Posted on 09/25/2003 12:00:07 AM PDT by SAMWolf
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are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.
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The Battle for Henderson Field With Imperial Japanese Army troops still vainly struggling to subdue the beleaguered U.S. Marines who stubbornly clung to the Henderson Field perimeter like a drowning sailor to a preserver, Imperial General Headquarters was loath to leave the situation alone. Strict measures and decisive action would have to be taken to achieve the sort of overwhelming victory at Guadalcanal that morale and strategy required to keep the possibility of final victory open. It was not surprising what the collective minds of the Imperial General Headquarters at Tokyo, still the top authority on the conduct of the war, and Combined Fleet with its seagoing headquarters on the "Hotel Yamato in beautiful and peaceful Truk lagoon, churned out for execution in the three final weeks of October, 1942. Similar in appearance to the operations that had led to the Battle of the Eastern Solomons, but more extensive and carefully planned, their scheme offered a foolproof method of eliminating any American opposition to Japanese reinforcement runs to Guadalcanal either by mere threat of force imposed on a weak opponent, or by attacking and destroying him if he dared oppose the Imperial Navy. All operations would be tied to the progress of the 17th Army on Guadalcanal. General Kawaguchi, Commander-In-Chief, would set a time by which his forces would be placed in such fashion as to overwhelm the Americans (who were still considered rather weak in number and by comparison) and bring Henderson Field into Japanese possession. The IJN, with a powerful five-carrier force, would move forward to fall upon the U.S. Navy's flanks if it attempted its own reinforcement runs, evacuation maneuvers, or even tried to employ its carriers in a fleet battle. Admiral Kinkaid Led the USN task force of the USS Enterprise and the South Dakota at the Battle of the Santa Cruz The naval operations that would provide Kawaguchi with the necessary additional ground support artillery pieces, supplies, and most importantly, more men -- would be conducted as two major reinforcement runs and repeated but regular runs of the Tokyo Express. When Admiral Kondo, in charge of Combined Fleet operations, put to sea at 1330 on 11 October 1942, with two battleships and carriers Hiyo and Junyo, trailing Nagumo's three-carrier 3rd Fleet by three and a half hours, the first of these reinforcement runs was already being executed. It would be an awkward opening for the IJN's most carefully planned campaign. This first reinforcement run, a "singularly important run by a reinforced Tokyo Express, containing seaplane carriers Nisshin and Chitose, would lift heavy artillery, ammunition and men to Guadalcanal, necessary ingredients to General Kawaguchi's recipe for winning on the ground. Accompanying them would be 8th Fleet's CruDiv 6, or better, its three remnants, under Rear-Admiral Goto Aritomo. Their laborious task would be to shell and disable the feared Cactus Air Force and thus open a route for easier reinforcement both day and night. Alas, it did not turn out the way it was intended. Admiral Kondo Led the Japanese naval forces during the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands in October 1942. The Tokyo Express, preceding Goto, arrived at Guadalcanal and successfully disembarked its load. Goto, however, stumbled unprepared into Rear-Admiral Norman Scott and was soundly defeated in the ensuing battle of Cape Esperance. It was a heavy blow to Japanese morale, and yet it happened to be only a partial defeat within the global scope of the campaign; the most important part, the safe delivery of Kawaguchi's highly needed reinforcements, was accomplished. While the Japanese reinforced, a small U.S. convoy under Rear-Admiral Richmond Turner also approached Lunga Roads, carrying the National Guardsmen of the 164th Regiment of the Americal Division to their first combat duty. Crowded aboard two freighters were the 2,900 men of the regiment, plus Marine replacements. Vice-Admiral F. "Bull" Halsey replaced Ghormley as Commander of the South Pacific area Turner arrived off Lunga on 13 October and stumbled into the major air offensive preparing for the IJN's second important convoy, this one not a Tokyo Express but a genuine convoy. It was fortunate for Turner that the 11th Air Fleet had not considered a strike at naval forces and chose to hit the runways of Henderson Field instead. This convoy, called the "High Speed Convoy by virtue of its comparatively fast movement, consisted of six fast transports and an escort of eight destroyers, and carried 4,500 men and many rounds of ammunition, again vital to the 17th Army on Guadalcanal. To box this unit through, Combined Fleet had assigned it powerful support in the form of two battleships, Kongo and Haruna, under the command of Rear-Admiral Kurita Takeo, to bombard Henderson Field in the night before the convoy's arrival. It was obvious that such a heavy shelling would incapacitate U.S. air power on the island, and together with the carriers now within supporting distance to the north, any threat to the convoy would be fought off. Admiral Nagumo Led the IJN 3rd Fleet at the Battle of the Eastern Solomons, and Carrier Division 1 at the Battle of Santa Cruz. Kurita's arrival at Lunga Roads in the first hours of 14 October was the first and last time that Henderson Field would be subjected to a battleship bombardment; alas, that took nothing away from the savageness of the action. Kurita's sixteen 14 guns loaded with Type 3 bombardment shells took to hitting Henderson Field for an hour and a half, and when Kurita departed, most of the Cactus Air Force had been obliterated, along with the greater part of its fuel reserves. A Kate heading over South Dakota after having released her torpedo. There had been light casualties overall, but the command staff of VMSB-141 and most of its planes had been destroyed, severely limiting Henderson Field's striking power on the last day it could possibly intervene with the High Speed Convoy's approach. Yamamoto hurried his forces south to engage a now-coverless U.S. fleet and win the campaign. However, Yamamoto was a bit over-ecstatic: Henderson, while severely hit, was in fighting spirits. The Americans scraped together every flyable plane to hit back at the convoy, which they did throughout the afternoon of 14 October. Their tireless efforts did little to decelerate the convoy's advance, but it was a vital feeling of doing something that would help efforts on the 15th. Imperial command units were in high spirits. Their important convoy anchored off Tassafaronga at midnight on the 14th, and commenced unloading immediately. A Tokyo Express added another 1,100 men to the landed troops, and Admiral Mikawa dropped another 700 8 shells within the Henderson Field perimeter, an effort which meant little to the Marines after Kurita's shelling the previous night. Shokaku under attack during the Battle of Santa Cruz 2nd Fleet's carriers provided cover for the still-unloading convoy on the next morning, but several relays of attackers, first piecemeal, then coordinated, hit at the transports and forced three to beach themselves. One more transport was completely unloaded and retired, but Admiral Takama, in charge of the operation, abandoned the disembarkation and headed north of Savo, to maneuver his ships more effectively -- and never returned when the night, under a full moon, brought no relief from Henderson's constant attacks. That night, yet another 8 bombardment, this one by cruisers Myoko and Maya, hit Henderson, but it neither turned the tide of operations. Henderson remained more or less operable, although the amount of planes it housed had considerably decreased. A Japanese Val dive bomber plummets toward the U.S. carrier Hornet on October 26, 1942, during the Battle of Santa Cruz off Guadalcanal. A Japanese Kate torpedo bomber that has recently released its torpedo can also be seen flying past. The Hornet was sunk in this battle. On 16 October, the renewed aerial offensive cost the U.S. a destroyer, but finally, the Americans were reasonably close to offering the Japanese resistance at sea. Carrier Enterprise left the homely waters of the Hawaiian Islands, where she had been receiving extensive if rushed repairs for the past month, and headed south to reinforce the only carrier then available, Hornet. With her Air Group 10, the U.S. might actually be in a position to move against any further operations of the IJN. But while Enterprise proceeded on her seven-day journey from Pearl Harbor to the Solomons, the Japanese experienced further trouble. Though the reinforcements had been landed largely as scheduled, an early-morning bombardment by destroyers Aaron Ward and Lardner had laced the freshly stocked ammunition dump near the debarkation area of the previous convoy; 2,000 5 shells burst into the area and ignited the greater part of the vital stocks. 26 October 1942: Three near misses straddle Enterprise, as she and her escorts turn in wild evasive maneuvers. Accordingly, General Kawaguchi was unable to conduct his attack as planned (difficulties in moving his large forces also played into this decision), and he decided to postpone his move from the 20th to the 22nd a move which the Navy only barely found out about. The Imperial Navy had problems of its own. With all its major forces deployed at sea, fuel was getting critically low so low that one of the supporting tankers had to return to Truk and take aboard fuel from battleships Yamato and Mutsu, for no other reserves were left at this advance base. It was on 18 October 1942 that the campaign took its most sharp turn for the Allies when Admiral Nimitz, tired of Vice-Admiral Ghormley's (COMSOPAC) cautiousness (some said, timidity) and obvious disorganisation, with the approval of Admiral King relieved Ghormley and replaced him with Vice-Admiral William F. "Bull Halsey. It was Halsey's finest hour. A stocky, tough-looking individual with a gritty face and personal manner that fit his nickname, this former Naval Academy boxer and football player was preceded by his reputation as a fiercely attack-minded fighter who cared little for formula but much for performance. His mere presence lifted American spirits and his first acts in office did likewise he ordered neckties removed from Navy uniforms and moved the headquarters from pleasant but remote Auckland to the closer Nouméa. The anti-aircraft battery pumping out shells at the Battle of Santa Cruz, 26 October 1942. The IJN, meanwhile, paid another price for the continuous delays in the opening of the ground campaign -- which had been postponed to the 24th -- when Hiyo, one of 2nd Fleet's carriers, suffered an engine breakdown on the 21st that could not be fixed at sea, forcing her to retire to Truk, leaving behind several of her planes that were transferred to Junyo.
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My Dads brother nearly bought the farm just off the entrance to the ST Lawrence in 1945.
His frigate..HMCS Stettler obtained a sonar contact..heading toward it at full speed.
Stettler was dragging a chain noisemaker contraption behind it...lucky for Freedy..it saved Stettler from certain destruction.
Discovered the U.Boat Commander on the net..and have his testimony of his shot at Stettler.
It was either sit inbetween the temperature gradients.. ride out a depth charge attck..then slink off..or take a bow on shot..an run.
Helmut Schmoeckel Commander of U 802 decided to fire a bow on shot with an acoustic torpedo.
Freddy commented that the explosion occured right in the chain locker,,and the geyser was huge.
Schmoeckel was a good U Boat commander...he survived the war..surrendering his new sub with its snorkel off Scapa Flow.
From what I have read on the German acoustic torpedo.it was powerfull..and seldom missed..unless you had noisemakers in the water.
Hemut served aboard another U Boat previous to his full command...he has a personal testimony on audio file at U.Boat.net...other commentary in some books.
Some of the cagyier U Boat commanders decided against resupply at sea with Milch Cows..opting for caches on coastlines..and raiding.
In one account Helmut just huged the coastline past Greenland..then dashed accross the high arctic to get home.
There are a few war yarns of German U Boat crews visiting Bars in Montreal and in Quebec during the war..hard to say..but we are talking about the French here..so anything is possible : )
Freddy's ship was in the ST Lawrence with a sister class ship..HMCS Magog ..which U 1223 chewed up with an acoustic.
The torpedo detonated behind the ship in the chains..and still blew the stern off.
Admiral Hipper
Admiral Donitz seemed afraid of Hitler..towed the party line..German navy just sat around till R.A.F. bombed them.
He was afraid of losing the fleet so he didin't use it.
Hiyo
Junyo
Nisshin
Shokaku
Shokaku W of Marianas damaged Jun.19/44 by torpedoes fired by US sub Cavalla blew up due to fuel vapors
Last "Banzai" onboard sinking ZUIKAKU (25/10/44)
The Bofors 40mm gun originated as a German Krupp design in 1918. The WW 2 40mm was manufactured by the Bofors Company in Sweden which, quite literally hand built and fitted each weapon. Mass production techniques were not used by Bofors. When the United States bought the rights to manufacture the 40mm, we did employ mass production techniques which allowed us to produce the 40mm by the thousands. The British produced the Mark 1 single barrel and the Mark II double barrel. The United States produced single, double and quad mounts of the 40mm and supplied them to all our allies.
The 40mm was the Navy's standard intermediate range anti-aircraft weapon throughout WW 2, the Mk IV quad mount being extremely effective. The 40mm was used post-war until fast-moving jet aircraft became commonplace.
Crew on the USS Hornet (CV12) firing their quad-40mm gun. The loaded "ready racks" are clearly visible. The gun crews are feeding the guns so quickly their hands are slightly blurred.
Quadruple 40mm in action
Seriously, I did it because it was my duty, as God gave me to see my duty. After that, I did it for the good women of my people, and the future of my people's children, and for the honor of my people who did their duty before me.
Sentimental old cuss!!! Next I'll be telling my grandchildren what I did in the war!!! Actually, I worked like he!! and had a few narrow escapes, end of story!!! Still life in me, but I must have used up most of my good luck by now, now I count on His Grace. Luck you can never count on, but the Lord is always.
You said "We owe you more than we can ever repay." What I did was a gift to God, and to my people. A gift freely given is not to be repaid. You are one of us, one outfit trying to turn the tide.
Me too. ;)
If no thanks are in order then I offer gratitude.
Thats a unique art print of the IJN carriers : )
A few crew members form USS Isherwood shared their experiences from duty stations on 40 mm and adjacent director tubs.
crowded...noisey..hard on the eyes..and legs as the vibration waves ponded thru their bodies.
eating the cordite grit from 5" 38's to the particles kicked up form the Bofors.
A diffucult place to be when a Kamikaze was boring in....DD-520 took a kamikaze in mount #3..the 40 mm crew ..director crew..and 5" mount were incinerated in av gas...grizzly reality for the survivors who saw their freinds go this way.
They commented to me..that off Okinawa..many in the tubs could see their sister cans in adjacent radar picket station or various screen configs slug it out with the Japanese...seeing cans explode sending ships superstructure up over 100ft.
some refused to sleep inside the ship..opting for a mat and a place on deck somewhere.
Am amazed at the mental fortitude of the young U.S. naval personel ....Okinawa must have pressed many to their limit of copeing.
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