Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book

 - Class of 1945

Page 68 of 144

 

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 68 of 144
Page 68 of 144



Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 67
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Page 68 text:

.4 lap rnerchantrnan at Manila takes one on its fantail disable the flight deck and prevent the scheduled strikes from leaving, ordered a water landing ahead of a screening destroyer. The answer came back: ullight arm wounded. Hatch fouled. Will not be able to open cockpit cover. Comdr. Taylor spoke quickly to the Admiral. 'cltis sui- cide, sir, for that boy to land out there. l'll take the respon- sibility for the flight deckfi Even as Admiral Davison assented, the cool voice on the radio spoke: cclfnough gas for this circle only. Can you give me a green llag?7' Franklinls engines churned full speed. and a forty knot gale swept the deck as the captain held her into the wind. The green flag went up. Every man on the ship watched with bated breath for they knew the danger of that landing to ship and plane. Fire-fighting crews, lirst aid men, damage control boys stood by. The men on the barriers were tense at their posts. Down glided the Hellcat in a beautiful approach. The tail- hook caught a wire and the plane slid along on its belly to rest gently against the first barrier. Lt. Johnson, with two lap planes to his credit, emerged shaken but ready to Hy again the next day. But that was the day, another of heavy air action over Manila, that Lt. Eric Magnussen, of Vir- ginia, Minnesota, probably the oldest combat pilot in the Navy, was missing in action. 'cMaggie, after shooting two Zekes down that day, headed his damaged Hellcat for Big Ben but was never seen again. Now, while the llattops pounded the Japanese bases in the l'hilippines, and the tempo increased to the fury of pre- invasion assault, the mighty fleet ol' transports. battle-ships, escort carriers, all the Seventh lfleet, drew near lmytf-. The historic moment arrived, on Uctober 2l st, l9llfl, as the troops of the Sixth Army poured ashore and the colors of Arnerica arose once more over the island where freedom had been crushed for three long years. A promise had been redeemed. Task Group 38.111 withdrew to refuel on October 22n:l. leaving the Luzon post to another force. This message from President Roosevelt to Admiral Halsey was received: NTlze country has followed with pricle the rnagnihcenl sweep of your fleet into enemy waters, in aclclilion to the gallant fighting of your fliers. We appreciate the ea- clurance anal super searnanslzip of your forces . . . To the officers anrl rnen of all services uflzo have carried the fglzt to the enemy-Well Done. Between October 9th and October 20th the task group had flown 1677 sorties over enemy targets, shot down l82 enemy aircraft, destroyed 197 on the ground, probably destroyed 87. It had lost twenty-three aircraft in combatg seventeen pilots and eleven aircrewmen were missing in action. lt had sunk 37 Japanese vessels larger than one thousand tons and badly damaged 38 others. Of these totals Big Ben's Air Group Thirteen had taken its full share. ,. r'-agp ' 'f i Q T ' .4-s S- jk lj ZX-X .A-:!Jx.x, A' x Rr N if Y ' ,S Nw my hw, xx I 'N

Page 67 text:

big ship heavily to port and the second bomb went off on the starboard side, close aboard, throwing a column of water over the ship and shaking the decks. The third bomb missed the port side twenty feet and before its concussion had subsided the fourth hit the corner of the deck-edge elevator. hurling hot steel and shrapnel in all directions. One Oscar was shot down by Big Ben's battery as he pulled out of his dive while the other went into a dogfight with the patrol. Shrapnel from the hit tore through the gallery deck, the island structure. and the mast. Signalman James Rogers, at his station on the flag bridge, was killed. Lt. tjgj Harmon R. Hudson. of the bomber squadron, and seaman William Taylor were inoitally wounded. Five other men were seri- ously hurt and later died, twenty-seven were injured. Under the direction of Comdr. Smith, Medical Department Head, the casualties were given first aid and the more seri- ously wounded were rushed to the sick bay. Aided by Drs. Fuelling and Fox and by Titus, Vober, Torneby, Mitchell, Mason, of the Medical Staff, all performed prodigiously that day. At least two men would have died had the surgeon's efforts been too little or too late. George Smith, radarman third class, at his battle station, a hundred feet from the hit, had been struck with a piece of shrapnel that tore through the half-inch steel bulkhead before completely piercing his side. Dr. Fox, without hesitation, working through the rag- ged hole in the man's side, removed several feet of riddled intestines, joined the ends which the damaged section had bridged, cleaned and stitched the wound. Within two weeks George Smith was back on watch, proud of his Purple Heart. Lt. Hoy, a torpedo plane pilot, struck in the temple and in the spine with shrapnel, lay dying on his cot in the quiet room that night. Three large blood clots were forming on his brain, beneath the shattered bone. Dr. Fox, who de- claimed knowledge of uanything from the neck up, watched the agonized man for five hours when he could take time from the dozens of wounded in the nearby sick bay. Then, when it seemed as though Lt. Hoy had breathed his last, Dr. Fox reached a decision. lnto the ship's operating room the pilot was wheeled by anxious pharmacist's mates. Instead of anesthesia an oxygen mask was used to keep the wounded man alive. For two hours the doctor labored, cutting through the damaged bone, removing the deadly clots which he had known must be there, then replacing the trepanned section. Lt. Hoy was alive two weeks later and transferred to a hos- pital ship, with a fighting chance for recovery. Fortunately the bomb hit had not knocked the flight deck out of commission. The deck edge elevator could be re- paired by Comdr. LeFavour,s shipfitters and Lt. Comdr. Greene's engineers. The bomb-laden strikes would continue to pour off toward the doomed Japs on Luzon. During the afternoon two more attacks were thrown at Task Group 38.4. From the northwest 50 Japanese planes appeared on the radars. A few minutes later a large group came into radar range from the southwest. Lt. Comdr. Brun- ing scrambled section after section of Hellcats, and the San Jacinto air patrol was already moving full speed to intercept the enemy groups. Within ten minutes 30 fighters were clos- ing in on the southern group and 20 fighters on the northern formation. In a precise interception at 50 miles the southern Japs were brought to battle. Not a Nip escaped.. Reports from the airmen came through: Splash two Zekesf' Splash an Oscar, MSplasl1 a Betty. The northern group was intercepted at 60 miles while it attempted to execute an encircling maneuver. It fled in panic, Hellcats of the Thirteenth charging in victoriously to knock down a dozen of the Japanese before the formation escaped when American gas ran low. On Big Ben all hands breathed a sigh of relief and grati- tude to the boys of Fighting Thirteen. In CIC Lt. David Al- len, Evaluation Officer, was busy until late that night tabu- lating reports from the other air groups for a final tally of the dayis work. 84 Japanese planes had spun into the water, shattered by American steel. Big Ben's guns had accounted for one and her fighters had shot down 29. The Enterprise air group had knocked down 27, with the remainder going to the smaller airgroups on the San Jacinto and Belleau Wood. Heavy strikes were again launched at the Manila Bay area on October 16th, concentrating on shipping. The Japanese defenders strove desperately to protect the ships which were the life-blood of their Empire. Oscar and Zeke fighters trail- ed returning strikes, hoping to pick off cripples, or circled above the oncoming formations of carrier planes, striving to draw off fighter escorts so that other Zekes could pick off unprotected dive-bombers and torpedo planes. Sometimes this worked and then the gunners in the Avengers and Hell- divers had opportunity to show their mettle. A number of them were credited with shooting down Jap fighters. Yet at day's end the hulks of half-sunken ships dotted the shallow water of Manila Harbor and clouds of smoke poured from the stricken installations. That night 30 of the Enterprise planes striking Manila lost their way in the dusk. They were heard on the radio and finally located, but when they had been directed to the task group it was dark and many had barely enough gas to land aboard. It was urgent to get them down, every carrier in the force advised the Big E that they were ready to commence landing operations. As the tired warbirds came down to the dim-lit flight decks pathetic messages could be heard on the radio: 'This is Beaver Two. Am making water landing. Outf, Gas enough for one more circle. Can you give me a flag, please?7' One Helldiver, blinded in the darkness, fiew full into the side of the Belleair Wood and exploded. Half a dozen others crashed in the sea and the indefatigable de- stroyers commenced searching for survivors. Big Ben took eight planes aboard, the pilots and air- crewmen stumbled out, exhausted. It had been trying for all hands while those big black planes were bumping down on the flight deck in the dark. The Big E was grateful: We thank you for your prompt response to emergency Wednes- day night. Your close cooperation much appreciated? On the next day occurred another incident that might have had tragic consequences. Lt. J. B. Johnny', Johnson, of Fighting Thirteenth, was wounded over the target and the landing gear of his Hellcat so badly damaged that it could not be lowered. He came back with his strike, barely enough gas to make the ship, and requested permission to make a crash landing on deck. Admiral Davison, knowing that might



Page 69 text:

CHAPTER EIGHT . . . 1'll l1Ul,'6'l'f0I'Qf'1 1011111 1110 rfrzptain told us the other everziirzgg and I guess 1 zvorft let my 2'l'lIlIlll'llll!l1'f'II. 01'0'Pl, eitlier . . . Anil 1 cloriil l1Li1z1f man ' o us . . as 1 will ever forget 111111 ,111p named Una, the little yellow pilot that laid his Zeke on our jliglzt declf. But 111111 c1ia'n't stop Big Ben . . . 7, BATTLE FOR LEYTE GULF Amiinxi. D.xv1soN's 1-'LXGSHIIL Franlrlin, and the ships of Task Group 38.4 withdrew to the westward on October 22nd to replenish supplies since bombs were low and the supply of torpedoes nearly exhausted. Task Groups 38.2 and 38.3 were now in the seas off Luzon and Leyte, supporting the doughboys of the Sixth Army. Task Group 38.1, with the brand-new carrier Ticonderoga. was on a course from Ulithi to the Philippines. Admiral Halsey knew that the next move was up to the Japanese Navy. The airfields for a thousand miles north of Leyte were out of commission for weeks and the important Philippines' bases were under daily attack from carrier bombers. The vital shipping lanes over which reinforcements must come to Yamashita's soldiers were under constant at- tack. Within a few weeks new airfields hacked from the Leyte jungles would bc havens for the land-based Fifth and Thir- teenth Army Air Forces. If the Philippines-and the Fm- pire-were to be saved it was up to the big, black battle- wagons and Hat-tops of the Imperial Navy to smash the American Fleet. Their aim must be to isolate the 200,000 in- vading Yankee soldiers so the defending Nipponese Army could cut them to pieces. The Japanese plan of battle was simple in conception and held the threat of disaster to the American forces It w as the old pmcer movement From the northern tip of Luzon to the southern end of Nlindanao there are a thousand miles of island dotted ocean the Philippine Archipelago There are two passavfs by which a fle t mtv it cross the island chain Suia aio Straits be x ecn Levte Gulf and the South China Sea the Strait of oa'1 Be nardnto b s c '1 Luzon an' .iamar 100 rules norti o cvte Gull e 1, s of Am mica tra s l now .x ne alan r s 1 fruisci .1 If rcenn s xfrs u c oi , I H tr ins io s e la 'intl irmatrn urizlo and 'llususlu t lt old r matt esn is with '1 do7cn stroyf r d tr n ffllllf rs x our f rlu I ir Ju in SCI r1irr ino Strat d rut s y Jdflf'9f llrf lt J ldll 19111 I Ullr fdrrll TS Flu rut ers and tx flf'-lfljyff would procerd southward rom afan and lay 1 hundrefl fTlllfS to thf west of l eytc support lf 1 the itlier two llf-ft bv drawinff off iny Amerif in farm r assaults. Probably the Japanese admiral expected some as- sistance from land-based aircraft in the Philippines. It was a desperate gamble of a Navy for an Empire. Weighed against it in the scales of war were the Third and Seventh United States Fleets. During the night of October 23rd the fateful word flashed to Big 13en's radio room from submarines in the China Sea that the Japanese Navy was on the move and that strong units of the enemy fleet were approaching the Philippines. Task Group 38.4 wheeled and steamed westward, flank speed. At dawn ten search-attack groups, six Hellcats and six bomb- ers to a team, were thrown west. Four of the assault teams came from Big Ben. Over a radius of 325 miles they ranged, covering the island areas and waterways of southern Samar, northern Leyte, Cebu, Negros, and Panay. No major forma- tion of the enemy fleet were sighted, but near Pucio Point. Panay. two destroyers and a cruiser were located. Lt. Dick Harding and Lt. uFatsi' Miller joined their attack groups and thundered down to hit the laps with rockets, bombs, and machine gun fire. The cruiser heeled over and sank. The destroyers were blazing and listing heavily when the attack ended. l.ater in the day main units of the Japanese Second Fleet welt si htecl TTIOXIIIU throuoh Tablas Straits 150 miles from fl lap 111 slroyrr 1111 I9 slzalcrn ln Il closf ont rom one 0 13144, 11111 9 91117111 uflneh plants October 24111 - ., 1 . . 4 - F f 5- g K '77 - ' 1 ' C . , f xi. g 2. ' Y . 0 . , . . l . W N . , Q . gi - C. ., , K, ' ' . ' t 1 ' ' s , , fl . r . etr c, CF , t 1' ,. l f L 4' ' P. where til li 'n:lr.v-': 1 .fr ,'1i -nupoiis anil supply s lips s l' y. T' , J I ese Ifi .11 Fleet, two llC1l1lGfS'l1lJ.'. half a doggcii 5 :jfs '1 l st 1 7' g fif!.'iTOJ'? .i, wo l l force its way tfzr igli the fiuraeaio Strait.: and fall upon the z aj rl: Th , ' pa esf Second lflcrrt, two sur :S -l ' tl fsl 'pr:. the l' , r ', f.'ri' .e l ' l,.il'1.'. ' 1 .P dei 'e s an f : '.L: .1 '. Il l 2 l 1 gib l -2 .' n ller- ' l' .' Qs, an 1 . l,eyte'.1 feuppl' line to Ulitlii. The 181 ' .. f Tl ' l lflcet, wr l' .lf.1 ls, f t' 't iglil fi 'sc ,.' s' fs. ' :ff .' . '. f e- 1' ' ' 'f , fl- 2 if U I , .7', 7.1. .- if i .2 if 1 lf, 1, ,fel rw 2 ,117 , I 'L..' 'I f'.... 1 1

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