7591
Good Friday morning July 10 2026 . It was cloudy and cool when I got up and
headed out to the Oceanside VA but it has cleared up fast and is heating up
to 84 by 3
Warm Regards,
skip
This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)
Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/. Go here
to see the director’s corner for all 97 H-Grams
A bit of everything today but many of the pictures did not come through
This Day in Navy and Marine Corps History:
July 10
1934 President Franklin D. Roosevelt travels to Cartagena, Columbia, by USS
Houston (CA 30). His visit was the first by a U.S. president to South
America.
1943 In Operation Husky, naval gunfire helps Allied troops land on Sicily,
Italy. It is the first extensive use of LST's and smaller landing craft to
deliver heavy equipment over the beach.
1945 USS Runner (SS 476) sinks the Japanese minesweeper (No.27) off Tado
Saki, Honshu.
1945 - 14 carriers from Third Fleet carriers begin air strikes on Japanese
Home Islands which end 15 August
1971 USS Ponce (AFSB 15) is commissioned. The final Austin-class amphibious
transport dock is named after a city in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
1993 USS Nebraska (SSBN 739) is commissioned at New London, Conn., the 14th
Ohio-class submarine.
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Today in History July 10
1520 The Spanish explorer Hernan Cortes is driven from
Tenochtitlan and retreats to Tlaxcala.
1609 The Catholic states in Germany set up a league under the
leadership of Maximilian of Bavaria.
1679 The British crown claims New Hampshire as a royal colony.
1776 The statue of King George III is pulled down in New York
City.
1778 In support of the American Revolution, Louis XVI declares
war on England.
1850 Millard Fillmore is sworn in as the 13th president of the
United States following the death of Zachary Taylor.
1890 Wyoming becomes the 44th state.
1893 Dr. Daniel Hale Williams performs the first successful
open-heart surgery, without the benefit of penicillin or blood transfusion.
1925 The trial of Tennessee teacher John T. Scopes opens, with
Clarence Darrow appearing for the defense and William Jennings Bryan for the
prosecution.
1940 Germany begins the bombing of England.
1942 General Carl Spaatz becomes the head of the U.S. Air Force
in Europe.
1943 American and British forces complete their amphibious
landing of Sicily.
1945 U.S. carrier-based aircraft begin airstrikes against Japan
in preparation for invasion.
1951 Armistice talks between the United Nations and North Korea
begin at Kaesong.
1960 Belgium sends troops to the Congo to protect whites as the
Congolese Bloodbath begins, just 10 days after the former colony became
independent of Belgian rule.
1962 The satellite Telstar is launched from Cape Canaveral,
Florida, beaming live television from Europe to the United States.
1965 "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" becomes the Rolling Stones'
first No. 1 single in the USA.
1967 Singer Bobbie Gentry records "Ode to Billie Joe," which will
become a country music classic and win 4 Grammys.
1976 In Seveso, near Milan, Italy, an explosion in a chemical
factory covers the surrounding area with toxic dioxin. Time magazine has
ranked the Seveso incident No. 8 on its list of the 10 worst environmental
disasters.
1985 Coca-Cola Co. announces it will resume selling "old formula
Coke," following a public outcry and falling sales of its "new Coke."
1991 Boris Yeltsin is sworn in as the first elected president of
the Russian Federation, following the breakup of the USSR.
1993 Kenyan runner Yobes Ondieki becomes the first man to run
10,000 meters in less than 27 minutes.
1940 The Battle of Britain begins as the Luftwaffe attempts to destroy the
RAF in anticipation of a German invasion of England
1943 Allied forces commence the invasion of Sicily
1965 MiGs shot down as bombing of North Vietnam continues »
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Rollingthunderremembered.com .
July 10
Thanks to Dan Heller and the Bear
Links to all content can now be found right on the homepage
http://www.rollingthunderremembered.com. If you scroll down from the banner
and featured content you will find "Today in Rolling Thunder Remembered
History" which highlights events in the Vietnam war that occurred on the
date the page is visited. Below that are links to browse or search all
content. You may search by keyword(s), date, or date range.
An item of importance is the recent incorporation of Task Force Omega (TFO)
MIA summaries. There is a link on the homepage and you can also visit
directly via https://www.rollingthunderremembered.com/task-force-omega/.
There are 60 summaries posted thus far, with about 940 to go (not a typo—TFO
has over 1,000 individual case files).
.
Thanks to Micro
To remind folks that these are from the Vietnam Air Losses site that Micro
put together. You click on the url below and get what happened each day to
the crew of the aircraft. ……Skip
For Friday July 10 .
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July 10,
This Day in US Military History
1863 – Under Rear Admiral Dahlgren, ironclads U.S.S. Catskill, Commander
G.W. Rodgers; Montauk, Commander Fairfax; Nahant, Commander Downes; and
Weehawken, Commander Colhoun, bombarded Confederate defenses on Morris
Island, Charleston harbor, supporting and covering a landing by Army troops
under Brigadier General Quincy A. Gillmore. Close in support of the landing
was rendered by small boats, under Lieutenant Commander Francis M. Bunce,
armed with howitzers, from the blockading ships in Light House Inlet, The
early morning assault followed the plan outlined by General Gillmore a week
earlier in a letter to Rear Admiral Du Pont: “I cannot safely move without
assistance from the Navy. We must have that island or Sullivan’s Island as
preliminary to any combined military and naval attack on the interior
defenses of Charleston harbor. . . . I consider a naval force abreast of
Morris Island as indispensable to cover our advance upon the Island and
restrain the enemy’s gunboats and ironclads.”
1940 – The Germans begin the first in a long series of bombing raids against
Great Britain, as the Battle of Britain, which will last three and a half
months, begins. After the occupation of France by Germany, Britain knew it
was only a matter of time before the Axis power turned its sights across the
Channel. And on July 10, 120 German bombers and fighters struck a British
shipping convoy in that very Channel, while 70 more bombers attacked
dockyard installations in South Wales. Although Britain had far fewer
fighters than the Germans-600 to 1,300-it had a few advantages, such as an
effective radar system, which made the prospects of a German sneak attack
unlikely. Britain also produced superior quality aircraft. Its Spitfires
could turn tighter than Germany’s ME109s, enabling it to better elude
pursuers; and its Hurricanes could carry 40mm cannon, and would shoot down,
with its American Browning machine guns, over 1,500 Luftwaffe aircraft. The
German single-engine fighters had a limited flight radius, and its bombers
lacked the bomb-load capacity necessary to unleash permanent devastation on
their targets. Britain also had the advantage of unified focus, while German
infighting caused missteps in timing; they also suffered from poor
intelligence. But in the opening days of battle, Britain was in immediate
need of two things: a collective stiff upper lip–and aluminum. A plea was
made by the government to turn in all available aluminum to the Ministry of
Aircraft Production. “We will turn your pots and pans into Spitfires and
Hurricanes,” the ministry declared. And they did.
1943 – Operation Husky: The Allied landings begin. Patton’s 7th Army lands
in the Gulf of Gela between Licata and Scoglitti. Assault elements of the
180th and 157th Infantry regiments, both part of the 45th Infantry Division
(AZ, CO, OK) storm ashore as part of the invasion of Sicily. They meet
little resistance and quickly move to secure the British right flank as it
moves north to take Messina, the island’s closest point to the Italian
mainland. This operation marked the first time any Allied force attacked an
Axis power on its home ground. The Italians soon overthrow their dictator,
Benito Mussolini and asked the Allies for peace. However, the Germans
quickly moved large numbers of troops into the country and fought the Allies
all the way back to the Alps, not surrendering until the end of the war on
May 8, 1945.
1945 – US Task Force 38 aircraft, 1022 in all, raid 70 air bases in the
Tokyo area, destroying 173 Japanese planes. Only light anti-aircraft fire is
encountered. This is the first time that elements of the US 3rd Fleet have
attacked Tokyo. Included in the task force carrying out the raids are the
aircraft carriers Lexington, Essex, Independence and San Jacinto, the
battleships Indiana, Massachusetts, South Dakota and Iowa, the cruisers
Chicago, San Juan, Springfield and Atlanta and 14 destroyers. Tokyo radio
refers to the “dark shadow of invasion” in mention of the raid.
1950 – At Taejon, Lieutenant Harold E. Morris demonstrated a T-6 trainer
aircraft to be better suited for the airborne controller mission than
liaison aircraft.
1950 – The first engagement between U.S. and North Korean tanks occurred
near Chonui. One enemy T-34 was destroyed while two outclassed U.S. M-24
Chafee light tanks were lost. Near Pyongtaek, the Air Force achieved its
greatest single-day destruction of enemy tanks and trucks during the war
1965 – U.S. planes continue heavy raids in South Vietnam and claim to have
killed 580 guerrillas. U.S. Phantom jets, escorting fighter-bombers in a
raid on the Yen Sen ammunition depot northwest of Hanoi, engaged North
Vietnamese MiG-17s. Capt. Thomas S. Roberts with his backseater Capt. Ronald
C. Anderson, and Capt. Kenneth E. Holcombe and his backseater Capt. Arthur
C. Clark shot down two MiG-17s with Sidewinder missiles. The action marked
the first U.S. Air Force air-to-air victories of the Vietnam War.
1967 – Outnumbered South Vietnamese troops repel an attack by two battalions
of the 141st North Vietnamese Regiment on a military camp five miles east of
An Loc, 60 miles north of Saigon. Communist forces captured a third of the
base camp before they were thrown back with the assistance of U.S. and South
Vietnamese air and artillery strikes. Farther to the north, U.S. forces
suffered heavy casualties in two separate battles in the Central Highlands.
In the first action, about 400 men of the 173rd Airborne Brigade came under
heavy fire from North Vietnamese machine guns and mortars during a sweep of
the Dak To area near Kontum. Twenty-six Americans were killed and 49 were
wounded. In the second area clash, 35 soldiers of the U.S. 4th Infantry
Division were killed and 31 were wounded in fighting.
The Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day
*PARLE, JOHN JOSEPH
Rank and organization: Ensign, U.S. Naval Reserve. Born: 26 May 1920, Omaha,
Nebr. Accredited to: Nebraska. Citation: For valor and courage above and
beyond the call of duty as Officer-in-Charge of Small Boats in the U.S.S.
LST 375 during the amphibious assault on the island of Sicily, 9-10 July
1943. Realizing that a detonation of explosives would prematurely disclose
to the enemy the assault about to be carried out, and with full knowledge of
the peril involved, Ens. Parle unhesitatingly risked his life to extinguish
a smoke pot accidentally ignited in a boat carrying charges of high
explosives, detonating fuses and ammunition. Undaunted by fire and blinding
smoke, he entered the craft, quickly snuffed out a burning fuse, and after
failing in his desperate efforts to extinguish the fire pot, finally seized
it with both hands and threw it over the side. Although he succumbed a week
later from smoke and fumes inhaled, Ens. Parle’s heroic self-sacrifice
prevented grave damage to the ship and personnel and insured the security of
a vital mission. He gallantly gave his life in the service of his country.
*SCHOONOVER, DAN D.
Rank and organization: Corporal, U.S. Army, Company A, 13th Engineer Combat
Battalion, 7th Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Sokkogae, Korea, 8 to
10 July 1953. Entered service at: Boise, Idaho. Born: 8 October 1933, Boise,
Idaho. G.O. No.: 5, 14 January 1955. Citation: Cpl. Schoonover,
distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and outstanding courage above
and beyond the call of duty in action against the enemy. He was in charge of
an engineer demolition squad attached to an infantry company which was
committed to dislodge the enemy from a vital hill. Realizing that the heavy
fighting and intense enemy fire made it impossible to carry out his mission,
he voluntarily employed his unit as a rifle squad and, forging up the steep
barren slope, participated in the assault on hostile positions. When an
artillery round exploded on the roof of an enemy bunker, he courageously ran
forward and leaped into the position, killing 1 hostile infantryman and
taking another prisoner. Later in the action, when friendly forces were
pinned down by vicious fire from another enemy bunker, he dashed through the
hail of fire, hurled grenades in the nearest aperture, then ran to the
doorway and emptied his pistol, killing the remainder of the enemy. His
brave action neutralized the position and enabled friendly troops to
continue their advance to the crest of the hill. When the enemy
counterattacked he constantly exposed himself to the heavy bombardment to
direct the fire of his men and to call in an effective artillery barrage on
hostile forces. Although the company was relieved early the following
morning, he voluntarily remained in the area, manned a machine gun for
several hours, and subsequently joined another assault on enemy
emplacements. When last seen he was operating an automatic rifle with
devastating effect until mortally wounded by artillery fire. Cpl.
Schoonover’s heroic leadership during 2 days of heavy fighting, superb
personal bravery, and willing self-sacrifice inspired his comrades and saved
many lives, reflecting lasting glory upon himself and upholding the honored
traditions of the military service
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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for July 10, 2020 FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT
ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD “PHIL” MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE
INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY
10 July
1910: Walter Brookins became the first American aviator to reach one mile in
altitude, when he flew a Wright Biplane to 6,259 feet at Atlantic City, N.
J. He set an FAI altitude record and won the Atlantic City Aero Club prize
of $5,000. (9)
1911: Lt Frank P. Lahm won the National Balloon Race by traveling 772.5
kilometers from Kansas City, Mo., to La Paz, Ind. (24)
1935: Bell Aircraft company founded.
1938: Through 14 July, Howard Hughes and his four-man crew started an
around-the-world flight from New York. They stopped their Lockheed Model 14
Super Electra passenger aircraft in Paris, Moscow, Omsk, Yakutak, Fairbanks,
Minneapolis, and returned to New York. They covered the 14,791 miles in 3
days 19 hours 8 minutes. (9) (24)
1943: Allied airborne troops landed at Gela and Syracuse, Sicily, in the
first large-scale airborne operation attempted by the allies in World War
II. (24)
1945: The last aircraft carrier action of World War II began with attacks
against targets in the Japanese home islands. (24)
1950: KOREAN WAR. Fifth Air Force started using T-6 trainers for the forward
air control mission, because the liaison aircraft were too slow to evade
enemy fire. When an enemy convoy stopped at a bombed-out bridge near
Pyongtaek, F-80s, B-26s, and F-82s attacked and claimed the destruction of
117 trucks, 38 tanks, and 7 halftracks. (28) A joint USAF and Royal Canadian
Air Force conference agreed to erect the Pinetree radar network on Canadian
soil. (24)
1951: KOREAN WAR. A flight of F-80s reported a long N. Korean Army convoy of
trucks and tanks halted by a demolished bridge. Fifth Air Force diverted
every available aircraft to attack with bombs, rockets, and gunfire,
resulting in the destruction of over 150 vehicles, a third of them tanks.
(28)
1952: KOREAN WAR. Beginning this date, over the next three weeks the 315th
Air Division airlifted the 474th Fighter-Bomber Wing from Misawa AB, Japan,
to Kunsan AB, S. Korea, the largest unit movement by air to date. (28)
1959: The first Red Richard unit relocation began. This program withdrew
atomic-capable USAFE units from France. (4)
1961: The Air Force conducted a test to see how far a pilot could fly using
radar navigation under simulated combat conditions. For this test, an F-105D
flew a 1,520-mile nonstop blind flight at altitudes between 500 and 1,000
feet. (24)
1962: NASA used a Delta rocket booster to launch Telestar I, the world’s
first experimental commercial communications satellite (AT&T). (24) 1965:
Two 45 TFS aircrews, flying McDonnell-Douglas F-4C Phantom IIs from Ubon
RTAFB, used Sidewinder missiles to shoot down two MiG-17s some 75 miles
northwest of Hanoi. These were the first enemy jets shot down in air-to-air
combat over North Vietnam. (17)
1966: William R. Berry flew his Raven S50R balloon to an FAI altitude record
of 18,980 feet for subclass AX-7 balloon (1,600 to 2,200 cubic meters) at
Livermore, Calif. (9)
1968: The DoD stopped the Navy’s F-111B development program, following a
budget reduction.
1971: The Aeronautical Systems Division announced a decision to proceed with
the full-scale development of the Subsonic Cruise Armed Decoy (SCAD)
missile.
1979: Exercise GLOBAL SHIELD. During this annual exercise, SAC launched two
Minuteman III ICBMs from Vandenberg AFB. One mission, Glory Trip 40GM, was
the last Phase I Minuteman III flight test. (1)
1980: Exercise PROUD PHANTOM. Through 3 October, 12 F-4Es flew from Moody
AFB to Cairo to participate in the exercise. It was the USAF’s first
tactical deployment to Egypt. (16) (26)
1998: Col Teresa M. “MarnĂ©” Peterson became the first active duty woman to
command an operational flying wing when she assumed leadership of the 14 FTW
at Columbus AFB, Miss.
2002: A C-5 from the 436 AW left Dover AFB for Kabul, Afghanistan, with
13,115 pounds of school supplies collected by children from 58 American
schools. (22) The USAF lost a second Global Hawk (AV-4) in a combat zone. An
engine component failed, causing further internal damage to the engine, and
the UAV was destroyed while making an emergency landing in Pakistan. (3)
Through 11 July, the 210th Rescue Squadron (Alaska ANG), using an HC-130
tanker and an HH-60 helicopter, rescued a seriously-ill Filipino sailor from
his ship 1,000 miles at sea and delivered him to a hospital at Kodiak. The
mission lasted about 26 hours. (32)
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Seen this before but it'll never be old.
Thanks to Wigs
This story is confirmed in Elmer Bendiner's book, The Fall of Fortresses.
*Sometimes, it's not really just luck.*
Elmer Bendiner was a navigator in a B-17 during WW II. He tells this story
of a World War II bombing run over Kassel, Germany , and the unexpected
result of a direct hit on their gas tanks. "Our B-17, the Tondelayo, was
barraged by flak from Nazi antiaircraft guns. That was not unusual, but on
this particular occasion our gas tanks were hit.
Later, as I reflected on the miracle of a 20 millimeter shell piercing the
fuel tank without touching off an explosion, our pilot, Bohn Fawkes, told me
it was not quite that simple. "On the morning following the raid, Bohn had
gone down to ask our crew chief for that shell as a souvenir of unbelievable
luck.
The crew chief told Bohn that not just one shell but 11 had been found in
the gas tanks. 11 unexploded shells where only one was sufficient to blast
us out of the sky. It was as if the sea had been parted for us. A
near-miracle, I thought.
Even after 35 years, so awesome an event leaves me shaken, especially after
I heard the rest of the story from Bohn.
"He was told that the shells had been sent to the armorers to be defused.
The armorers told him that Intelligence had picked them up. They could not
say why at the time, but Bohn eventually sought out the answer. "Apparently
when the armorers opened each of those shells, they found no explosive
charge. They were as clean as a whistle and just as harmless.
Empty? Not all of them! One contained a carefully rolled piece of paper. On
it was a scrawl in Czech. The Intelligence people scoured our base for a man
who could read Czech. Eventually they found one to decipher the note. It set
us marveling.
Translated, the note read:
*"This is all we can do for you now... "
Using Jewish slave labor was never a good idea."
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Thanks to Fred Fun story BUT pictures DO NOT COME THROUGH ANY MORE SKIP
Eagles at work
This came from a gentleman who runs a 2,000-acre corn farm up around Barron,
WI, not far from Oshkosh. He used to fly F-4Es and F-16s for the Guard and
participated in the first Gulf War.
His story:
I went out to plant corn for a bit, to finish a field before tomorrow
morning and witnessed 'The Great Battle'. A golden eagle -- big, with about
a six-foot wingspan - flew right in front of the tractor. It was being
chased by three crows that were continually dive bombing it and pecking at
it. The crows do this because the eagles rob their nests when they find
them.
At any rate, the eagle banked hard right in one evasive maneuver, then
landed in the field about 100 feet from the tractor. This eagle stood about
3 feet tall. The crows all landed too and took up positions around the eagle
at 120 degrees apart, but kept their distance at about 20 feet from the big
bird. The eagle would take a couple steps towards one of the crows and
they'd hop backwards and forward to keep their distance. Then the
reinforcement showed up. I happened to spot the eagle's mate hurtling down
out of the sky at what appeared to be approximately Mach 1.5. Just before
impact, the eagle on the ground took flight, (obviously a coordinated
tactic; probably pre-briefed) and the three crows that were watching the
grounded eagle also took flight -- thinking they were going to get in some
more pecking on the big bird.
The first crow being targeted by the diving eagle never stood a snowball's
chance in hell. There was a mid-air explosion of black feathers, and that
crow was done.
The diving eagle then banked hard left in what had to be a 9G climbing turn,
using the energy it had accumulated in the dive, and hit crow #2 less than
two seconds later. Another crow dead!
The grounded eagle, which was now airborne and had an altitude advantage on
the remaining crow that was streaking eastward in full burner, made a short
dive, then banked hard right when the escaping crow tried to evade the hit.
It didn't work - crow #3 bit the dust at about 20 feet AGL. This aerial
battle was better than any air show I've been to, including the War Birds
show at Oshkosh. The two eagles ripped the crows apart, and ate them on the
ground; and, as I got closer and closer working my way across the field, I
passed within 20 feet of one of them as it ate its catch. It stopped and
looked at me as I went by, and you could see in the look of that bird that
it knew who's Boss of the Sky. What a beautiful bird!
I loved it. Not only did they kill their enemy, they ate them. One of the
best Fighter Pilot stories I've seen in a long time.
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Thanks to Carl
(Go to read the whole thing for many neat pics and the complete story!)
Friday, July 09, 2021
Fullbore Friday
As the D-Day invasion was ongoing, the German Navy sortied what they could
to try to drive the allies back across the channel. The most feared were the
French based U-boats.
Please read the whole thing, but here is a nice summary of one of the
under-told stories of WWII, Coastal Command.
One night. One crew. Two U-boats.
Fullbore.
“G-George” droned on through the night. Men drank coffee from thermos
flasks, kept the chatter to a minimum, scanned the endless sea and began to
feel the numbing weariness set in that came with these long over-water
patrols. But adrenalin shot through their bloodstreams like amphetamine just
after 2 a.m. when Foster announced on the intercom that he had a solid
return on his radar 12 miles dead ahead in the vicinity of Ushant Island
(Ouessant). It was too early to tell whether it was a French fishing smack
or the conning tower of a U-boat. Moore corrected his course slightly to
port to put the target in the path of the moon reflecting on the water.
Three miles out the conning tower of a submarine was made out in the
moonlight.
Coastal Command anti-submarine crews were trained to attack the moment a
U-boat was detected and without deliberation. An undamaged Type VIIC U-boat,
with a well-trained crew could crash dive beneath the surface in 30 seconds.
Time was of the essence, as was complete surprise.
Immediately, Moore instructed Foster to switch off the radar in case the
submarine had detection equipment, and then began to drop lower and lower,
adjusting his course to keep the enemy up-moon until he was at 50 feet above
the calm surface. McDowall, the navigator, took his position at the bomb
sight. Moore ordered the four big bomb doors opened and as they slid upwards
and outboard on their rollers, he could hear the hydraulic pumps working and
sense the difference in the airflow note down the sides of his warhorse.
Approaching the U-boat, which they calculated was making 10–12 knots in a
westerly direction, they selected 6 depth charges from their quiver,
attacking due south and 90 degrees to the path of the U-boat on her
starboard side. Moore chose to leave the powerful 22 million-candela Leigh
Light off to further keep their whereabouts secret. As they screamed in for
the attack, the spare navigator, Pilot Officer Alec Gibb, DFC sprayed the
conning tower with heavy machine gun fire (some 150 rounds according to the
after action report) from his position in the nose. Moore and Gibb later
stated they could see as many as 8 submariners scrambling from the tower to
get to the deck guns. There was some anti-aircraft return fire, but it was
too little and too late. They had caught them completely by surprise.
As they roared over the submarine at 190 mph, six depth charges, set 55 feet
apart, were falling from “G-George’s” bomb bay, having been released by
McDowall whose accuracy this night would be perfect. Three fell on either
side of the submarine in a textbook straddling attack just ahead of the
conning tower. A flame-float, designed to ignite when it hit the water was
also dropped to identify the position of the submarine at the moment of
attack. The rear gunner Flight Sergeant I. Webb watched in fascination as
the detonations exploded white in the moonlight and appeared to lift the
700-ton submarine out of the water.
By the time they had climbed, swung around and were homing on the beacon of
the flame float at the position of the attack, there was nothing left of the
U-boat save for some floating wreckage and the oily slick of diesel fuel. A
Type VIIC U-boat had disappeared and ceased to exist in a matter of seconds,
the depth charges having done their job breaching the pressure hull and
sending one of Karl Dönitz’ hunters to the bottom with all hands. One can
only imagine the last minutes of terror for the more than 50 men aboard.
Sadly, when this submarine sank, there was no one who could identify which
U-boat it was. Postwar accounting pointed to U-629, commanded by
Oberleutnant zur See Hans–Helmut Bugs on its 11th war patrol. She had just
slipped out of her pen at Brest the day before. Still, other researchers
disclaim the U-629 identification, pointing instead to U-441, commanded by
Kapitänleutnant Klaus Hartmann on its ninth and final war patrol. It is not
my goal to be definitive as to the identity of the fifty or so men killed
that night, that best being left to experts in the field. Knowing would
bring the story to a satisfying close, but it will not lessen the tragedy or
the courage of the U-boat men who died that night.
Moore settled his crew down after the last pass over the wreckage, and
ordered a course correction to take them back on their patrol. At 0231, just
twenty minutes after the first radar contact was made, “G-George” sent a
message to command that they had sunk a U-boat. The men were charged with
electricity, but they had a job to do and hours before they could return
home to St Eval.
Just a few minutes later at 0240 hrs, as they settled down at 700 feet ASL,
Foster reported another radar contact 10 degrees off the starboard nose,
this time just 6 miles ahead. Moore, with information from Foster, began to
home in on the target, and at 2.5 miles range and 75 degrees to starboard,
they sighted the conning tower of another U-boat on a northwesterly course
running at an estimated eight knots on the surface. This time Moore needed
to circle to port and come in on a course that would allow them to attack up
the moon path.
Bringing the big Liberator down to 50 feet once again, Moore approached the
U-boat at 110 degrees to its starboard side with plenty of time to set up
another perfect attack at 190 mph. The remaining six Torpex depth charges
were released at 55-foot intervals as well as a flame float. Again, Gibb,
the spare navigator in the nose, was firing his machine gun at the conning
tower, which answered this time with flak and tracer fire. As they roared
overhead, the rear gunner Webb saw four depth charges strike the water to
the starboard side of the U-boat and two on the her port side—another
textbook straddling attack. Massive flumes of exploding water were seen
rising on either side of the submarine, ten feet aft of the conning tower
and totally obscuring the target.
Returning to the position of the flame float, Moore, Gibb and Ketcheson saw
the U-boat in the bright moonlight, with a heavy list to starboard. As they
approached, the bow rose steeply out of the water to an angle of about 80
degrees. The boat slid back into the sea “amid a large amount of confused
water” according to the 224 Squadron ORB.
Moore circled in fascination and, coming around again, he turned on the
powerful Leigh Light slung beneath his starboard wing outboard of engine No.
4. The blinding blue-white beam illuminated three yellow dinghies crowded
with men floating on an oily surface strewn with bits of wreckage. One can
imagine how exposed the survivors must have felt caught in the white light
of the Leigh with a heavily armed Liberator thundering down its beam toward
them. They passed overhead without further molesting the surviving crew,
switched off the Leigh Light and left the German sailors floating in the
moonlight.
The submarine was U-373, another Type VIIC boat commanded by Kapitänleutnant
Detlef von Lehsten on its 11th war patrol. It had just slipped out of Brest
after a six-month repair following a similar attack by a Coastal Command
Wellington and Liberator in January. We know for certain that this was U-373
because all but four members of the crew survived to be picked up the next
day by French fishing vessels and returned to Brest. Von Lehsten was one of
the survivors.
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Thanks to Pete
Skip-
This morning's List mentioned a sub kill by VP-94 on this date:
1943—PBY (VP 94) sinks German submarine (U 590) at the mouth of the Amazon
River, Brazil.
<image001.jpg>
Attached are some BDA photos, taken from the step of 94-P-10, my dad's PBY,
if you are interested. I've got the official action summary as well!
My father was flying copilot in 94-P-10 (PBY-5A) that morning
with his best friend (Ltjg Frank Hare) in the left seat (their lineal
numbers were 1 # apart, and most crews alternated left & right seats on the
long patrols). My dad spotted a sub on the surface, after another PBY (Ltjg
Auslander 94-P-1) radioed that they had seen another 60 miles away. When
Frank Hare rolled into the surfaced sub, their PBY was lit up by 50 cal fire
from the sub. Apparently, the Germans were losing too many subs to the PBY's
in the clear blue waters off Brazil, so they changed their tactics and
decided to fight it out on the surface with the slow PBY's.
The first shots killed Frank Hare immediately, wounded my father
in the left leg, and seriously wounded the port blister gunner. My dad was
able to pull out, circle the sub and re-attack it, dropping 2 depth charges
which apparently crippled the sub, because it didn't dive again. They
remained circling overhead, radioing for backup; both sides licking their
wounds. Until later, when Auslander arrived in 94-P-1 and finished off the
sub.
My father never talked about this event in any detail; PTSD I
suppose. I found out about it mostly in some books and war histories, and
from some of his squadron mates. I'm an F-8 guy; I can't imagine having
your best friend get blown away two feet away from you, and continuing the
mission for another 3 hours!
Big day in my family! I was born 1 year later; probably
conceived during his R&R recuperation!
Pete Phelps
Litning
<image002.jpg>
Sub Kill report from 9 July 1943
The night of July 7-8, convoy TJ-1 was attacked in the Trinidad area, two
ships being sunk and others damaged. Planes were immediately despatched from
Belem to operate out of Amapa, taking over coverage of the convoys. On the
morning of 9 July several sightings were made at a distance, both by planes
and surface craft, indicating that the attack was being continued. BT-18 was
entering the area from the South at this time and is was necessary for five
planes in Belem and a limited number of pilots to give night and day
coverage and fly daylight sweeps. Lt. (jg) Stanley Ernest Auslander, USNR,
104 673, Lt(jg) John Milton Elliot, USNR, 113 067, Lt.(jg) Frank Joseph
McMackin Jr., USNR, 112 627, in 94-P-1, enroute to relieve on convoy
coverage, sighted the swirl of a submerging submarine just before noon and
advised the base that gambit tactics would be employed. At approximately
1230 Peter, 94-P-10 sweeping the area immediately east of TJ-1 sighted a
surfaced submarine about 60 miles distant from the swirl sighting. Just
after starting the first leg of the sweep at 1235 Peter, the co-pilot
sighted the U-boat 12 miles distant at 03-54 North, 49-52 West. The
submarine apparently did not see the plane until quite late for no attempt
to submerge was made. At a distance of more than a mile from the submarine,
orange flecks from the submarine's anti-aircraft fire were noticed, and
almost immediately thereafter an explosive shrapnel shell enterd the bow on
the port side exploding against the instrument panel, setting fire to the
Sperry oil, and causing billowing smoke and flame. The pilot, Lt. (jg) Frank
Fisher Hare, USNR, 112 640 was struck by shrapnel in the head, heart, and
body. The run was continued and the two starboard depth bombs released.
Interrogation of those of the crew who could see the drop of bombs indicated
that they landed close together, approximately 25 to 35 feet from the stern
of the submarine and about 45 degrees to starboard. There was no visible
indication of damage. The bow gunner fired his .30 calibre guns continuously
during the approach and the port blister ;.50 calibre gun was brought to
bear after the drop. About 20 to 30 minutes after the original attack, the
plane departed, the submarine being still surfaced. The evaluation of the
attack was "no damage." 94-P-1 and 107-B-5 investigated the area about 1300
Peter, but found no traces of the submarine.
The complement of the aircraft included:
Pilot Lt. (jg) Frank Fisher Hare, USNR, 112 640
Co-Pilot Lt (jg) Jean Price Phelps, USNR, 112 158
Navigator Lt.(jg) Michael Carl Argento, USNR, 112 141
Tower Lombardo, Joseph (n), AMM3c, 316 78 75, USN
Bow Eisaman, Clifford Emery, AMM3c, 652 10 02, USNR
Starboard
Blister Testen, Andrew Frank, AOM3c, 613 99 69, USNR
Port
Blister Brown, Thomas Russell, ARM3c, 268 81 22, USN
Radio Lack, James Thomas, ARM3c, 356 66 90, USN
(4)
Lt(jg) Hare was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the
Purple Heart. J Price Phelps was awarded the Air Medal and Purple Heart for
wounds sustained from the initial attack as well as for continuing the
attack and probably damaging the sub; causing it to remain on the surface
for Lt Auslander's later attack and kill. Meanwhile, 94-P-1 continued its
gambit and at 1424 Peter, a surfacing submarine was sighted about three
miles dead ahead, position 03-22 North, 48-38 West. The plane was flying at
3700 feet over a broken cloud base of .4 to .6 cumulus at 1700 feet and had
just passed through a fairly heavy cloud. The U-Boat was about 2 1/2 miles
distant. As the pilots could not see the submarine, the nose was pushed over
to bring it into view. Water was running from its decks and within a few
seconds it was fully surfaced, cruising at about 15 knots on 125 degrees
true. The pilot held the plane in a dive directly toward the submarine,
without changing course and threw on the bombing switch. Lt. (jg) McMackin
blew the warning horn and rushed to the waist compartment to take pictures
of the enemy underseas craft through the port blister. The throttles were
cut, but still the plane attained a speed of 200 knots indicated. At an
altitude of about 150 feet, Lt.(jg) Elliot released the depth bombs by
intervalometer spaced at 73 feet. The submarine was fully surfaced,
proceeding on course, and there was no evidence that the crew, three or four
of whom could be seen in the conning tower, were aware of the approach of
the plane. An easy turn to port was made after the plane was pulled out of
its dive and while the spray was still visible. When the water subsided no
trace of the submarine would be seen. All of the occupants of the waist
hatch were thrown into the bilges by the pull-up. The gunner had been firing
the .50 calibre and had sprayed the conning tower with 7 to 10 rounds. As he
fell, the gun was apparently elevated, so that one or two bullets went
through the starboard wing of the plane. No serious damage was done. While
circling, a greenish-brown slick was visible and in the center of it, two
swimming men, a large timber, several small articles and two boxes. A crew
member then reported seeing three additional men in the water and Lt.(jg)
Elliot spotted them on the next approach. Five were counted at this time,
but three apparently sank very quickly. A life raft was dropped, but drifted
away before the swimmers could reach it Four life jackets were dropped, two
inflated and two uninflated and the survivors appeared to get into the
inflated ones. Emergency rations were also dropped within reach. Four
minutes after the drop a large amount of oil started to rise two or three
hundred yards from the slick along the sub's track and observation showed
the slick continuing to grow in length and breadth to a size of half to a
mile long and a quarter of a mile wide. There was no forward motion to the
oil slick. The attack was assessed as "probably sunk." 94-P-1 was manned as
follows:
Pilot Lt.(jg) Stanley Ernest Auslander, USNR, 104 673
Co-Pilot Lt.(jg) John Milton Elliot, USNR, 113 067
Navigator Lt.(jg) Frank Joseph McMackin, Jr.,USNR, 112 627
Port Blister Denauw, Frank Joseph, AMM2c, 606 19 58, USNR
Starboard Blister Watson, John Harry, ARM2c, 406 77 87, USN
Radio Garren, Hoyt Edwin, ARM2c, 296 00 73, USN
Bow Smith, Elmer Bryant, AMM3c, 268 81 81, USN
Tower Mustone, Joseph James, Jr., AOM3c, 607 52 10, USNR
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