Shangri La (CV 38) - Naval Cruise Book

 - Class of 1946

Page 46 of 140

 

Shangri La (CV 38) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 46 of 140
Page 46 of 140



Shangri La (CV 38) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 45
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radar picked up three lost Marine fighter planes from Yontan Airfield and vec- tored them in to the task group. Although they had never made carrier landings before, they were directed to safety to the Yorktown, where, without enough gas to take a wave-off, they bounced to a stop on Rear Admiral Radford's flagship. The Okinawa Target CAP had a field day May 4th, when the CAP leader took his twelve Corsairs to grips with a larger force of enemy planes. Shangri-La planes accounted for five Zekes, five twin-float biplanes, and three Petes in a furious dogfight witnessed by cheering ground troops. Two Shangri-La planes were shot down over the water but rescued by Dumbo and a patrol vessel. Half- way 'round the world, Germany gave up in Holland and northwestern Germany. Stepping up ground support attacks, the carrier air groups blasted away at the enemy's Siegfried Line on the south banks of the Asa River, while the Sixth Marine Division moved in on the opposite bank. During the early morn- ing hours of May 10th, the Tenth Army bridged the Asa River and forced their way to the outskirts of Naha, capital of Okinawa. Clinging tenaciously to each foot of ground, the Japanese defenders fell back to secondary entrenchments. Sugar Loaf Hill withstood eleven costly marine attacks before collapsing. The renewed activity ashore brought enemy planes to the front again-the CAP between Tokuno and Tori Shima knocked down nine Zekes in a single patrol. Two Kamikazes slipped through the CAP over Task Group 58.3 to crash into the Bunk-er Hill, flagship of Admiral Mitscher and staff. Striking in the midst of planes loaded for a sweep against Okinawa ground troops, the enemy planes .detonated many high-explosive bombs and fuel tanks. Flames and smoke mushroomed skyward in full view of the Shangri-La in a neighboring task group, miles away. Many of the Admiral's staff were killed in the ensuing explosions or trapped in flag quarters on the gallery deck as gasoline-fed flames gained headway against the valiant efforts of the Bunker Hill crew. Pulling out of the formation to fight for her life, she managed to transfer Admiral Mitscher and the surviving members of his staff to an accompanying destroyer for further transfer to the Randolph. ' The morning sun found the Shangri-La, with twenty-five flags on her island scoreboard, headed south and east for Ulithi to receive Admiral John S. McCain aboard as Commander Second Carrier Force Pacific. Between operations many Isaac Waltons found time to wet a line in the clear waters of the lagoon. Others headed toward Mog Mog atoll for beer parties and steak fries on the coral beaches. Par from a travel-folder tropical paradise, the atoll provided a welcome release from drills, watches, and steel decks. Swimming parties and baseball games were organized for the few, fleet- ing hours of play in the midst of war. Returning to the ship in the crowded landing craft of the Atoll Command, they spread to remote- corners with paper in hand for a quick letter home on the next eastbound plane. p



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Fighter burns after crash landing. OPERATION T wo. ' Admiral McCain's force sortied Ulithi on May 24th, under the old Task Group 58.4 designation, and laid a course for the operating area off Okinawa. Joining up with the fueling units off Okinawa, the force combined with Task Group 58.3, Admiral Mitscher's First Carrier Task Force. While other units fueled and provisioned from supply ships, Admiral Mitscher transferred from the Randolph to a destroyer and thence to the Shangri-La by means of a boatswain's chair suspended between the two ships as they steamed in formation. Retiring to Admiral lVlcCain's sea cabin, the two famous, winged warriors exchanged plans and information before the formal change of com- mand and fleet designation. Task Force 58 was officially changed to Task Force 38 at midnight, May 27th. During the mid-watch the strong, friendly forces began to- appear in the southeastern sector of the Shangri-La radar grid. By sunrise the screen was filled with orderly pips as lookouts made out the big Missouri, flagship of Admiral W. F. Halsey, surrounded by the remaining units of the Third Fleet. fupper leftj Navy air strikes at Okinawa. fcenter leftl Iwo Beach after assault. flower left? Battleship Wisconsin at sea.

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