Crosshairs

80 years ago today. Leyte Operation, October 1944. The day of the first noted use of kamikaze.

Official Wartime caption: “The Australian heavy cruisers HMAS Shropshire (left) and Australia (right), with an unidentified U.S. heavy cruiser, photographed through a ring gun sight on board USS Phoenix (CL-46), off Leyte on 21 October 1944.”

Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. Catalog #: 80-G-291377

The gunsight is on a, likely Detroit-built, Bofors-licensed 40mm L60 quad mount, of which the “Phoo-Bird,” as a Brooklyn class light cruiser, carried six by this time in the war. She put them to good use, too.

In the first 11 days of the Japanese kamikaze attacks in the Leyte Gulf, Phoenix called her gunners to action no less than 55 times.

Her Navy Unit Citation reads, in part:

In encounters with the enemy air forces the ship shot down three of the suicide divers coming at her and assisted in shooting down several others that attacked other ships.

The Swedish-designed 40mm (which needed extensive conversion for inch-pattern mass production) was a godsend both to the U.S. Army who used it for ground-based AAA and to the Navy, who used it to fill the gap between 20mm Oerlikon, the fiasco that was the 1.1-inch “Chicago Piano,” and the excellent 5″/38 DP gun.

The Navy credited the 40mm Bofors with splashing an astounding 742.5 enemy aircraft during the war with 1,271,844 shells– an average of 1,713 per “kill.” Of note, they were credited with fully one out of every three aircraft downed by AAA, a record matched by no other platform.

Not put into U.S. domestic production until early 1942, during 1944-45 alone, no less than 7,440 single mountings, 6,670 twin, and 1,550 quad mountings were produced for the Navy by the time the end of the war halted production.

Only in first-line service for six years (it was officially replaced by the new rapid-fire radar-controlled 3″/50 Marks 27, 33, and 34 in 1948) the Navy still had Bofors afloat on WWII-era auxiliaries until at least 1977, with some reportedly being used from time to time on LSTs engaged in brown water ops during Market Garden during Vietnam.

USS Garrett County (LST 786) in the Co Chien River, Republic of Vietnam, June 1968. Note the PBRs alongside and HAL-3 Seawolf Hueys on deck. Commissioned in 1944, she also has manned 40mm Bofors at the ready in her gun tubs. U.S. Navy Photo K-51442

And of course, dozens of these mounts endure on WWII-era museum ships around the globe.

These images are from one of my recent visits to the SoDak battlewagon USS Alabama.

Looking for a Better Deal on a CMP Navy MK2 7.62 NATO Garand?

Back in June, we let you know that the CMP was beginning to sell off a supply of surplus U.S. Navy circa 1960s MK2 7.62 NATO Garand conversions-– of which AMF upgraded 17,050 rifles and H&R another 15,000 rifles using a 3:1 mix of converted .30 caliber barrels (the MK2 MOD 0 rifle) and new-made 7.62mm barrels from Springfield Armory (the MK2 MOD1).

The price at the time was $950 for the MK2 MOD0s and $1,600 for the MK2 MOD1s.

Well, that has now dropped to $900 (Mod 0) and $1200 (Mod 1) plus $35 shipping & handling per rifle.

Guns are available here.

Plus:

After review by the CMP Rules Committee, the following CMP Games Rifle and Pistol Competition Rules Rule G4.2.2 e) has been edited to: As-issued M1 Garands must be chambered for the .30-06 or the 7.62mm NATO (.308) cartridge.

This change will allow CMP MOD 1 7.62mm NATO M1 Garands to be used in As-Issued Military Rifle Matches – including the upcoming Talladega 600 in November!

Learn more about the Talladega 600 at https://thecmp.org/cmp-matches/talladega-600/.

Foxtrot Zulu Milkshake

The old ways: 

040303-N-6842R-025 Key West, Fla. (Mar. 3, 2004) Ð Lt. Allen Karlson, a student pilot assigned to the ÒTigersÓ of Training Squadron Nine (VT-9), with instructor Cdr. Joe Kerstiens (USNR) sits ÒshotgunÓ(rear seat) evaluating Lt. Allen Karlson before his solo formation training. 1st Lt. Tim Miller flies his T-2C Buckeye down to cross under the lead, on his first formation solo, during a formation training mission over Key West, Fla. VT-9 came to Key West to teach Navy and Marine Corps student pilots formation flying and gunnery techniques. The instructors are part of Squadron Augment Unit Nine (SAU-9), the Reserve component for Training Squadron Nine (VT-9), one of two training squadrons that operate from Naval Air Station Meridian, Miss., under Training Wing One (TW-1). U.S. Navy photo by Ens Darin K. Russell. (RELEASED)

U.S. Navy photograph 330-CFD-DN-ST-89-08969. Photographer Jim Bryant. Via NARA. National Archives Identifier: 6445247

In case you missed it, the Chief of Naval Air Training (CNATRA) last August announced they are ditching the classic white/orange/black/red scheme used by its aircraft for generations (since the mid-1950s) in favor of sort of a glossy faux tactical look.

From last year’s presser:

CNATRA utilizes four different type/model aircraft, with a fifth on the way, to support intermediate/advanced strike, intermediate/advanced multi-engine and advanced rotary training. These aircraft include the T-45C Goshawk, TH-57 Sea Ranger, TH-73 Thrasher (replacing the TH-57 Sea Ranger), and the T-44C Pegasus, soon to be replaced by the T-54A (King Air 260).

For these aircraft, the new paint scheme will utilize shades of a glossy grey coat to more closely resemble the tactical paint scheme (TPS) covering operational fleet aircraft. The shade of grey will closely resemble the specific counterpart for each training aircraft. For example, the coat of the TH-73 Thrasher will reflect the darker tactical paint scheme of the MH-60S Seahawk, while the T-54A will have a lighter coat similar to the P-8A Poseidon. Colored markings will contrast the grey paint for lettering and symbols like the United States roundel.

Additionally, the tail of each aircraft will feature a distinctive color scheme identifying the specific training air wing (TAW) an aircraft is assigned to, typically referred to as a tail “flash.”

Well, it looks like the first T-45s, those of Training Air Wing 2, have been repainted. 

The conversion will slow:

The new changes to CNATRA aircraft will be gradual. An aircraft will only receive its new paint when the current life cycle of its orange-and-white coat is nearly complete. This will result in the last orange-and-white paint coats disappearing in seven to eight years.

As with everything, there are mixed feelings, with many bringing up the fact that the high-viz livery was chosen to help visually deconflict airspace (and ground space!) and make spotting downed aircraft easier.

I’ve always been a fan of the old yellow-chrome “Yellow Peril” look from WWII for trainers and target tugs.

NAMU Johnsonville Curtiss SB2C Helldiver target tug.

N3N pictured at NAS Pensacola, NNAM photo

Sailor cranks the engine of an N3N training flight, circa 1941 Kodachrome NNAM

Stearman N3N-3 N2S trainers NAS Corpus Christi, TX WWII cadets

Harry Greene flies his Boeing Stearman Kaydet Primary Trainer airplane over the Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility at Pearl Harbor, Oahu, May 30, 2016. Greene is a helicopter pilot at Coast Guard Air Station Barbers Point and an aircraft enthusiast in his off-duty time. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Tara Molle/Released)

Yellow is my favorite

Alternatively, I think that the high-viz 1920s look or 1940s-early-50s fleet blue would be great choices. 

USS Boxer CV-21 March 10, 1948, off San Diego First operational jet fighter squadron VF-5A FJ-1 Fury LIFE Kodachrome.

Plus, this new gray Goshawk look greatly resembles the gag-filled privately-owned Folland Gnats and HF-24 Ajeet used in 1991’s Hot Shots!

Who knows, maybe someone in CNATRA is a fan.

Clip ensues.

HK Has Entered the Micro 9 Game (7 Years Late?)

Germany’s Heckler & Koch finally dropped a commercially available micro compact 9mm pistol this week, debuting the thoroughly tested HK CC9 onto the market.

The polymer-framed striker-fired “one and a half stack” 9mm offers flush 10+1 and extended 12+1 capacity magazines, is optics-ready (RMSc/407k footprint) with a tritium front sight and a blacked out, serrated rear sight; and is somewhat modular through the use of interchangeable backstraps.

It is almost the exact same size as the SIG P365 (introduced in Jan. 2018), Springfield Armory Hellcat (Aug. 2019), and March 2021’s Ruger MAX-9 and S&W M&P Shield Plus. Then of course there are the more recent Canik Mete MC9, Taurus GX4, Stoeger STR-9MC, et. al, ad nauseum.

However, HK has a big up by saying they held to the same standards as their full-size duty pistols and tested the micro compact to the NATO AC/225 standards across 750,000 rounds. This meant running it in extreme temperatures, dust, sand, and mud, and “being dropped to simulate real-world conditions,” with the latter part seeming like the company was throwing a little shade at some other pistol makers.

So they may have just taken the time to get it right…

More in my column at Guns.com.

The Last Hurrah of The Third Republic’s Tanks

When the Germans swept into France in May 1940, the Gallic country had over 3,200 tanks on hand, by far besting the invading forces which only had about 2,400 Panzers they brought to the party.

However, it’s not how many you have but how well you use them that counts, and, by June 1940 it was all over.

As part of the Compiegne Armistice of 22 June 1940, which kneecapped the rump of the Vichy government’s military forces, especially those still in Europe, most of the decent French armor still in service– over 2,500 tanks– was turned over to the Germans.

French SOMUA S 35 and Renault R 35, handed over by Germans to Italians. Spring of 1941

A captured French Somua S-35, under new management, circa June 1940

The Germans allowed the Vichy a few small tank units– in overseas colonies. There, they fought the Americans in Morocco and the British in Syria in 1941-42.

Not one to throw away anything of value in the largest land war in Europe, the Germans dutifully used more than 800 old Renault FT17 and 800 newer Renault R35 light tanks in a mixture of static defense roles along the Atlantic Wall and constabulary uses in occupied areas.

German soldiers at a checkpoint at the crossroads near Dieppe, with a pillbox made of a French FT Renault light tank. Note the Hotchkiss MG

Renault FT17 (German Panzerkampfwagen 17R 18R 730f) in Serbia for security anti-partisan operations

Canadian officers examining abandoned German defenses in liberated Dieppe in 1944, including a dismounted Renault FT17 turret

French FT 17 Renault light tank of the Veinesodden coastal battery Btt. Nr.4 448. Located near the villages Kongsfjord and Veynes Finnmark

More modern and better-armed/armored tanks (Char B1bis, S35s, R-35s, and H-39s) were passed on to armor-poor Axis fellow travelers such as the Italians, Hungarians, Bulgarians, and Romanians.

A Soviet soldier stands next to an abandoned ex-French Romanian Renault R35 that had been rearmed with a captured Soviet 45 mm AT gun, 1944

The Germans used over 500 11-ton Hotchkiss H35/H38/H39s in counter-partisan efforts in the Balkans and Eastern Front.

German Hotchkiss Tanks 21 Pz Div by Steve Noon

Armed with a 47mm L32 main gun, the Germans seemed to have thought highly of the 20-ton Somua S35 AMCs (Automitrailleuses de Combat), and some 300 of them were pressed into service, largely on the Eastern Front, with the 201. and 202. Panzerregiments.

Somua S35 in German use

Captured French Somua S35 and Hotchkiss H38 tanks in a German parade, in Paris, in 1941.

Prague, May 1945: the last stand of the Wehrmacht in Czechoslovakia was spearheaded by French AMR 33 and 35 tanks

Meanwhile, heavy Char B1bis were used by Panzer-Abteilung 213, the unit that garrisoned the Channel Islands, as well as in training and service roles and as Flammwagen flame tank conversions. Formed on 17 November 1941 in France, it was equipped with 56 captured French tanks: 20 FT17s, which were largely converted into pillboxes, and 36 Renault Char B1s.

The latter included two Char B bis command tanks with Abteilung Headquarters in Guernsey, 12 standard Char B1 bis tanks, and five flame tanks with 1. Kompanie in Gurnesy, and an identical 2. Kompanie in Jersey. It was assigned to 319. Infanterie-Division on the Channel Islands.

French Char B1 bis sent to the Channel Island of Guernsey in 1941, as part of Panzer Abteilung 213

Fast forward to the Overlord and Dragoon landings in Normandy and along the Riviera in the summer of 1944, and the Allies increasingly came in contact with running second-hand pre-1940 French tanks kept in good repair by the German occupier.

Cherbourg Two GIs examine a camouflaged Renault UE tankette, German designation: Schlepper UE-630(f) (infantry tractor).

Many were scooped up by Resistance groups who were happy to go from hiding in attics and garages to openly controlling strategic points from behind armor plates.

Free French H-39 tanks (Pz. Kpfw. 38H 735 fs) in Paris, August 1944: French, then German, then French again.

Resistance marked B1bis tank, recovered in Paris on August 25, 1944

Somua S-35 tank taken on August 20 in Saint-Ouen, photographed on August 23 in front of the town hall of the 17th arrondissement of Paris, rue des Batignolles.

By early October, the Allied forces in liberated France had collected 60 working tanks (17 B1bis, 21 S35s, and 22 H35/39s) along with at least twice that many junked hulls that could be cannibalized for parts. Plus, workmen and repair shops at Souma and Renault were available.

With that, it was decided to set up a French tank regiment, equipped with these recaptured domestic tracks, to augment the French armored units that were already rolling against the Germans with American-supplied vehicles.

The old 13e Régiment de Dragons, which had operated S35s and H35/39s in 1940 before they lost 90 percent of their tracks in combat against the Germans and were disbanded, was reactivated on 16 October 1944 and given the job of rolling with these rag-tag upcycled tanks which were derided as “defective, unreliable, unstable and of fanciful operation.”

Under Chef d’Escadrons Georges Lesage, the 13e RD was authorized 20 officers, 90 NCOs, and 500 men, with a HQ squadron and one squadron each of S35s (1st Sqn, Capt. d’Aboville), B1bis (2nd Sqn, Cpt. Voillaume), and H35/39s (3rd Sqn). Support was a mortar battery on half-tracks, an oversized recovery and repair troop, and truck-carried engineer and medical platoons.

Talk about a wacky TOE!

Making lemonade, 13e RD was used not on a frontline where they could possibly bump into a Tiger or Panther, but rather in an infantry support role against isolated pockets of German holdouts along the French Atlantic coast that had been bypassed in the advance across Western Europe.

This included clearing out Royan (Operation Vénérable), the island of Oléron (Operation Jupiter), La Rochelle (Operation Mousquetaires), and the liberation of the Pointe de la Coubre. Grueling reduction operations against desperate and cutoff men, where the object was a daily squeeze until the pocket was no more. 

Free French Char B1 named Vercors of the 13th Dragoons enters a French town, 1944

Char Somua S35 du 13e Régiment de Dragons dans les ruines de Royan, le 16 avril 1945.

Char B1bis tanks from the 13th Dragoon Regiment parading in Orléans on May 1, 1945, for the Joan of Arc Festival

Somua S35 tank of the 13th Dragoon Regiment (13e RD), in Marennes (Charente-Maritime) on April 30, 1945, while loading onto a barge for its transfer to the island of Oléron. This tank, taken by the Wehrmacht from the French Army in 1940, is one of the vehicles recovered in the Paris region or in Gien. It still bears German camouflage. The French cockade probably covers a German Maltese cross.

However, they were popular with the locals, who were no doubt overjoyed to see the pre-war Republic’s tanks, operated by French crews, on parade after rooting out the “boche“.

13e RD Parade of tanks on rue du Palais, May 8, 1945 by Pierre Langlade

“B1bis tanks recovered by 13e RD, parading in front of General de Gaulle at Les Mathes, on 22 April 1945, during the troop review organized after the battles of Royen and Pointe de Grave. These tanks are partly from the recovery campaign organized during the previous winter in Normandy:”

A report dated 13 June 1945 is equal parts complimentary and realistic:

The French equipment has generally given complete satisfaction on this front. The Somua has only confirmed the qualities of robustness and handling that it had shown in 1940. The B1bis, much more delicate in terms of maintenance and handling, has [not] caused any major problems […]. The tanks were used as support tanks for infantry units, arriving before or after the infantry depending on the circumstances, leading the infantry to the shutters, or being surrounded by them if necessary.

Post VE-Day, 13e RD was sent to help occupy the Rhine and remained there until it was disbanded in April 1946, its men then disbursed to other units.

Its sister unit, the 12e RD, had made it to Germany the previous May along with a smattering of French armor.

April 1945. R35 tanks of the 12ᵉ Régiment de Dragons

Hotchkiss H39 recaptured for use by the 3e Regiment de Dragons (renamed 12e Regiment de Dragons in early 1945), 1st French Army

Parade of Hotchkiss H39 tanks recovered and assigned to the 12th Dragoon Regiment, in Lindau (Germany), May 9 or 11, 1945

Re-established (sans armor) in 1952 as a paratrooper unit to fight in Algeria, today the Camp de Souge-based 13eme RDP is a fire brigade of sorts and has been deployed since 1977 everywhere from Chad to the former Yugoslavia, Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Mali, and Syria.

Tracing its origin back to 1676, the regiment’s motto is Au-delà du possible (Beyond the impossible), which makes sense.

Zap!

Official caption: “Sailors shoot a Mark 38 25mm machine gun during a live-fire exercise on the fantail of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68) in the Pacific Ocean, Oct. 14, 2024. Nimitz is underway in 3rd Fleet conducting routine training operations.”

U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Timothy Meyer

To be clear, the mount is a stabilized BAE Mk38 Mod2/3, which can be fired remotely and reportedly has a two to three-fold increase in Probability of Hit (POH) versus the old Mod 1. It has a cyclic rate of 175-to-200 rounds per minute, at least until its onboard 150 linked rounds run out.

Nimitz and her sisters, for the past decade, have carried at least four MK38s for use against surface targets as needed.

The Navy’s program of record for the Mk38 is 501 guns, which may or may not include the USCG that uses the mount on its remaining handful of 210-foot Reliance class cutters (where they replaced the last WWII-era 3″/50 DP wet mounts in U.S. service) and 60+ 158-foot Sentinel-class patrol boats.

Keep in mind that all installed armament on cutters “belongs” to the Navy while the Coasties are on their own to purchase small arms, hence their use of Glocks rather than SIG P320 M17/M18s. 

USCGC Benjamin Bottoms (WPC-1132), note her Navy-owned MK38 forward

Make that 2-4-9

Continental Navy sloop-of-war Fly (8 guns) along with Continental Navy sloop-of-war Mosquito (4 guns). Both ships were mentioned as being on station in Delaware Bay with Fly watching six British ships in a letter dated 30 December 1776. This image from a 1974 painting by William Nowland Van Powell currently in the U.S. Navy Art Collection

Continental Navy sloop-of-war Fly (8 guns) along with Continental Navy sloop-of-war Mosquito (4 guns). Both ships were mentioned as being on station in Delaware Bay with Fly watching six British ships in a letter dated 30 December 1776. This image from a 1974 painting by William Nowland Van Powell is currently in the U.S. Navy Art Collection

The Navy marked its 249th official birthday (well, technically begun as the Continental Navy) this week.

They released a well-produced 8-minute moto video, below, that is very decent.

Stop Holding Your Breath on the Palmetto StG 44 Clone

Palmetto State Armory on Tuesday signaled the end, at least for now, of its love-hate relationship with rebooting the iconic StG 44.

The South Carolina-based gunmaker announced at SHOT ’23 that its clone would be the first in what they dubbed the “Battlefield” series of historic guns. PSA had enlisted Mac Steil, the “M” of the defunct Hill & Mac Gunworks, a small gunmaker that had been working on an updated semi-auto Sturmgewehr clone for the better part of a decade but never made it to market.

The StG reboot is now vapor ware. 

The guns were to be made with modern techniques complete with a threaded barrel, a long stroke piston operating tilting bolt action, an HK style trigger pack, wooden furniture, and the possibility of being chambered in 5.56 NATO, 7.62x39mm, .300 AAC Blackout, or the original 7.92 Kurz– the latter is still in production by Privi Partisan in Europe.

However, that bubble now seems to have popped, as PSA announced this week.

The TL;DR: They couldn’t make it work and the juice apparently wasn’t worth the squeeze.

Six Pack of Tin Cans

San Diego, California. 22 October 1930. Officers and crew of six Wickes class “flush decker” four-piper destroyers: USS Rathburne (DD-113); USS Talbot (DD-114), USS Dent (DD-116), USS Waters (DD-115), USS Lea (DD-118), and USS Dorsey (DD-117).

Naval Station Treasure Island, NHHC photo. Accession #: UA 571.06

Seen interbellum, most of the above were built in the last few weeks of the Great War and served on late 1918 cross-Atlantic convoy escort. Surplus to the Navy’s needs by the 1930s, they would be marked for disposal with WWII saving them from premature scrapping.

Of the six, Rathburne would serve as a training ship and high-speed “Green Dragon” transport (APD-25), downing two Japanese aircraft; as would Talbot (APD-7), Waters (APD-8), and Dent (APD-9). Dorsey, meanwhile, served as a high-speed mine sweeper (DMS-1) during WWII. At the same time, Lea would revisit her Great War service, riding shotgun on a series of Atlantic convoys and earning a Presidential Unit Citation with the Bogue hunter-killer group in 1943.

USS Lea off Boston Navy Yard, 9 April 1943. Note stacks of depth charges on her stern and at least four DC throwers. 19-N-42631

All would survive the war, decommissioned in 1945– most while the war was still on– and be sold for scrapping in 1946.

Warship Wednesday Oct. 16, 2024: Skill and Perseverance

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

If you enjoy my always ad-free Warship Wednesday content, you can support it by buying me a cup of joe at https://buymeacoffee.com/lsozi

Warship Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2024: Skill and Perseverance

Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. Catalog #: 80-G-272783

Above we see, some 80 years ago this week, the Cleveland-class light cruiser, USS Houston (CL-81), making like a submarine with her decks nearly awash. This is not an optical illusion. She is seen under tow on 17 October 1944, after she had been torpedoed twice by Japanese aircraft during operations off Formosa. The first torpedo hit Houston amidships on 14 October. The second struck the cruiser’s starboard quarter just 43 hours later while she was limping away.

A ship with a standard design displacement of 11,744 long tons, it was later estimated that, in the above image, she was so full of water that she was at some 20,900 tons.

The Clevelands

When the U.S. Navy took off the shackles of the London Naval Treaty and moved to make a series of new light cruisers, they based the design on the last “treaty” limited 10,000-ton Brooklyn-class light cruiser, USS Helena (CL-50), which was commissioned in 1939 (and was torpedoed and sunk in the Battle of Kula Gulf in 1943).

The resulting Cleveland class was stood up fast, with the first ship laid down in July 1940. Soon, four East Coast shipyards were filling their ways with their hulls.

The Cleveland class, via ONI 54R, 1943

The changes to the design were mostly in the armament, with the new light cruisers carrying a dozen 6″/47 Mark 16 guns in four triple turrets– rather than the 15 guns arranged in five turrets in Helena as the latter’s No. 3 gun turret was deleted.

The modification allowed for a stronger secondary armament (6 dual 5″/38 mounts and as many as 28 40mm Bofors and 20 20mm Oerlikon guns) as well as some strengthening in the hull. Notably, the latter may have worked as one of the class, USS Miami (CL-89), lost her bow to Typhoon Cobra but lived to tell the tale.

Much overloaded at more than 14,000 tons when fully loaded, these ships were cramped and top-heavy, which led to many further mods such as deleting catapults, aircraft, and rangefinders as the conflict went on to keep them from rolling dangerously.

Although 52 hulls were planned, only 27 made it to the fleet as cruisers while nine were completed while on the craving dock to Independence-class light carriers. A further baker’s dozen (of which only two were completed, and those too late for WWII service) were reordered as Fargo-class cruisers, which was basically a Cleveland with a single funnel and a redesigned, more compact, superstructure.

Remarkably, although the Clevelands saw much hard service in WWII, none were lost in action. No other cruiser design in history has seen so many units sail off to war and all return home.

The Cleveland class in the 1946 edition of Jane’s.

Meet Houston

Our subject is the third U.S. Navy warship to carry the name of the Lone Star State’s city which itself is named in honor of Sam Houston.

Originally slated to be named USS Vicksburg, CL-81 was renamed on the ways to honor the sacrifice of the Northampton-class heavy cruiser USS Houston (CL/CA-30) which was tragically lost in a storm of Japanese torpedoes during the Battle of Sunda Strait on 1 March 1942, a vessel whose legacy is cherished in her home state. That ship’s 1,000-man crew all either perished or were “rescued” from the sea by the Japanese and sent to hellish POW camps.

That doomed cruiser had a special link to her “hometown” and would visit it three times between 1930 and 1939, collecting a special Silver Service donated from public subscription from city leaders.

USS Houston (CA-30) view taken at Houston, Texas, in late 1930, when the ship visited the city after which she had been named. Courtesy of Captain Henri H. Smith-Hutton USN ret., 1976 NH 85177

Two months after CA-30 was lost, 1,000 young men, the “Houston Volunteers,” mustered for service to replace those lost on the cruiser and, sworn in by RADM William A. Glassford before a local crowd of 150,000, unveiled a 60-foot model of the vessel before leaving directly for Naval Training Center San Diego aboard five special trains.

Likewise, the Harris County War Bond Drive raised over $85 million, enough to not only replace the USS Houston but also to build the light carrier USS San Jacinto (CVL-30). Don’t mess with Texas, indeed.

30 May 1942. Caption: “1000 men of Houston, Texas are sworn into U.S. Navy in a mass enlistment ceremony to replace 1,000 lost on cruiser ‘Houston’.” University of Houston Libraries Special Collections. do8941zg26p

Building the new USS Houston (CL 81) at Norfolk Navy Yard, Norfolk, Virginia, for launching on June 19, 1943. Workmen lifting a steel deck plate weighing many hundreds of pounds into place. Photograph released May 31, 1943. 80-G-68627

Building the new USS Houston (CL 81) at Norfolk Navy Yard, Norfolk, Virginia, for launching on June 19, 1943. Looking through the huge anchor-eye are John W. Jackson and Wilson Majors, both steamfitters. 80-G-68632

When it came time to find a sponsor for this new cruiser, Mrs. Claud Hamill, who led the campaign to raise funds for the second cruiser Houston, was the logical choice. She led a group of 20 Houstonians to the event and christened the vessel “on behalf of the people of Houston who ensured the perpetuation of a beloved American name in a great fighting ship!”

“Norfolk, Va., 19 June 1943– Mrs. Claude Hammill, of Houston, Texas, smashes a bottle of champagne against the bow of the new cruiser, Houston, as the ship starts down the ways at her launching 19 June 1943 at the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co., Newport News, Va. In the picture reading from the extreme left are Senator Tom Connally, of Texas, Governor Coke Stevenson, of Texas, Jesse Jones, Secretary of Commerce, Mayor Otis Massey, of Houston, Lieutenant Commander Wilson Starbuck, Public Relations Officer of the Fifth Naval District, and (front) Rear Admiral O.L. Cox, Supervisor of Shipbuilding at the Yard.” University of Houston Libraries Special Collections. do9829b816n

Future USS Houston (CL-81) Being christened by Mrs. Claude Hamill at Newport News, Virginia, 19 June 1943. 19-N-47116

USS Houston (CL-81) launched, at the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company shipyard, Newport News, Virginia, 19 June 1943. 19-N-47114

Commissioned on 20 December 1943, she would spend the next four months conducting shakedown and training cruises ranging from Boston to the Caribbean.

Her first skipper was Capt. William Wohlsen Behrens, a 45-year-old Mustang who had served during the Great War as an enlisted man on submarine patrol off the Atlantic Coast later picked up his butter bar after attending Temple University.

And his cruiser was beautiful!

USS Houston (CL-81) off the Norfolk Navy Yard, Virginia, 11 January 1944. She is painted in Camouflage Measure 32, Design 1d. Photograph from the Bureau of Ships Collection in the U.S. National Archives. 19-N-60240

Same as the above. Note her extensive radar fit including SG, SK-2, Mk 13, and twin Mk 25 radars. 19-N-60241

Same as the above. Just a great example of Measure 32, Design 1d for modelers. 19-N-60239

USS Houston (CL-81) vertical photograph of the ship underway off Norfolk, Virginia, 12 January 1944. This gives a fantastic view of her dozen 6″/47s, dozen 5″38s, 24 40mm Bofors, and 21 Oerlikons as well as her twin stern cats. 80-G-214194

USS Houston (CL-81) off Norfolk, Virginia, 12 January 1944. She is painted in Camouflage Measure 32, Design 1d. 80-G-214200

USS Houston (CL-81) underway off the U.S. East Coast, on 26 January 1944 on shakedown. NH 50219

War!

Catching orders to head to the Pacific, Houston arrived at Pearl Harbor on 6 May 1944 via the Panama Canal and San Diego and by the end of the month would join VADM Marc Mitscher’s fast carrier Task Force 58 at Majuro Atoll.

Her baptism of fire would occur in June as she screened those flattops on their raids of the Marianas and the Bonins— losing one of her Kingfishers to an accident on the 12th– before turning to Saipan for the Marianas campaign by mid-month.

After spending two weeks screening TF 58 as its carries haunted Saipan from 90 miles offshore during “The Marianas Turkey Shoot,” Houston was dispatched on 27 June, along with sister USS Miami (CL-89) and six escorting destroyers, as a surface action group with orders to shell Japanese-occupied Guam and Rota.

Houston let her big guns sing for the first time, delivering 542 6″/47 HC shells and 313 of 5″/38 AA Common. Her spotting planes reported her guns to have knocked out a dozen aircraft on the ground and set alight a factory building and three large fuel storage tanks.

Of this action, Behrens noted that “While the expenditure of ammunition was high for the results obtained on targets other than the airfield, I consider it well spent, in view of the experience gained by all hands. Firing at the radio or radar stations at Rota and Guam eliminated the nervousness apparent in firing at these first targets on both islands. The performance of all personnel was most satisfactory.”

Early September found her on another sortie with USS Miami, this time joined by sister USS Vincennes (CL-64), to plaster Japanese positions on Angaur, Peleliu, Ngesebus, and Palau. This time she spent 884 6-inch and 661 5-inch shells. Miami narrowly beat her, ripping off 900 of each. 

Houston then rejoined her carrier task force and screened it during airfield reduction strikes in the Philippines before returning to Peleliu to support the forces landing there in mid-September.

October saw her weather a 60-knot tropical storm at Ulithi Atoll on the 3rd before standing out against Nasei Shoto and Formosa as part of Task Group 38.2– the fleet carriers USS Bunker Hill, Intrepid, and Hancock; the light carriers USS Independence (loaded with night fighters) and Cabot; the battlewagons USS Iowa and New Jersey; and the anti-aircraft cruisers USS San Diego and Oakland. By the 10th, the TG was sending aircraft on raids against Okinawa.

On 11 October, Houston’s deck log noted “several enemy snoopers” probing the TG’s boundary and at least one unidentified submarine was spotted.

Behrens noted, “It does not appear that tomorrow’s strike on Formosa will be a complete surprise to the Japanese.”

Indeed, 12 October saw much excitement, with Houston splashing four Japanese land-based torpedo bombers while filling the air with 5,000 rounds of AAA and suffering two men with shrapnel wounds. The aircraft included new radar-equipped Mitsubishi Type 4 Ki-67 Hiryu (flying dragon)(“Peggy”) Army twin-engine heavy bombers of Imperial Army Air Force (IJAAF) Air Combat Group (Hiko Sentai) 98.

Houston helped repel another attack the next day, in which the brand-new Baltimore-class heavy cruiser  USS Canberra (CA-70) suffered damage. The leviathan, part of nearby Task Group 38.2, was holed by a Type 91, Mod. 3 torpedo that hit below her armor belt at the engineering spaces and blew a jagged hole in her side, killing 23 men outright. Due to the location of the wound, a whopping 4,500 tons of water flooded her after fireroom and both engine rooms, leaving the cruiser dead in the water and had to be taken under tow by the cruiser USS Wichita (CA-45).

With Houston ordered to take the limping Canberra’s spot on the screen the next day, just after sunset on the 14th, the flying dragons of Hiko Sentai 98 caught up to her as night fell. She struck down three of the attackers but caught a tough-to-fight torpedo directly under her hull.

USS Houston (CL-81) view looking aft, showing damage to the ship’s stern area resulting from a torpedo hit amidships received off Formosa on 14 October 1944. This photo was taken while Houston was under tow, but prior to the second torpedo hit on 16 October. Note the OS2U floatplane that had been jarred off the port catapult, breaking its wing on impact with the aircraft crane. 19-N-106304

From Behrens’ report:

The Excruciating Limp

As with the stricken Canberra, which was being slowly pulled away from Formosa by Wichita, a heavy cruiser, USS Boston (CA-69), came to the stricken Houston’s aid and took her under tow on the morning of the 15th. By midnight both Canberra and Houston were under tow to Ulithi for repairs at a stately 5 knots.

Houston transferred no less than 776 of her officers and men to escorting destroyers while a force of 450 remained behind to attempt to save their home. The radio room was ordered to destroy most of the ship’s codes and ciphers in case she had to be abandoned.

A destroyer alongside the damaged USS Houston (CL-81) (right) on 15 October 1944, removing excess crewmen after she was torpedoed by Japanese aircraft off Formosa. Photographed from USS Boston (CA-69). Note OS2U floatplane on Boston’s port catapult. 80-G-272781

Her men waged war against the sea and their home’s own warren of twisted steel and buried their found dead in the briny embrace of the warm and unforgiving blue Pacific. Among the dead was her engineering officer, CDR William H. Potts (USNA 1927), killed when Main Engine No. 1 was wrecked. Two other men trapped in the after fire room had been killed by fatal burns.

USS Houston (CL-81). Burial at sea for crewmen killed when the ship was torpedoed off Formosa on 14 October 1944. Photographed while Houston was under tow on 15 October. 19-N-110835.

With an 8-degree starboard list and a draft of 34 feet (against a normal mean maximum of 25 feet), Behrens ordered the cruiser’s port anchor jettisoned and her port chain payed out to 90 fathoms to keep the ship as even as possible.

Everything quickly got primitive as the ship was flooded to the third deck and the heat of the tropics set in:

The fleet tugs USS Munsee (ATF-107) and Pawnee (ATF-74) assumed the tows of Canberra and Houston on 16 October.

Then, that afternoon, the Japanese caught up to Houston once again and she soon caught another torpedo that wrecked her hangar and flooded her steering compartment.

Japanese aerial torpedo explodes against the ship’s starboard quarter, during the afternoon of 16 October 1944. Houston had been torpedoed amidships on 14 October, while off Formosa, and was under tow by USS Pawnee (ATF-74) when enemy torpedo planes hit her again. USS Canberra (CA-70), also torpedoed off Formosa, is under tow in the distance. The original photograph is in the USS Santa Fe (CL-60) Log, a very large photo album held by the Navy Department Library. NH 98825

Behrens noted that, “In the midst of the action, our towing vessel, Pawnee, sent us a very encouraging message saying, ‘We’ll hold on,’ and continued to make the usual 5 knots in the right direction.”

Later that afternoon, Behrens ordered more of his crew taken off by escorting destroyers. By dusk, there only remained 48 officers and 152 men left on board– with six of them too gravely wounded to risk moving. With sick bay in the dark and with no ventilation, the cruiser’s guest cabin was converted to a hospital, and the wounded were brought on deck whenever conditions permitted.

On the 17th, assisted by four gasoline-driven pumps sent over by Pawnee, Houston decreased her draft to 32.5 feet and her list to 6 degrees.

This slow parade continued for days, with the Diver-class rescue and salvage ship USS Current (ARS-22) arriving alongside and sending over experts and the fleet tug USS Zuni (AT-95) taking Houston in tandem tow with Pawnee.

With almost zero reserve buoyancy left, the days were spent lowering–by hand, block, and rope– 130-pound 6″/47 shells from the shell decks of the four main turrets to the lower handling rooms to help shift the cruiser’s center of gravity.

Armored doors were unbolted and, wrestled above deck, were cast overboard. Searchlight and gun director platforms were torched off and either used for patching material or thrown over the side as were many 20mm and 40mm guns. Abovedeck ammo stores were tossed. Anything too vital to Deep Six was transferred to LCVPs and whaleboats to give to escorting destroyers to store. Rank didn’t exist and officers worked on the repair parties alongside ratings.

Luckily, fresh water had been stored in forward voids as ballast and was siphoned off for cleaning and drinking. Behrens observed, “It had a strong paint and rust taste but did much to quench the thirst.”

On the morning of 27 October, with the help of several tugs, a still very wet and soggy Houston slipped through the Mugai Channel and moored alongside the repair ship and floating workshop USS Hector (AR-7) at Ulithi Atoll, wrapping a 1,250nm mile tow that took 13 days, at an average rate of 4 knots.

Behrens finished with this observation:

USS Houston (CL-81) alongside USS Hector (AR-7) at Ulithi Atoll, 1 November 1944. She was under repair after being hit by two Japanese aerial torpedoes on 14 and 16 October, during operations off Formosa. An LCM is passing by in the foreground. 80-G-373678

After temporary repairs, Houston proceeded to Manus on 14 December under tow by the tugs USS Lipan and Arapaho and escorted by a screen of three destroyer escorts and a coastal minesweeper. Making 6.5 knots, the little convoy (Task Unit 30.9.14) made Manus six days later.

The advantage of having a forward-deployed Advanced Base Sectional DryDock (ABSD) became readily apparent. After waiting in Seeadler Harbor over the Christmas holidays, Houston entered ABSD No. 2. after USS Reno (CL-96) floated out on 7 January 1945.

Overhauls of two light cruisers at a Pacific Base inside ABSD, circa 1944-45. USS Reno (CL-96) and USS Houston (CL-81) 80-G-K-2963

USS Houston (CL-81) damage to the ship’s hull, amidships, from a Japanese aerial torpedo hit received off Formosa on 14 October 1944. The torpedo struck the ship on her bottom, inboard of the starboard bilge keel, while she was in a turn, producing the inward displacement of bottom plating seen here. Photographed in an ABSD floating drydock at Ulithi Atoll while Houston was under repair, circa November 1944. 19-N-105803

After three weeks in dry dock, Houston floated out on Valentine’s Day 1945 and, with only No. 2 and 3 main engines and Nos. 1, 2, and 4 boilers available, she was able to operate under her own steam for the first time in four months and logged a remarkable speed of 23.4 knots.

By 16 February, along with the wounded but patched up Reno and the tin can USS Bowers (DE-637), Houston and company left Manus for Pearl Harbor, zig-zagging at 16 knots. Arriving in Hawaii on 24 February, after a three-day port call and much-needed libo, Reno and Houston set course for San Pedro, California on 27 February.

Crossing through “The Ditch” a much different cruiser than when she passed just 10 months prior, Houston eventually steamed to the New York Navy Yard, arriving on 24 March 1945. Reno followed her almost the whole way, only peeling off at Charleston three days prior.

Six months later, with an extensive rebuilding almost complete, the war ended with Houston still in New York.

Houston received three battle stars for World War II service.

Capt. Behrens was relieved and was assigned duty as Commander, Naval Training Center Bainbridge, Maryland, and served there in the rank of Commodore.

Peacetime Showboat

Her repairs complete, our subject visited her namesake city just after VJ Day to show the flag and line the decks for Navy Week in October 1945. Besides, she needed to show the taxpayers and Bond buyers what they paid for back in 1942.

Crowd on shoreline along the Houston Ship Channel to welcome the USS Houston (CL-81) light cruiser during Navy Week, October 1945. University of Houston Libraries Special Collections. do66558f697

Civilians along the Houston Ship Channel welcome the USS Houston (CL-81) light cruiser during Navy Week, October 1945. Sailors in uniform line the decks. University of Houston Libraries Special Collections do26967446b

Civilians along the Houston Ship Channel welcome the USS Houston (CL-81) light cruiser during Navy Week. Sailors in uniform line the decks. The cruiser carries two new Curtiss SC-1 Seahawk floatplanes– a type that only entered service in October 1944– with their wings folded. University of Houston Libraries Special Collections do5460qs96s

From April to December 1946, Houston was sent on a European and Mediterranean cruise, visiting cities in Scandinavia, Portugal, Italy, and Egypt.

Stockholm. Ships include the elderly (circa 1915) 6,700-ton Swedish coastal battleship (Pansarskeppet) HSwMS Sverige along with the light cruiser sisters USS Houston and USS Little Rock (CL-92), while the new Gearing class destroyers USS Perry (DD-844), Glennon (DD-840), Warrington (DD-843) and Cone (DD-866) are arrayed at pier side and in the distance, along with Swedish jageren (destroyers). Eskaderbild.eskader på Stockholms Ström 11. Juli 1946. Sjöhistoriska museet. Fo219541

Following a second Med cruise with Cruiser Division 12 in 1947, upon returning to Philadelphia, Houston decommissioned 15 December 1947.

Placed in reserve, she swayed on Philly’s redlead row until, stricken from the Navy List on 1 March 1959, she was sold for scrap to Boston Metals on 1 June 1961 and scrapped.

Epilogue

The Clevelands, always overloaded and top-heavy despite their hard service and dependability, were poor choices for post-war service and most were laid up directly after VJ Day with only one, USS Manchester (CL-83), still in service as an all-gun cruiser past 1950, lingering until 1956 and seeing much Korean War duty, successfully completing three combat tours with no major battle damage.

Six went on to see further service as Galveston and Providence-class missile slingers after an extensive topside rebuild and remained in service through the 1970s. One of these, USS Little Rock (CL-92/CLG-4/CG-4) has been preserved at the Buffalo Naval & Military Park, the only Cleveland currently above water.

The third USS Houston has a marker at the National Museum of the Pacific War. 

She is remembered in maritime art and scale models.

Her war diaries and reports are digitized in the National Archives. 

Her 79-page war damage report is epic, noting:

That Houston survived two torpedo hits which produced a precarious stability condition, extensive flooding, serious loss of structural strength amidships and a severe gasoline fire is due for the most part to the intelligent approach of her personnel to the damage control problems with which they were confronted and the skill and perseverance with which they carried out the control measures initiated.

USS Houston (CL-81) Plate I, Torpedo Damage. Formosa. 14-16 Oct. 1944. Profile of Vessel Heeled 30° to Port

As for her wartime skipper, RADM Behrens retired from the Navy in 1947, capping a 30-year career across two World Wars. Not bad for a Mustang.

He earned a Navy Cross for his time on Houston:

“For extraordinary heroism as Commanding Officer of the USS Houston, during action against enemy Japanese forces off Formosa on October 14, 1944. With his ship dead in the water and listing violently in the heavy seas following an enemy aerial attack, Commodore (then Captain) Behrens remained steadfast and calm, efficiently directing damage control measures and the removal of personnel to other ships in the formation before his crippled ship was taken in tow by another cruiser. With his ship again under attack by hostile aircraft two days later, he inspired his officers and men to heroic effort, maintaining control and contributing in large measure to his ship’s successful return to a friendly port. By his valiant leadership, determination, and grave concern for the safety of his ship and her crew. Commodore Behrens upheld the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.”

RADM Berhens passed in 1965 and is buried in Arlington, Sec: 2, Site 994-1

His son, VADM William Wholsen Behrens, Jr. (USNA 1943), survived WWII service in the Submarine Force with six war patrols and a Silver Star to prove it then was involved in 28 amphibious operations during Vietnam. He capped his service as the first head of the newly organized National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in 1972 and passed in 1986. He is also in Arlington. Good genes in that family.

The fourth USS Houston (SSN-713) was an early Flight I Los Angeles class hunter killer. Launched in 1981, this submarine was christened by Barbara Bush, wife of then Vice President George Bush which was appropriate as, while a Navy Avenger pilot (of a plane he named “Barbara”) in WWII, Bush crashed in the Pacific and was rescued by a submarine. The luckiest of her namesakes, she served a long career (33 years, 11 months, and 1 day) without loss and was decommissioned in 2016.

USS Houston (SSN-713) port quarter view of the nuclear-powered attack submarine USS Houston (SSN-713), foreground, and the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kenney (CV-67), background, departing Hampton Roads for a patrol. August 17, 1982. DN-ST-89-01391

The Navy desperately needs a fifth Houston, and maybe a first USS Behrens.


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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