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Page 47 text:
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. 1 V u ' ' X V wh- I ' ' -' ' -' Qdensfif mt, , , -,W , 1x4 -S A ., mmwb, K M.. ,. . v---v----------------v-'k X-4vvv-vwwvww-vvwvv Arkansas had at last fired her opening salvo into this war of Shickelgruberls. Through my binoculars, I could see occasional gun flashes from the crests of the cliffs, just aft the port beam. As I trained the glasses over to the area of one Hash, I saw a great cloud of dirty gray smoke and Hame burst, which I later learned had spelled the doom of that battery. We were to see all of them blasted one by one out of existence. Later, as we moved nearer to the beach, we could see the twisted remains of the guns and the piles of rubble that were the shattered pillboxes. I happened to glance at the main batteries and noted that they were training to port. I moved the crews to the leeward side and shortly after heard the word passed, mln one minute the main battery will fire to port !'l A few seconds later, the entire ship shuddered as the big guns thundered their reply to the paperhanger's boast H. . . To- morrow the world I We were prepared for a shock, having experienced main battery firing in practice. However, we had neglected to take into consideration the extra powder charge that ac- companies service ammunition, and we were in- deed literally raised off our feet. .jr ..,, THE ARKY Our target was a heavily fortified gun em- placement. After the first spot, the word came back from the spotting plane that the target was destroyed, and so it was to continue throughout our firing - mission accomplished. A small coastal village, bristling with enemy ammunition dumps, antiaircraft batteries, tanks and troops was to feel the impact of our fire. An inland city was to be fairly blasted out of existence for har- boring enemy troops and supplies. Deadly ac- curate was our fire, and devastating to Nazi troop concentrations, tank columns, fortified houses, and ammunition and fuel dumps which we were called upon to destroy. So accurate, in fact, that from our radio transmitter room, where the oper- ators had been monitoring German broadcasts, came word that a Nazi broadcaster had dubbed us the HDevil Ship, and that the Luftwaffe were out to wget usf, We were to later learn that they were quite serious in their threat, for the repeated air attacks made upon us were quite often the cause of some hair-raising experiences. I I shall never forget a little side show that was performed before our admiring eyes by a plucky little destroyer that had chosen a war all of her own with an enemy observation post and gun em- placement just at the crest of the cliffs off our beam. The Can was incredibly close to the beach, moving parallel with it like a scrappy little dog, stalking back and forth, looking for a fight. Each time the shore battery would open up, the can would reply with everything she had, from five-inch batteries to twenty millimetre machine guns. Someone, watching the scrap, said he would bet even the skipper was out on the bridge, shooting with his forty-five, and it looked just like that. The shore battery scored several near misses ---,------v----v-.AJx.vv,4 5-'V4V15-,-.vwvvw-vvvwv-vv l. .QX 'A' ,Ffh . ., -I ' me - ' 'gnu' - g- I-,A---A-4.-... Vgfkfigfi ' ' iv. 1 . V iff' ' A if . ,
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Page 46 text:
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Page 48 text:
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