LITTLE
KNOWN SUB FACTS
by
Bill Wolfe, Editor of Polaris
The first Japanese casualty to American arms during WW-II was an aircraft
shot down on Dec. 7th, 1941 by the Tautog.
The first submarine force casualty suffered in WW-II was G. A. Myers,
Seaman 2, shot through the right lung when
Cachalot was strafed during the Pearl Harbor raid.
The first "live" torpedoes to be fired by a Pearl Harbor submarine were
fired by the Triton (Lent), 4 stern tubes fired on the
night
of Dec. 10, 1941.
The first Pearl Harbor boat to be depth charged was the Plunger (White) on
Jan. 4, 1942, 24 charges.
The first "down the throat" shot was fired by Pompano on Jan. 17, 1942.
The first Japanese warship to be sunk was torpedoed by Gudgeon (Grenfell)
at 9 AM on Jan. 27, 1942, the IJN I-173 (SS).
The first major Japanese warship lost to submarines during WW-II was the
heavy cruiser Kako which fell victim to
S-44
Moore) on Aug. 10, 1942.
The first submarine to fire on a battleship was Flying Fish (Donaho) Sept.
1942, damaging a Kongo class BB.
The first submarine to fire on an aircraft carrier was Trout (Ramage),
damaging Taiyo, August 28, 1942.
The first Japanese ship to be sunk by gunfire was by Triton (Kirkpatrick),
near Marcus Island on Feb. 17, 1942. At the time,
Kirkpatrick was the youngest skipper to get command at Pearl.
The first man to die in submarine gun action was Michael Harbin, on
Silversides, May 1942.
The first rest camp for submarine crews was established at a military
encampment at Malang, in the mountains
of
Java, 89 miles from Surabaya. Three days were allotted to submarine crews
there in January 1942.
The first TDC (Mark 1) was installed in the Cachalot.
The Plunger was the first boat to sustain an "arduous" depth charge attack
and survive.
In September 1936, Cdr. C. A. Lockwood Jr., assumed command of SubDiv 13
composed of the new boats Pike,
Porpoise, Shark and Tarpon.
On December 31, 1941, Captain Wilkes evacuated Corrigidor on board the
Seawolf to establish a new base
at
Surabaya, Java. Simultaneously Capt. Fife boarded Swordfish and sailed to
Darwin, Australia.
Expressing the view that Japan could not hope to be victorious in a war
with the U.S., Admiral Yamamoto was "shanghaied"
to the
post of Commander of the Combined Fleet (from the Naval Ministry) to
thwart a possible assassination at the hands
of his
many dissenters.
A survivor of the Japanese carrier Kaga, at the Battle of Midway, told how
some of his shipmates saved themselves by clinging
to the
air flask of a torpedo fired from Nautilus which hit the carrier and
failed to explode, the concussion separating the
warhead from the airflask.
LCDR. Francis White was the only skipper who lost two submarines in
combat, the S-39 and the S-44.
The IJN I-176 (Cdr. Kosaburo Yamaguchi) was the only Japanese boat to sink
an American submarine (Corvina) during the war.
The last Japanese submarine to be sunk in the Pacific, the I-373, was
torpedoed by Spikefish (Monaghan) on the morning
of 13
Aug. 1945, in the East China Sea.
As late as July 1945 Japanese guns on the cliffs of Lombok Strait shelled
the Loggerhead as she proceeded through the
strait
on the surface
In July 1945 Bugara (Schade) operating in the Gulf of Siam, sank 12 junks,
24 schooners, 16 coasters, 3 sea trucks and
one
naval auxiliary, all by gunfire.
In the early morning hours of June 22, 1945, Barb, (Fluckey) fired a dozen
5-inch rockets into the town of Hokkaido from
5000
yards off shore.
A Japanese prisoner, recovered from a wrecked aircraft by Atule (Mauer)
had the following items in his pockets:
7
packs of Japanese cigarettes, 1 pack of British cigarettes, calling cards,
ration books, club tickets, diary, note book,
flight
record and two magnetic detector tracers, with notes concerning them, a
thick wad of money, a vial of perfume and a
number of other personal items.
On the night of 8-9 December 1944, in a coordinated attack with Sea Devil,
Redfish heavily damaged the aircraft carrier
Hayataka; ten days later she sank the newly built carrier Unryo.
When Robalo was sunk, presumably by a mine, on 26 July 1944, five of her
crew swam ashore and were captured
by
Japanese military police and jailed for guerrilla activity. They were
evacuated by a Jap destroyer on 15 August
and
never heard from again.
On 27 Oct. 1944 Rock fired 9 torpedoes at Darter, stranded on Bombay
Shoal. In Feb. 1943 Tautog (Sieglaff)
laid
mines off Balikpapan, Borneo. In April 1944, the Japanese destroyer
Amagiri struck one of these mines and sank.
This
was the same destroyer which rammed the PT-109, commanded by J.F. Kennedy.
The first boat to be equipped with QLA sonar for locating mines, was
Tinosa.
When Admiral Nimitz assumed command of the Pacific Fleet in Jan. 1942, he
raised his flag on the
submarine Grayling. Relinquishing command nearly four years later, he
lowered his flag on the submarine Menhaden.
America's first Japanese POW was Sub-Lieutenant Sakamaki, captured when
his midget submarine, launched from
the
I-18, struck a reef in Kaneohe Bay and he swam ashore and surrendered.
The second Japanese submarine sunk, a midget caught inside Pearl Harbor
and sunk by the seaplane tender
Curtiss, was later raised. Too badly damaged for intricate examination, it
was used as fill-in material in the construction
of a
new pier at the submarine base.
During 520 war patrols in 1944, submarines fired 6,092 torpedoes, more
than in 1942-43 combined (5,379). Statistically it
took 8
torpedoes to sink a ship in 1942, 11.7 in1943, 10 in 1944.
During 1944, 117 navy and air force personnel were rescued by U.S. Subs;
The Tang (O'Kane) picked up 22 for the leader
in
this category.
During 1944 Japan lost 56 submarines, 7 to U.S. Submarines.
On Nov. 21, 1944, Sealion II (Reich) fired a salvo of fish at each of two
BB's, the Kongo and Haruna. The Kongo was hit
and
sunk, but the DD Urakazi intercepted the fish meant for Haruna and was
instantly sunk.
Message to all submarines on 13 April 1944: "Until further notice give
fleet destroyers priority over Maru types as
targets for submarine attacks.
During 1944 U. S. submarines sank 1 BB, 7 CVL's, 2 CA's, 7 CL's, 3 DD's
and 7 SS's of the Japanese navy.
So numerous were submarine attacks on the Singapore-to-Empire trade routes
in 1944 that a common saying in
Singapore was that "one could walk from Singapore to Tokyo on American
periscopes.
Emperor Hirohito, upon learning of the Bataan death march at the
conclusion of the war, stripped General Homma, the
responsible commander, of his medals and decorations.
When the loss of Saipan was announced to the Japanese people on July 18,
1944, Prime Minister Tojo and his
entire
cabinet resigned.
On Feb. 22, 1945 the Flounder fired four fish at a Japanese patrol boat.
Two of the fish ran in a circle, causing Flounder to
maneuver frantically to avoid disaster. On the following day she collided
with Hoe.
The Flounder (Stevens) sank the only German U-boat that was credited to
U.S. Submarines in the Pacific.
The last of the German commerce raiders, the Michael, was sunk by Tarpon
(Wogan) on Oct. 18, 1943 while enroute
to
a Japanese port.
On December 28th the Dace (Cole) torpedoed the Japanese collier Nozaki,
the last ship to be sunk in 1944.
The last large merchantman to be sunk by submarine during WW-II was the
Hokozaki Maru, sunk March 19, 1945 by
Balao
(Worthington).
The last Japanese warship afloat in the South Pacific, the light cruiser
Isuzu, was sunk by Charr (Boyle) after she was
previously hit and badly damaged by Gabilan (Parham)
The Flasher sank more tankers than any other submarine.
The largest merchant ship sunk by submarines during WWII, the Tonan Maru
#2 was sunk by Pintado (Clarey) on 22 August 1944.
Except for those officers who received the Congressional Medal of Honor,
Commander Davenport was the most decorated
man of
the war.
During 1944, 14% of the CO's were relieved for non-productivity, 30% in
1942 and 14% in 1943.
A total of 7 reserve officers achieved command of a fleet submarine in
WW-II.