Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book

 - Class of 1945

Page 75 of 144

 

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 75 of 144
Page 75 of 144



Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 74
Previous Page

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 76
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 75 text:

l 1 E l i l l 1 l 4 l t l . l A t t See 'einif . . . That's the w ny to the cruisers. boys . . lie was flying down over the Jups. drawing their lire. and the bursts of flak in the evening sky directed the Anrerican warships to their targets. .-X brave man was llocket 77. Before the moon rose the last Japanese warship of tht group was on the muddy bottom of the llacilic. smashed by cruiser gunfire. As the task group steamed south. Jap de- struction complete to the north. the captain spoke solemnly and proudly to liig liens tense crew: You will never forget today. Today. October 25th, 19-1-l. we have defeated the Japanese Navy in one of the decisive sea battles of history . . Then he turned the speak-xr over to the fliers who had climbed from Franlrlinis deck. Vlfhen the men off watch that night rolled into their hunks they were as proud as Captain Shoemaker 4 they had put those planes in the air and kept 'em there . . . October 26111 was spent in contacting the tanker group and refueling. Nleantime complete reports were pouring in of the far-Hung Battle for Leyte Gulf. The Japanese Second Fleet, attacking Vice Admiral Kinkaidis escort carriers, withdrew at the last moment. after sinking the Gambier Bay, two de- stroyers. and three destroyer escorts. The Japanese admiral had reached his decision at 11 a.m. and steamed north to San Bernardino. passing through the strait at midnight, ev- ery ship in his squadron damaged by destroyer torpedoes or air attack. As the fast battleships of the United States Third Fleet passed the straits at 1:00 a.m. only one crippled Japanese cruiser lagged behind. It disintegrated so swiftly under thc sixteen-inch guns of the super-battleships that not until some of the stunned survivors were pulled out of the water was it known to be a cruiser and not a destroyer. To pursue the group of enemy warships into the heavily mined straits would be imprudent, so Admiral Halsey contented himself with launching heavy air assaults over the escape route through the islands. The Japanese force beaten in the Suragaio Straits had truly been annihilated. Only one crippled battleship made its way back into the Sibuyan Sea and it was sunk by air attack before Admiral Kinkaid could Htake a picture of the darn thingf: As a fighting force the Imperial Japanese Navy had ceased to exist. MacArthur,s heachheads were secure and no power on the face of the earth could stop Americafs re- conquest of the Philippines. Franklin and Task Group 38.4. steamed back to the Leyte area the next day, furnishing combat air patrol for the trans- ports in the Gulf. and launching search sweeps for Japanese warships still trying to escape. Sixteen Hellcats. each armed with a 500-pound bomb, located a cruiser of the Aoba class with two destroyers, south of the island of Mindoro. Four direct bomb hits and fourteen rockets were slammed into the cruiser. lt was left blazing, leaking steam, and listing heav- ily to port. The two destroyers were damaged. Half an hour later another hghter sweep, launched by the lfrttcrprise, ar- rived to hnish them off. The two destroyers were still there, one already abandoned by its crew. The cruiser was never seen again, almost certainly sent to the bottom by llig lierfs strike. The airmen from the llig AFI made strafing runs over the destroyers. leaving them both sinking. A Lt. f. B. Johnson, Corning through hatch on the Flight deck of the Franklin . . . fohnnfy's experiences were so numerous and unusual that Quentin Reynolds wrote him up in a Colliefs article During the 28th and 29th of October heavy calls were placed on the Fleet's fighter squadrons by MacArthur7s em- battled forces. Combat air patrol was flown over Leyte, and searches were conducted off the island of Samar for carrier pilots shot down in the previous actions. The Hellcats shot down eight Oscars and one Zeke which were trying to attack the transports in Leyte Gulf. Vlleather was rainy and the new- ly constructed airfields at Dulag and Tacloban on Leyte were in poor condition. Crack-ups were frequent on the muddy fields, and often grounded pilots were under bombing attack as the Japs continued to slip in groups of bombers to strike the invasion forces. On the evening of the 28th, six of Franklin's patrolling Hellcats attacked twelve Jap fighter planes at dusk. When the Oscars had been driven away, Big l3en's airmen were forced .rfs , , , Q j ,, ' V1 Flight rlcclt crews arming a dcclcloaa' . . . Note rockets being loaflcfl on llcllcats . . . Air Group I3 was one Of first to use this weapon against japanese

Page 74 text:

destroyers and the few planes of the escort carriers were putting up one of the most heroic battles of the war. Three of those destroyers and two destroyer escorts went to their deaths in the unequal struggle, but they did not die in vain. Months later, after the surrender of Japan, Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita, commander of the Japanese Second Fleet, confessed that, incredible as it may seem, his enemy fleet of two dozen major warships was turned back at 11:00 a.m. by damage suffered from the torpedoes of seven Ameri- ican destroyers escorting the baby flat-tops and bombs from the escort carrier's planes-as well as the fear of further attacks. Assault groups from other flat-tops of the Third Fleet were now over the stricken Japanese carrier group 300 miles north of Leyte Gulf, and 75 miles from Big Ben. By the end of an hour every carrier in the force was hard hit, burning, or on .'.f'?1'x 1' ' .-a'l +T: . f fi.,-Q, . .J f..,y,sa. , -, 357311 is ' 2 rzfirtir' 1 ' f Q . ,, Comdr. W. M. :'W'ild Billn Coleman, hard-flying skipper of Figfzting Thirteen, the bottom. Cruisers were flaming, the two old battleships and one cruiser were steaming frantically northward. The destroyers milled around aimlessly, some trying to pick up Japanese sailors, now floating in the sea by hundreds, The seven fast battlewagons of the Third Fleet, detached from the carriers, were straining ahead at thirty knots, eager to bring the Japs to a battle which could have but one con- clusion. At 10:00 a.m. came radar warning of a large flight of en- emy aircraft approaching, 100 miles to the south. These, it was learned later, were the Jap carrier planes that sent the Princeton to the bottom off Luzon the day before. They had landed on Luzon and were flying out to rejoin their carriers. 30 Hellcats roared south to meet them, but the Jap planes were evidently in radio contact with their fleet. Before the Hellcats sighted them, they reversed course and turned south out of range, apparently informed of the disaster to their floating bases. At noon, 150 more bombers and fighters took off from Big Benls flight deck to add to the destruction. But now the calls for aid from the south were urgent. Admiral flalsey turned the heavy new battleships, then only 40 miles from their quarry, with the carriers and destroyers of Task firoup 38.2 to aid the embattled baby flat-tops of the Sf5Vfiflfll filfifff. At 1:30 Franlclirtfs fourth strike cleared the deck. The Jap- anese ships were in a panic-stricken condition. Undarnaged vessels steamed desperately at high speed, on independent courses, in any direction to get out of range of the bombers. Damaged ships, listing heavily, circled wildly, all guns fir- ing, with no effort at mutual support. Here and there two or three destroyers, or a destroyer and a burning cruiser. steam- ed in formation using their guns to best advantage. It was a wild, desperate, confused battle. And it cost the dive-bomb ing squadron from Big Ben heavily, for Lt. John H. Finrow, a University of Washington boy, who had flown 31 missions, went down in his Helldiver with his gunner, Henry E. Borja, the lad his shipmates called HHank. Lt. fjgj D. A. Mcphie, recommended for the Navy Cross and two Air Medals, died that day with his gunner, B. D. Chandler, a boy from old Alabama. It would have been ffMac'sH last mission, had he returned. Yet there was one thing certain about that battle. Squad- ron after squadron of America's finest air groups kept fill- ing the sky above the fleeing Japanese. As soon as the air group of one carrier had delivered its attack, the planes of another would come flashing down to attack. Through the afternoon the battle continued. Even Comdr. Coleman, of Fighting Thirteen, could only shake his head in the ward- room that night and say, HI wouldnft have believed it if 1 hadn't been there. 1 don't know half what happened and 1 was there all day. Theyill never get all of this one in their history booksf' As evening drew near, two cruisers and a destroyer-one cruiser limping-were all that remained of the force. The two battleships, one damaged, with no destroyer escort, were 100 miles north, fleeing at their best speeds. They would run the gauntlet of a dozen American submarines posted in their path. That night a submarine reported five torpedo hits on one and when last seen it was dead in the water. Admiral Davison asked for any carrier with a dozen fighter planes and a clear flight deck to volunteer for a rocket-armed sweep to get one of the cruisers. Big Ben's flight deck was crowded with the last returning strike. but the Enterprise volunteered. Half an hour later the proud voice of the strike leader from the Big E could be heard over the radio: Hello, Badger. This is Dodger Four. Break out the beer. Wife just sank a cruiser. Badger was Admiral Davison's radio call. The Admiral answered personally: This is the Badger. himself. Great going. Well have the band waiting for von, Now, as the sun dipped into the sea on the Japmiesim lin- perial Navyis last day on the Pacific. cruisers from the Third Fleet drew near to hnish the cripples. The Air Coordinator. still flying over the scene. directed them to the targets. His voice could be heard on the radio. though the cruisers were not audible. The airman's voice was clear and cold. Can't see 'em. eh? Do you see me? f'Well, watch these black bursts now . .



Page 76 text:

to land as best they could on the airfield at Dulag while it was under attack. Later all made their way back to the ship. except Lt. tjgl Robert F. Brooks. One wheel of his Hellcat had been shot awayg he hailed out over Leyte Gull' near land. but was not found. It took twelve of them to get Bobby. . . . The same day, a sad one for Big Ben. Lt. Raymond B. Cookis Helldiver failed to return. Bay Cook, of Palmyra, N. Y., and his gunner, William B. Butler, of Cincinnati, Ohio. were marked missing. Also night fighter Wfarren Wolf, of White Plains, N. Y.. on being catapulted into the darkness to intercept a Jap bomber, spun directly into the sea. Wlarren. a handsome, cheerful boy, who grinned at danger, was car- ried under the water by his plane, of Lt. XVineger's three night chicks only one was left now-Tony Martin. A message from General MacArthur to the fleet on Oc- tober 29th said that the Army now ls established its air forces on Leyte and would assume all responsibility for bombing island targets. Navy planes would attack island targets only when permission had been obtained from the Army. However, during the following morning, there were numerous reports of enemy aircraft and the combat air patrol had been busy. None had closed within 30 miles of the task group, but the double watch was set on the guns. At 2:00 p.m. the radio room reported a fleet tanker force 50 miles away under air attack, Franklin at once launched twelve Hellcats to go to its aid. Hardly had they left the deck when a small group of lap planes, which thc- rfornhat patrol had been chasing for the last half-hour, appeared near the formation. They had originally been detected 75 miles to the northwest, high in the air, the combat air patrol, guided out to intercept, tailed to spot the rlf-r-f-pliu-ly camouflaged Japanese planes. All the way in to the ship the fighters had flown within a mile or two of the enemy. but unable to register a HTallyho. Now, at ten miles, they were visible to the task group, three or four thousand feet in the air. The destroyer Bagley, fueling alongside, cast off at 2:17 p.m. The cruisers and destroyers of the screen closed in tight around the carriers, Frrmklin, Enterprise, liellffau ll oofl. and San. facinto. The course was changed ninety degrees to the left, putting the attack on the sterns of the Hattops. Now. at six miles, every hve-inch in the formation opened up and the black bursts of exploding shells began to spot the sky around the Japs. Une minute later, two miles away. the six enemy planes nosed over in their dives. Two hundred forty mm. muzzles took up the battle and pepper-like dots covered the western sky. Finally the twenty's opened as the laps whipped close. A Judy bomber, in flames, dove at Big Ben and missed. crashing in the water amidships, starboard. His bombs and plane exploded on impact with the water and the big flat- top shook with the concussion. Now a Zeke came slanting I if Sl1.Il'I-lflv' plrnze lfzul IIIISSPII 11115 jus! expfmlerl in flu' ll'llfl'f by Big lien .... Aflzoflzer. in flurmzv, llmf 14-il! 1101 1n1.s.s, lrulllex flown nf ilu' fllgllf deck. will: Ffflllkll-II s gIllIIH'l'S .vfrzggirig ur lzifn r-wry incl: nf' ilu' zrvrv.

Suggestions in the Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book collection:

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 21

1945, pg 21

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 46

1945, pg 46

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 140

1945, pg 140

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 25

1945, pg 25

Franklin (CV 13) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 120

1945, pg 120

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.