Now Hear This!: Ships of the U.S. Navy in World War II
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Now Hear This! - John J. Motley
© Burtyrki Books 2020, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.
Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
NOW HEAR THIS!
Ships of the U.S. Navy in World War II
JOHN J. MOTLEY
Lieutenant (j.g.) U.S. Naval Reserve
AND
PHILIP R. KELLY
Now Hear This! was originally published in 1947 by the Infantry Journal Press, Washington, D.C.
* * *
No one who spent any time in the US Navy during World War II will be puzzled by the title of this book, but for others an explanation is indicated.
From boot camp to naval station to ship, Now hear this!
followed the sailor. The first sound booming into the ears of the bewildered civilian as he came aboard the training station was a string of commands. New and perplexing orders bellowed from the bull horn every sixty seconds. At the end of his first five minutes the frightened boot was sure of only one thing —when the Navy said, Now hear this!
it meant, Dammit, LISTEN!
The authors are using this salty Navy phrase to call attention to brief combat histories of some of the fighting ships of World War II.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 4
FOREWORD 5
INTRODUCTION 7
PREFACE 9
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 10
BATTLESHIPS 11
The South Dakota 11
The Texas 13
The New York 14
The Pennsylvania 15
The Tennessee 16
The Maryland 17
The Washington 19
The North Carolina 20
The Indiana 21
The Alabama 23
The Iowa 24
The New Jersey 25
The Arkansas 26
The Missouri 27
CARRIERS 29
The Enterprise 30
The Saratoga 35
The Yorktown 38
The Hornet 41
The Essex 45
The Bunker Hill 47
The Hancock 50
The Princeton 51
The Langley 53
The Cabot 54
The San Jacinto 55
The Cowpens 57
The Belleau Wood 58
The Card 59
The Fanshaw Bay 61
The Bogue 64
The Guadalcanal 66
The Tulagi 68
CRUISERS 70
The Boise 70
The Richmond 72
The Salt Lake City 75
The Northampton 76
The Louisville 77
The Chicago 79
The Houston 80
The New Orleans 83
The Portland 84
The Astoria 86
The Minneapolis 87
The Tuscaloosa 89
The San Francisco 91
The Quincy 92
The Brooklyn 93
The Philadelphia 95
The Savannah 96
The Honolulu 99
The Atlanta 100
The Helena 101
The Juneau 102
The San Juan 104
The Columbia 105
The Santa Fe 106
The Birmingham 107
The Vincennes 109
DESTROYERS 112
The Sterett 112
The Borie 115
The Preston 118
The Blue 119
The Ralph Talbot 120
The Benham 121
The O’Brien 123
The Meredith 124
The Monssen 126
The Fletcher 129
The O’Bannon 131
The Pringle 132
The Buchanan 135
The McCalla 136
The Farenholt 138
The Claxton 139
The Dyson 141
The Callaghan 143
The Colhoun 144
The Janssen 145
The Eversole 146
The Rich 147
SUBMARINES 149
The Barb 149
The Greenling 152
The Dace 153
The Tang 156
The Tirante 159
PATROL VESSELS 161
FRIGATES 161
CORVETTES AND GUNBOATS 162
CONVERTED YACHTS 162
SUBMARINE CHASERS 162
MOTOR TORPEDO BOATS 162
FLEET AUXILIARIES 164
CRANE SHIP 164
DESTROYER TENDERS 164
AMMUNITION SHIPS 165
TRANSPORTS 165
NET-LAYING SHIPS 166
NET CARGO SHIPS 166
GENERAL STORES—ISSUE SHIPS 167
CARGO SHIP—AIRCRAFT FERRY 167
HIGH-SPEED TRANSPORTS 167
ATTACK CARGO SHIPS 168
CARGO SHIPS 169
SUBMARINE RESCUE VESSELS 170
STORE SHIPS 170
MOTOR TORPEDO BOAT TENDERS 170
SURVEYING SHIPS 171
HOSPITAL SHIPS 171
FLOATING DOCKS 172
SEAPLANE TENDERS 172
BARRACKS SHIPS 173
REPAIR SHIPS 173
MISCELLANEOUS AUXILIARIES 174
AMPHIBIOUS FORCE FLAGSHIPS 174
OILERS 175
GASOLINE TANKERS 176
ATTACK TRANSPORTS 176
SALVAGE VESSELS 177
SUBMARINE TENDERS 178
OCEAN TUGS 179
DISTILLING SHIPS 181
UNCLASSIFIED VESSELS 181
MINE VESSELS 182
LANDING CRAFT 187
THE MERCHANT MARINE 189
APPENDIX 199
ILLUSTRATIONS 232
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 249
FOREWORD
In fury, scope and intensity, World War II climaxed anything the world has ever witnessed in the history of naval warfare. For the first time, our naval ships prowled every open sea in search of the enemy. This war had everything...from old-fashioned hand-to-hand combat between men aboard individual ships to great battles between massed fleets. This book records the end of an era, for there will never be another war in the classic pattern. The advent of the atomic bomb, the proximity-fuzed missile, rockets, radar and mass air assaults mark the end of naval warfare as we have known it in the past. One thing is indisputable. The old order had a fitting finale.
During the war, security prohibited reporting of the complete achievements of any one ship. A vessel might pop up in the news for a day or two, then disappear from public notice for months. Yet in those months, ships like the Enterprise, the Boise, the Dace or Pringle were often in scores of engagements, under constant air or sea attack. As a result it was impossible for the average civilian (and many servicemen) to realize the pace of the ceaseless combat operations.
The purpose of this book is to let the public know what went on out there,
to give some glimpse, however fleeting, of the relentless striking force that was the United States Navy in World War II. The fighting records of such giant-killers as the destroyer Sterett will demonstrate, we hope, that the war at sea was not an occasional flurry of excitement, but a grueling, knock-down fight all the way. And this was true, not only for a few highly publicized ships, but for hundreds of others as well.
The authors realize that these ships’ histories are inadequate in conveying the full battle stories of even the small Fleet units. For always, behind the casual phrase, death threatened. Our destroyers engaged in screening operations off Leyte,
the communique might say calmly. But to the men of the Mahan or the Cooper, engaged in these operations, there was more to it than that. No words can ever describe the horror and excitement, the terror and beauty of war at sea. The story of any one ship and the men aboard her is worthy of a book alone. So, completely told, are the events of any action, any day, any hour. Ostensibly about the Navy’s fighting ships, this book is also, inevitably, about the men who fought—and died—aboard them.
In Now Hear This! we have tried to pull together in narrative form the chronological actions of representative ships of every major type. For our sources we have relied entirely on the files of the Navy Department’s Office of Public Information and the Aviation History Section of the Bureau of Aeronautics. However, the opinions or assertions contained in this book are those of the authors, and are not to be considered as Official or as reflecting the views of the Navy Department or of the Naval Service at large. The histories are as accurate and complete as these sources allowed, during the spring of 1947 when this book was written.
The ships mentioned in Now Hear This! are not chosen or arranged according to any rule of thumb. It was not our intention to present only outstanding ships, but to select a representative grouping. Some ships which we might have included were omitted because of inadequate records, for the Navy is still compiling histories of its one hundred thousand ships in World War II.
In selecting the ships we have leaned heavily on the Navy’s own estimates of its leading vessels—the 250-odd Fleet units awarded the Presidential Unit Citation or the Navy Unit Commendation, highest U.S. ship awards. But we have also gone farther, talking with division, squadron and task group commanders. Their opinions, as well as our own after digesting hundreds of individual ship histories, are also represented.
There is no doubt that some worthy ships have been omitted. The authors expect to receive a modest amount of angry letters inquiring, "Why the hell did you guys write about a ferryboat like the Blank, but never mention the U.S.S. Fearnaught?" For every sailor worth his salt felt that in some way, however peculiar, his ship was the best damn wagon in the Fleet.
It probably was.
PHILIP R. KELLY
JOHN J. MOTLEY
INTRODUCTION
In every war, except conflicts between contiguous land-locked nations, control of the waterways is a vital stake. The nation that controls the seas inevitably wins.
That was true in the Graeco-Persian wars, in the Punic War, in the Napoleonic wars and in every war this country has fought. Yet every one of those wars was fought with different ships, different weapons, different tactics. Sea power was the constant factor throughout; its application varied radically from one contest to another. The Roman trireme, the 100-gun British man-o’-war, the carriers and submarines of the United States Pacific Fleet, all were instruments of the sea power which this war saw exercised not only on the surface of the ocean, but under it and over it.
There was never a war fought at sea like the last one. There will never be another war fought like the last one. Our hope and effort must be that there will never be another war. But if war cannot be prevented, then the struggle for domination of the water-routes between this nation and its opponents will mark its beginning and determine its ending, whatever the instruments of sea power future technichologists may devise.
Even a war such as the fiction-writers conjure, in which radio-guided, atom-smashing robots will be hurled through thousands of miles of space, would be a struggle for sea power. At the end, the nation whose fleet can convoy an army of occupation to the opponent’s shores and keep it supplied, will be the victor. Without that, a mutual belaboring with buzz bombs could end only in stalemate.
We do not know what the warships of the future will look like. They may be true submarines, able to bombard inland cities with guided missiles while safely submerged at sea. We are too close to a revolutionarily new era in propellants and projectiles to make any safe prediction. Another war would also see the air as a more crowded field of action than the last. But, whatever the instruments, control of the routes overseas must be the dominating effort. Whether capitulation comes after a paralyzing air blow or from infantrymen storming the last shattered redoubt, the seas will have to be crossed in safe control. In the last war, the airplane that bombed Hiroshima and the soldiers who smashed through France and Germany to Berlin were both ultimate extensions of applied sea power.
Thus the story of combat ships is the narrowest interpretation of sea power, but it is also the sine qua non of a history of the war. A nation’s war machine must be a balanced one, to deliver the maximum of power at the optimum targets. No one can say that this area or this branch of the military won the war. All the branches and arms are mutually interdependent. A fleet without an amphibious force to transport and supply and blast a beachhead, could not have won the war any more than an Army without a fleet to carry it to the enemy.
Japan, with a lively understanding of sea power at the outset of the war, sought to keep America’s armies landlocked by crippling the fleet at Pearl Harbor. Japans error was in discounting our recuperative powers and will to fight, to take the offensive with an outnumbered fleet under the additional handicap of great distances from base.
Germany put its dependence on unsupported air power and the submarines, both of which might have worked more effectively had Hitler’s general staff conceived the significance of sea-air power. Even our great and stout-hearted ally, Great Britain, might have fared better at the war’s onset if she had not experimented before 1939 with a severance of air power from sea power.
The two great oceans had to be conquered before the enemy lands on their far shores could be subjugated. Any book which helps to provide an understanding of the composition and the functions of the United States Navy is important. The beacon of victory which illuminates our nation today rests on a tripod of air power, land power and sea power, each sturdy limb essential to the stability of the other two. Each is a power unto itself, but capable of fully using its potentialities only so far as it draws strength from the other two, and contributes of itself to them.
CHESTER W. NIMITZ
PREFACE
In a war which at its height saw millions of men, hundreds of thousands of airplanes and thousands of ships locked in struggle the world around, individual ship exploits were lost to view save as public relations officers isolated and enlarged them for the benefit of public morale.
Thus it is that fleets and task forces, Torpedo 8
and The Black Cats
won collective acclaim where in other wars at sea the U.S.S. Oregon, U.S.S. Kearsarge, Admiral Dewey, Admiral Porter, John Paul Jones, individually symbolized the success of American sea power.
But to the men who served aboard a fighting ship, that vessel will forever be an object of fierce pride and abiding love. Happy ship
or taut ship,
the good old Texas or the mighty Missouri will mean something to them as precious, as indefinable, as personal, as home and family. That is what makes old Navy men the greatest sentimentalists in the world, and causes them always to pity their colleagues in khaki who can never love a fort, a tank or a field piece as the Navy man identifies himself with a destroyer, a cruiser—yes, or a sea-going tug, homeliest craft of all.
The authors of this book have caught that spirit of ship-to-man relationship and present it well, miraculously well considering the economy of word they have had to employ. Lieutenant Motley, who served with distinction on the escort carrier Guadalcanal, was for some time after VJ-day associated with me in the Navy Department, where my respect for his ability developed into a cordial friendship. His collaborator, Phil Kelly, saw the Navy from another and perhaps more objective point of view, as a writer who remembers well the North Atlantic in winter, particularly as it appeared from the cruiser Savannah. Both are former newspapermen and together they form an admirable team.
The book will provide a pleasant nostalgia for all who served afloat, but its greater service will be to translate for all others the significance of the Navy, ship by ship, to the nation in its years of deadliest peril.
WALTER KARIG
Captain, USNR
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors acknowledge with thanks the assistance and guidance of Capt. Walter Karig of the Navy, Col. Arthur Symons of the Infantry Journal who edited the manuscript, Lt. Comdr. Leonard Hall and Lt. (jg) John Strohmeyer of the Ship Section and Kitty Clark Brouilette of the Magazine and Book Section of Navy Public Information, William D. Gorman and Sydney Blatt. Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz took time out from his busy job of running the world’s biggest Navy to write the introduction, for which we are more than grateful. Our wives, Sarah and Kay, rendered invaluable help in typing the manuscript. The story of the cruiser Richmond was taken from a letter of Capt. John H. Leppert of that ship to Mayor W. C. Herbert of Richmond, Va.
BATTLESHIPS
The primary purpose of a battleship is to carry destruction to the enemy
says a Navy Department release. Early in the war there were many who believed this concept obsolete, arguing that the increased use of carrier or land-based planes spelled the end of the big ships. This gloomy prediction seemed justified after the sinking of Britain’s Prince of Wales and Repulse early in 1942. But ships like the South Dakota and Washington, operating in a tightly-knit carrier-destroyer unit, soon proved that the heavily armored battleship, with its formidable array of 148 antiaircraft guns, was still a vital part of the fleet. Radar, carrier-plane coverage and the proximity-fuze (which causes shells to explode automatically upon nearing a target) all played important roles in this comeback.
US battlewagons in World War II ran the gamut—from the dowager Arkansas to mammoths of the South Dakota, North Carolina and Iowa classes. Thirty years of naval development lay between. The 562-foot Arkansas, for example, packed twelve 12-inch guns and could push her 26,000 tons along at about 20 knots. The 880-foot Iowa had a standard tonnage of 45,000 tons, carried nine 16-inch guns and drove along at better than 30 knots. And these were only the more obvious differences dividing the old and new.
A battleship is born, not from a blueprint, but from discussions among the experts in the Navy’s Bureau of Ships. After painstaking tests of model hulls, the ideas around which she is to be shaped are ready for conversion to the blueprint stage. More than 30,000 plans are drawn before the $100,000,000 ship becomes a reality.
Although the modern battlewagon usually carries about 2,700 men in wartime, her ten generators could supply electricity for a city of 20,000. In her intricate skein of nerves and arteries she packs 900 electric motors, 2,000 telephones, 442,000 feet of piping and 1,220,000 feet of wiring. Her main pumps can send 4,800 gallons of water per minute coursing through the endless fire mains, and her 1,000 watertight spaces are all protected by automatic sprinkler systems. Her anchors weigh 15 tons apiece and the 2,000 feet of chain attached add another 121 tons to her impressive bulk.
The installation of her turrets is a primary engineering feat, only slightly less complicated than her launching. A finished turret, with its three 16-inch guns, weighs over 1,800 long tons...and there are three of them. Installed about one month after launching, the turrets are first assembled, then divided into sections, disassembled, and towed alongside the fitting-out pier on a barge. Special gauges insure an accuracy of 1/64-inch centering in this delicate operation.
Of the 17 battleships in service in 1941, the Arizona and Oklahoma were lost at Pearl Harbor. There were 23 in service in October, 1945.
The South Dakota
Try to get most Navy men to agree on the outstanding ship of the war and you’re apt to launch a new battle. But an official Navy report has this to say of the mighty Sodak
..."Certainly no other battleship has a comparable record. What a ship goes through cannot be expressed in figures, but on paper her career looks something like this:
Major operations, 15; major surface battles, 4; invasions, 7; major air strikes, 50; bombardments, 9; Japanese large surface vessels sunk, 3; Japanese aircraft shot down, 64; miles steamed from commissioning to Tokyo, 246,970.
First of her class, the 35,000-ton monster was commissioned at Philadelphia Navy Yard on March 20, 1942. Named by President Roosevelt, she started her war cruise under Rear Adm. (then Captain) Thomas L. Gatch on August 16, 1942. Little was heard of her until October 26, when as Battleship X
she startled the world by slaughtering the Japanese attackers in her first battle at Santa Cruz Islands. In that fracas, Battleship X was in support of the carrier Enterprise’s group— sent to strengthen our South Pacific forces. Eighty-four Japanese planes poured out of the sky to tackle the group, directing the greatest air attack ever unleashed on a battleship. Fresh from easy kills over the famous British battleships, Prince of Wales and Repulse, the Japanese came in confidently. Then the South Dakota took over. Maneuvering at better than 27 knots, she unleashed a curtain of steel so murderous that the commander of American planes signaled his men away. He yelled: Stay away from that big bastard. She’s shooting down the sky!
When the smoke had cleared, the Sodak had shot down 34 Japanese planes. More than that, she had disproved the then popular idea that the battleship was obsolete in the face of modern airpower. But she had not escaped unscathed. A 500-pound bomb smacked one turret, wounded Captain Gatch.
Yet three weeks later the South Dakota turned up in action again, this time in the night battle off Savo Island, turning point in the Guadalcanal campaign. In company with the battleship Washington and the carrier Enterprise, the Sodak slammed into the dangerously narrow straits off Guadalcanal and started what has been termed the most furious seafight of the war. Quickly ranging in, she set two cruisers afire with her first salvos. After sinking one of these, fire was directed to another light cruiser astern. On the fourth salvo this ship broke in two. Another group of Japanese warships popped up, and three caught the Sodak with searchlights, concentrating their fire on her. Retaliating with heavy fire from her secondary batteries, she knocked out the searchlights, and slammed several salvos into another Japanese ship, which also broke in two. The rest retreated. Again the Sodak had suffered damage. Thirty men had been killed, 60 wounded. And the 42 large enemy shells which hit her had inflicted grave damage. Back she came to New York for repairs.
In February 1943 she left the Navy Yard and in June joined the British Fleet in the North Atlantic, Arctic Ocean and North Sea off Norway, Spitsbergen, Iceland, Greenland and Bear Island. She was then under the command of Capt. Lyndex D. McCormick. Then in November 1943 she turned up again in the Pacific under the command of Capt. Allan E. Smith. As part of a carrier group assigned to the Gilbert Islands assaults, she began a marauding career which carried her into the heart of the Pacific campaigns.
After the Gilberts came the bombardment of Nauru, then the Marshall Islands landings and occupation. In January 1944 she unleashed her tremendous fire power on Roi and Namur. Then followed air strikes on Truk, Guam, Saipan and Tinian. The Sodak was on the prowl and the Japanese were far from happy. More air strikes this time in March on Palau, Yap and Woleai. At this point Capt. Ralph S. Riggs took over. In April she turned up for the invasions of Hollandia and New Guinea and in May, for the bombardment of Ponape. In June Saipan felt the fury of her guns. Relentlessly, the attack pressed on. In the first battle of the Philippine Sea, the South Dakota again felt the sting of Japanese raiders when another 500-pound bomb caught her. But the next day (June 20, 1944) she was in on the air strike against the Japanese fleet, and on the very next day, on strikes at Pagan.
Back to Puget Sound Navy Yard in July and August for an overhaul, she rejoined the fleet in time for strikes on Okinawa, Luzon and Formosa in October 1944. And in December with a fast carrier task force of the Third Fleet, the Sodak plunged into the Second Battle of the Philippine Sea. One month later the same group supported the Luzon landings and occupation. The Sodak was there, too. In February she was with the Fifth Fleet, supporting the Iwo Jima landings and occupation; in March, the same role at Okinawa.
The South Dakota boasts of a number of firsts
proudest of which occurred July 14, 1945. For on that date, under the command of Commodore C. B. Momsen, she blasted the Japanese homeland, bombarding the town of Kamaishi in the first attack of its kind since 1863. Similar attacks on other Japanese cities followed with sledgehammer effect. And now the Rising Sun was setting fast. On August 15 Japan capitulated. On August 29, the mighty Sodak dropped anchor in Tokyo Bay. The long fight was over. Few ships of any nation would ever equal her record.
The Texas
Pearl Harbor brought a whole new life to many US ships, but the Texas (BB 35) simply took war’s outbreak in stride. To begin, the Texas, commissioned March 12, 1914, was a veteran of the First World War, serving as a unit of the Sixth Battle Squadron against the Germans in 1918. After the Armistice was signed she led a comparatively sedate career, but in April, 1941 she steamed into Norfolk Navy Yard to prepare for war.
May, June and July she was on neutrality patrol across the stormy North Atlantic, with her crews ready for instant action—six months before the United States was brought into the war.
On December 7, 1941 she was in Portland, Maine, and from January until October, 1942 she convoyed ships to Europe, Africa and the Canal Zone.
In November, 1942 she covered the landings in the Mehdia-Port Lyautey area, pumping 14-inch shells into enemy roads and ammunition dumps. During 1943 she resumed her convoy escort duties, steaming to Casablanca, Morocco, Gibraltar, Scotland and Ireland. Then in June, 1944 she was in on the big show, hurling hundreds of shells into selected targets during pre-invasion bombardments of Normandy.
The Texas was finally tagged by the enemy on June 25, 1944 during a three-hour duel with German guns at Cherbourg. She was straddled 30 times and suffered two direct hits. One shell wiped out the navigation bridge, killing 1 and wounding 14, but the other hit luckily proved a dud, causing no damage except a hole in the side. After repairs she took part in the invasion of Southern France in July. From there she returned to New York in September, 1944, joining the Fleet at Ulithi in time to participate in the Iwo Jima operations. One of the crew’s most exciting moments came when those topside witnessed the famous flag-raising on Mount Suribachi.
It was in the Okinawa invasion that the Texas really unleashed her shootin’ irons, firing four complete shiploads of ammunition: more than two thousand 14-inch and two thousand six hundred 5-inch shells. And her crew made some kind of record by remaining at battle stations for days, sleeping at their posts beside the guns.
The New York
The venerable New York (BB 34), commissioned in April, 1914 was one of the three old US battleships to weather the war undamaged. After playing an important part in World War I, she wasted no time in getting into World War II, escorting troops to Iceland in July, 1941 when that island was occupied as a defense base.
Then followed a cruise in the North Atlantic and three months off Newfoundland, protecting our new bases there. On December 7 the New York was being overhauled at Norfolk, Virginia. Two months later she was on convoy duty again in the wintry North Atlantic. During the summer of 1942, she made two runs to Scotland at the height of the U-boat menace. Both cruises were punctuated by numerous scrapes with subs, but the New York’s convoys escaped.
In the landings at North Africa, in November, 1942 the New York, along with the Philadelphia, neutralized the strongest coastal defense unit in the region. From there she went on to Casablanca and was in Safi Harbor when six ships were torpedoed on November 11-12. After returning to New York, she made two convoy trips to Casablanca. Then from June, 1943 to August, 1944 she served as a training ship along the East Coast.
In January, 1945 the New York proceeded to Ulithi to join the assault on Iwo Jima. Forced to leave the task force when she lost part of her port screw, the New York recovered in time to begin the pre-invasion bombardment of Iwo Jima on February 16. During this bombardment she scored a direct hit on a large Japanese ammunition dump which went up like a 4th-of-July display.
After a stay at Manus for repairs, the New York arrived at Okinawa on March 27, where she remained in action for 76 consecutive days. Though repeatedly subjected to all kinds of enemy attack, the New York was the only capital ship to stay on the job without relief. One Kamikaze made an unsuccessful suicide run through a hail of antiaircraft fire but crashed harmlessly into the sea. The New York poured more than five million pounds of shells into targets on Okinawa.
After Okinawa had been declared secured, the New York proceeded to Pearl Harbor on June 12, 1945 where she was completely regunned.
The Pennsylvania
The Pennsylvania (BB 38) had to wait for her second war to get into the fighting. After sitting out World War I without seeing any real action, the Pennsy
took part in the fire and smoke of World War II from Pearl Harbor to Okinawa, got shot up a few times, and lost a lot of good men.
The Pennsylvania was commissioned in June, 1916 and was named Fleet flagship in October. She remained flagship of the Fleet until September, 1945, 29 years later.
On December 7, 1941 the Pennsy was in drydock at Pearl with her propellers removed. Japanese planes made repeated attempts to torpedo the drydock caisson so that a wall of water could sweep in on the battleship, but they failed. Even though the Pennsylvania was not in fighting trim, her crews manned light guns and fought back. The ship was severely strafed and bombed; 24 of the men were killed, many others wounded.
In two weeks the Pennsy was underway for San Francisco and repairs, and although she was able to be at sea by January 12, 1942, the Navy decided to modernize