This is a
l o n g read, but very
interesting.
A BIZARRE BIT OF U.S.
NAVAL HISTORY ABOUT WHICH MOST AMERICANS KNOW “ZILCH”
by Kit Bonner, Naval Historian From
November 1943, until her demise in June 1945, the
American destroyer USS William D. Porter (DD-579) was often hailed
- whenever she entered port or joined other Naval ships - with the
greetings: "Don't shoot, we're
Republicans!"
For a half a century, the US Navy kept a lid on the
details of the incident that prompted this salutation. A Miami
news reporter made the first public disclosure in 1958 after he
stumbled upon the truth while covering a reunion of the destroyer's
crew. The Pentagon reluctantly and tersely confirmed his story,
but only a smattering of newspapers took notice.
In
1943, the 'Willie D' as the Porter was nicknamed, accidentally fired
a live torpedo at the battleship USS Iowa (BB-61) during a practice
exercise. As if this weren't bad enough, the Iowa was carrying
President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the time, along with Secretary
of State, Cordell Hull, and all of the country's WWII military
brass. They were headed for the Big Three Conference in Tehran,
where Roosevelt was to meet Stalin and Churchill.
Had the Porter's
torpedo struck the Iowa at the aiming point, the last 60 years of
world history might have been quite different. The Porter was one of hundreds
of assembly line destroyers built during the war. They mounted
several heavy and light guns, but their main armament consisted of
10 fast-running and accurate torpedoes that carried 500-pound warheads. This
destroyer was placed in commission on July 1943 under the command of Cdr Wilfred
Walker, a man on the Navy's fast career track.
In the months before she
was detailed to accompany the Iowa across the Atlantic in November 1943, the
Porter and her crew learned their trade, experiencing the normal problems that
always beset a new ship and a novice crew.
The mishaps grew more serious
when she became an escort for the pride of the fleet, the big new battleship
Iowa. The night before they left Norfolk, bound for North Africa,
the Porter accidentally damaged a nearby sister ship when she
backed down along the other ship's side and her anchor tore down the other
ship's railings, life rafts, ship's boat and various other formerly valuable
pieces of equipment. The 'Willie D' merely had a scraped
anchor, but her career of mayhem and mishaps had just begun.
Just twenty
four hours later, the four-ship convoy, consisting of Iowa and her
secret passengers, the 'Willie D', and two other destroyers,
were under strict instructions to maintain complete radio silence.
Since they were going through a known U-boat feeding ground, speed
and silence were the best defense.
Suddenly, a tremendous explosion rocked the convoy. All
of the ships commenced anti-submarine warfare maneuvers. This
continued until the Porter sheepishly admitted that one of her depth charges had
fallen off her stern and exploded. The 'safety' had not been
set as instructed. Cdr Walker was watching his fast track career become
side-tracked.
Shortly thereafter, a freak wave inundated the ship,
stripping away everything that wasn't lashed down. A man washed
overboard and was never found. Next, the fire room lost power in
one of its boilers.
The Captain, at this point, was making reports almost
hourly to the Iowa about the Porter's difficulties. It would have
been merciful if the force commander had detached the hard luck
ship and sent her back to Norfolk. But, no, she sailed on.
The morning
of 14 November 1943 dawned with a moderate sea and pleasant weather. The Iowa
and her escorts were just east of Bermuda, and the president and his guests
wanted to see how the big ship could defend herself against an air attack. So,
the Iowa launched a number of weather balloons to use as anti-aircraft targets.
It was exciting to see more than 100 guns shooting at the balloons,
and the President was proud of his Navy.
Just as proud was Adm Ernest J.
King, the Chief of Naval Operations; large in size and by demeanor, a true
monarch of the sea.
Disagreeing with him meant the end of a naval career.
Up to this time, no one knew what firing a torpedo at him would
mean. Over on the 'Willie D', Cdr Walker watched the fireworks display
with admiration and envy.
Thinking about career redemption and breaking
the hard luck spell, the Captain sent his impatient crew to battle stations.
They began to shoot down the balloons the Iowa had missed as they drifted into
the Porter's vicinity.
Down on the torpedo mounts, the crew watched,
waiting to take some practice shots of their own on the big
battleship, which, even though 6,000 yards away, seemed to blot out
the horizon. Torpedomen Lawton Dawson and Tony Fazio were among
those responsible for the torpedoes. Part of their job involved
ensuring that the primers were installed during actual combat and
removed during practice. Once a primer was installed, on a command to fire, it
would explode shooting the torpedo out of its tube. Dawson, on this particular morning, unfortunately
had forgotten to remove the primer from torpedo tube #3. Up on the bridge, a
new torpedo officer, unaware of the danger, ordered a simulated firing.
"Fire 1, Fire 2," and finally, "Fire 3."
There was no Fire 4 as the sequence was interrupted by an unmistakable
whooooooshhhhing sound made by a successfully launched
and armed torpedo. Lt H. Steward Lewis, who witnessed the entire event, later
described the next few minutes as what hell would look like if it ever broke
loose.
Just after he saw the torpedo
hit water on its way to the Iowa and some of the most prominent
figures in world history, Lt Lewis innocently asked the Captain,
"Did you give permission to fire a torpedo?"
Captain Walker's reply will not ring down through naval history,
although words to the effect of Farragut's immortal 'Damn the
torpedoes' figured centrally within.
Initially there
was some reluctance to admit what had happened, or even to warn the Iowa. As
the awful reality sunk in, people began racing around, shouting conflicting
instructions and attempting to warn the flagship of imminent
danger.
First, there was a flashing light warning about the torpedo
which unfortunately indicated the torpedo was headed in another
direction.
Next, the Porter signaled that the torpedo was going reverse
at full speed!
Finally, they decided to break the strictly
enforced radio silence. The radio operator on the destroyer
transmitted "Lion (code for the Iowa), Lion, come
right." The Iowa operator, more concerned about
radio procedure, requested that the offending station identify
itself first.
Finally, the message was received and the Iowa began
turning to avoid the speeding torpedo.
Meanwhile, on the
Iowa's bridge, word of the torpedo firing had reached FDR, who asked that his
wheelchair be moved to the railing so he could see better what was coming his
way. His loyal Secret Service guard immediately drew his pistol as if he was
going to shoot the torpedo. As the Iowa began evasive maneuvers, all of her
guns were trained on the Porter. There was now some thought that the Porter was
part of an assassination plot.
Within moments of the warning, there was a
tremendous explosion just behind the battleship. The torpedo had
been detonated by the wash kicked up by the battleship's increased
speed.
The crisis was over and so was Cdr Walker's career. His
final utterance to the Iowa, in response to a question about the
origin of the torpedo, was a weak, "We did
it."
Shortly thereafter, the brand new destroyer, her Captain and
the entire crew were placed under arrest and sent to Bermuda for
trial. It was the first time that a complete ship's company had
been arrested in the history of the US Navy.
The ship was
surrounded by Marines when it docked in Bermuda, and held there several days as
the closed session inquiry attempted to determine what had
happened.
Torpedoman Dawson eventually confessed to having inadvertently
left the primer in the torpedo tube, which caused the launching.
Dawson had thrown the used primer over the side to conceal his mistake. The
whole incident was chalked up to an unfortunate set of circumstances and placed
under a cloak of secrecy.
Someone had to be punished. Cdr Walker and
several other Porter officers and sailors eventually found themselves in obscure
shore assignments. Torpedoman Dawson was sentenced to 14 years hard labor.
President Roosevelt intervened; however, asking that no punishment be meted out
for what was clearly an accident.
The Porter was banished to the upper
Aleutians. It was probably thought this was as safe a place as any for the ship
and anyone who came near her.
She remained in the frozen north for almost
a year, until late 1944, when she was re-assigned to the Western
Pacific. However, before leaving the Aleutians, she accidentally
left her calling card in the form of a five-inch shell fired into the front yard
of the American Base Commander, thus rearranging his flower garden
rather suddenly.
In December 1944, the Porter joined the Philippine
invasion forces and acquitted herself quite well. She distinguished herself by
shooting down a number of attacking Japanese aircraft. Regrettably, after
the battle, it was reported that she also shot down three American
planes. This was a common event on ships, as many gunners, fearful
of kamikazes, had nervous trigger fingers.
In April 1945, the Porter was
assigned to support the invasion of
Okinawa. By this time, the greeting "Don't Shoot,
We're Republicans" was commonplace and the crew of
the 'Willie D' had become used to the ribbing.
But the crew of
her sister ship, the USS Luce (DD-522), was not so polite in
its salutations after the Porter accidentally riddled her side
and superstructure with gunfire.
On 10 June 1945, the
Porter's hard luck finally ran out. She was sunk by a plane which
had (unintentionally) attacked it from underwater. A Japanese
bomber made almost entirely of wood and canvas slipped through the Navy's
defense.
Having little in the way of metal surfaces, the plane didn't
register on radar. A fully loaded kamikaze, it was headed for a
ship near the Porter, but just at the last moment veered away and
crashed alongside the unlucky destroyer. There was a sigh of
relief as the plane sunk out of sight, but then it blew up
underneath the Porter, opening her hull in the worst possible
place.
Three hours later,
after the last man was off, the Captain jumped to the safety of a
rescue vessel and the ship that almost changed world history
slipped astern into 2,400 feet of water. Not a single soul
was lost in the sinking. After everything else that happened, it
was almost as if the ship decided to let her crew off at the
end.
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