Destroyers; Two Main Types Fought WW II
If the Fletcher class U.S. destroyers won the Battle of the Pacific, the
Benson/Livermores won the Atlantic/Mediterranean. I realize that the premise
is an exaggeration, but destroyers played a major role in World War II. In
the Atlantic they helped the Allies survive the early onslaught of the U-boat.
In both oceans, and in the Mediterranean, destroyers helped the troops get
ashore. In the Pacific, destroyers performed the dangerous picket duty against
kamikaze aircraft.
The action portion of this Chapter begins with the landings in Southern France
on August 15, 1944. We will begin that event in our story after covering
Edison's progress during the late winter, spring and summer of 1944. In summary,
Edison left the Mediterranean for New York in late February 1944, after finishing
her chores at Anzio. Edison skipped, or was skipped by, the Normandy Invasion
of June 1944. I will relate, however, an interesting role that Edison and
the other veteran "Med" destroyers and cruisers played relative to the cross
channel invasion from England to France. First, though, some feedback.
Feedback
As noted in the beginning of Chapter Nine, I have, since about Chapter Five,
been including feedback early in each Chapter. The feedback is often stimulated
by something said in a previous chapter. I have determined to put it in as
soon as I could even though it might better fit at an earlier chapter in
the story.
I want to highlight the first Internet feedback from Edison men, or from
their children or grandchildren. Nine chapters were on the Web before this
occurred. I believe this story owes these new Edison Web readers to Jean
Whetstine and the thirty-year old Edison newsletter she edits and publishes.
In the latest edition of the Edison newsletter (January 1998), Jean graciously
printed some of my remarks at the October 1997 Edison reunion in Portsmouth,
Virginia and also reproduced my business card which contained the URL for
this website and my e-mail address. So, first Edison Web-readers, here you
are:
Warren E. Blake. On Edison from December `41 at Casco Bay to May `43; e-mail
1/29/98:
Susan DeVore Reilly. Her father is "Harry" Reilly, given name Henry, a plankowner
on Edison; Susan telephoned 1/31/98 and gave me her e-mail address:
Tanya M. Sommers. Her grandfather is Frank Barber, another plankowner; e-mail
2/1/98.
Next, a delightful post Anzio-Chapter feedback item is reproduced below.
This e-mail came from Ken Williams who served on the USS Ludlow and who
contributed to this story in an earlier chapter. Ken's e-mail was dated 1/31/98.
"Frank; Thanks for the kind words in regard to the Ludlow and myself. I look
forward to, and enjoy each chapter.
"Your speaking kindly of the HMS Penelope brought forth many warm thoughts
of her. She was known as HMS Pepperpot of Malta. Whenever I saw her, she
invariably had holes from bomb or shell fragments in her stacks and guntubs.
There was always a rivalry between us and the Brits; but there was admiration,
too. From the haze of 50+ years, I recall the HMS Spartan when she went down.
She got hit in the sunset air raid and was burning badly. The Brits stayed
aboard and continued to fight the fire until about 2200 hours when a high
level bomber laid a stick of bombs on the brightly illuminated target. Whenever
we got the word, "Red Shingle" we went to battle stations. But it wasn't
till the Brits sounded their sirens that we really paid attention.
"The Germans were massing just north of the Tiber River and we wanted to
bring in some cruisers to break up this concentration. The Ludlow was assigned
to protect five minesweepers who were to sweep a channel for the cruisers.
Minesweepers sweep at five knots, barely underway, so they make a good target.
We battled all the way up to the end of the channel and battled back to the
Anzio beachhead. We then got the orders we did not want to hear. "Go back
up, the channel has to be wider." The second time, coming back down, we were
getting no return fire but the "Sweeps" were still whaling away with their
3" guns. Our Cap't asked, "What is your target?" The "Sweeps" replied, "We
ain't got no target. It just makes us feel better."
"You just can't argue with that logic. (A little anecdote you most certainly
will understand and hopefully appreciate.) Best Regards, Ken W."
As we approach the final chapters of this story of a Benson/Livermore class
destroyer in WW II, there will be more anecdotes. I have a number that I
have wanted to put in earlier but I felt that the thread of the story should
first be established.
Not long after the story of this Chapter was completed, I left the Edison.
I will do a little more research to help complete her tale for the period
I was not aboard. But, I will not be able to speak with the force that being
aboard provides. Also, just one more time, I want to leave the modern reader
of these lines with a sense of what the cadres of enlistees and reservists
and draftees coming into service just before or at the outset of World War
II were like.
World War II Was Multicultural Before That Term Was Invented
The Naval Academy "types" joined their units, for war service, trained for
a lifetime career in that service. I have acknowledged at various points
that the U.S. Naval Academy and its graduates were the victims of technology
"lag" in ordnance, electronics and steam engineering. But at least, the USNA
education gave us some insight on what we were supposed to know. Reserve
Officer Joe Dwyer, who later became Edison's Engineering Officer, was the
Chief Chemist in a comb factory when he reported aboard Edison as an Ensign.
After the War, Joe was responsible for the success of a company which specialized
in the manufacture of homogenizing equipment. Jim Hughes was another reserve
officer whom I first knew as an Ensign on the USS Edison. Jim Hughes is today,
early 1998, a "sitting" Administrative Law Judge for the State of California.
Seaman Abe Simon, who could neither read nor write, came to the Edison as
the owner of a successful junk and salvage company. (I am sure Abe used to
weep when hundreds of spent five inch brass cartridge cases were simply swept
over the side.)
Officer or enlisted, aboard the Edison I never heard anyone make anything
of the different paths to service taken by reservists, draftees, and regulars.
We were all men of the Edison, proud of our service in her, and proud of
our service with each other. Every man aboard was proud of his heritage and
everyone of us listened with fascination when another one of us would reveal
a bit of his past. This is still going on, as we see in the next item.
More Feedback
"An account mostly from memory, of my service in the U.S. Navy before, during
and after, WWII, by Warren E. Blake.
Boot Camp and Trade School
"I enlisted in April of 1941 with deferred reporting until I graduated from
high school on the 13th of June. On the 24th of June I left New Haven,
Connecticut for NTS, Newport, R.I. After eight weeks of "boot camp" and a
short leave, I was off to Machinist Mates School at Great Lakes, where classroom
work on the "mechanics of machinery" and the basics of machine lathe and
milling machine were learned. Frequent liberty in Waukegan and Chicago was
enjoyed. This phase of school was about a month in length, then we were off
to Ford Motor Co's. River Rouge Plant, at Dearborn, Michigan. Two months
of intensive, hands-on work in the apprentice school and general plant, under
the watchful eye and tutelage of Ford employees was very rewarding and enjoyable.
There, because of Henry Ford's aversion to cigarette smoking in his factories,
I was initiated in the fine art of chewing tobacco without getting sick!
On December 7th, we had just returned to barracks from Chapel, or noon chow,
I don't recall which, when we learned that we were no longer just kids, looking
for adventure. The amazing change at the plant, almost overnight, from civilian
auto production to almost 100% military production, was difficult to comprehend.
The attitude of us "kids" changed just as rapidly. An awareness that from
now on it was not going to be all fun and games. Even though we had plenty
of light moments, we were all much more serious in our daily demeanor and
discussions. Three quarters of our school term was completed and now we were
real anxious to learn just what the immediate future held, for us.
"Now it was time to go back to Great Lakes for final exams, graduation, and
assignment to our first real duty stations. Graduate, we did, all 116 of
us, with no drop-outs or flunk-outs. I don't recall how Christmas was spent
that year, but I'm almost positive that Thanksgiving Dinner was in the mess-hall
at the River Rouge Plant. My first year away from home for the Holidays!
Oh--I mustn't forget----being an "old salt" now, with another stripe on the
cuff of my dress blue jumper, I had to go to Detroit and get tattooed while
we were in Dearborn!
U.S.S. EDISON, DD439
"I don't remember, nor do I have record of, the exact date that I reported
aboard Edison, but I do know that it was a cold , blustery night on Casco
Bay, in the first week or so, of January, 1942. This "landlubber" had to
negotiate a Jacob's ladder out of a bobbing motor launch, with hammock and
seabag on his shoulder, and the quarterdeck watch just peering down, to see
if this "new kid " had what it takes!
"After being shown down below to the forward mess deck compartment, the
quarterdeck messenger told me where to sling my hammock. It was right next
to the skin of the ship, and even though we were still at anchor, the "boing
- boing" of the plates springing in and out with each wave, had me wondering
a little, if I was really hearing what I thought I was. I was, and it precluded
my getting any sleep on my first night at sea. After a quick run down to
Newport for fuel, we headed down for Bermuda. When we left Newport, I was
assigned temporarily to the first division and assigned both duty and GQ
stations. I recall very vividly, my first week at sea. I don't recall seeing
the sun during that time, as I was very busy rolling around the deck in #1(gun),
5" handling room (my GQ station) in my own vomit. I don't recall what the
chow menu was that week either, and I really didn't give a damn! It was heaven
on earth, when we anchored in Bermuda and I found that the sun shines down
there, also, and that the sea does calm down, at times. Best of all, I was
hungry.
"Even though Livermore was based in Bermuda, Edison never met up with her
and I was augmented by Edison as a crew member (kidnaped !). After only a
short time in the 1st division (at the time I graduated from Machinist Mates
School, the Navy was not handing out ratings upon graduating. I came out
of school as F3/c even though I graduated 9th out of a class of 116). CEM
Camp approached me with the offer to strike for Electrician's Mate, which
offer I readily accepted. Chief Camp set me on a course of study that saw
me making EM3/c in a very few months.
"Memories of Boston, Portland, Halifax and Argentia, as well as Iceland,
during the early part of 1942, were of the "frigid" variety. Pulling in to
port with several inches of ice from main deck almost to masthead. The long
convoy hauls where tedium could have set in were it not for GQ every morning
at dawn, and the constant submarine alerts accompanied very often with depth
charge attacks. You slept fully clothed, wearing your life belt, and when
you had quartering seas and the can would "corkscrew", you slept (or tried
to) with arm and leg on one side braced against your bunk chains, and on
the other side, against the stanchions supporting the bunks. During calmer
seas though, the bunks were quite comfortable, compared to a hammock! (From
the day I entered "boot camp" until I was signed on as Ship's company in
Edison and finally got a bunk, I had spent about six months in a hammock).
"Pulling alongside the docks in Londonderry or Glasgow, even without getting
liberty, was like being on leave! "Sensation" cigarettes were selling on
board for .03 a pack, $0.30 per carton (standard brands were much more costly
at $0.60 a carton) and were grabbed up to be used to barter for all kinds
of goods (including contraband Scotch for 2 cartons). We had a very clean
ship, as a few handsful of rubbish covered several dozen cartons of cigarettes
in GI cans being carried ashore for disposal! The First Lieutenant or Quarterdeck
Watch, never questioned the great volumes of `trash" being disposed of! I
remember that EM1/c Gerry Randall was running the "ship's store" at the time.
He also sold raffle tickets for a .38 cal. Colt revolver, for BM1/c Madison.
Don't know what he wanted the money for, but the revolver was given to him
by an officer at an embassy where he had been stationed. Anyway, I bought
two tickets for a dollar and wound up being the owner of the gun, which I
put in the armory for safe keeping.
"We had a very good electric gang on Edison, although some felt that CEM
Camp was driving them too much. He would conduct classes topside when weather
permitted and down in the engine room while you were on generator and
distribution watch when weather was bad. I remember Henry Reilly, Ed Stolarz,
Harry Halligan, Robert Morris, Gerry Randall, Larry Whetstine, and Joe Zock.
Larry Whetstine went home with me one weekend, to Hamden, CT. I can't recall
where the ship was at the time. Probably either Portland or Boston. Larry
was a pretty tall guy, and when my mother saw him she said, "My gosh son,
you're as big as Big Stoop". (Big Stoop was a cartoon character of that era,
I believe he was in the strip, " Terry and the pirates"). It was probably
about fifteen years ago that I read in one of Jean's newsletters that someone
inquired where Larry got the nickname, "Stoop", so I wrote to Jean to tell
her that my mother was the culprit!
"During my days as an electricians "striker", Chief Camp had Bob Morris break
me in as a movie operator. We had on board one, large, top-heavy, Simplex,
carbon-arc light, 35mm, movie projector, which had to be lashed down in the
forward mess compartment, projecting through the starboard hatch onto the
screen in the after mess compartment. With just the one machine, there was
always a lot of heckling to take, while reels were changed, especially when
the wrong one was put in. This training served me well, for I wound up being
a movie operator in both USS Kidd, and USS Wisconsin. The knowledge of carbon-arc
lights in the projector also helped me understand the operation of the 24"
and 36" carbon-arc searchlights, on my subsequent ships.
"Early on, in North Atlantic convoy duty the reality of death came close
to me. The Awatea incident brought home to me the uncertainty of life when
I lost two very good friends in Ingraham, DD444, and later in the war, others
on Buck and Benson, and I don't know how many others. Most not yet twenty
years old, me being just 18 when Ingraham went down. This was one of several
convoys in which the rescue vessel HMS Toward served with us. Many years
later (in 1980), I met the skipper of Toward, and we've been close friends
ever since. He was born on the Isle of Skye and is a bagpiper, we having
met when we both became members of a Scottish cultural society. He was living
in Belfast Maine when we met, and is now living in Pennsylvania. Peter MacPherson
by name, he is a real gentleman.
"I don't recall just how many convoy crossings we made, interspersed with
dockside alterations in Boston (one being when our liquid cooled 50 cal.
machine guns were replaced with 20mm Oerlikon's) and one fairly long yard
availability in Brooklyn, where we went into drydock, and I spent my first
night in the engine spaces on "cold iron watch". Boy, oh boy! Was it ever
cold! Life became more bearable when we made trips down south on special
assignment. Up the Mississippi to New Orleans, where the First Lieutenant
had the ship washed down topside with "fresh water", which made the ship
look like a Hershey bar, when it dried! Connection to city water when we
got dockside, cured that. Up the Sabine River to Port Arthur, Texas, where
the country is so flat that ships on the river looked like they were high
and dry, on land. I think that this trip was made sometime after the invasion
of North Africa, at Casablanca.
"Casablanca, and dodging shells from ship and shore battery, and torpedoes
from subs. That was a hectic week. Armistice Day? Hah! We were still fighting
in one area or another since the first attack on the 8th of November. One
evening , right after chow, I was standing on the main deck hungering for
a pipe full of tobacco that was denied me, for we were refueling from a tanker
and the "smoking lamp was out". All of a sudden, all hell broke loose, and
three large transports in close proximity were torpedoed. Mooring lines and
fuel lines to the tanker were severed, and we got underway, pronto and spent
quite a while trying to track down the sub, or subs. This was getting too
close for comfort!
"Escorting ships back to the states and back to Casablanca. On the first
trip back to Casablanca after the invasion, I was ashore on liberty with
two other Edison men, when I was "pinched" for the first time by Shore Patrol.
We had just come out of a bar, and I noticed an SP Officer and two ratings
across the street (a very crowded street) at a distance of about 50 feet.
We hadn't gone but about the same distance parallel with them, when I was
tapped on the shoulder and asked why I hadn't saluted the officer. This one
took me by surprise, because at that distance, and with all the civilians
and service personnel in between, it never entered my mind. Well we wound
up on report by this officer and were taken back to Edison, which was outboard
of Texas and two other cans. As soon as we were underway for the states again,
with leaves coming up, Cap'n. Headden held mast and surprised me by asking
me if I thought 4 hours as "Capt. of the head" was appropriate punishment!
It seems that several skippers were tired of this particular shore patrol
officer "harassing their men on liberty", but had to account for the arrests
by the S.P. and make a report of punishment. Anyway, I didn't mind polishing
troughs and such too much, as I knew I was getting leave in New York. I think
that it was after this trip to New York, that we convoyed a tanker to Port
Arthur. Somewhere in this time span, we made one trip into the Med and tied
up in Oran. I had only been in the Med once during the war, so it had to
be on Edison. It seems to me that it was after this trip that we went to
Brooklyn for yard period. This was in the spring of `43, and when we came
out of the yard, we tied up at Bush Terminal in Brooklyn, I suppose for supplies.
"I was out on the starboard yard-arm (I can think of a lot of other places
I'd rather have been) replacing bulbs in the yard-arm blinker lights when
Morris, EM2/c yelled up that I'd been transferred (I sure wished that I had
a parachute!). A call had come for Edison to supply an EM2/c for a new Fletcher
class DD, whose crew was at Long Beach, N.Y. By the time I had gotten down
to the deck, orders for W. Blake, EM2/c, had been drawn up and I had 30 minutes
to pack my bag. I was given an advance in rating to EM2/c to facilitate transfer
(Morris was an experienced movie operator and knew how to dicker with other
ships and stations, to get the best movies, and the Exec didn't want to lose
him!)"
I will summarize the rest of Warren Blake's contribution. After his service
on Edison, he served on the Fletcher class DD, USS Kidd, then on the battleship
Wisconsin, then on the destroyer Meredith, all before becoming a civilian
in late 1946. After four years as a postwar civilian, he received a surprise
"invitation' from the Navy to return to active duty, the Navy being short
in its artificer branch. Instead of going to Korea in his specialty, as an
electrician, (the artificer shortage mentioned in his recall to active duty)
Warren was sent to the destroyer H.J.Ellyson as master-at-arms with European
duty. This gave Warren an opportunity to visit the grave of his brother who
died and was buried in England of wounds received in WW II. Another brother
was flying B-25s over Rabaul and Bougainville when Warren was in that area
on the USS Kidd. Warren's second separation came on December 20, 1951 at
Norfolk VA. He then again resumed his civilian career as a fireman in Hamden,
Connecticut.
Westbound in Ballast
We have some time to account for after leaving the Mediterranean for rest
and overhaul in March 1944. Edison left Palermo on the 14th of February 1944,
Algiers on the 18th, and Oran on the 21st, bound for Casablanca. Our orders
were to await the formation and arrival of convoy GUS-31. We made a rendezvous
with this convoy on 26 February 1944 and got underway for New York. An Edison
log entry of March 4, 1944 states that the Liberty ship SS Amelia Earhart
joined our New York bound convoy that day. The Edison was the `top dog' in
this convoy, and in fact the only "dog", as destroyers are sometimes called,
in the convoy. The rest of the escorts were Destroyer Escorts. Our skipper,
Lieutenant Commander Hepburn A. Pearce was the Convoy Commodore.
Things had certainly changed in the Atlantic. A convoy of this size with
a destroyer and nine destroyer escorts was a revelation to those of us who
had been baptized on the North Atlantic runs of 1941-1942. Then it was a
scarce allotment of U.S. destroyers with a U.S. or Canadian Coast Guard cutter
or Canadian corvette added from time to time.
That February-March 1944 convoy assignment was a long trip with over 100
Liberty ships, in ballast, through a rough Atlantic sea crossing. Each day
began with a "body count" of the Liberty ships. We would cross through the
convoy from flank to flank, reading the convoyed ship's name off its stern.
(TBS voice communication was still restricted to warships and the methods
for communicating with merchant ships were based on such limited options
as the 500 kilocycle distress frequency.) It took several passes through
the nine or ten convoy columns, first one way and then back, then over again
etc., to accomplish this. It was an exercise in seamanship, because the
prevailing wind and sea of the zig or the zag in zig-zagging convoys effected
your transit differently each time. Some Liberty ships with engineering or
exceptional ballast problems would be lagging and our transit through the
convoy would contain a dimple to accommodate the straggling column. Our Captain
let me keep the conn for this on the mornings that I had the 0800-1200 watch
and I appreciated his confidence in me. On the 16th of March, the convoy
arrived off the East Coast and dispersed into units destined for different
ports.
Edison's March 1944 log also shows that we made Gravesend Bay for off loading
ammo on 18 March. For that period, the log also shows that Lieutenant Richard
"Dick" Hofer, Annapolis Class of 1942, was detached from the USS Edison on
20 March, 1942, to proceed to NAS Dallas for flight training. Dick Hofer's
departure meant that I had become the Edison's Gunnery Officer. There was
no ceremony. Lambert, Boyd and Hofer had been Edison's Gunnery Officers and
these men would be a hard act to follow. (I was to see Dick Hofer just once
more, at NAS Sanford Florida, in 1951 or 1952. Dick was killed shortly after
that last meeting, while flying a Navy JRF on an instrument approach into
Albuquerque, NM.)
Leave and Recreation
As evidence of U.S. progress in the War, Edison personnel began to get actual
"leave" when we got to the "yard" at Bayonne, NJ, just after the middle of
March 1944. Most leaves were of the three day variety, but some were longer.
Three days would let you get to the Northeast Corridor, Pennsylvania Rail
Road, with stops in Newark, New Brunswick, Trenton, North Philadelphia Station,
Broad Street and 30th Street Stations in Philadelphia, Wilmington, Baltimore
and Washington, D.C. Many GIs would sit up or sleep (try it, sometime) on
a night train on this line just to take a girlfriend out for an evening,
and be back at the ship the next morning. Taxi drivers in New York knew well
where Sand Street was in Brooklyn, the home of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. My
first sight of the new battleship, USS Iowa, was when the Edison and she
were in adjacent dry docks at the Navy Yard. A destroyer looked like a tug
boat in that setting. In fact, destroyers could be nested two abreast, and
three deep in the dock and not go past the stern of the Iowa. Another favorite
dock was the 35th Street Pier on the East River. I have examined one of the
early Edison photos reproduced earlier in this story and Edison appears to
have just gotten underway from 35th Street.
There is no poll of the number of us who got married during the March/April
1944 New York/New Jersey yard availability. Lt. Craw and I acted as best
man for each other on successive days, his marriage in a church in New Jersey
and mine in St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan. Joe and Gert Dwyer got
married up in Massachusetts. I would guess 20 marriages, officers and crew,
at least. (If anyone wants to find out why the "boomers' were so concentrated,
these are the facts.) I had three days leave. My wife, Peggy, "picked the
day" we got married. It turned out to be April 1, 1944, April Fools Day,
in a Leap Year. (I've kidded you a lot about the wedding date "you picked",
Peggy, but it is quite clear we took the only date that was available. We
were married by a Monsignor, who later became the Bishop in residence at
St. Pats. His name was Flannelly.) That wedding ceremony, (no flowers or
music-it was Lent, the Saturday before Palm Sunday in the Catholic Church)
was our high point in the Church, until we made it to our 50th a few years
ago. My New York State Uncles, Vincent and Donald Dailey, helped us get a
marriage license on short notice, helped us arrange a wedding ceremony on
a Saturday afternoon at 6 p.m. during a light snow storm, and arranged a
reception and dinner at the Biltmore Hotel in New York City. "Helped us"
is an understatement because I do not recall doing any of it. Finally , our
wedding suite was arranged by them for us at the Barclay, a lovely hotel
in Manhattan, and the General Manager sent flowers to the room. It was the
first time I did not have to bid my date good night at the Lobby elevator.
Most of our meals the next three days were at the King of the Sea on Third
Avenue. It was all seafood, but I liked their Nesselrode pie.
An East River Event
In the early dusk of one inclement day, Edison came into New York harbor,
with dock space assigned at 35th Street on the East River. Entering New York
was always an event because it meant some of us would get ashore. It was
always somewhat tense, though, because the skipper and the navigator would
have one of us deck officers in training to conn the ship. There is a turn
necessary around Governor's Island to stay in the channel and "ranges", a
pair of marks on Manhattan skyline structures, one behind the other, as alignment
targets on the pelorus to more precisely define where the ship was to make
its course change. A strong current was running this foul evening and the
conning officer and then the skipper gave way sooner than usual to a port
pilot, who came over to us in a small boat from the Pilot Boat near the Ambrose
lightship. The pilot confidently conned the ship up the East River and with
signals, beckoned to two tugs to make fast to us with lines, one on the bow
and one on the stern. In the slip right next to where we were headed was
a beautiful white seagoing yacht, one of many that the military commandeered
at the outset of WW II. This yacht had a beautiful clipper bow, with an engraved
figurine of a proud lady at the top of the prow.
The pilot got us headed into our dock. I had never seen such a rapid upstream
current. The two tugs were to hold us off the dock against the current, and
gradually let us come down on the dockspace. They were pulling hard to battle
the movement of the East River. With about 200 feet of space to the dock,
the line from the forward tug snapped. Our bow began to set down on the dock
at high speed, headed for a concussion beyond any help the bumpers draped
over the starboard side could give. It was an emergency, and the pilot looked
helplessly at Captain Pearce. Pearce did not hesitate. I had never seen this
happen before! "I'll take it pilot.", he said, and in the same breath gave
orders to the annunciator, ALL ENGINES BACK, EMERGENCY! He ordered the tug
at the stern to get loose and out of the way. Edison's available horsepower,
probably 30,000 at that point, took hold. Just before smashing her bow into
the dock, Edison pulled clear, backing into the East River at high speed.
Right into the path of a tug with five coal barges in tow! No need to expect
anything from that assemblage except that they would plow straight into us.
ALL ENGINES EMERGENCY AHEAD! By now, the engineers below would be sweating.
"How did the Germans get a sub into the East River?", some of them might
be asking. PORT ENGINE BACK TWO THIRDS! We had to twist and parallel the
river heading outbound, move forward out of the way of a train of coal barges,
and somehow snake between that river traffic and the shore. I was on the
after deck house. Our stern cut an arc toward the next pier. That white clipper
bow and her tranquil lady passed directly overhead, just. We made it.
"Hap" Pearce was truly a seaman, first class. After things got under control
and the pilot reestablished contact with the tugs, the Captain, showing no
particular emotion, calmly asked the pilot if he was ready to take us back
to 35th Street. He was and he did. I am sure that the pilot appreciated the
Captain's gesture of confidence in him. I also realized that the pilot was
now aware that he was in the presence of a real ship handler who knew how
to use the power of his ship when that power was needed. The engineering
gang of the Edison deserved a big hand too. I am giving it somewhat tardily,
but with feeling, on behalf of all of us topside "witnesses."
That Leave Part Came To An End Too Soon
Next, Edison was off to Casco Bay, Maine. Edison anchored out, with one
whaleboat, cold and foggy. The chill got through to the bone. When I went
aboard, Edison had two motor whaleboats. These were skippered by a coxswain
or bos'ns mate. Their engineers were Motor Machinist's Mates, MoMM, a rating
different from the Machinist Mate who operated Edison's steam turbine plant.
The difference was a recognition of the diesel engine which powered the
whaleboat. Soon after I came aboard, one whaleboat was removed. While we
had two, one was the Captain's Gig and the other was for the crew. With some
skippers, not ours, the other was for all the officers and crew except the
skipper. Some skippers never shared their Gig. Gigs are fitted a little fancy,
with sort of curtain-type tassels draped under the overhang. But, when there
was just one boat for the entire ship, the fancies kind of went away. There
was a flag flown when the whaleboat was used as a Gig and removed if the
Captain was not aboard.
These boats were very seaworthy in the hands of a good crew. I can recall
at Hampton Roads (Norfolk Naval Operating Base anchorage) one very rough
morning coming back from liberty and the petty officer in charge at the landing
ordered that no boats leave the landing until the sea calmed. Captain Pearce,
knowing Edison had to get underway by 8:00 a.m., ordered the coxswain of
the Edison's Gig to get underway and take us back to the Edison. We made
it.
Casco Bay seemed dark and dreary all the time. Anchored out with Edison and
other destroyers was the U.S.S. Denebola flying the flag of ComDesLant
(Commander, Destroyers Atlantic Fleet). In peacetime, a station ship like
that that did not actually go any place, would help out with "services" to
destroyers. In wartime it was every ship for itself. One nice extra service
would have been the loan of liberty boats, not that Portland, Maine was the
most desirable liberty town on the East Coast of the USA. But, you could
drink there.
Leaning
All destroyer sailors have stood on the deck of a rolling ship. Edison rolled
as high as 57 degrees when I was aboard. Still, the effect of standing on
the deck of a ship not underway, but listed over at 20 degrees, just hanging
there, is an experience that really scared me. It happened one night in Casco
Bay, during a non-underway emergency that took place in the middle of another
emergency. We were to get underway the next day, the 20th of April 1944 in
convoy, with orders, many of us divined, that would take us to Normandy and
the cross channel invasion. (Yes, now I had enough time aboard to begin to
speculate on "where next?" We actually had no knowledge that the cross channel
would be at Normandy) Since it was the last night in the States, and since
we had worked very hard to be ready to go with such schemes as CSMP (which
I will come back to), we pushed the limit on the number of people allowed
liberty. The whaleboat was crowded on each trip and it was in constant transit.
I was OOD that night and Joe Dwyer had the engineering duty. The Captain
went ashore early and the Executive Officer went ashore late. The Captain
came back aboard somewhat the worse for wear. No movie scriptwriter could
have dreamed up the next few hours.
Joe Dwyer was still learning to be Engineering Officer, and I had never quite
experienced the responsibility for the whole ship, a kind of "Full Monty"
responsibility. Just about dusk, Joe reported that we had sprung a leak in
a fresh water tank. Now, destroyers treat fresh water like liquid gold. It
is a necessity for the propulsion system. The evaporators that make fresh
water work off the almost-spent steam. The scuttlebutts ( for drinking water)
are fed `almost' fresh water that is not good enough for the boilers and
turbines. Human showering is mostly a salt water affair with a failed invention
called salt water soap. The Edison could not depart for battle on the morrow
with a leak in a fresh water tank. I sent a signal to the USS Denebola for
help on dealing with the problem. The immediate response signal, summarized,
offered no help. "Fix it yourself!" Amplified, in context, "Doesn't the Edison
know that the entire Fleet in this Bay sorties tomorrow for momentous operations
in Europe?"
Joe told me his men figured they could get the hole up out of the water if
we listed the ship about 20 degrees. Irrespective of whether we got help
or not, we would have to get the hole up out of the water. There was no prospect
of a drydock. Portland did not even have one. So, at Joe's direction, his
men, skilled and to all appearances, confident, started pumping oil and water
to the port side. Gradually, Edison heeled over, and inch by inch, our welders
now hanging on a scaffold, reported the impending "arrival" of the suspect
hole. After four hours of anxious step by step pumping, the hole emerged
above the waterline. It was about amidships on the starboard side. Everything
loose on deck had to secured. Just as Joe's men were preparing their torches
to weld a hastily fabricated patch over the hole, a boat approached from
the flagship, the USS Denebola. A weary Commander (three striper) came up
(or over) the ladder we put down, and took in this scene with great puzzlement,
while he moved ever so carefully about our slanted deck. "I want to see your
Captain. I have Secret sailing orders for him to sign for!" Whew! The Captain
is ill, too ill to see you, was my response. "Well then, I want to see your
Executive Officer." Sorry sir, he is ashore. "What on earth is going on here?
Tomorrow you sail. No Captain. No Exec. And this crazy operation going on
when I cannot even stand up on the main deck." Well sir, we asked for your
help but you turned us down. We are doing our best. "OK. I'll be back at
0200. Make sure you are straightened out and I can get the CO or the XO to
sign for these Secret sailing orders. These orders are the most important
you will ever get." Yes Sir, we will do our best.
Sure enough, he came back at 0200. Now, though the Captain had come back
aboard, he was really in no condition to see anyone. The XO had until 0600
to return. I did not think a junior officer could persuade gold-braid-on-the-cap
to come back once more at 0600. Joe's men now had the patch on and wanted
to test the compartment by putting some air pressure on it before we pumped
fluids back and righted the ship. Good evening, Commander. Watch your step
sir. We are still tilted over. "I want to see the Captain or the Executive
Officer." Sorry sir, the Executive Officer is not aboard and the Captain
is too ill to see you. (I thought the man was going to go bonkers. Joe, standing
at my side, was just as scared as I was.) "What in heaven's kind of ship
is this, anyway? Leaving in a few hours, still listing like crazy, no senior
officers available!" Sir, if I could make a suggestion. You have had a long
night visiting all these destroyers. If you would let me have the sealed
package, I will take it in to the Captain's stateroom and get him so sign
and bring you back the signature just as fast as I can. "Never supposed to
do anything like this, but the Fleet has to sail, and I want to make extra
sure this one sails with it. OK. No more funny business, please."
So, I took the package into the skipper's stateroom off the starboard passageway.
He was in deep sleep in his bunk which was on an inner bulkhead. I put the
orders into his open safe, and signed his name, and brought the receipt back
to the Commander. Here you are, Sir. Have a pleasant morning. He never spoke
as he got back into his launch and disappeared into the Casco fog. Joe told
me the test was OK, and he started the pumping operation in reverse. At about
0630, still over about 15 degrees, the bell from the skipper's stateroom
rang. I ran from the quarterdeck and presented myself at his side. "Why in
hell can't I get up out of this bunk?" Sorry sir, we are still heeled over
and you are in kind of a V-shaped slot there until we get level again. Please
read those orders. It apparently tells where we are going and when.
TO DO and DONE
Oh yes, the Current Ships Maintenance Project (CSMP). By April of 1944, Jim
Hughes had become the First Lieutenant. At our previous type (type=destroyer)
inspection, probably in or around Norfolk, maybe a half year earlier, the
DesLant "destroyer type" people had given us a poor mark because our CSMP
file was not up to date. During the April 1944 Casco Bay stay, the destroyer
type officers on the Denebola told us to be ready to stand inspection while
anchored there. The inspection was held and we got good marks. (This was
before the fresh water tank episode.) We were especially lauded because our
CSMP file was up to date. Jim Hughes had discovered the discrepancy report
in which we had the bad mark during the previous inspection, just a day or
so before this Casco Bay inspection. Jim had his shipfitters construct two
shiny, aluminum boxes with beautifully fitted, hinged, covers. Both were
labeled CSMP in large letters. Both obviously held 8 x 10 1/2 inch government
letter-sized documents. One box was labeled TO DO. The other box was labeled
DONE. The Edison done fine. After the inspection party left I looked inside
the two covered boxes. There was nary a document inside either box, nor do
I believe there ever was.
An Eastbound Show of Force
On 20 April, 1944 Edison's two week stay in Casco Bay ended as she headed
back into the Atlantic with an all-warship force. Many of the ships had been
in Casco Bay with us but other cruisers and destroyers rendezvoused offshore
from other ports. This was my first time at sea without cargo ships, and
we did not even have a fleet tanker with us to fuel the destroyers. On this
day, too, though I did not realize it until reading Theodore Roscoe's book
on Destroyer Operations in World War II, the USS Lansdale took a torpedo
while guarding a Mediterranean convoy. She was another Benson/Livermore sunk
by aerial torpedo.
The speed of advance of our all-warship convoy, much faster than the fastest
merchant convoy, took us to the Azores in just a little over five days. The
destroyers fueled there and this force was underway again.
We were not going to England or the British Isles to await the cross channel
invasion. We were going back to the Mediterranean, only this time instead
of slinking through the Straits of Gibraltar in the dead of night, we were
going through at high noon, and hoped the German spotters in Algeciras, Spain,
surely would see us, and count us! It was the conjecture around the ship
that the Allied High Command wanted the Germans to think that the next major
thrust would come from the south of Europe. And for all most of us really
knew, maybe it would. The sealed orders I had signed for surely revealed
our next mission, but I was not among those on the Edison who had a "need
to know" even though I was now about the fifth senior officer of our 23 aboard.
I had begun as the junior officer in the 10-officer complement Edison had
when I joined the ship. Irrespective of the predictions about our next action
assignment, a magnificent fleet of 25-30 U.S. cruisers and destroyers sailed
through the Straits of Gibraltar at noon Greenwich time on 29 April and arrived
in Oran on 1 May 1944.
Edison sortieed from Mers-el-Kebir the next day to assist in the escort of
convoy UGS-39. From 8 May to 13 August, Edison served in various AA and ASW
assignments for ships transiting Italian waters. There was a brief time out
for gunnery exercises 11-14 July 1944. On 13 August, 1944 Edison left Palermo,
Sicily for her assignment in DRAGOON, scheduled for August 15, 1944. During
this period, we lost more Benson/Livermore destroyers participating in the
Normandy Invasion.
USS Corry
In the Spring of 1942, before I graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy, our
modest berthing and anchorage facility at Annapolis was visited by the USS
Corry, the first Benson/Livermore class destroyer I had ever seen. From our
Annapolis seawall we could speculate about some of the events of her time
trials. One unmistakable sight occurred when Corry's two screws, each driven
by 25,000 Shaft Horsepower, were given All Ahead Flank Emergency. (From my
memory, this signal was "All Ahead Flank" on the annunciators, sounded twice
in succession to indicate "Emergency") Corry's stern dug down like a fast
speedboat, which she was, and the bow seemed to hydroplane. I did not know
until later that she was making over 37 knots but I was impressed with the
sight. I also learned later that the shallow Chesapeake did not allow the
absolute top speed to be achieved. It was about that time that the Naval
Academy annual First Class Midshipman auction was held for assignments after
graduation, and as I related at the outset of this story, I put in for
Destroyers, Atlantic Fleet. I now feel that perhaps, subconsciously, the
Corry visit to USNA influenced my decision. The USS Corry was lost during
one of ANVIL's (Normandy Invasion) first D-Day close fire support missions
at Utah Beach. She struck a mine which broke her keel. Normandy is not chronicled
in this story because Edison was not there. But, I did want to note Corry's
loss and also the losses of the destroyers USS Meredith and the USS Glennon
before the assault phase of the great cross channel invasion came to an end.
In a later Mediterranean action, we lost the Destroyer Escort Herbert C.
Davis, which along with the U.S. DE Frederick C. Jones, had served so brilliantly
at Anzio.
She Left Her Anchor in Napoli
Edison managed a few liberties in Naples. We took what might be looked at
as an extra liberty our first time in that beautiful harbor. We had been
reminded to look at the charts before anchoring there. Naples was a deep
water anchorage. The bottom would usually be about 40 fathoms down. This
depth was quite different from our anchorages in other world harbors. Jim
Hughes, our First Lieutenant, ordered his deck gang to transfer some chain
from the port anchor chain to the starboard anchor chain to accommodate the
extra depth. In most anchoring situations, the anchor detail could order
the chain snubbed at 15 fathoms and be assured the anchor was already on
the bottom. Not so at Napoli. Human habits are hard to break. Our first trip
in, the charts for our assigned anchor position showed about 42 fathoms of
water. The navigator (Stan Craw) told the skipper (Hap Pearce) that Edison
had arrived over the assigned anchor position coordinates, and the skipper
used the horn to tell the First Lieutenant (Jim Hughes) on the focs'le,"
NOW!" Jim said, "Let Go", and the chain sped up out of the chain locker with
the anchor as the driving force. The fifteen fathom "shot" sped by and Jim,
out of habit, ordered the capstan operator to snub the chain just as the
fifteen fathom shot hit the water.
"Report the chain.", ordered the Captain. "Up and down, no strain.", reported
the focs'le. "Back down ten turns." ordered the skipper, and then asked again,
"Report the chain." "Up and down, no strain.", reported Jim from the anchor
detail. "Where are we, navigator?' asked the skipper. "About a quarter mile
from our anchor position." responded Stan Craw. "Jim, bring up that anchor.",
spoke the Captain. Orders were given to the capstan motor operator and the
chain slowly came up out of the water. Sure enough, the fifteen fathom shot
came out of the Bay of Naples,, neatly split in half. So then the Captain
looked, and we all looked, for the anchor buoy which would mark the anchor
position on the bottom.. "Jim, how much line did you have on the anchor buoy?"
"Fifteen fathoms, Captain." So there in Napoli Bay is a nice anchor, which
at one time could be found if you snorkeled to 25 fathoms and found the anchor
buoy. I assume the anchor buoy and its line have disintegrated over the past
fifty years. Jim has taken a lot of kidding about the "up and down, no strain"
event, which the rest of us relished as a sanity break from the serious business
of shooting, and being shot at.
DRAGOON
From Christmas, 1943, right on through the Italian campaign in 1944, Prime
Minister Churchill used every argument and worked every channel of communication
possible to persuade Roosevelt and Eisenhower that the northern Italy to
Yugoslavia alternative was the best choice for beating the Nazis, and that
the southern France strategy should be abandoned. He won some converts, but
General Eisenhower was never convinced. President Roosevelt sided with his
Generals. After the Normandy landings, their outstanding success on the main
thrust from Normandy, coupled with the slower going in the Cherbourg prong
of the assault, convinced the Allied planners that logistics alone demanded
ports in the south of France. At its peak, even given the amazing job in
clearing devastated Cherbourg to make her a seaport once again, that port
could not handle the tonnage of a Marseilles. The decision to throw the weight
of Patton's Army eastward and leave Brittany to die on the vine, meant that
Brittany ports were out of the question to make up the logistics deficiency
that several successful Allied armies now required. On 8 July 1944, General
Sir Henry Maitland Wilson, Eisenhower's successor for all Mediterranean
operations, put in motion the plan to invade the south of France.
The veteran 3rd, 36th and 45th U.S. infantry divisions were readied for the
assault phase. They would become the nucleus of a new US 7th Army under
Lieutenant General Alexander Patch. For the assault phase, these would be
commanded by Lieutenant General Lucian Truscott and be called the VI Corps.
Two French divisions, also withdrawn from Italy, would become the French
II Corps which would be supplemented by a French tank and motorized infantry
brigade. To minimize language difficulties during first assault hours, the
French troops would come in a major follow up landing, close behind the assault
forces. It would still be Admiral Hewitt's job to get these forces successfully
ashore. Under Hewitt, Rear Admiral Frank Lowry would handle the west flank,
toward Marseilles, with the U.S. 3rd Division to go ashore. Rear Admiral
Bertram Rodgers, USN, would command the landings of the U.S. 45th Division
in Baie de Bougnon in the center pointed toward St. Tropez. Rear Admiral
Don Moon, USN would be in charge on the right flank, with the U.S. 36th Division,
whose right flank would reach toward Cannes. We had worked with Lowry before
at Anzio, Rodgers had come from the Pacific, and Moon had commanded the tough
landings at Utah Beach in Normandy. Each had the primary responsibility to
get one US assault division, with added units, successfully ashore. Rear
Admiral Lyal Davidson would again command naval gunfire support. Recalling
the beyond-range problems of the cruisers and destroyers at Anzio, Admiral
Hewitt asked Admiral King for heavier-gunned warships to augment Hewitt's
Eighth Fleet.
Five battleships were made available, Nevada , Texas, Arkansas, old U.S.
BBs, along with HMS Ramillies and the French BB, Lorraine, which we had seen
in North African ports. I never laid eyes on these heavies during DRAGOON.
Heavy U.S. cruisers Augusta and Tuscaloosa were added. Light cruiser Quincy
was added to Brooklyn and Philadelphia, helping to make up for the absence
of the damaged Savannah. It would be Edison's assignment to work this assault
with Tuscaloosa and Rear Admiral Morton Deyo. Seven British and two American
escort carriers would provide air cover and air support. There would be a
major pre-dawn paratroop landing, followed by a softening bombardment from
the sea and then an 0800 local time daylight troop landing. Admiral Davidson
and a member of his staff had gone to Normandy to examine German shore defense
fortifications. The planners expected to face some heavy guns in the assault
phase of DRAGOON but knew they would not find the heavy guns and fortifications
in the depth experienced at Normandy. On the fifth of August, laden with
combat fatigue from Normandy, Admiral Moon took his own life and was replaced
by Rear Admiral Spencer Lewis, USN.
For those who recall code names, the name Overlord, the long planned invasion
operation across the English channel, moved into its actual assault phase
with the name, Neptune. Anvil had been the long term planner's name for the
Southern France invasion during its preparation, but the assault phase became
known as Dragoon.
Edison's officers and men often speculated, during the four invasion operations
preceding Southern France, about success and the prospects for the end of
the War. But no one aboard Edison during the extensive preparation for DRAGOON,
had the remotest idea then that the final sustained period of dramatic enemy
action for Edison's commissioned life span was at hand.
The Chain of Command
The senior officers are more tuned to the chain of command and the junior
officers and crew complement are less aware of its nuances, though we generally
had an idea who the next-up boss was. A destroyer and its skipper going into
action are part of a chain of "command". It is spelled out on paper before
the operation takes place. Then, in the fast pace of action which follows,
that chain of command can change by the minute, with no paperwork whatsoever!
The plan adjusts to the realities, to what the enemy does, and to what our
forces have accomplished or failed to accomplish.
It had been Edison's good fortune, whether escorting to the place of assault,
defending against air attack or surface attack or sub-surface dangers, or
while under the direction of a shore fire control party, SFCP, to generally
re-attach to Admiral Lyal Davidson's command often enough to feel "at home"
with him. This feeling of attachment persisted just as strongly as our bond
with a destroyer division or destroyer squadron commander. During DRAGOON,
Admiral Davidson moved his flag to the USS Augusta, another ship well known
and trusted by us. But these treasured connections were far from the Edison
during the Southern France assault. Davidson and Augusta were kept busy on
the west flank of the operation while Edison was either directly under Admiral
Deyo on Tuscaloosa, or working for an SFCP, both of which were on the eastern
flank of operations. We preferred the SFCP assignments. A bond with Tuscaloosa
and her flag officer never jelled for the Edison. This resulted from contrasts
that I only sensed at the time. Reviewing my recollections for this story,
the difference I then only sensed has become clear.
"I am going in!", were Admiral Davidson's electric words from USS Philadelphia
as he confronted the yet-to-be-swept mine field at Salerno.
"Go in and draw their fire and we will back you up." , were the words from
Tuscaloosa at Cannes almost a year later.
If I had any other point to make in the contrasts of the words above, I would
make it. Rear Admiral Deyo's requirements were right in context with the
overall challenge for the "Camel" support force, as our force during DRAGOON
was code-named. Destroyers screened, destroyers protected, destroyers put
themselves between main opposing larger warship ship armadas, and they always
"drew fire." We will take one such intervention look at our Pacific counterparts
near the end of the next Chapter. The situation developed in a major Pacific
battle in which destroyers performed the role of physically intervening between
an overpowering line of Japanese battleships and a group of sitting duck
U.S. escort carriers. It is as clear to me now as it was in 1943 and 1944
that the situation Deyo faced in the Gulf of Cannes was entirely different
from the situation Davidson confronted at Salerno.
Notwithstanding, I can just never forget how Rear Admiral Davidson in the
USS Philadelphia saw his role and Philadelphia's role so courageously in
that furious first day at Salerno. It could have been disaster for the Admiral
and his flagship. Philadelphia, too, lived just as charmed a life as the
Edison.
Rear Admiral Deyo proved to be more of a communicator than Rear Admiral Davidson.
Deyo publicly and unstintingly commended the ships under his command. Examples
will be forthcoming.
Other Bonds Held Fast
Our old friends Woolsey and Ludlow would be with us and the Camel Force,
along with U.S. destroyers Parker, Kendrick, Mackenzie, Mclanahan, Nields,
Ordronaux, Boyle and Champlin. Champlin was commanded by my company officer
at the U.S. Naval Academy, LCDR F.E. Fleck. In addition to the U.S. heavy
cruiser Tuscaloosa, we had U.S. cruisers Brooklyn and Marblehead, battleship
Arkansas, HMS Argonaut, and French cruisers Duguay-Trouin and Emile Bertin.
The latter was one of the most graceful looking warships I have ever seen.
All together, these warships were labeled, The Bombardment Group for Task
Force 87, Camel Force. The flagship for Rear Admiral Lewis was the attack
transport, USS Bayfield. Seeing Marblehead, the cruiser he'd helped rescue
from near annihilation by the Japanese in a very early Pacific engagement,
must have made Captain Pearce a proud man. For some reason, historian Samuel
Eliot Morison labeled Marblehead a light cruiser in Volume XI of his History
of United States Naval Operations in World War II. She had an eight inch
main battery and that was the standard that differentiated a "heavy" cruiser
from the six inch gun "light" cruisers. But, Marblehead was quite old, witness
her sponson guns, so Morison may have downgraded her a bit.
Here , thanks to a U.S. Navy recognition photo in World War II, is a look
at France's Emile Bertin.
Here, thanks to Drake Davis, are two U.S. light cruisers, with whom Edison
spent considerable time in 1942-1944. The first picture is the USS Brooklyn.
The one following is the USS Philadelphia.
The Operation Begins
In our training for Dragoon, we tried to apply lessons learned from our four
earlier assault operations beginning with Casablanca. Admiral Hewitt and
others who joined him in a special pleading, which had been ignored in earlier
invasions, succeeded in getting a powerful pre-landing bombardment, and an
0800 daylight assault landing time. The sea bombardment took its place as
a continuity in an orchestrated series of air bombing operations begun in
April, 1944. These airborne operations were gradually stepped up in intensity
and covered the shoreline from west of Marseilles all the way to Genoa, Italy.
Despite the broad extent of the air bombers target shoreline, and the judicious
employment of "equal bomb" treatment to all sectors along that shoreline,
the Germans were able to correctly anticipate that the Rhone River delta
and the Rhone valley would be our main thrust. And with the nearly 900 major
vessels underway, "in their own bottoms" as some put it, carrying nearly
1500 craft, not in their own bottoms, Allied timing was no puzzle to the
Germans. The German forces were just now spread too thin to do too much about
it. They had too many fronts to defend. They were where Marshal Stalin wanted
them. To give Prime Minister Churchill, who could see postwar Europe better
than we could, his due, our forces were disposed in the west, and not in
some Adriatic-Aegean front where the Allies could become involved in countries
closer to "Uncle Joe" Stalin's objectives. Eisenhower's armies were primed
to shorten the War in Europe and shorten it they did. The Allies were not
primed to become involved in central European politics. Destroyer folks did
not muse about these matters. It would have been distracting and non-productive.
If these musings are distracting to this story, I plead guilty. This author
is in a bit of a discovery process as the connections between events in World
War II becomes clearer.
Here is an August 14, 1944, CINCMED dispatch, readdressed by CTG 87.7 (Camel
Bombardment Group) to Edison and all ships in this command:
-QNL- -A- 7Y3 141745 7YY3 -A- CINCMED BT
TUSCALOOSA AND CAMEL FORCE GENERAL WILSON AND ADMIRAL CUNNINGHAM WISH YOU
GOOD LUCK, YOUR ENTERPRISE WILL MAKE HISTORY AND WILL GIVE A FATAL BLOW TO
THE ENEMY.
The time of receipt (TOR) of this message was August 14, 1944 at 1645, a
quarter to five p.m. local time. The dispatch originator was Rear Admiral
Deyo.
The first night landings were made by a force of 5,000 paratroops from 396
transport planes which departed from airfields near Rome. Pathfinder planes,
night fighters and airborne jammer aircraft preceded them. The Allied aircraft
took a path from the northern point of Corsica to the French coast, along
which they were guided by three beacon ships located along the shoreline
well clear of our approaching sea forces. The air drops, both of the chutists
and the gliders, were targeted around Le Muy and were completed almost perfectly
by shortly after 0500 on the fifteenth of August. This group had Le Muy in
hand by afternoon, had seized a German corps command quarters, had taken
several hundred prisoners, and were linked up with the 45th division which
had landed over the beaches, all before the end of D-day. Every one of the
396 planes got safely back to base.
The second landings, still in the darkness, involved 3,000 U.S., British,
Canadian and French commandoes with a special mission on the western flank
of the landings. Prior to the deployment of this "Sitka" Force, smaller groups
landed on the group of offshore islands, capturing prisoners and discovering
that some of the heavy fortifications were in fact wooden dummy guns. Others
were real and Augusta had to pound away with her main battery. One had sufficient
encasements to call for the 15 inch shells from the HMS Ramillies. Landings
on the coast itself at Cap Negre began about 0200 on the 15th of August.
One objective was to cut the defender's communications and access between
Toulon and our assault beaches to the east. With some more help from Augusta
and HMS Dido, these landings accomplished their mission and linked up with
U.S. 3rd Division units shortly after noon on D-day.
Edison's Fifth D-day Begins
First, of course, the sweepers. Their day began at 0515, with the objective
to clear boat lanes for the three main attack forces. Drone boats to clear
explosive underwater obstacles were then employed. The use of this technique
still presented problems but worked better here than during the pre-invasion
training exercises in Italy. With first light appearing, heavy Allied land
based bombers came over just before 0600. This continued in waves until about
0730, overlapping the sea bombardment commenced by HMS Ajax. Scout planes
from the U.S. light cruisers Philadelphia, Brooklyn and Quincy were catapulted
into the air when the low mist obscuring targets dissipated..
The "Alpha" Force, embarking the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division, would land in
the Baie de Pampelone. This was the westernmost of our main forces, except
for the Sitka Force which had been clearing the islands off Cap Negre were
getting astride the coast road to Toulon to prevent the enemy from moving
forces toward our landing beaches. Delta Force, with the 45th Division would
land in the center, on the eastern promontory of the Golfe de St. Tropez.
The Camel Force, with the 36th Division, would land at Beach Red in the Golfe
de Frejus and at Beach Green to the east on Cap Drammont. This Division's
primary responsibility was to get moving along the road up the Rhone Valley
toward Vichy and Lyon and lead the charge to the linkup with Eisenhower's
forces moving east from their successful Normandy invasion beaches. The 36th
also presented a right flank, toward Cannes, Nice, Monaco and eventually
toward Genoa. While we had no inkling at my level of the overall strategy,
I learned-by-doing that our sea forces were to protect this right flank,
to assist in modest advances of our troops into Cannes and Nice, and to help
erect the holding wall to keep the main northbound 7th Army free of flank
attacks and harassing artillery from the eastern flank. This part settled
in on us something like Anzio, although the weather was better and we were
now supporting a winning hand rather than a bogged down force.
Edison took up her fire support station just before 0400 on the 15th of August,
1944. At 0746, we were fired on by a shore battery and at 0800 returned fire.
At 1605, our War Diary states that we fired on and destroyed a pillbox. We
were under air attack just after dusk at 2110. We could see a DO-217 in one
pass. We fired at it but did not hit it. It wasn't the Director crew's fault.
By mistake, I had left a 5 mil deflection spot in the computer from a previous
shore firing mission.
Again, thanks to Drake Davis, webmaster for the USS Savannah website, for
this valuable picture of a DO-217 with an Hs-293 powered glider bomb under
one wing and a Fritz-X (FX-1400) radio controlled ballistic bomb under the
other wing.
Beach Red presented a plethora of obstacles, mines, heavy weapons, and well
protected defenders. Several minesweepers were sunk and the sweeper force
did not get the first phase of the sweep accomplished. Our forces were therefore
impeded in getting personnel ashore to deal with underwater demolition
responsibilities. The landing craft were coming in on schedule so the decision
was made to move the Beach Red stream of boats to Beach Green, which had
been heavily defended, but which had yielded. The destroyer Ordronaux took
up landing craft re-direction tasks here and did a marvelous job under tight
circumstances. Beach Red was still badly needed-every beach was needed for
the logistics challenge- so the 36th Division resolved to take Beach Red
from the rear and they did. But it was the 19th of August before the Golfe
de Frejus was cleared of most of the defender's death traps. Other units
of the 36th proceeded east to the west shore of the Golfe de Napoule. The
city of Cannes was situated on its eastern shore.
All in all, the Alpha and the Delta forces met all of their D-day objectives
and then some. Camel Force was held up momentarily by their Beach Red impasse.
But by the end of the 16th, all major units of the 3rd, 36th and 45th Divisions
were ashore with full supplies. St. Raphael fell on the morning of the 16th.
Strong forces began to move westward toward Toulon and Marseilles. We still
had to get two follow up French Divisions ashore to go with General de Lattre's
French II Corps, to which had been entrusted the vital mission of taking
Toulon and Marseilles. The supply chain that Eisenhower counted on was stretched
out in already-loaded bottoms all the way back to the U.S. east coast. Marseilles
was a more critical port than any other. Moving men and materiel across beaches
would never work for the million man thrusts needed to defeat Hitler.
A Touch of Class
I want to take a few lines here to relate something about the man we knew
as Admiral Hewitt. It comes from Morison's Volume XI, The Invasion of France
and Germany. Admiral Hewitt went ashore on the morning of the 16th of August,
1944, with James Forrestal, U.S. Secretary of the Navy, General Patch, commanding
the 7th Army, and Admiral Lemonnier of the French Navy. Provided with two
jeeps, this party drove into St. Raphael. The townspeople peered out of windows
and doors with curiosity. Admiral Hewitt stood up in his jeep, and pointed
at the officer's cap of Admiral Lemonnier, which was quite French and quite
noticeable. With that, the townspeople formed an immediate crowd, and
spontaneously broke out in song, The Marseillaise. That event tells a lot
about Admiral Hewitt.
We Move East
It was toward the Golfe de Napoule that Edison's main attention was drawn
after D-day. A heavy battery on an island just offshore presented danger
to the flank of the 36th Division. Edison would be involved in dealing with
it. The character of the shore and the land behind it changed dramatically
as one moved eastward toward Cannes.
This visual splendor of red stone sand and blue Mediterranean was not lost
on me. Salerno's shoreline was just as beautiful in its way, but at Southern
France I was the Gunnery Officer and could see so much more through the
Director's optics than with 7X50 binoculars. Chief Fire Controlman Jackson
and I jabbered all the time by yelling or through the sound powered phones
as we would discover one land feature after another. I particularly recall
the rail yards on the north side of the Golfe and the spur line that reached
west from there, right to one of our Camel Force landing beaches. We took
out our share of box cars and locomotives until our troops had secured the
area.
Where Are Those Batteries Firing From?
That is surely what Rear Admiral Deyo wanted to know. I can tell you how
we helped him find out. This came after we were directed to draw enemy fire,
and received assurance that we would be backed up by the Tuscaloosa. On one
trip into the Golfe de Napoule (we referred to it as the Gulf of Cannes then)
on an assigned mission, our skipper pointed our ship straight in. For example
purposes, let us say our heading was North, or 000 degrees true. From where
we suspected the major battery harassing our troops was located, our target
angle, to them, would be 045. In other words, they were broad on our starboard
bow. Sure enough, we drew their fire. As the splashes drew closer, and we
could see from the height of the splash plumes that these were big shells,
the Captain went from 10 knots ahead, to 5 knots astern, by giving appropriate
commands to the engine room. Hap Pearce was giving the German fire control
people credit for good ranging, and for getting a "solution" to our forward
speed at something between 5 and 10 knots. Sure enough, the next salvo of
splashes was way out ahead of us. They had been fooled. They had not thought
to put "minus 5 knots" into their solution. This trick will only work once
in awhile so other times we used speed ahead, course changes, and smoke.
While we were directed to draw their fire, we were not directed to get hit.
It was clear to bridge personnel that our skipper was not at all keen about
such tactics.
More Dispatches
Military teletypewriters printed in all CAPS. The military message form,
the `daddy" of our telegram and even our e-mails, is not highly embellished.
Some dispatches used AR, to mean Acknowledge Receipt, a feature still missing
in most of our e-mail systems in 1998. Some messages reveal a BT, to denote
end of transmission. Most used X, in lieu of periods, or orally, as "stops".
All come with a date/time group. The first two numerals are the day of the
month, the last four are the time of day in a 24 hour day. An alphabetic
suffix is sometimes used to reveal the time zone. The ones below with the
suffix B, are in the second time zone east of Greenwich, or two hours after
Greenwich Mean Time. That time zone was local time for Southern France. Like
e-mail, when the sender is under some pressure, spelling suffers. Not to
worry, the meaning was usually clear. I had been scanning these into our
story in earlier chapters but often the faded carbons left something to be
desired. So, here, I will re-key them and I promise to indicate with parentheses
where I alter them.
The first one, reproduced earlier, was a general "pump up the troops" message
from the high command. The first line showed that the entire chain of command,
four levels, joined together in the message. British General Wilson was CINCMED.
This next dispatch is an early situation report for DRAGOON.
152230B SITUATION REPORT 152000B
OBSTICALS AND ARTILLERY FIRE ON SHORE NAVY DID NOT LAND 142 INF ON BEACH
264A AS PLANNED X 142 INF WAS LATER LANDED OVER BEACH 264B X AT 152000B 142
AND 143 INF WERE TO ATTACK FROM A LINE OF DEPARTURE U-566372--584346, 142
INF ATTACKING FREJUS AND 143 INF ATTACKING THROUGH ST RAPHEL AND BEACH 264A
TO ARGENS RIVER TO CONTACT 45 INF DIV X 141 INF ADVANCED NORTH FROM BEACH
265A, LEADING ELEMENTS REACHED APPROXIMATELY S 295600 X 180 INF ADVANCED
NORTH NORTHWEST AGAINST SLIGHT OPPOSITION, LEADING ELEMENTS REACHING U 460290,
U 490315 AND U 5530 X 157 INF ADVANCED WEST AND SOUTHWEST, LEADING ELEMENTS
REACHING U 440177, U455215 AND U 465255 X 179 INF LANDED AND ASSEMBLED VICINITY
U487226 X ELEMENTS OF 117 CAVALRY RECONNAISSANCE SQUADRON REACHED U 415242
AND U 450280 X SEVEN INF OF THREE INF DIV CONTACTED FRENCH COMMANDO FORCE
ALONG WEST ROAD AT U365308 X 30 INF REACHED AREA U 3913--- ( u 3916 ) X 2
BT 15 INF ATTACKING ST TROPEX AT END OF PERIOD X NO CONTACT BETWEEN DIVISIONS
OF FRECN COMMANDOS LANDED SUCCESSFULLY AT CAP NEGRE AT 150230B X DESTROYED
BATTERY AND BLOCKED COASTAL ROAD TO THAT AREA X ONE COUNTERATTACK REPULSED
X PASS TO CONTROL OF 6 CORPS AT 150800B X COMBAT COMMAND SUDRE OF FRENCH
ARMORED DIV ARRIVED IN ASSULT AREA PERPARED TO LAND OVER 45 DIV BEACHES PRIOR
TO MIDNIGHT, 15 AUGUST X ADVANCE INLAND PROCEEDED VERY SATISFACORILY DURING
THE AFTERNOON FROM BEACHES WHICH WERE ASSULTED DURING MORNING X
That has to be one of the earliest situation reports for DRAGOON. It is good
news because it fit the plan very well, even showing that our forces were
ahead of the plan schedule. Every staff officer to any ranking officer would
rush this into his boss, and would hope that the "good" part of the good
news, would in some way rub off on the messenger.
The next message is from COM WNTF, Commander Western Naval Task Force, Admiral
Hewitt.
170820B
SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION OF INITIAL PHASE OF DRAGOON HAS BEEN MADE POSSIBLE
BY EXCELLENT PRELIMINARY TRAINING AND MATERIAL PREPARATION AND BY EXCELLENT
PERFORMANCE OF DUTY IN ACTUAL OPERATION BY ALL CONCERNED. WELL DONE TO ALL.
WE MUST NOW MAKE EVERY EFFORT TO LAND FOLLOW UP TROOPS AND SUPPLIES WITH
MAXIMUM RAPIDITY AND SUPPORT ADVANCE.
It was good to hear from the man who has led you since the beginning of the
Mediterranean operations and to learn from him that a "phase" has successfully
transpired. I doubt if there was a hard and fast time line in the plan. I
think that the leadership made these decisions ad hoc. The initial "phase"
at Anzio took much longer and ended on the note of settling down for the
long haul; we did not push the Germans out. At Southern France, the defenders
were pushed out of there quickly and Hewitt sounds the note that our Allied
forces' momentum requires the supply train to function on all cylinders.
I must admit that during the combat period itself I really did not comprehend
all that. While our forces at sea made some mistakes along the way and I
could see those, I should have been giving greater credit to our leadership
for the vision they had about how to win the war.
This next message is from Rear Admiral Deyo who is passing along what our
"customer", the 36th Division Commanding General, thinks about our work.
-P- -A- 7W4 171413B 7WW4 GR 72 BT
GENERAL DAHLQUIST INFORMS ME THAT FROM HIS OWN OBSERVATIONS AND REPORTS FROM
HIS COMMAND THE FIRE SUPPORT OF THIS GROUP WAS MOST EFFECTIVE AND WELL EXECUTED
X GERMAN PRISONERS UNIFORMLY EXPRESSED ADMIRATION OF THE NAVAL GUN FIRE X
I WAS PARTICULARLY PLEASED WITH THE INITIATIVE EFFICIENCY AND BOLDNESS OF
THE ORDRONAUX (a destroyer) IN PROTECTING THE BOAT WAVES DURING THE DELAYED
LANDING X YOU HAVE ALL PERFORMED YOUR TASKS SKILFULLY AND THOROUGHLY X WELL
DONE AND BEST LUCK BT - TOR: 1315
We still had tasks to perform, but nothing compared with the tasks of the
3rd, 36th and 45th Infantry Divisions of the U.S. Army as they became swallowed
up in the land mass of Europe. They were not likely to see or hear or experience
naval gunfire again in their lifetimes. Some of those lifetimes were short.
The dispatch also contains "GR 72", which is a word count. Military communication
was often interrupted and incomplete so the word count helped the addressees
figure out if they had received the entire message. This is a redundancy,
like the parity count in today's computer communications. Those readers who
worked in some aspect of communications in war time will note that today's
protocols owe much to practices developed in the military.
The final message is in two parts, one from SAC, the Supreme Allied Commander,
General Eisenhower, up there in England or occasionally at the front with
his Generals. One can sense in this exchange that Ike knew he would not be
in touch with his Admirals like he had been over the past two years.
COMMANDER IN CHIEF HAS RECEIVED THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE FROM THE SUPREME ALLIED
COMMANDER BEGINS "WILL YOU PLEASE CONVEY TO ALL RANKS OF THE ALLIED NAVIES
UNDER YOUR COMMAND MY CONGRATULATIONS AND THANKS FOR THE MASTERLY MANNER
IN WHICH THE INVASION FORCES HAVE BEEN MARSHALED TRANSPORTED LANDED SUPPORTED
AND SUPPLIED SINCE THE INCEPTION OF THE OPERATIONS IN SOUTHERN FRANCE THE
REMARKABLE SUCCESS OF THE OPERATION COULD NOT HAVE BEEN ACHIEVED WITHOUT
HAVING ALL BEEN DISPLAYED IN SUCH MARKED DEGREE. 251600 AUGUST. THE FOLLOWING
REPLY HAS BEEN MADE TO THE SUPREME ALLIED NAVIES UNDER MY COMMAND. ALL OFFICERS
AND MEN CONCERNED IN THE OPERATION OFF SOUTHERN FRANCE WILL BE HONORED BY
YOUR PRAISE. THEY ARE PROUD OF THE PART THEY HAVE PLAYED IN CONTRIBUTING
TO THE SUCCESS OF THE OPERATION UNDER YOUR SUPREME COMMAND WHICH HAS (led)
TO THE 7TH ARMY GREAT VICTORY.
The Right Flank
There was still work to be done. I will reproduce a few words from the Edison's
War Diary.
"The period from 17 August through 22 August was spent in giving close fire
support to the post assault phase of Operation Anvil. Edison fired on an
enemy observation post on 17 August and the SFCP reported `fire very accurate.'
On 18 August she fired on anti-aircraft batteries and an enemy pillbox with
direct hits reported. The grand climax came on 21 August when she trained
her guns toward enemy occupied buildings. Sixty rounds of 5-inch ammunition
were fired into the buildings and a very elated SCFP reported, `Direct hits,
very good shooting.'
"Again on 22 August Edison moved in to fire on an enemy strong point. Results
for this bombardment were not observed due to a radio casualty. Later she
was called on to destroy a concentration of enemy trucks. So effective was
her fire that after 48 rounds, the shore party reported, `Mission successful,
no vehicles left. Good shooting.' Two enemy gun emplacements also took the
brunt of Edison's guns later in the day."
It was on the 22nd of August that Frank Barber, the gun captain of Gun #2,
was hit by shrapnel from an enemy shell that landed up forward near the ship,
and whose plume contained not just water but some "hard" stuff.
The period from 22 August to 22 September was extremely busy for the USS
Edison. Cannes fell on the 24th of August and Nice on the 30th. All of the
French coastline eastward from the landing beaches belonged to the Allies
by 9 September. Edison was on fire station at all times except for a very
short liberty time at St. Tropez. I can recall sitting in the Edison's Division
Commander's cabin, my stateroom as long as we had no brass aboard, doing
a little praying. I prayed The Memorare for those who know the prayer. It
was, and is, my favorite prayer. I did not sleep much, but hung around the
bridge even when I was not OOD. The calls for gunfire kept coming in, and
the bridge crew would provide me early clues that I had better get back up
into the Director for General Quarters. Edison had tried Condition II's "watch
and watch", keeping two guns manned, instead of the single ready gun during
Condition III's "watch in three". WW II will never be replicated but if it
were, as CO, I would never use "watch and watch". Helmsmen and others, including
this author, would simply fall over onto the deck in a dead sleep. The human
body just cannot manage it, so my wish was always to go to GQ and if necessary,
eat cold rations there. At General Quarters, the ship is ready for anything,
the water tight integrity is at its best, and the full crew is at the ready,
whereas all other "conditions" involve a compromise.
Let me emphasize that this period was no one-destroyer show. A dozen or more
destroyers under Rear Admiral Deyo worked these same waters and each experienced
success, and each encountered some bizarre happening. One report that 80
fire missions had been undertaken has to have been a major, and for military
publicists, unexplained, understatement. Some destroyers could count nearly
to 80 by themselves.
The Final Days for Edison's Primary Mission
We had guns. We had torpedoes. We had depth charges.
While I was aboard, Edison never fired a torpedo in anger. We dropped hundreds
of depth charges. We fired thousands of 5 inch shells and used up three sets
of gun barrels. A look at the Edison or any other destroyer of her class,
a look at how space was allotted above decks and below for ordnance, and
a look at the war records, all of those looks make the case that the designers
got it right. Edison's primary mission involved her firepower. My last month
aboard found me totally immersed in that mission. I was also the beneficiary
of the care and feeding of Edison's crew and their care of her equipment.
From Lambert through Boyd and Hofer, Edison had the right leadership for
her primary gunfire mission. Edison's Chief Petty Officers were outstanding
and they worked to indoctrinate and inspire a crew second to none. That crew
executed, in every way called upon. If the ship's gun power and its use validated
the designers and the ordnance gang, Edison had the supporting cast and
propulsion systems that never failed to get her to the scene of action, on
time, and ready. And also, out of trouble, when it came our way. We were
lucky too.
We fired during the night of the 23rd of August on a railroad gun and other
gun emplacements. The SFCP could not ascertain the final damage because of
darkness. On the 25th of August, in the Bay of Anges three miles southwest
of Nice, Edison fired on a gun emplacement that was giving our troops a going
over. After 60 rounds, we got the message, "Very good shooting. Several direct
hits." from our SFCP. Edison fired again on the 26th on enemy troop
concentrations with no confirmation of effect. Our most likely targets were
now being found to the east toward Monaco and Italy.
The 31st of August found Edison at the Southern end of Cape Martin firing
on a gun emplacement. "Very good shooting.", was the verdict. Later that
day, another gun emplacement was pounded but ended in a "cease fire" when
fire obscured the result. We were taking very little counter battery fire
now, and there was very little enemy air activity. Because the water was
deep, mines were much less of a problem. We had a couple of days excitement
defending against one-man human-guided torpedoes. One of our destroyers captured
a German operator. This prisoner conveniently told where a second such
weapon/operator was maneuvering and he too was captured and his weapon sunk.
On 1 September 1944, Edison went back to the scene of the earlier gun emplacement
where the results had been in doubt and after 55 rounds, the shore spotters
reported, "Mission successful." We had three more targets that day. For the
first of these, fire again obscured the results. For the second, the result
was, "Target completely destroyed." This was an enemy gun in a house, and
took 36 rounds.
Edison was very busy on 2 September 1944. The first mission involved a dual
purpose defense gun (likely, an 88mm gun) and earned us a, "Mission successful.",
after 48 rounds. It took more rounds and more time for the next target but
the SFCP gave us a "cease fire" and then a, "There is no more activity there."
German mortar platoons were dealt with next and the effort deemed successful
after 60 rounds. Late in the afternoon we went back to GQ at 1832. We expended
120 rounds to help our advancing troops take out a fort with the result,
"pretty well destroyed." Edison also made enemy use of a highway a bit hazardous
and ceased firing when our shore spotters told us, "That is good for now,
will call later if we need you."
On 8 September, Edison was pulled out of the firing line and according the
record, moored alongside the USS Denebola in the Gulf of St. Tropez. I do
not recall this respite and was a little surprised when I did the research
and discovered that the Denebola was over here with us. She is the support
ship whose "embrace" we had left in April in Casco Bay, and a ship I had
consigned forever to Casco Bay. I am sure we used the three days for upkeep
and then it was back to firing station on the 14th of September, 1944. I
am almost sure there was no liberty ashore during this period, but we caught
up on our sleep, and most likely had to "air bedding", always a way to keep
us occupied when we had "nothing else to do." Our departure from St. Tropez
was also the occasion for praise from ComCruDiv Eight, most likely Rear Admiral
Deyo, on USS Tuscaloosa. "The Edison, in the execution of fire support missions,
both day and night, displayed an aggressive spirit. Her effective fire caused
much damage to the enemy. Her intrepidity under fire of hostile shore batteries
was of the highest order." Although Hap Pearce got a little hot under the
collar when Rear Admiral Deyo's name came up, the latter must have observed
the little backing down maneuver in the Golfe de Napoule when Pearce fooled
that battery off Cannes. That is the only way I can interpret the phrase,
"intrepidity under fire".
Back on station on the 14th, our first target was a self-propelled gun and
50 vehicles. After 72 rounds, the SFCP message was, "Mission accomplished.
Very good shooting, all targets destroyed including self-propelled gun."
The day's remaining two targets were exceptions to our diet of land targets.
One was an enemy merchant ship with another, unidentified object, in the
water near that ship. Both took several hits from Edison's guns. The merchantman
was left settling, the other target sank before it could be identified. Writing
almost 54 years later, the possibility that this was a human torpedo with
its mother ship occurs to me. On the 15th, we took a bridge south of Cape
Mortola under fire. This bridge was important because it could support German
armor being brought in to harass our landing force. We used 28 rounds, and
in effect damaged the approaches to the bridge so that the bridge itself
was temporarily "out of service." A convoy of trucks was then disabled mostly
because the road they were on was made impassable.
On the 16th the Edison was at work five separate times. A gun emplacement,
a supply warehouse, a storage tank, a troop concentration with trucks and
support personnel absorbed 91 rounds. The storage tank took 14 rounds by
itself but smoke obscured results. The heavy concentration of troops and
trucks, all near the gun emplacement, brought this evaluation, "Tore hell
out of battery. Every round counted. Men and trucks are dispersed." This
had taken an additional 89 rounds. The 17th was a similar day. There were
five targets. Three enemy coastal guns, troops and trucks, and a bridge were
reduced.
Liberty at St. Tropez
We were sent back to St. Tropez, this time for liberty ashore. While anchored
off a now peaceful St. Tropez, I was among those who were given liberty.
I went with the Captain and a couple of others to a villa owned by an American
and commandeered by some military unit as an "entertainment club." They had
a pool and we swam. They had wine and we drank. I drank too much, much too
much. I realized I needed to get back to the ship so I left on foot to go
to the landing we were using. I took a short cut, I was told later, through
fields that had not been swept for land mines. The luck of the inebriated,
I assume, got me to the dock. I was noisy aboard the whaleboat (gig) and
insisted on sitting on the engine cover, a no-no. The Executive Officer had
come from some other duty and was also aboard and properly objected to my
"condition". When I got back on Edison, I was informed by the OOD that the
Exec. had confined me to my quarters and relieved me of my duties. This occurred,
according to my 1985 inspection of the Edison's log at the National Archives
on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington D.C., on the 20-24 watch on 20 September,
1944. The next entry of interest to me in that National Archives visit 40
years after the incident, appeared in the 08-12 log of 21 September, 1944.
I discovered that Dailey was returned to duty in view of "present operating
conditions", and the Edison was underway at 1546 on the 21st to relieve the
USS Ludlow on firing station.
It was good for me that we were busy again, firing on the 22nd. Remorse is
better handled with some distracting "activity". And heaven knows if I would
have been sent back to duty had it not been for the need to go back to the
firing area. I saw Captain Pearce a couple of times in later years, and Stanley
Craw once, and neither seemed to have had my inappropriate episode on their
minds. Mostly, I was ashamed and shame is with oneself.
The first targets on the 22nd of September 1944 were a storage dump containing
gasoline and equipment, enemy artillery emplacements, troops and a mortar
platoon. A bridge and a rail terminal were also fired on. Flames at or near
the storage dump gave us an indication of success there. One last target
deserves "special mention".
My Last Go At Gunnery; An "Interested" Spectator
On 22 September 1944, the day after being released from my deserved "confinement
to quarters" of 20-21 September, we were working up the coast well east of
Cannes, past the Italian Riviera toward a place called Ventimiglia. This
trip began had begun on a stunning Riviera day and the first "shoots' had
been rather routine. (See paragraph above.) We had been told that there was
an active 88mm battery at Ventimiglia (I never found out what that place
was twenty miles from, and would wish later that it was twenty miles from
us) and the Edison and the Woolsey were told to find the battery, and "take
it out." Finding enemy artillery emplaced and camouflaged ashore is not an
assignment for destroyers. The only way to do it without a SFCP or air spotting,
and we had neither, was Admiral Deyo's Southern France D-day prescription
to "draw their fire". So we worked our way east, and gradually closed the
shore to five or six thousand yards. Suddenly, we were in the fight of our
lives. A four gun, 88mm, radar-controlled battery opened up on us and their
"ranging" salvo was right on. That battery could fire as fast as we could.
He knew where we were, obviously, and we had little idea where he was. No
flashes and no smoke were visible ashore. Yes, we fired, but like the sweepers
that the Ludlow guarded at Anzio, we could only shoot at where fire "might
be coming from". Unlike Ludlow's sweepers at Anzio on their final pass, these
Germans were firing rapidly, and accurately, at us.
Like cornered animals, Woolsey and Edison twisted and turned and built to
top speed of over thirty knots on two boilers. Our only strategy was to open
the range, but we had to change target angles and hope the accuracy of the
German radar was not matched by a rapid calculating fire control system.
To mask our target angles, both destroyers immediately made "smoke" from
the chemical generators first, and then with their power plants too. I estimate
that we were within easy range of a four gun 88mm battery for fifteen agonizing
minutes. We finally abandoned shooting at them, knowing that the shoreline
itself was now out of our range, in addition to not being sure where they
were.
Salvo after salvo landed right alongside Edison and Woolsey. It helped that
there were two of us. Two targets to track, both behind smoke and both changing
course at high speed, prevented the shore battery from picking us off one
at at time. My final assessment is that the German MPI-Mean Point of Impact-
was too tight. Four shells missed over and then four shells would miss short.
The Germans were not getting a straddle with a single salvo. We escaped,
with prayers, and a sheepish feeling of having accomplished nothing worth
talking about or recording. I am almost embarrassed to present it here.
On the 24th at 2202, Edison rendezvoused with USS Philadelphia and sailed
for Marseilles, arriving on the 25th. It was my only visit to that great
port, now in our hands, and I did not get ashore. On the evening of the 25th,
we left with the Philly to go to St. Tropez, leaving on the 26th for Oran,
where we moored alongside the SS Yankee Arrow at Mers el Kebir on 28 September,
1944.
My shipboard duties were over. I had had orders to flight training for some
time. I was awaiting a relief (stipulated as a necessary requirement for
my detachment by our Captain) in the person of an officer from a South Pacific
minesweeper, who of course, never came. To the consternation of the Captain,
I was then detached "without relief" in a modification of my original orders.
I was directed to wait in Oran, Algiers for an Army Air Force (MATS-Military
Air Transport Service) C-47 to take me to Port Lyautey in Morocco. Then,
as it turned out, I would leave on an American Export Airlines-crewed Army
Air Force C-54 for Patuxent River Maryland, via landings in the Azores and
Newfoundland. That crew were part of American Airline's early international
operations
Edison left Oran on 1 October, 1944, and resumed escort duties along with
some training exercises. She made ports in Gibraltar, Oran, Toulon, Marseilles,
Naples, Horte in the Azores, and New York where she arrived with a convoy
on 17 January for an extended yard overhaul. On 16 February, while backing
out of a slip at Earle, New Jersey, Edison was struck by the SS Benedick,
and though no personnel were hurt, Edison was badly rent and required immediate
and extensive yard repairs. These took until 7 March 1945 when she again
went to Earle for ammo and resumed her place in active duty. On the 17th
of May 1945, Lieutenant Commander W. J. Caspari, USN relieved Commander H.
A. Pearce as CO, USS Edison. Craw had left earlier. In an amazing coincidence,
Pearce and Craw were reunited as CO and XO respectively of the destroyer
USS Sarsfield in their next duty. (Lieutenant Commander Sarsfield had been
the skipper of the Maddox, lost in the Gela landings at Sicily. He did not
survive the bombing by a Nazi plane.)
I will cover a few more details of the Edison's career from the beginning
of 1945 until her decommissioning in 1946 in the next two closing chapters.
For the remainder of Edison's career I will be relying on official records
and the memories of other officers and men. At Ventimiglia, Italy, both Dailey
and Edison had fired their last round in anger in WW II.
Copyright 1998 Franklyn E. Dailey Jr.
- dailey@crocker.com
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