufactured warhead added to the U.S. arsenal since the Cold War, replacing the aging W78 335–350 kiloton warhead and its Mark 12A reentry vehicle, which has been in service since the 1970s.

    While it could be used on Minuteman III, it is intended for the U.S. Air Force’s future Sentinel ICBM.

    This came three days after the DOD announced that the U.S. “will pursue a modern variant of the B61 nuclear gravity bomb, designated the B61-13, pending Congressional authorization and appropriation.”

    The B61 has been around for a half-century, but as you can tell by the tacks it has seen numerous upgrades to keep it in service.

    The B61-13 would be deliverable by modern aircraft, strengthening deterrence of adversaries and assurance of allies and partners by providing the President with additional options against certain harder and large-area military targets.

    It would replace some of the B61-7s in the current nuclear stockpile and have a yield similar to the B61-7, which is higher than that of the B61-12 (which is currently almost done with a Life Extension Program that has been underway since 2013).

    Flight tests at Sandia National Laboratories’ Tonopah Test Range in Nevada in March 2020 were the last in a series designed to demonstrate the refurbished B61-12’s compatibility with the U.S. Air Force’s F-15E Strike Eagle jet fighter:

    The B61-13 will not increase the number of weapons in the U.S. stockpile. The number of B61-12s to be produced will be lowered by the same amount as the number of B61-13s produced.

    The B-16-12 and B-61-13 will be certified for delivery on current strategic aircraft (B-2A) and dual-capable aircraft (F-15E, F-16C/D & MLU, PA-200) as well as future platforms (F-35, B-21).

    Likewise, with the Russians now resumed underground nuclear testing (and folks like North Korea and Iran possibly on the cusp of similar activities), a team led by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) last week conducted a non-nuclear underground chemical explosive test in Nevada to improve the US ability to detect low-yield nuclear explosions around the world.

    This experiment, conducted in the P tunnel in Area 12 of the NNSS, used chemical high-explosives and radiotracers. (NNSA)

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