My arrows point to the compartments where up to 217 troops could be quartered on either side of a 200-foot-long hold.3 | |
Sailors in bunks in the crew quarters of a landing ship-tank bound for North Africa on the way to invade Sicily, 1943.4 (Library of Congress) |
The voyage to Hawaii began with a stop at Naval Base Key West. But soon after departing New Orleans, Dad's ship encountered rough weather. “Riding out a hurricane” in the Gulf of Mexico was one of the few experiences he brought up whenever he talked about his time in the Navy.
Some research showed a tropical depression was reported in the eastern part of the Gulf on July 23, 1943. It's path is labeled "1" on the map below.
A portion of the 1943
National Weather Service North Atlantic Hurricane Tracking Chart.5 |
- July 25 at 7:00 p.m. - The storm is declared a
Category 1 hurricane, indicated by the black circle (0000 UTC) at the start of
the red portion of the path.
- July 26 at 7:00 a.m. - The first white circle (1200 UTC) shows the hurricane's position as it moved NNW.
- July 27 early morning hours - The storm made landfall as a Category 2 hurricane near Galveston, Texas. As the first hurricane of the 1943 season, it was called Hurricane 1 since naming did not begin until 1950.7, 8, 9
As a tropical storm, the winds of the
depression increased into the 32-38 mph range, a 7 on the Beaufort Wind
Force Scale. That meant the ship was encountering at least 13- to
19-ft waves.10 The paths of the slow-moving (5-7 mph) tropical storm
and Dad’s ship, probably traveling at less than its 12-14 mph range due to conditions,
intersected sometime on the afternoon of July 25. Looking at the approximate
speed of the ship and the location, speed, and estimated size of the storm, I
believe Dad could have been in the midst of it for 12 hours or more.
In trying to imagine what it would be like on a ship under those conditions, I recalled a trip I made on October 30, 2012. Right after school that day, and on pure impulse, another math teacher and I made the 45-minute drive to St. Joseph, Michigan. We wanted to see the predicted 20-ft waves on Lake Michigan caused by Superstorm Sandy’s sustained 50 mph winds. We parked, surprised at the number of people who were braving the nasty, cold weather to satisfy their curiosities, just as we were.
As soon as we opened the car doors, we were assaulted by the sound of howling wind and roaring waves. We walked up the back side of a small dune to get a clear view of the lake, keeping our heads down so our faces wouldn’t be blasted by the blowing sand. At the top, the wind hit us so hard it nearly knocked us over.
When I looked out toward the lake, I was stunned to see an almost apocalyptic view of immense, dark gray, angry-looking waves exploding against the lighthouse. The waves were so big and violent they looked as though they could swallow the lighthouse and everything else in their path. The breakwater was completely submerged as wave after wave washed over it. I had never seen the lake look like that. I remember thinking at the time the last place I would want to be was on that lake on any kind of boat, no matter how large.
– SWINGING HAMMOCKS & THE CROW'S NEST –
Of course, my experience doesn’t even begin to compare with what Dad and his shipmates went through, but recalling it gave me a better perspective of his circumstances. Dad described how, during the storm, he and the other sailors were in their hammocks which were swinging back and forth as the ship rocked; water sloshed from side-to-side on the floor beneath them. Their hammocks were probably the safest place to be so they didn’t get thrown around in the ship. I am not sure why there was water inside the ship, and I didn’t ask Dad any questions about that, unfortunately.
Dad was also fond of telling a story about a crew member who was sent up to the crow’s nest during the storm. He told us the ship was rocking so much the crow’s nest would hang way out over the water on one side then the other, as the LST rolled back and forth in the waves. He always mimicked the movement with his arm when he described that. Once again, I didn’t verbalize the question that was in my head. Why on earth would anyone be in the crow’s nest in that kind of weather? All these years later, I think I have a possible explanation.
A crow’s nest can be 100 or more feet above the deck of a ship. From that vantage point an observer can see about 25 miles farther than can be seen from the deck below – and that was important in this situation.11 As it turns out, the captain needed weather information obtained the old-fashioned way – through direct observation – because he could not communicate with the coastal weather stations or ships. The reason? Both the military and civilians were observing strict radio silence due to the fact that the enemy was at our door.
Note the crow’s nest on LST-942. Photo taken in
late 1944.13
(Wikimedia Commons)
|
Even if an
advance warning had occurred, Dad’s ship would probably have been in a similar situation. When the Navy is notified of severe weather, it declares “sortie condition
alpha.” Under these orders, ships are sent out to sea to keep them from being damaged while moored to a pier. With
sufficient warning, ships can move to areas unaffected by
the storm, although that might not have been possible in this situation.14 Otherwise, they have to ride it out, just as Dad’s ship did.
Despite the danger presented by the July storm, ships and land-based weather stations followed the radio silence directive, resulting in the public and military being taken completely unawares. Hurricane 1 was subsequently dubbed the “Surprise Hurricane.” Damages totaled nearly $256 million in 2020 dollars, hundreds were injured, nineteen lives were lost, five planes were destroyed at Ellington Air Force Base in Houston, Texas, and damage to oil rigs slowed the production of aviation fuel for months – a serious problem in the middle of a war that relied heavily on fighter planes on two fronts.
Details about damage were censored even after the hurricane was over to prevent our enemies from detecting any weakness in the country’s ability to combat them. However, due to the massive destruction and the number of injuries and lives lost, information about severe weather threats was never withheld again.15
* * *
673 statute miles from New Orleans, Louisiana – arrived about 29 Jul 1943
(Google Maps 2020) |
Aerial view of the U.S. Naval Air Station Key West
(Boca Chica Field), Florida (USA) in the 1940s.18 (U.S. Navy photograph) |
650 statute miles from Key West, Florida – arrived about 1 Aug 1943
Number of days at sea: 3.1
(Google Maps 2020) |
An aerial shot of
U.S. Naval Base Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, circa 1962.21 (Wikimedia Commons)
|
827 statute miles from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba – arrived about 5 Aug 1943
Number of days at sea: 4.0
(Google Maps 2020) |
(Enlarged map of the location of the Panama Canal - Google Maps 2020) |
F4U-1A
fighters of Navy Squadron VF-17 transiting the Panama Canal on the flight deck
of an Escort Carrier, circa Aug 1943.22 (National Archives) |
The deck-edge aircraft elevator* is in the raised
position. (See my red arrow.)23 (Naval History and Heritage Command) |
3387 statute miles from U.S. Naval Station Panama Canal, Panama City, Panama
Arrived about 22 Aug 1943
Number of days at sea: 16.2
(Google Maps 2020) |
* * *
2701 statute miles from U.S. Naval Base San Francisco, California
Arrived about 4 Sep 1943
Number of days at sea: 13
Dad said the entire trip from New Orleans to Hawaii took 42 days. In that time, he sailed over 8200 miles.
~ Experiences of Other Seamen:
- US Navy Boot Camp in WW2
- Experiences Aboard the USS Clarence K Bronson DD668 During World War 2
- Veteran recounts life aboard Navy landing ship in World War II
- A sailor's story: Concord WWII vet recalls his war in the Pacific
~ A brief history of the LST: https://www.lst393.org/history/lst-general.html
~ The Big Ditch: http://navy.memorieshop.com/World-Ports/Panama/Third-Locks.html
– CITATIONS –
1Symonds, Craig L. The unloved, unlovely, yet indispensable LST. June 6, 2019. https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2019/06/06/the-unloved-unlovely-yet-indispensable-lst/. Accessed November 26, 2020.
2Two Coast Guard-manned LSTs open their great jaws in the surf that washes on Leyte Island beach, as soldiers strip down and build sandbag piers out to the ramps to speed up unloading operations. 1944. (Coast Guard). NARA FILE #: 026-G-3738, WAR & CONFLICT BOOK #: 1210. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Two_Coast_Guard-manned_LST%27s_open_their_great_jaws_in_the_surf_that_washes_on_Leyte_Island_beach,_as_soldiers_strip_down_and_build_sandbag_piers_out_to_the_ramps_to_speed_up_unloading_operations_HD-SN-99-02869.jpg. Accessed November 28, 2020.
3Landing Ship, Tank technical drawing All Hands Magazine Sept 1959.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landing_Ship,_Tank#/media/File:Tank_landing_ship_technical_diagram_1959.png Accessed November 25, 2020.
4(1943) Sailors in bunks in crew quarters of landing ship-tank ship bound for North Africa on way to invade Sicily. , 1943. [July] [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress. https://www.loc.gov/item/90706611/. Accessed November 25, 2020.
5Past Track Maps of U.S. Landfalling Major Hurricanes, Atlantic Basin, 1943. National Hurricane Center and Central Pacific Hurricane Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/data/tracks/tracks-at-1943.png. Accessed December 19, 2020.
6 Day, John. [Airman] Who Is Duckworth? March 28, 2014. Columbus Air Force Base. https://www.columbus.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/618754/who-is-duckworth/. Accessed December 19, 2020.
7https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1943_Atlantic_hurricane_season. Accessed December 11, 2020.
8Sumner, Howard C. North Atlantic Hurricanes and Tropical Disturbances of 1943. The Monthly Weather Review, November 1943, Vol. 71, No. 11, W. B. No. 1402, p. 179-180. https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/general/lib/lib1/nhclib/mwreviews/1943.pdf. Accessed December 9, 2020.
9Bates, Josh. How Are Hurricanes Named? Here’s What You Need to Know. October 15, 2019. https://time.com/5696288/hurricane-names/. Accessed December 11, 2020.
10Haddon, Sarah. Sea State and Swell. https://blog.metservice.com/sea-state-and-swell. Accessed December 18, 2020.
11https://flatearth.ws/crows-nest. Accessed December 11, 2020.
12https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:(1867)_p184_I_SCORESBYS_TUNNA.jpg. Accessed December 11, 2020.
13https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:LST-942_underway_in_late_1944.jpg. Accessed December 11, 2020.
14Lockie, Alex. 30 ships ordered to flee US Navy’s biggest base in Virginia as Hurricane Florence closes in. Business Insider, September 10, 2018. https://www.businessinsider.com/us-navy-ships-flee-virginia-base-as-hurricane-florence-approaches-2018-9. Accessed December 10, 2020.
15Moore, Tom. “Hidden Hurricane” of July 1943 Was A Deadly and Destructive Surprise to Coastal Texas. July 26, 2018. https://www.weatherconcierge.com/hidden-hurricane-of-july-1943-was-a-deadly-and-destructive-surprise-to-coastal-texas/. Accessed December 9, 2020.
16NAS Key West, FL History. https://www.keywestnavalhousing.com/history. Accessed November 19, 2020.
18Aerial view of the U.S. Naval Air Station Key West (Boca Chica Field), Florida.(USA) in the 1940s. [US Navy Photograph] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Air_Station_Key_West#/media/File:NAS_Chica-Fla_NAN9-47.jpg. Accessed November 19, 2020.
19The United States Navy and the City of Key West, Florida Information Pamphlet. The Key West Press, about 1946, pp.12-13. https://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00005067/00001/17x. Accessed December 12, 2020.
20Guantanamo Bay Naval Base. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guantanamo_Bay_Naval_Base. Accessed December 17, 2020.
21View of the U.S. Naval Base Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, circa in 1962. [Official Department of Defense Photograph] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Guantanamo_Naval_Base_aerial_photo_1962.jpg. Accessed December 17, 2020.
22F4U-1A fighters of Navy Squadron VF-17 transiting the Panama Canal on the flight deck of an Escort Carrier, circa Aug 1943. https://ww2db.com/image.php?image_id=22760. (NARA) National Archives and Records Administration. Accessed December 18, 2020.
23Kerlee, Charles, photographer. USS Yorktown (CV-10). [United States Navy Photograph] Naval History and Heritage Command. (NHHC) Catalog #: 80-G-K-15334. https://www.history.navy.mil/our-collections/photography/numerical-list-of-images/nhhc-series/nh-series/80-G-K-15000/80-G-K-15334.html. Accessed December 18, 2020.
24Stubblebine, David. Comment on May 26, 2019. https://ww2db.com/image.php?image_id=28693. Accessed December 18, 2020.
25AJ-2 Savage on Aircraft Elevator on Board USS Yorktown (CVA 10) [Photograph], 1954. National Naval Aviation Museum. https://www.history.navy.mil/content/history/museums/nnam/explore/collections/aircraft/a/aj-2-savage0/aj-2-savage-on-aircraft-elevator-on-board-uss-yorktown--cva-10-.html. Accessed December 18, 2020.
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