U.S.S. Seawolf: Submarine Raider Of The Pacific [Illustrated Edition]
eBook - ePub

U.S.S. Seawolf: Submarine Raider Of The Pacific [Illustrated Edition]

  1. 175 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

U.S.S. Seawolf: Submarine Raider Of The Pacific [Illustrated Edition]

About this book

Illustrated with 16 photos of the ship and crew
Writers Gerold Frank and James Horan were struck by their travelling companion on a train between New York and New London, Conneticut in 1943; "He was big and brawny, his giant frame squeezed into a coach seat; he had the clear blue eyes, the hawklike gaze of a Viking; and he was the most beribboned figure we had ever seen in a navy uniform". This man was Chief Radio Operator Jim Eckberg, and as he told Frank and Horan the tale of his ship, the famous USS Seawolf, they were captivated and determined to write a book commemorating the heroic actions of the crew and so "U.S.S. Seawolf: Submarine Raider Of The Pacific" was born.
With the expert aid of Eckberg, the authors set about to recreate the history and atmosphere aboard the sub. Her career started slowly; during her first two forays around Manila in 1942 she could not get a clean target and was depth charged for the first time. Her luck changed in February 1942, roaming in the Java Sea, she struck her first live target and so would begin a game of cat and mouse with the Imperial Japanese Navy for months to come. Aggressively handled, stealthy and quick to dive to avoid the inevitable depth charge reprisals, the Seawolf would leave a trail of destruction in here wake until January 1943 when she docked in San Francisco and took on a new crew. The Seawolf received 13 coveted battle stars during the war and sunk a confirmed 71,609 tons of Japanese shipping.
An exciting, authentic and atmospheric account of the 'War Beneath the Waves' against Japan.

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Information

Publisher
Verdun Press
Year
2014
Topic
History
eBook ISBN
9781782899242

CHAPTER I — This is the Seawolf

Let’s take the Wolf the first time I saw her. She wasn’t any beauty then. They were just completing her at Portsmouth, New Hampshire. She was covered with black scaffolding, workmen were climbing over her sides, and I felt low. You see, they were building the Wolf at Flatiron Pier on the Piscataqua River; and in the dry dock, less than three hundred yards away, they’d brought in the ill-fated Squalus. For ten bad minutes before I set eyes on the Wolf, I watched them take the dead from the Squalus, I saw them carrying off the bodies of men I knew, lifeless bodies hidden under gray tarpaulins, carrying them over the gangplank on stretchers; and at the same time I heard the pneumatic hammers working on the hull of the Wolf, just out of sight around the river’s bend. I don’t get shaky easy, but, standing there, you couldn’t help think a little about life and death. The Squalus, which hadn’t come up from a test dive, a floating tomb for so many men; and the Seawolf, all fresh and new and ready to go out and make a name for herself, as the Squalus had hoped to do....
When I finally got away from there and stood in front of the Wolf, I did my best to keep the Squalus out of my mind. Yard workmen were laying the Wolf’s teakwood decking, riveters were assembling her periscope shears, painters were daubing a thick black coat of paint on her sides, which swelled outward so gracefully at the waterline. Her heavy bronze bell was being rigged. Under the scaffolding I could make out her clean, trim lines. She was pretty.
Watching, thinking about it all, I couldn’t know then what lay before us—Cavite and the stench of Jap dead in the harbor of Manila; the looting of the Philippines; terror and split-second escapes from death in the shallow waters of the Lombok Straits; day and night raids on Jap shipping from Christmas Island to Corregidor; depth charges and depth charges and depth charges —many missions and 40,000 miles under the Pacific, and weeks on end without seeing the sun—well, nobody could have dreamed of anything like that, then. It was August 1939, and the newspapers that day were full of the threat of war.
I’d come to Portsmouth that morning from San Diego, where I’d been advanced in rank to radioman, first class, and transferred from the U.S.S. Plunger. Months earlier, in Pearl Harbor, I’d put in for the Seawolf when I learned she was being built, and they had told me that if I was selected, I’d sail under Lieutenant Commander Frederick Warder, of Grafton, West Virginia. He’d been in charge of outfitting the Wolf from the beginning. I learned now that he was laid up with a bad knee. Less than an hour after I’d seen the Wolf, I knocked at his door on the second floor of the hospital in the Navy Yard.
A soft voice with just the trace of a drawl said, “Come in,” and I walked in. He was in bed. I introduced myself. He looked up at me with the steadiest blue eyes I’ve ever seen. “Eckberg, eh?” he said. “Radioman?”
“Yes, sir,” I said. “I got in today. They told me you had a bad knee. I’ve just been transferred from the Plunger.”
“Good!” said Captain Warder heartily. “I’m glad to see you.”
I was to learn that “Good!” was his favorite expression. Had we sunk a Jap man-of-war? Good! Were we winning or losing? Good! If the first, we’ll do better still; if the second, we’ll come back twice as hard.
He struggled to sit up. I helped him. He was a small, trim man, almost schoolteacherish in appearance, but with authority in every gesture. He appeared to be four or five years older than I was—say about thirty-five. Firm lips, determined chin, piercing blue eyes under narrowed lids, smooth face. I’d learned about him. Graduate of Annapolis, 1925; graduate, M.S. in engineering, University of California, 1934; submarine engineer; married, father of four children—a competent citizen of the United States Navy.
“This knee of mine,” he began, and with an effort he swung about and sat on the edge of the bed. “It’s been bothering me ever since I slipped on the ice last winter.” He looked me up and down and suddenly began firing questions. “Have you seen the Wolf yet?”
“Just a little while ago, Captain,” I said.
“How do you like her?”
I told him. I liked her lines. She looked clean.
“She’s a damn fine boat!” he said, and that was that.
As for me, why had I been transferred? Had I asked for a new boat? Why? What sort of radio gear did I have on the Plunger? Was I familiar with this type and that? His questions were direct. As head radio and sound man on the Wolf, I’d be her eyes and ears under water. A submarine is blind below periscope depth, and her only contact with the world is by sound. She feels and gropes her way along the bottom of the sea, between shoals, over reefs—all by sound. She recognizes the enemy’s approach by sound and measures the success of her attacks by sound.
I answered his questions.
“Good!” he said finally, and gave me my first order. “Go down to the Seawolf and look around. Dig for information. You’ll have plenty of time. Learn that boat. Go there after the yard workmen knock off, and they won’t bother you. But learn that boat.”
“Aye, aye, Captain,” I said. “I sure will.”
“Very well, Eckberg,” he said. He smiled. ‘I’ll be seeing you.”
In the Navy “Aye, aye” means “I have heard your order and will attend to it,” and “Very well” means “I have heard what you have said and acknowledge it.” We’d hit it off right, Captain Warder and I, at the very beginning.
That night, as we had supper in the dinette of the small furnished house we’d taken in Portsmouth, I told my wife, Marjorie, about it. Marjorie is blonde and slender and good-natured and blessed with common sense. She grew up in Chicago, met me when I was still a third-class radioman, and, in spite of the gloomу warnings of her friends and my own irresponsibility, married me. She liked music and she liked the sea. She was proud to be a Navy wife. In the five years of our marriage she had never complained of the haphazard life we’d led. But I knew the Squalus tragedy had hit her hard. She listened silently as I talked about the Wolf, and told her how impressed I was with the calm sureness and friendliness of my new skipper. She poured the coffee. ‘Is he married?” she asked.
I grinned. I knew Marjorie. Like all navy wives, she felt better if she knew her husband’s skipper was married and had a family waiting at home for him. They like to think that tends to make a captain keep both feet on the ground and not take needless risks. “Yes,” I said. “Married and with four children, too,”
Marjorie looked out the window. Through that window, on a clear day, you could see Portsmouth Harbor. You could see the Isle of Shoals; you could see the submarines as they went out to sea and took their first dives. It was off the Isle of Shoals that the Squalus dived.
“Well,” she said, “I suppose that will give me more peace of mind. I don’t think I’ll ever forget the men on the Squalus. I want a husband that’s alive, Mel.”
The crew of the Wolf began to gather now—picked submarine men from all over the world, from San Diego and Mare Island, China and New London, Panama and Seattle—burly men, ham-fisted and barrel-chested; little wiry men who looked as though they’d jump at a noise, but turned out to be made of cold-drawn steel; soft-looking men who could bake a cake or strangle a man; psalm-singers and booklovers; swaggering lady-killers and men with icewater in their veins; Jew and Gentile, Italian, Swede, Dane, German, Scotch, Irish, Pole—Americans who were to take over the Wolf with me and make her the great searaider she was, one of the greatest of all time. These are submarine men. They know how to keep their hands busy and their mouths shut. They’re tough-muscled and tough-minded. They size each other up quickly. A hearty clasp of the hand, a swift appraisal, a grin. “I was on the S-41.” —“Hell, no! Jesus, you must know my old buddy, Duke Briggs.”—“Know him? Why…” Hand clasps, old stories revived, new friendships made.
Most of us meet in the Submarine Barracks, Building 150, assigned to the Seawolf’s crew. Here, eight hours a day, we study blueprints of the Wolf. A submarine such as the Wolf needs a crew of 65—three complete crews each on an eight-hour shift, and specialists all. Officers, electricians, machinists, radiomen, firemen, signalmen, torpedomen, fire-controlmen, cooks, mess boys. The Wolf has to be our home, a battleship on the surface, a raider under the surface, able to hold her own against anything on the sea, below it or above it.
The men come in, their white canvas seabags over their shoulders, their grips in their hands. They ask, “Is this where the Seawolf bunks?”
We glance up from our blueprints. “This is it,” we say. We look them over carefully. They throw their bags down.
“Well, this is the place, then,” one says. “Any empty bunks? How about a locker?”
We’re the crew of the Seawolf. We learn who our officers will be. Executive and Navigation Officer, second in command, is Lieutenant William Nolin Deragon of Albany, New York, Annapolis ’34, a tall, rangy man with a long face etched with two sharp lines from nose to mouth, and deep-set eyes. He’s just come off the S-42. He’s completely nerveless, calm in the most dangerous situation. He will become “Willie” to Captain Warder. The phrase, “Now, Willie, what I want”—the Skipper’s usual preface to an order, whether it be to attack a Jap destroyer or to find a case of iced beer for the crew in some desolate tropical outpost— is to become a familiar one to us all.
Diving officer is Ensign, later Lieutenant, Richard Holden, of Rutland, Vermont, Annapolis ’37, handsome, black-haired, energetic, with a deep bass voice. He’s only twenty-four, but he already has the respect of his men. Communications Officer is Ensign James Mercer of White Plains, New York, a University of Michigan man, slim, aquiline-nosed, with thick black brows, retiring—everything a Navy officer should be. He’s a model to the crew, absolutely fearless. As Communications Officer he’s the Skipper’s right hand during an attack.
Day by day the rest of the crew gathers. Chief Torpedoman Robert (“Squeaky”) Langford, a thirty-five-year-old lanky Iowan with a high-pitched voice and a complete knowledge of a torpedo’s temperament; Ensign Burr Casler, Assistant Navigation Officer, whose jutting jaw and wiry thatch of hair make him look twice as pugnacious as he is; Chief Pharmacist’s Mate Frank Loaiza, “doctor” of the Wolf, a dark, handsome, nervous Puerto Rican who talks with his hands and will be forever hurrying through the boat to his cabinet in the after-battery, getting medicine for us—saline tablets, aspirins, laxatives. He’s “Pill-roller” and the “Quack” to us, but he takes our kidding good-naturedly. I meet Chief Yeoman John Edward Sullivan, thirty-two, from New Jersey, a big, blond, ruddy-faced Irishman who is to be the Wolf’s chief clerk, keeping the files, the war diary, and all necessary data. Edward (“Pop”) Mocarsky—forty-three, with a few wisps of gray hair on top of his head, a sober, silent Pole from East Hartford, Connecticut, an old-school electrician whose “Mocarsky circuits” baffle any other electrician. Chief Torpedoman Edward Sousa, chief petty officer of the boat, who could rouse the dead with his booming voice; and Electrician’s Mate Hank Brengelman, a roly-poly German with pale blue eyes and a love for books; and Chief Machinist’s Mate Otis C. Dishman, at thirty-eight a legendary figure in the submarine service, a powerfully built man who looks vaguely like Orson Welles made up for a terrifying part, and whose tattoo designs—flowers, pretty girls, and rushing railroad trains speeding about his body—are equally famous among sub men.
These are the men of the Seawolf. We consider ourselves a damn fine crew. We know we’re different from other services of the armed forces. We differ from the crew of a Flying Fortress for example, or a company of Marines, because we have no identity outside our submarines. We were not salesmen, clerks, factory employees, white-collar workers, transformed overnight into fighting men. Most of us have had no private life. Most of us went into the Navy as soon as we were old enough—seventeen, eighteen, nineteen. With all due modesty we know we’re picked men, paid 50 per cent more in our jobs than men in any other branch of the service, and that few of us will be in it actively after we’re forty—because it’s so tough. Most of us have been in submarine service for at least ten years. Most of us are married, with families. Submarines are our lives and our careers. We’ve never been interviewed by newspaper writers. We’ve never talked about what we’ve done.
We’d never thought there was much to talk about. But, then, we hadn’t been on the Seawolf. We hadn’t become part of a boat that was glory itself.
My first trip through the Wolf was unforgettable. I thought I knew submarines. I’d been on the boats for twelve years, since I was eighteen, when my brother Paul, quartermaster first class on a submarine, felt my biceps, punched me in the shoulder, and said, “Kid, why don’t you come into this outfit? We could use you.” In twelve years I’d seen a lot of submarines, but the Wolf topped them all. More than 308 feet long, weighing 1,480 tons, built to make over 20 knots surface speed, air-conditioned and equipped with every modem d...

Table of contents

  1. Title page
  2. TABLE OF CONTENTS
  3. Foreword
  4. Prologue
  5. CHAPTER I - This is the Seawolf
  6. CHAPTER II - The Wolf Strikes Back
  7. CHAPTER III - We Take the High Command
  8. CHAPTER IV - Revenge for the Rock
  9. CHAPTER V - Rescue of the Bamboo Fleet
  10. CHAPTER VI - Fire One!....Fire Two!
  11. CHAPTER VII - “For Heroism...”
  12. CHAPTER VIII - Jinxed
  13. CHAPTER IX - Anchored in Sick Bay
  14. CHAPTER X - Tons of Jap Shipping
  15. CHAPTER XI - The Wolf Comes Home

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Yes, you can access U.S.S. Seawolf: Submarine Raider Of The Pacific [Illustrated Edition] by Gerold Frank,James David Horan,J. M. Eckberg in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & European History. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.