Part I - Allied Strength Up; Strategy at Turning Point
When A DD's Ammo Is Expended
Yes, I realize that this was the last heading of the previous chapter on
Anzio. I need to cover just one more detail on that subject. The cruisers and
the battleships routinely reported the number of rounds expended as part of
their daily reports. Occasionally, Edison made an ammo report when queried by
its Squadron commander or other higher authority. But Edison did not routinely
make ammo reports. We looked in the magazines after a concentrated firing
period and, eye balling the space, estimated the rounds fired since the last
"inventory". When indicated, we made it a point to tell the skipper that we
did or did not need ammo. He was, therefore, always informed as to the
essentials and included an ammunition report to higher authority when
relevant. We just did not routinely report the "score" on ammo as was the
established practice with fuel. Ammo in reserve became a more important factor
in the next three action campaigns of the USS Edison. At Salerno, the ammo
level dictated passage through that narrow channel between life and death.
Contested Priorities
Salerno was another step in the strategy to penetrate the soft underbelly
of Europe. The U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) increasingly wanted to give
its priority to a cross channel invasion of western Europe. Prime Minister
Churchill wanted to demonstrate the vulnerability any defender of Central
Europe would have in attacks from the south, originating from Italy eastward.
He had taken this route in WW I campaigns and though defeated then,
anticipated that the WW II Allies could accomplish decisive war objectives
with the appropriate disposition of Mediterranean-based forces.
Prime Minister Churchill was not opposed to the cross channel invasion but
it was not a 1943 priority for him. Increasingly, U.S. commanders got the
impression that it might not even be a 1944 priority for the PM. Moving up the
Italian peninsula, therefore, fit Churchill's idea of the strategy that should
be employed. Interestingly, the Southern France invasion of August 1944 found
the U.S. and England switching sides on the importance of the Mediterranean.
The south of France did not fit Churchill's soft underbelly focus but it did
fit the U.S. concept of leverage once the cross channel invasion of France had
begun.
Trident and Quadrant
There were two conferences subsequent to the Casablanca Conference that
dealt with Mediterranean matters. The first was the Trident Conference and it
took place 12 May 1943 in Washington DC. It got off to a good start with word
of the Axis surrender in Tunisia. The U-boat picture in the Atlantic had eased
somewhat. The Germans on the eastern front had retreated under Russian
pressure to the Donetz River basin. The U.S. was about to step up the war
against the Japanese in the Solomons. While all the highest level people who
attended the Casablanca conference were present at Trident, neither General
Eisenhower nor any of the other field commanders could come. Weary from
fighting in North Africa, the active force commanders were attempting to meld
their field experience into HUSKY (Sicily) plans.
Churchill's persistence won the immediate argument and an invasion of Italy
went into planning. Landings at the Gulf (or Bay, as it was often referred to)
of Salerno, Italy, just below Naples, would be the target. It was authorized
officially on 26 July 1943. The Quadrant Conference in Quebec in August 1943
confirmed the decision. The operation's code name was to be AVALANCHE. What
would happen after Salerno was not determined.
Salerno; More Than A Landing Operation
Although the U.S. subscribed to the Salerno decision, and later to what
became the Anzio siege (it was not supposed to be a siege), key commanders and
key invasion forces at Division strength began to show up on lists to go to
England and make ready for the Normandy operation. One who was an early
nominee for such a move was British General Montgomery. Another important move
in the offing was a change in General Eisenhower's responsibilities. When the
British General Alexander took over overall command of ground forces on the
Italian peninsula and General Mark Clark was successfully ashore as commander
of the U.S. Fifth Army in Italy, the command structure in the Mediterranean
sector changed. "Ike's" dual role, for active prosecution of the Mediterranean
effort and for the planning and build up effort for Normandy, ceased. He would
become actively and continuously dedicated to preparations for the cross
channel invasion.
Insofar as Italy was concerned, after Salerno, Ike became a negotiator for
talents there that he felt he needed in England. For Salerno, however, Ike was
a negotiator for larger forces for that operation as he was still the senior
military commander with operational responsibility in the Mediterranean. The
U.S. Army First, Third, Ninth, 45th and Second Armored Divisions had already
acquired valuable experience and after Sicily, some got a rest. The U.S. 36th
Division was to get its baptism in the Salerno assault operation with the U.S.
45th Division in immediate reserve.
Salerno was a pivot, militarily and strategically. Salerno was the last
Mediterranean operation where the soft underbelly strategy edged out the cross
channel in priority. Casablanca, Sicily and Salerno were a phase; Salerno and
Anzio were a phase. But at their common juncture, Salerno, the important force
and command changes outlined above were about to take place that put cross
channel into active planning for calendar 1944! This was not done, even at the
most private and secret war conferences, with any clarion statement. It was
just that key divisions and key leadership would begin to leave the
Mediterranean. The Mediterranean war went on, but these changes foretold a
pressure role for the Allied presence in Italy rather than a breakout
strategy. Finally, as executed in August of 1944 almost a year later, the
invasion of Southern France was part of the cross channel invasion strategy.
The invasion of Southern France at last found Churchill and his U.S. Allies
agreed on how that operation fit the overall picture even while Churchill
disagreed that it should occur at all.
Aftermath of Sicily
Palermo fell on 22 July 1943. Mussolini told the Italian King (Victor
Emmanuel) on July 25 that he, Mussolini, was all through. Marshal Badoglio was
appointed to head the Italian government and its armed forces.
Beginning on 10 August, across planned water routes and in planned stages,
the Germans got 200,000 men out of Sicily and safely across the Straits of
Messina. This included a number of near intact Panzer Divisions. Although many
Italian soldiers had surrendered to the Allies in Sicily, the Italians, too,
evacuated many units intact. With 350,000 men available in Sicily at the
beginning of the Allied invasion, and with the reenforcements they had moved
into Sicily from Italy, the Axis had made a major commitment there. Sustaining
that commitment was predicated by the German high command on success in the
field. With the fall of Palermo, Syracuse and Augusta in the early stages of
the Allied effort in Sicily, the German high command had one goal, to
extricate their forces and make their stand in Italy. Their plan to extricate
had been made as part of their plan to commit.
The Allies had no strategy in making to prevent this. The opportunity was
there. While uncertainty existed in Allied minds concerning the war intentions
of Italian surface Navy forces, the Italian Navy was for the most part absent
from Axis defense activity. Britain and the U.S. had the naval forces for
interdiction of the Axis retreat across the Straits of Messina. The
one-operation-at-a-time syndrome infected Allied planning and many felt that a
major opportunity had been missed. Germany successfully executed an important,
controlled retreat and would have her forces available for another day. Even
if Allied commanders had generated an ad hoc plan, the fact that their own air
forces, both U.S. and British, were "out of the loop" pursuing their own war,
meant that the complete echelon of the top Allied commanders, land, sea, and
air were not even comparing notes. Our forces had made a successful landing in
Sicily. Allied land forces went on from there with little variation from the
originally planned routes and fought brave and clear to the Straits of
Messina. The U.S. Army and U.S. Navy almost nightly conducted locally
conceived leap frog attacks along the north coast of Sicily on the road to
Messina. Toward the end of the campaign in Sicily the Axis forces were moving
out faster than we were moving in. A major foray into the heart of the Axis
evacuation across the Straits of Messina was never conceived, let alone
executed.
Worlds Apart, Salerno Was More Like The Pacific
This is not to say that Salerno and Tarawa were the same. Fortress Europe
was a continent. Roosevelt and Churchill, though at issue on specifics, never
deviated from the manpower priority given to the defeat of Hitler. Even with
his monumental misjudgement of June 1941 in turning on his "ally", Russia,
Hitler still extracted a horrible death toll in his defense of Europe. The
U.S. cemetery at Anzio is just one reminder of German effectiveness in
defending Italy and keeping Allied forces there from sweeping up into Europe
proper.
The "Japanese Empire" had no continent. It was a string of captured
islands, some large, some small, with a limited continental stronghold or two
thrown in where needed. The contest to dislodge the Japanese from these
islands was first a strategy to terminate the expansion of Japanese hegemony,
and then one by one, and very selectively, to gain or gain back the key points
the U.S. needed for the final assault on Japan itself. The carnage in most
every landing the U.S. made in the road back was particularly horrible in
terms of the percentage casualties to the numbers of troops involved on both
sides. The U.S. was not dominant numerically in the beginning and the
critically important U.S. tactic was to interdict by sea any attempt the
Japanese undertook to bring in reinforcements.
Up until Sicily, a main challenge for the Allies against Hitler was long
supply lines. For his part, Hitler was still facing a large potential number
of attack points that the Allies might choose. In North Africa and at Sicily,
the Allies put ashore numerically stronger forces than the defenders could
commit directly at the beachheads; the Allied attackers then tried to work
fast enough so that the defenders could not move their defense-in-depth troops
or armor fast enough to gain local superiority. By Salerno, the shorter
perimeters of the defenses began to work more toward the German advantage. The
uncertainties faced by the German high command of where we would attack became
less. At Salerno, the land forces available at the points of attack moved
toward parity. The defenders still had more air bases, though the Allies had
captured enough of them to give a good account of themselves in the air. It
was in surface based sea forces that the Allies had the major advantage. The
Italian Surrender just added to the uncertainty element present in all
military strike operations.
Although the strategic balance was shifting toward the Allies, at Salerno
the German defender enjoyed something of the tactical parity that Japanese
defenders of the Pacific islands enjoyed at the point of engagement. In troops
and in armor, the defenders at the beaches of Salerno in the early hours had a
superiority. This would be the advantage the Japanese held in almost all the
early contested landings in the Nimitz/MacArthur rollback campaign in the
Pacific. The differences were important. The Japanese could not "fall back" to
some mountain stronghold. This undoubtedly increased their acknowledged
ferocity in combat. The Japanese Navy could, and did, contest the combat sea
forces that the U.S. employed in getting its assault forces to the beaches.
The Japanese won their share of those sea battles but in no case did they
prevent the U.S. attackers from gaining and holding the beachhead. Learning
from Guadalcanal and Tarawa, the U.S. increased the intensity and duration of
pre-landing bombardments. That lesson took longer to sink in in the
Mediterranean. Hitler's U-boats took a heavy toll of Allied warships in the
Mediterranean but in no case did this prevent the Allies from establishing and
controlling the beachhead that was their initial objective.
At Salerno, the D-day toll in lives lost by soldiers and seamen was high,
especially high as a percent of those engaged. Despite the fact that Salerno
was in doubt all day on D-day, and the operation's immediate objectives in
doubt until D+6, the Allied land forces fought their way in foot by foot, and
eventually achieved the breakout from the beachhead that is the objective of
any such concentrated effort. The Edison played a key role on D-day at
Salerno.
The Toe and The Boot
The foot of the Italian Peninsula is characterized as a "toe" and a "boot".
The Allies put in progress important tactical operations there in early
September 1943. The British Eighth Army of British General Montgomery was
entrusted with the move, which took place on 3 September. Landing craft, under
cover of a heavy cross-strait British bombardment from sea and land, went
ashore north of Reggio on the Italian peninsula's toe. A leapfrog operation up
to Pizzo at the narrowest part of the foot engaged the tail end of the 29th
Panzer Grenadiers moving north. This occurred on 8 September, the day the
Italian armistice was announced. Admiral Cunningham, mindful again of the
Italian "fleet in being", an important segment of which was at Taranto, had
suggested to General Eisenhower (according to Samuel Eliot Morison in Volume
IX of United States Naval Operations in World War II in which he credits
Admiral Cunningham's "A Sailor's Odyssey) that he would supply the ships if
Ike would supply the troops for the occupation of Taranto. He did supply all
the ships except the USS Boise which was recruited away from D-day at Salerno
to return to Bizerte and embark the last contingent of the British 1st
Airborne Division which was committed to the Taranto occupation.
This was an interesting play, this "borrowing" of resources. Theoretically,
Eisenhower "owned" all the resources. So he "loaned back" a British Division
for Taranto. Cunningham, who was the overall sea commander, under Ike, in the
Mediterranean, had to "borrow" a U.S. cruiser, which he had ticketed for the
Salerno invasion, back from Ike, in order not to leave about 800 officers and
men of the British 1st Airborne at Bizerte. Boise's aircraft were off loaded
to provide space for nearly 100 jeeps. So, with British cruisers and
minelayers pressed into service, supplemented by the USS Boise, the force
sailed to Taranto on the evening of 8 September just as the AVALANCHE force
gathered off the Bay of Salerno.
Cunningham brought along the British battleships HMS Howe and HMS King
George V and a six destroyer screen just in case the Italian warships
objected. On the afternoon of 9 September, two Italian battleships and three
cruisers stood out of Taranto. No shot was fired. The Italian fleet passed the
British fleet and proceeded on its way to designated surrender ports. While
planes pass in seconds, ships pass in hours. During those hours, a German
observation plane might have taken an air photograph which would have provided
German air intelligence officers any number of scenarios.
The British cruisers entered Taranto harbor at dusk on September 9th, and
took pilots aboard, according to Morison's fascinating story of this event.
Those Italian ship pilots must have had a busy day, one fleet leaving, and
another coming!
"Buon giorno, pilota. Mi permetta di presentare il capitano de Fregata, il
signor Thebaud."
So begins and ends my two years study of Italian at the U.S. Naval Academy.
It was designed for just the situation that Boise encountered at Taranto, but
alas, I was up at Salerno unable to assist Captain Thebaud of the USS Boise in
his dialogue with the Italian ship pilot.
The Taranto occupation was comparatively peaceful and Allied troops went on
to occupy nearby Bari, an important Italian port on the Adriatic side of
Italy, later the scene of one of the worst ammunition conflagrations of all
time. Montgomery's Eighth Army made ready to move northward, out of Calabria
as the general area is called. The Allied cruisers then departed Taranto,
proceeded through the Straits of Messina, and joined the battle for the
beaches at Salerno, already in progress.
Uncertainty
As had occurred with French Admiral Darlan in North Africa, secret
negotiations between General Eisenhower's representative and a representative
of the Badoglio government took place before the Allied landings at Salerno. I
am struck now by the bravery of these emissary/ negotiators who took enormous
personal risks to pass through contested territory across "enemy" lines to
conduct discussions. Also, those who did this on both sides never had a full
hand to deal from. Anyone who wants to surrender wants to know that the other
party has an irrevocable resolve to invade, and wants the essential detail on
where it will take place. General Eisenhower's emissaries, Walter Bedell Smith
for Italy and General Mark Clark for North Africa were not delegated authority
to reveal this information. Irrespective of any agreements negotiated,
therefore, the ideal was not reached in either case that would give the
tactical commander of the invasion forces any sort of knowledge-certain about
predisposition of "enemy" forces.
And, who was the enemy, anyway? An agreement of sorts was reached with
Badoglio on September 3, 1943, after which, in effect, Italy was out of the
war. Surrender? Armistice? U.S. General Maxwell Taylor of the 82nd U.S.
Airborne Division was also involved in a spinoff negotiation with the Italians
about a paratroop drop on Rome, but this was called off due to uncertainties
on both the part of Eisenhower's representatives and Badoglio's about whether
each side was telling all that it knew. General Eisenhower chose to announce
the original deal at 1830 September 8, 1943, and, forewarned as to time and
frequency, many on the invasion ships listened to his broadcast. While the
desired result of "coming over" to the Allied side by intact units of the
Italian Army and Air Force did not occur, the German hold on the peninsula
being so strong, the Italian Navy did carry out the terms of the Armistice.
The land bound units of Italy's armed forces just sort of "melted away",
according to Samuel Eliot Morison. The Italian Navy, sortieing from northern
Italian ports and from Corsica and Sardinia, to designated Allied surrender
ports, took a fearful beating from the Luftwaffe in which a number of ships
were lost, with great loss of life. The Allies, occupied with the Salerno
landing, could give them no help.
Allied Force Structure for Salerno
The naval force structure had not changed. Reporting to Eisenhower, Admiral
Cunningham, RN, headed up the overall naval forces structure. Admiral Hewitt,
now in a fully equipped flagship, USS Ancon, had the responsibility for all
amphibious forces and for Royal Navy covering forces-the big ships further
offshore. The Northern Attack Force was led by British Commodore Oliver RN and
the Southern Attack Force aimed at its assigned beaches at Paestum was led by
U.S. Rear Admiral Hall.
Aboard Ancon was General Mark Clark, commanding the newly designated U.S.
5th Army. This Army was to be put ashore in the U.S. sector, which was
southeast of the British sector. An important new U.S. Army division, the 36th
was in the assault wave. Clark had been picked by Eisenhower and reported
directly to him once established ashore. The British X Corps for the Northern
sector was commanded by LGEN McCreery who had replaced a British General
wounded in a Bizerte air raid just a few days earlier. Major General Dawley
USA led U.S. troops in the Southern sector.
Montgomery's British 8th Army would be fighting northward to make a
juncture with the Fifth Army. Their progress was not fast enough to bring them
into position to interfere with the German decision to make an all-out defense
at the beachhead in Salerno.
The JCS (U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff) had given back to Admiral Cunningham
one of his British carriers and four of his British converted-hull escort
carriers. This gave the Seafires, the carrier equivalent of the Spitfires,
adequate time on station over Salerno. The land based Spitfires had 180 miles
to fly from Sicily, giving them just about one half hour over the attack area.
For the first time, a fighter-director team under a U.S. Army Air Forces
Brigadier General was embarked on the USS Ancon with Hewitt and his staff.
Company Overhead
While we had seen the scouting planes from the U.S. Navy cruisers and
battleships, occasionally at Casablanca, and from just the cruisers at Sicily,
the air combats had taken place mainly out of sight of Navy ships. At Salerno,
we became more aware of what was going on upstairs. The Luftwaffe furnished
their brand of entertainment to the ships at sea, delivered for the most part
by Junkers JU-88s and Dornier DO-217s. These delivered bombs and torpedoes,
and the latter launched a new version of "guided" bombs. A JU-88 is pictured
in an earlier chapter. (I was not able to get a good picture of a DO-217 for
this chapter.)
Airborne "friendlies" became much more visible. For high cover, the
Supermarine Spitfire, with an elliptical wing readily visible in good weather
at 20,000 feet, was a most welcome partner. Spitfires provided our principal
high altitude air cover at Salerno. One is pictured below.
Next to be pictured is a U.S. Navy recognition shot of a Spitfire. Labeled
the Spitfire XII, it has had its wings clipped and would have been much harder
for a sailor to identify at 20,000 feet without that beautiful elliptical
wing.
The Spits and the British Hawker Hurricane were powered by the Rolls Royce
Merlin engine, of just over 1,000 horsepower. This in-line, liquid cooled
engine was a breakthrough in engine design and provided nimble, fast
,single-engine aircraft performance for the British.
Legions of workers on the U.S. home front provided not only the steady
supply of new warships needed for the ambitious Allied counteroffensives, but
also mass-produced, competitive aircraft. Here is a picture taken from Little
Friends, a beautifully written and illustrated Random House publication. This
young lady is working on a P-38 Lockheed Lightning. In the Mediterranean,
these aircraft were used for low level bombing and strafing of enemy
positions. In other war sectors, they escorted bombers.
One day off Italy, two P-38s in perfect formation came roaring out of the
foothills over the water making their exit from an attack at less than 500
feet and not a half mile from Edison. The wingman in the formation then made a
graceful, tangential descent at high speed, finally impacting the sea and
sinking immediately. We were at the spot in seconds. Roiled, soiled water was
all we could find. The pilot had undoubtedly been hit by flak, went
unconscious, relaxed his hand on the stick and throttle, and flew to a
graceful, sudden death. Here is a U.S. Navy recognition picture of the
Lightning.
Toward the end of the major portion of the Italian campaign, the U.S. Army
Air Forces got another fighter into mass production. That was the P-51
Mustang, which replaced P-40 Warhawks as both a low level fighter bomber and
high level escort plane. It had longer legs than the Spitfire. Apparently the
U.S. Navy recognition set available to me was one made relatively early in the
war. For that reason, the Mustang below is a drawing, and this was used in
lieu of a photo for recognition training.
The P51 marked the end of the military reign of the liquid cooled piston
engined aircraft. Liquid cooling provided high performance but also a
possibility for catastrophic engine failure. The Republic P-47 Thunderbolt,
which we did not see in the Med, joined the battle for Western Europe with its
air cooled engine. All the U.S. Navy carrier aircraft's engines had been air
cooled for years, though we did not see them in the Med either. This
changeover to aircooled piston engines passed quickly as Germany introduced
all jet aircraft before the end of the war. Allied air forces abandoned the
piston engine for combat aircraft after the end of WW II.
The U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff
In reviewing some history to prepare for this story, it was almost like
looking under the covers to piece together the role of the U.S. very high
command (Joint Chiefs of Staff-JCS) in prioritizing manpower for Europe over
the Pacific. Behind each move, one can see not just a JCS focus on the
Normandy invasion and the consolidation of a viable Allied force position in
Western Europe, but the JCS focus beyond Europe. The Churchill/Roosevelt
agreement that Europe and the Axis had priority over Japan and the Pacific was
always honored, but to the JCS, that commitment was also the prerequisite for
getting at the Japanese. While they did not exercise overt veto power over
specific actions in the Mediterranean, the JCS had the ultimate power of
allocation of resources. The Chiefs grasped the strength of the U.S. as the
arsenal of democracy, and they grew with this new United States as it was
blossoming into a world power. In providing sufficient forces for the
Mediterranean up to and including Salerno, the JCS exercised rationing control
over essential systems like carriers. The JCS forced the focus back to cross
channel invasion plans for 1944 by the manner in which they rationed manpower.
The major persons on stage were the Eisenhowers, Montgomerys, Pattons, Clarks,
Tedders, Alexanders, Cunninghams, and Hewitts, and of course Churchill and
Roosevelt. But the men behind the scenes determining what future actions could
be undertaken were the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff. They had Nimitz and
MacArthur and the Pacific on their mind at all times. Marshall, King and
Arnold were not always in the public eye, but they were tuned to these most
fundamental changes in the world power structure.
Departure
Major convoys with heavy escort forces began to leave North African ports
as early as 3 September. The principal assault convoy for the Southern Attack
Force left Oran on 5 September and included the U.S. Army's 36th Infantry
Division in 13 transports escorted by Philadelphia, Savannah and 12
destroyers. Admiral Hewitt on USS Ancon, accompanied by HMS Palomares, and US
destroyers Bristol, Nicholson and Edison left Algiers on 6 September.
Geography
The Bay of Salerno was like a broad letter U, opened to the southwest, with
the beaches roughly on a northwest-southeast line. The American sector was to
the south with four beaches, and the British were just to the northwest with
six beaches. There was a gap between the assault sectors. Salerno had the
finest beaches we would find in the Mediterranean campaign and the Germans
knew this too. The next harbor north was beautiful Naples, U-shaped and also
open to the southwest, and flanked by the Isle d'Ischia on the north and the
Isle of Capri on the south. The Germans knew we would want Naples, one of the
world's great harbors. The British forces moved into Salerno with Capri to
their port side, and on the clear, golden sunset evening of the 8th during the
approach, and on a perfect weather D-day itself, Capri was quite visible to
the British.
The Human Equation
General Clark was interviewed by author Quentin Reynolds during transit of
the USS Ancon to Salerno on the 8th of September 1943. We will select just a
few lines of that interview from the volume, "United States Navy in World War
II" , compiled and edited by S.E. Smith and published by William Morrow.
Reynolds: Are you apprehensive of what their air will do?
Clark: I'm scared stiff of what their air will do, but we hope to have two
of their air fields by D plus 2 and then our fighters won't have that long
pull from Sicily.
Reynolds: When do you expect to establish headquarters ashore?
Clark: If everything goes according to plan-and it never does-I may get
ashore on D plus 2.
Destroyer sailors might also be interested in how Comdr. D.H. Swinson USNR,
Ancon's Executive Officer, helped prepare his ship's company for General
Quarters. This according to a "Plan of the day for Thursday 9 September 1943
on USS Ancon (AGC4) as reported in the "United States Navy in World War II."
"Food will be brought to General Quarters stations in food carriers by men
detailed from ammunition parties." ......Gun platform crews will provide three
fathoms of manila line for hoisting and lowering 10-gallon Aervoid coffee
containers."
Captain Headden on the USS Edison always told us, "A hungry tiger is a
fighting tiger."
Who Gets There First
Since the assault waves and the minesweepers were usually "engaged" before
the "backup" fire support ships went into action, I will include some comments
by Commander W. J. Burke and author William Bradford Huie in their joint
offering, "The Panzers Were Waiting For Us", in the compilation, "The United
States Navy in World War II."
About 0320, in pitch darkness, the rocket craft let go their
barrage....They were fired in bunches, enveloping their craft in brilliant
sheets of flame, then soaring high up, over and down toward the beach where
thunderous explosions took place. ( Author note: This pre-landing bombardment
was new, the rockets were new, and the whoosh they gave off was a terrifying
sound.)
At 0330...the first waves of the assault troops landed in their small
craft...followed by waves of LCVPs, LCIs and LCTs....Sometime around 0430 four
German artillery shells fell into the water near our causeway. ( authors were
in an LST with causeways rigged)
At 0525 our ship, with causeways rigged for `momentum beaching', was
ordered to Green Beach. (This episode and the Green Beach referred to were in
the British sector.) We were following the course of the YM minesweepers (the
smaller U.S. wooden jobs, not as big as the metal hulled fleet AM
minesweepers) when, about a mile off shore a large size Italian mine which had
been swept to the surface, but not exploded, loomed in the path of the ship.
The forward lookout saw the ominous round shape and a frantic effort was made
to veer the ship to port, but not enough. The curved end of the inboard
causeway hit and rode up over the mine before going off against the side of
the ship.......There was a blinding flame, water towered up, objects were
hurled aloft, then a blast of air and a deluge of water and oil fell on
us....The explosion ripped into troop quarters killing and seriously injuring
a number of British soldiers.
....We grounded about 0600 without our causeways, some 250 feet off the
shore line and about 11 feet of water at the bow ramp....It was immediately
apparent that the beach had not yet been taken. Batteries of 88s and mortars
had the range of the beach and kept up the shelling all through D-day. .....We
decided to retract and attempt to put our cargo ashore.....via LCTs....When we
were about a half mile off the beach, a British destroyer laid a smoke screen
which protected us from further fire......
Ensign M.T. Jacobs, a former TVA engineer takes up the story of his LST. We
were carrying men of a Hampshire Regiment of the 46th British Division. On the
tank deck we had six Shermans, with a lot of half-tracks, Bren gun carriers,
and ducks .(these were the DUKWs which performed so well in all Mediterranean
assaults)..It was a clear night with a million stars but no moon.
The 16th Panzers were ready for us. When the small craft began hitting the
beach, the Panzers opened up with everything they had. Big guns, 88s and
machine guns. Our warships including the cruisers Savannah, Boise and
Philadelphia were with the Southern Attack Force off Paestum, and they
returned the fire. (I doubt if the Boise had really made it back from her
mission at Taranto as early as D-day.) The Savannah had pulled to within a few
hundred feet our LST, and she was blasting with everything she had. German
bombers started coming over, so even the guns on the LSTs started firing. God,
it was hot! And right at that moment we got the order to prepare to launch the
causeways.
Off to my left as we were going in, I could see another LST with her set of
causeways. That was Lieutenant Commander Burke, our officer-in-charge, with
Mitchell and Look. ....When we were about a mile off the beach, the causeways
ridden by Look and his men hit a loose mine, and there was one helluvan
explosion. ....Look and most of his twenty-four men were blown off the
causeway by that explosion....
About 0620-just before sunup-we hit the beach full speed....The beach
condition was such that our LST slid right on up to the water's edge..we
didn't need the causeways. All we had to do was throw a few sandbags under her
ramp and spread the mat...We began unloading our LST and had her unloaded by
0800....That was the best beach we'll ever see for LST operations....Shellfire
from the 88s was still bothering us on the beach.....Seven or eight Hampshires
decided they'd brew up a spot of tea on the beach...They lit a fire and had
the water boiling when one of them called to me. "Say, chappie, come and have
a spot o' tea." I started walking toward them and was within fifty feet of
them when a land mine went off right under that fire. ....when I got up every
damn one of those Hampshires was dead and mangled...We stayed on the beach for
ten days.. the bombing, shelling and fighting continued almost constantly....
Part II - Edison In Action
Southern Attack Force; USS Philadelphia
The cruisers were able to lend an earlier hand to the landings in the
British sector in the north because some progress was being made there,
despite the mines and the vigorous defense ashore. The situation in the
American sector landings to the south was grave. Here, the heavily mined
approaches had interfered even more with the landing craft and with the access
by the fire support destroyers and cruisers. Ashore, the situation grew
desperate. Many SFCPs had been wiped out and those that survived were under
fire and had difficulty establishing communication with their designated ship.
In seeking yet another report from the minesweeping commander, Rear Admiral
Lyal Davidson got an unwelcome answer on the TBS voice circuit, "They're
popping up all over the place. There is no channel for you yet." This was
midmorning on the 9th and though I could not see the Admiral say these words,
I could understand his state of mind as I recall the gist of his response,
"Stop talking (on this voice circuit) about mines popping up all over the
place. I can accept your assessment that there is no safe channel. Just get on
with your job. I am coming in." With that the Admiral directed the skipper of
the Philadelphia, Captain Hendren, to move through the minefield and get
inshore of it for close, and if possible, direct observation fire support.
What The Edison Did Then
Our skipper, "Hap" Pearce took all this in and made his own plan on the
spot. We had made contact with the Savannah's SFCP. They had more targets than
Savannah could handle. When the Philadelphia made her bold move, we were close
to her. Pearce knew that his sonarmen had developed moored mine detection
experience off Porto Empodocle at Sicily and he determined that the USS
Philadelphia was by far the best minesweeper in sight. He gave orders to the
helmsman and the engine room to have Edison fall in right behind Philadelphia.
I had never seen the big box stern of a cruiser that size so close ahead. I
had to look up at an angle of at least 45 degrees to read her lettering. I
will never forget that scene. For the only time I can recall in the five
attack landings in which we participated in at North Africa and the
Mediterranean, I felt an exhilaration as Edison made her move. We both made it
in and then ensued the most action-filled, harrowing, and fulfilled day of
Edison's life.
Lt. Stanley Craw was usually back on the after deckhouse with me when we
were at General Quarters. I was there to provide some direction to the
secondary guns, the 40s and the 20s. Lt. Craw was there primarily because he
would become the after conning officer if our bridge controls were disabled or
destroyed. He also helped with gunfire direction. After the Edison made her
move to get inboard of the minefield and get into position for shore
bombardment, the ship's control officers, Captain Pearce and Executive Officer
Jake Boyd knew they'd be in for a busy day. We would be dodging bombs, counter
fire from the beach, and mines. Edison's radar and sonar operators were able
to help define a narrow operating zone between the minefield and the shore.
Navigation information would need to be refined, and be much more
time-sensitive than usual. Even the fathometer became a war tool! An extra
hand was needed on the bridge. Stan Craw provided another capability for a
stretched out General Quarters bridge crew. He was called to the bridge and I
was left alone topside aft to observe what was about to unfold.
Lt. Dick Hofer, the Gunnery Officer and his main battery gun crews were
magnificent that day. But equal billing on the Edison for D-Day at Salerno had
to go to the Seamanship effort. This was not just another shoot from long
distance. This was an all day gunnery effort in cramped quarters, at high
speed. We were not casually lying off Bloodsworth Island in the Chesapeake or
even Cape Arzeu in Algeria. This was a total ship effort under combat
conditions. I will transcribe below major excerpts from a typescript called
"Salerno, First Day", which I wrote about 1960. The thoughts were then just
over 15 years old. The action takes place in the Southern Attack Sector. The
landing craft release point was about 6,000 yards (three nautical miles) from
the shore, at the outer edge of the coordinates of the minefield. The sweepers
worked tirelessly to sweep "channels" through the minefield.
The indented paragraphs below are taken from my 1960 typescript. They cover
what the official War Diary of the USS Edison, written in Washington after the
war, covers in the following eight lines of typescript. " She screened the
minesweepers while they cleared the fire support area. At 0510 on 8 September
(first error; should have been 9 September) DD 439's guns were trained inland
for shore bombardment. Her targets were enemy troop concentrations, tanks,
trucks, and artillery in the vicinity of Il Barizzo. Before leaving the area
on 24 September (second error; Edison left on 10 September and returned
several times before 24 September) en route to Mers-El-Kebir, two more air
attacks developed though they were not pressed and all units escaped damage.
All hands had an anxious moment (on 10 September) when a torpedo passed along
Edison's port side only 100 yards abeam."
It was early evening on 8 September 1943 when the watch relayed
the news that Badoglio had surrendered. I must say there was an immediate
disposition to question just what Badoglio could surrender. As the hours
wore on, however, the official broadcast made it sound as though Badoglio
had been able to effect, in the name of the King, a surrender of all of the
Italian Armed Forces. The degree of German military involvement in the
Italian Peninsula was unknown to a Junior Grade Lieutenant aboard a U.S.
destroyer. Early disbelief that anything could be won so easily gave way to
a disposition to believe that matters would perhaps be somewhat easier on
the morrow than had been anticipated. I believe that this statement
accurately reflects the feeling of most of those men in the U.S. Armed
Forces who were expecting to take part in the Salerno landings.
The beautiful weather which had made the approach so much like a
War College textbook amphibious operation, certainly also provided any
defender with a period of time, beginning on the afternoon of September 8th,
to calculate our strength and arrange his beach defenses. The morning of
September 9th commenced and it remained to be seen if the defender would
fight.
Well, fight he did! Our minesweepers were the first forces in
action, and they were totally engaged while dealing with the task of
clearing dense mine fields. The story of our minesweeping operations in the
Mediterranean Sea have never been comprehensively chronicled to my
knowledge. By the time that H-Hour, D-Day, Salerno, arrived, it was apparent
that the minesweepers had only just begun their task. My recollection is
that some postponement of H-Hour was authorized. (Faulty. I can now find no
corroboration of that.) The first waves to hit the beach (Southern Sector)
were quite late.
Even in the early light of morning some casualties in the
seaborne forces were already apparent. Numerous vessels were on fire and
others were settling low in the water. Our own visual observation of the
troops hitting the beach, later confirmed by fragmentary radio reports,
showed that they were in a murderous crossfire. As the morning wore on our
task force commander for gunfire support, Rear Admiral Lyal Davidson, became
more and more impatient. His main concern, now that he had safely conducted
his forces to the landing area, was to see that the troops got ashore. After
the Admiral's fourth or fifth interrogation of the sweep commander, over the
TBS, brought forth the response that the field was not swept, and that the
mines were still popping up all over the place, Admiral Davidson himself
exploded.......The Admiral must have been thinking of the morale effect on
his ships associated with these reports of mines. He knew that most of his
fire support destroyers and cruisers would have to penetrate the mine field
if they were to provide effective gunfire support to the now badly
off-balance landing forces. As a result, the Admiral commanded his Sweep
Commander ( it should be remembered that these sweep people had been heavily
engaged for many hours and had really done a magnificent job) not to report
again the status of the sweeping operation in terms of "mines popping up all
over the place". Then the Admiral announced tersely, "I am coming through."
Admiral Davidson was embarked on USS Philadelphia, and true to his word,
Philadelphia immediately started in.
The Philadelphia, the Brooklyn and the Savannah had been
wonderful ships to us in the destroyer Navy. We had operated with them
during convoy operations and then during amphibious operations commencing
with the Casablanca landings, thence to Sicily and now Salerno. We would see
them hammer away at Anzio and again at Southern France. This light cruiser
class had been designed, I believe, to counter the Japanese 15-gun cruisers.
Their big payoff in the Mediterranean came, however, in the fire power of
their six inch guns in support of amphibious operations. AA-wise they were
perhaps slightly deficient but hull integrity-wise, as Captain Cary and his
crew so courageously demonstrated in Savannah just a few days later, they
could take an awful wallop and survive.
A destroyer sailor who could read the word, PHILADELPHIA, across
a big gray box stern, as though he were taking a visual acuity test in some
optometrist's parlor, might develop quite a fright that collision was
imminent. Commander `Hap" Pearce decided to put his bow within a few feet of
that cruiser's stern and go in with her. It was a good time for spelling
practice on Edison's focs'le. A good many years later when I learned more
about the characteristics of mines (an assignment as the U.S. Navy's
Undersea Warfare Development officer), I reevaluated Hap's decision and
concluded it was a good one, although some might reasonably disagree. At any
rate, we went in with Philadelphia and got through the field without
casualty. The field had been well planned and executed, but for the type of
operation which ensued, the field gave us precious sea room just short of
the three fathom line. (Looking back, I figure a destroyer had a two mile
band between going aground ashore and the inner edge of the mine field. For
a cruiser, the fit was very tight.) So for the next 6 hours, Edison danced
along a thin line.
The situation ashore was so confused that no one seemed able to
establish effective contact with their assigned Shore Fire Control Party.
The cruisers were doing some direct interdiction fire (at longer ranges than
they would have preferred for that type of fire). This was always a little
risky because of the possibility of mistaking own forces for enemy forces. I
would like to make it clear that the people at sea could always see the
picture a good deal better than they were given credit for by the Army
ashore.
We could see that other ships had not been so successful as we
in getting through the mine field. I can remember HMS Abercrombie, that
grand old name which was just recently (circa 1960) stricken from the
British Naval Register, very low in the water from a mine and no longer able
to shoot. Other craft were similarly plagued. It is my recollection that we
were the first or among the first to make contact with a Shore Fire Control
Party. I believe we finally established contact with a party designated for
USS Savannah. Either Savannah had been unable to contact this party or had
passed the contact to us because of our better position with respect to the
NLO. A word about this NLO. The term stands for Naval Liaison Officer. This
man was assigned to the artillery ashore. He usually worked with an Army
artillery spotter as a member of a Shore Fire Control Party (SFCP). An Army
radio technician was assigned and also a poor arm-weary GI who did nothing
but crank for power. These parties were unbelievably courageous and
effective. In the fluid situation at Salerno on D-Day, this small party was
often the advance group, deep in enemy held territory. (At Salerno, "deep"
could be measured in feet or yards)
The Germans were now making a terrific counterattack on our
precarious landing area. Some of the Tiger (Mark VI) tanks were actually
moving southward along the beach to the beachhead. We (the Edison) were
faced with counter battery fire from these tanks and other Wehrmacht gun
emplacements throughout the remainder of this engagement. The flat
trajectoried 88 mm shell had a unique piercing sound as it passed between
our Director and the #1 stack. We had been used to the fluttery sound of
larger projectiles in arched trajectories. (Like our 5" 38s, most enemy
artillery projectiles were subsonic. The 88, I later learned, had a 4,000
feet per second muzzle velocity, and when you heard the sound, the
projectile was long gone. At Salerno ranges, the 88 shell was in a very flat
trajectory, where a "miss was as good as a mile", usually more. They had to
hit you directly and hope you had enough metal to set off their fuze, which
was essentially designed to be anti tank, armor piercing.)
We got right down to business with our newly adopted SFCP and
went to work. From my own station in secondary AA on the after deck house,
although we had a few air attacks the first afternoon, I was able to get
quite a perspective on our participation in the engagement. The Skipper and
the Gun Boss teamed up in a driving and dynamic display of destroyer gun
power. The Exec. and Navigator teamed up in a most difficult job of
high-speed navigation in restricted waters, while opening up fire lanes for
the 5" guns. Some unseen bond between these two teams kept matters from
getting completely out of hand. The Captain wanted to present an
unpredictable target to enemy fire while maintaining our guns on firing
bearings for long periods of time. I am sure the Exec. and Navigator did not
actually have time to think about Rocks and Shoals (the vernacular name for
Navy Regulations), as they kept us from straying back into the mine field to
seaward or running aground on Salerno's shores. The engineers supplied flank
emergency ahead and back in total disregard of acceleration curves.
(Since we were firing almost all of the time , and the water was
full of spent cartridge cases-"brass"- it needs to be added that the firing
cut-out cams would take Guns #1 and #2 out of action, or Guns #3 and #4,
depending on how fast we could turn in that mine safety zone and get going
the other way.) All the "systems" worked perfectly. Guns and engines and
boilers are stress-tested to some per cent over normal, and the Edison
worked that extra percent all the time in the no man's land of Salerno. Yes,
we had to be rebricked and regunned after Salerno, but the systems never
failed under those punishing conditions.
On some of the early targets, we had to fire rapid continuous
(about 20 rounds per gun per minute) fire for one, two and in one grueling
demonstration, for six minutes at a time. Although our "doctrine" told us
this could be uneconomical of projectiles (rapid "timed" fire was better)
the "spot" from the NLO was "on" and the urgency in his voice conveyed to us
a requirement for extreme performance. Later we went to continuous timed
fire, more economical of projectiles and nearly as effective on a per unit
time basis. The Army's Artillery General Officer ashore who was fighting
this phase of his battle with our artillery, sent repeated messages of
encouragement. Finally, in the waning hours of daylight, as we left the
firing scene, he sent one of the most magnificent messages of appreciation
to Rear Admiral Lyal Davidson that I have ever seen recorded. "Thank God for
the fire of the blue-belly Navy ships. Probably could not have stuck out
Blue and Yellow beaches. Brave fellows these; tell them so. General Lange."
Later and without waste of language, he told vividly of tanks piled up in
rubble and how attack after attack of the German forces had been blunted,
and finally turned back, and the beachhead made secure. Again, by mail we
received from this expressive and appreciative source, photographs showing
the terrific damage inflicted on twelve German tanks. They were piled up
like scrap iron. Many of us were truly amazed at the localization of
effective blast damage from concentrated 5" 38 HC fire.
Those two dreaded destroyer shortage bugaboos may have been
temporarily banished from mind, but inexorably we shot up our precious
supply of ammunition and used up a significant measure of our limited supply
of bunker fuel. Split plant, four boilers and those accelerations had taken
a toll on our fuel. The projectile count by late afternoon (still 9
September) told its story. There were just a few high capacity projectiles
left, all up in the handling rooms, directly under the guns served. We had
expended about 1200 5" 38 HC shells. A few odd star shells were still
available, some white phosphorus, and although my memory is rather dim on
it, I believe we had a few armor piercing aboard. (We also carried and never
used the VT fuzed shells, sometimes referred to as "influence fuzes." ) We
had started the day with extra HC projectiles and powder cartridges over and
above our allowance. These had been lashed in the handling rooms. It was
forbidden by Higher Authority and we would have had to reckon with this had
we encountered rough weather. (In rough seas, we had experienced loose 5"
projectiles from the #2 handling room falling through the hatch over the
officer's bunkroom passageway, and sloshing into the wardroom.)
Though it was not fully apparent until dark, the guns on Edison
were for the first time in my experience all white hot. They continued to
glow on into the night, gradually subsiding to red, then dying out though
still hot to the touch. The canvas tarp covering Gun #3 to save topside
weight had long since evaporated in flame. All the bloomers were completely
destroyed. About mid-afternoon when we reported our ammunition state, we
knew we were going to have to leave the firing area to make way for a ship
which still had some punch in her. (It turned out to be the USS Trippe.)
Edison was all shot out. (I used the term "firing area" when I originally
put down these thoughts without realizing that this was not a firing area in
any operation plan. Admiral Davidson and our Skipper "Hap" Pearce had carved
out a firing area and this became by usage, the firing area.)
I can honestly say that a good many of us were just a little
relieved at the opportunity to back off and light a cigarette. By late
afternoon, the sweepers had marked the channels and we were somewhat easier
going through the field on the way out than we had been on the way in.
Darkness was beginning to set in as we were directed to assist in screening
some of the attack transports which were still disgorging their human cargo.
Unfortunately, it wasn't quite over yet. We departed the Salerno
area, screening larger ships astern, on the next evening (10 September
1943), another hazy bright Italian moonlight night. The number of ghosts on
our radarscopes was almost beyond anything we had ever seen. And how rapidly
they moved! Edison's engineering force was again put to the test as we
attempted to pursue these phantoms and come to grips with them. All of a
sudden, we saw that characteristic orange flash. I had seen it before with
the USS Ingraham in the North Atlantic. It was the mark of a ship whose
magazines has exploded and was entirely different from the muffled poof near
a transport, for example, when these were hit below the water line. It
turned out to be the USS Rowan, a destroyer in our force, which had also
gotten in her share of shelling that day. ( I learned later there was a
heavy loss of life, and one lost was Lt. (Jg) Wiley Mackie USN, a USNA
classmate.) The USS Bristol turned back to assist the stricken ship. All
Bristol could do was pick up survivors, some badly injured, as the Rowan was
doomed. I do not know if the cause of the Rowan's loss has ever been
completely determined, but most of us felt it probably had been either an
E-boat torpedo attack as evidenced by the radar phantoms, or a submarine
lying in wait. Or again, it may have been one of the moored mines which had
been cut loose, and drifted into the path of the Rowan.
Salerno's first phase, for Edison, ended the following morning
(September 11th) in Oran when we tied up. The destroyerman's view of an
operation, while not claimed to be as complete a view of the operation as a
plans or staff man, is certainly a first hand view. The destroyer man sees
the little fellow, and the big fellow, and he must work with them both. I
certainly do not recall that Edison ever had a period of time in which the
action was more intense, the enemy more tenacious, and the issue so starkly
defined. The mine field certainly disrupted our timetable and increased our
casualties. The timetable in turn caused at least one U.S. infantry division
not scheduled for Salerno to be diverted into the combat area.
On April 18, 1991, my wife Peggy and I were helping one of my cousins with
Dailey genealogy. I opened the suitcase my father gave me a few years before
his death and the newsclip below fluttered to the floor. I had not seen it
before. Very likely it came from the Rochester (N.Y.) Democrat & Chronicle
or Rochester Times Union and he had cut it out some day in October 1943. It
bears an Associated Press date of October 17, 1943. "News" traveled slowly in
war time. The Bristol is misspelled as Briston.
Seamanship, Navigation, Engineering, Gunnery
Once Edison decided to match her fate with that of the USS Philadelphia and
enter the minefield at Salerno, there were no ship formations to observe, no
station keeping, and no ASW "slow weave". A sub here would have had to
surface. There was no fuel economy plan. All boilers were on line. Nothing on
Edison was going to be "saved" this day. Looking back, it was Edison herself
that was saved. Lady luck helped a crew built on teamwork.
Don't run aground. Don't hit Philadelphia. Don't stray back into the
minefield. One of the only two ships to make it inside the minefield by
mid-morning to support the Southern Attack Force landings did not want to do
to itself what the enemy was trying to accomplish, be put "out of action."
Rarely, if ever, is a ship pressed to the limits of its performance in
seamanship, navigation, engineering and gunnery all at once. I can recall long
winter convoys where an escort ship navigator could have gone to bed at the
exit port sea buoy and need to be waked only at the entry port sea buoy. The
Convoy Commander's ship could handle navigation and all the escort needed to
do was to keep formation. This is an outrageous example to make a point.
Convoy work is probably the most redundant work in the world.
Edison was either accelerating or slowing, making course reversals, dodging
bombs or shells (mostly the latter), and straining eyeballs to see "floaters"
as the drifting mines were called. The 5" main battery was in director
automatic, pointed toward enemy beach armor at all times irrespective of the
ship's course. The Wehrmacht's surviving tanks finally turned around! This was
direct fire! Our Chief Fire Controlman, Jackson, had a clear view of this
action in the rangefinder of his Mk 37 Director. Lt Dick Hofer, the Gunnery
Officer coordinated the four gun crews as they strained to keep up the rates
of fire demanded. His frequent loading machine drills paid off. No gun missed
a salvo unless the firing cutout cams prevented its firing.
Subsequent to D-Day
The first day at Salerno was a maelstrom of air attacks, sea attacks,
landings, and counterattacks. While Edison's principal contribution was made
on D-Day, that day was by no means conclusive. In the subsequent days, the
Germans organized a number of attacks which threatened the beachhead. For two
days, the 13th and 14th, plans were even made to re-embark troops already
ashore with the Southern Attack force to plug holes in the center between the
British Northern Force and the U.S. Southern Force. This did not have to be
carried out but it is revealing of the tenuous hold we had on the beachhead.
Unfortunately, General Montgomery's pursuit northward of the Panzers found the
latter disengaging and linking up with the German defenders of Salerno and
participating in German counterattacks on the beachhead. Montgomery's units
arrived on the 16th of September after the survival of the beachhead was
assured. The British 8th Army did participate in the subsequent capture of
Naples on October 1. This took place about 10 days late in the Allied
timetable.
Morison, Volume IX; Edition with Preface Dated March 1954
Some of the following data is excerpted or paraphrased from Samuel Eliot
Morison's Volume IX, pages 298-314, of the History of United States Naval
Operations in World War II.
"Assault shipping was supposed to be unloaded by the end of 10 September,
and except for a few LSTs at the southern beaches, that was done........Rear
Admiral (John) Hall in (USS) Samuel Chase sailed for Oran with 15 unloaded
transports and assault freighters, escorted by ten destroyers, at 2215
September 10....Shortly after midnight, destroyer Rowan of the transport
screen sighted a torpedo wake about 100 feet distant on the starboard
bow....(There followed for Rowan, the description of a period filled with fast
moving radar targets, pursuit at 27 knots and Rowan gunfire, followed by a
return to the convoy, then another radar target astern. In bringing her guns
to bear on this target, Rowan was struck by a torpedo according to her action
report and Admiral Hall's report.) There was a tremendous explosion, probably
in the after magazine, and she sank in 40 seconds. Bristol, detached from the
transport screen, managed to rescue only 71 members of the crew. 202 officers
and men went down with the ship. This sequence was also confirmed by an E-boat
division commander after the war who thought he had, in fact, sunk a 10,000
ton freighter. (In Theodore Roscoe's "US Destroyer Operations in World War
II", Roscoe states that Rowan's skipper, LCDR Ford survived the explosion and
sinking, and that Ford credited a Torpedoman's Mate 2/c with setting depth
charges on safe in the few seconds before the Rowan sank.)
Radio controlled bombs rendered the SS Bushrod Washington on 14 September,
and the SS James Marshall on 15 September, total losses.
(Our intelligence data on the USS Edison in 1943 provided us with
descriptions of two distinct Luftwaffe bomb systems, both guided all the way
from a "mother plane" to impact. One was an engine powered glide bomb, HS 293,
which during the last part of its flight was right down on the water flying
level until nosed down onto its target. We saw many attacks of this type, the
favorite targets being the relatively slow-to-maneuver LSTs. Surface observers
as well as controllers in the attacking plane could see the flare which the
mother plane used to control the powered glider bomb, most often used in
daylight attacks. The other, the FX 1400, was dropped from high altitude, and
its ballistic trajectory could be altered by moving the tail vanes which
stabilized the bomb. At night one could see the flare used to guide the tail
vanes of the radio controlled ballistic bomb, but the bomb itself, used both
day and night from high flying Dornier 217s, could only be seen in daylight in
the last moments before impact.)
On page 283 of his Volume IX, Samuel Eliot Morison's account refers to
radio controlled glide bombs, which I feel consisted of one basic system with
two variations. It was rocket powered; one variation had a range of 8 miles
and top speed of 570 mph and the other a range of 3 ½ miles but with top speed
of 660 mph. Trading range for speed could have been a settable configuration
of the same system prior to launch. This fits the description we had on board
for the HS 293 glide bomb. This system had a warhead of about 600 pounds. This
system is not the same as the trajectory alterable FX 1400 unpowered bomb that
was shown in diagrams to us in 1943. Returning to Morison, on page 283,
"Savannah was put out of action by one of these bombs." Radio controlled, yes,
but not the rocket powered glide bomb but the far more deadly FX 1400 is what
hit the Savannah, judging from the description below.
(This next sequence begins about 0930 on 11 September and culminates about
15 minutes later.)
"She was lying to in her support area, awaiting calls for gunfire support,
at 0930 September 11, when 12 Focke-Wulfe 190s were reported approaching from
the north. The cruiser rang up 10 knots speed, which she increased to 15 knots
after a heavy bomb had exploded close aboard Philadelphia, nearby.
(Philadelphia sailors told us later that this near miss lifted the entire
stern of the ship out of the water.) Ten minutes later, Savannah received a
direct hit on No. 3 turret. The bomb which had been dropped from a DO-217 from
18,000 feet, detonated in the lower handling room. The blast wiped out the
crew of the stricken turret and the No. 1 damage control crew in the central
station, blew a large hole in the ship's bottom and opened a seam in her
side."
( For bomb and damage details, I am indebted to Drake Davis, the son of a
Savannah sailor, who maintains a USS Savannah website. Drake refreshed my
memory on the two distinct types of radio controlled bombs, which gave German
"mother" planes a standoff bombing capability. Both of these bomb systems
worked very well. For greater detail, Drake Davis' website
http://www.concentric.net/~drake725/index_c.htm is highly recommended. The
author characterized the bomb as a Fritz-x and even has a picture of it. It
first opened about a two foot hole in Savannah's #3 turret, penetrated 34
inches of steel to get into the #3 magazine, where it then detonated. At
Malta, in drydock, a 20-30 foot hole in the hull of the USS Savannah was
exposed. The same weapon system was used in hitting a British cruiser. In this
case, the bomb went all the way through the cruiser and detonated in the water
under her keel!)
After many heroics, Savannah, for a time in a sinking condition without
power, made it to Malta. Since the British, too, had a cruiser put out of
action by a radio controlled bomb, two cruisers were ordered into the Salerno
action area in relief. One of the relief ships ordered up from Malta was the
cruiser HMS Penelope, with whom Edison later would put in many hours of work.
The U.S. cruisers Boise and Philadelphia used 70% of their ammo during the
9-15 September period. Ammo for the cruisers was so tight, the destroyer USS
Gleaves was ordered to Malta to bring back some of Savannah's 6" ammunition.
And before the beachhead had really been secured, not only had the U.S. 36th
and 45th Divisions been fully committed, but the 34th was to receive its
baptism of fire and the 3rd was ordered up from Sicily. Important elements of
the 82nd airborne also helped turn the tide.
While there were countermeasures ships at Salerno, notably the U.S.
Destroyer Escorts, Herbert C. Jones and Frederick C. Davis, these were
"getting their feet wet" so to speak, and I will go into some detail on what
they managed to accomplish against radio controlled weapons and other German
air tactics, in Chapter Nine on Anzio.
From Morison, Volume IX, page 296, a statement provided by the German
Marshal Kesselring, "On 16 September, in order to evade the effective shelling
from warships, I authorized a disengagement on the coastal front....."
Kesselring, though, had managed necessary withdrawals so effectively, and
had shown such an intestinal willingness to dispute every inch of ground, that
he was chosen by Hitler over Rommel stationed in the north of Italy to
continue this dogged defense. Morison reasoned that had Rommel been under
Kesselring's command during the Salerno beachhead battle, that Rommel's
available divisions could have turned the tide in the German's favor and the
Allies thrown back into the sea. For their part, in late September, the Allies
missed many opportunities to interfere with the German evacuations of Sardinia
and Corsica, where important German forces got out to help hold the Allies on
a line north of Naples. Available French and Italian sea forces, under Allied
direction, could have made those evacuations troublesome for the Germans.
Enemy Submarine Action
The U-boats were not finished with their favorite targets, U.S. destroyers.
The USS Buck was patrolling at the north end of the Gulf of Salerno on 8
October. Pursuing an active radar contact, Buck was torpedoed by U-616 forward
of her stack (she was a one-stacker). She went down in about four minutes with
loss of life exacerbated by depth charge explosions. (Buck's XO was LCDR G. S.
Lambert. As Edison's Gunnery Officer, "Beppo" Lambert had been an active
proponent of Edison's defined policy to leave depth charges on "safe" except
during actual pursuit of a submarine. My belief, therefore, is that Buck's
"pattern" was set because she was on an attack run against a submarine.)
Obviously, Buck had neither the time nor most likely the personnel or
equipment left to send an SOS. Waterlogged survivors welcomed three rafts
dropped by an Army transport at mid morning on October 9. The USS Gleaves was
attracted by a Very pistol flare late on the 9th. Only 94 out of 260 had
survived when the USS Plunkett and a British LCT arrived shortly after.
The photo above was furnished by Jack Dacey whose Uncle was lost on the USS
Buck.
The following information was furnished in a phone call on 12/28/97 by
Helmuth Timm, MM1/c, a survivor of the sinking of the USS Buck.
" It was between 11 p.m. and midnight on 8 October when we were
hit. I was in the after engine room. She sank fast. I barely had time to
kick my shoes off and get in the water with my life jacket on. The magazines
did not go off but a 600 pound depth charge off the rack at the stern did go
off as the hull sank, and caused death or severe concussion to men in the
water. I watched my Chief Petty Officer, P.U. Baker, sink below the waves.
After being in the water a long time, I was picked up late the next night. I
was taken to the hospital at Palermo and later to one in North Africa. I was
in the hospital about three months. I had a severe concussion and double
pneumonia. Dugan, our Chief Water Tender was in the hospital with me. Pete
Kielar, MM1/c, another survivor, has been in touch with me. I believe our
skipper, LCDR Klein, who was lost in the sinking, received the Navy Cross
for the sinking of that Italian submarine."
Mr. Timm recalled a Commander Durgin who was for a time the Squadron
Commander of DesRON 13 during early Mediterranean duty but did not recall
Captain Heffernan, who was ComDesRON 13 in the earlier North Atlantic convoys
described in Chapter Four. It is quite likely that Commodore Heffernan's tour
did not overlap Helmuth Timm's. ( E. R. "Eddie" Durgin, not to be confused
with his brother Calvin T. Durgin, who was skipper of the USS Ranger at
Casablanca, was relieved as ComDesRON 13 by CDR Harry Sanders on September 15,
1943. By this date, the DesRON 13 flag was no longer on the USS Buck but was
on the USS Woolsey, DD437.) I found Mr. Timm very alert during our phone
conversation but he protested, as do all of us at "our age", that he has
difficulty remembering names. Mr. Timm is 82 and spoke from his son-in-law's
home. His son-in-law is James Lingafelter, who assisted greatly in making this
telephone call possible.
U-616