Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/01/04

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Subject: Re: [Leica] very OT and LONG - Queen Mary 2 - now some Intrepid history
From: Seth Rosner <sethrosner@direcway.com>
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 12:21:55 -0500
References: <LOBBIECBCDAMJBIMKBDOEEIADCAA.gwpics@lycos.co.uk> <000d01c3cd7c$d68f9a40$7d38030a@sroffice> <3FEF61D0.7020008@shaw.ca>

Greg:

> I would like to cruise across the Atlantic on a passenger ship like the
> Queen Mary II someday.

far too big for my taste.

> The down side to an old sea salt (not me) is the new Queen Mary cannot
> be considered a "lucky ship" given the gangway collapse that killed 15
> or 16 people in France last month.

You are right about that. Curiously, my old ship, U.S.S. Intrepid, keel laid
Dec. 1, 1941 (!), launched April 26, 1943, commissioned Aug. 16, 1943, the
third of the WWII Essex class aircraft carriers, was considered a lucky ship
until 11 minutes past midnight 17 Feb 1944.

Warning: the lengthy account that follows is largely from the book, Twenty
Intrepid Years, her history published in 1963. Read on only if you have time
and interest. It is far longer than I meant.

On 17 February 1944, Intrepid was hit in her starboard quarter by a Japanese
torpedo, jamming her rudder. For some time she was incapable of being
steered, mainly because of the large "sail area" of a carrier. Her crew
devised a sail, literally, that enabled her to get back to Pearl Harbor and
drydock for temporary repairs by 24 February, then back to Hunter's Point
California for full repairs and return to combat in August.

By October 24, 1944, Intrepid had been continuously engaged in search and
destroy operations against elements of the Japanese Imperial Fleet. At 0812
that morning in Leyte Gulf, one of her aircraft located the Japanese Center
Force, 5 battleships including Admiral Kurita's flagship Yamato, the largest
battleship in the world, 2 cruisers and 15 destroyers. The pilot radioed
Admiral Halsey, commander of Task Force 38 and so began the Battle for Leyte
Gulf, the most significant naval battle of the Pacific war. On 29 October,
while Intrepid aircraft were attacking Japanese airfields on Luzon, a single
Japanese Jill bomber got through fighter cover and, while closing was
destroyed by anti-aircraft fire, nevertheless striking Intrepid's flight
deck from the starboard quarter, killing nine sailors manning a 20mm gun tub
there. On 25 November while engaged in a search and destroy for three heavy
cruisers, a Zeke got through the CAP - combat air patrol - and, badly
damaged, struck Intrepid's flight deck from astern, her 500 lb bomb piercing
the flight deck and exploded below deck in a pilot ready room. A second Zeke
approached from the port side and, destroyed by AA fire, did a wingover just
catching Intrepid's flight deck, her bomb also piercing the flight deck into
Hangar Bay #2. 65 officers and sailors were killed and Intrepid's aircraft
that had been engaged were diverted to other carriers. The attacks this day
on Intrepid and other carriers were the first real indication of the new
kamikaze tactics of trying to kill the American carriers with suicide
bombers (how that phrase now sounds). Intrepid returned to Pearl Harbor on
11 December for assessment of her damage. Most, looking at the extent of the
damage, were astonished that she had survived at all. She left Pearl on Dec
16 for Hunter's Point California, arriving on 20 December in time for
Christmas. Repairs were completed on February 11, 1945, shortly thereafter
she embarked Air Group 10, including for the first time a squadron of 36
F4U-1D Corsair fighter-bombers and stood out for Pearl Harbor, arriving
March 2. She then participated in the attacks designed to eliminate Japanese
air and sea capability on and around Okinawa and the Japanese home islands,
in preparation for the Okinawa landings. Kamikaze stuff was not over. On
March 18, while Intrepid aircraft were destroying 35 enemy aircraft at their
base, another Betty bomber approached her starboard quarter from astern; a
5-inch gun made a direct hit, taking off the plane's tail, splashing her
50-100 feet off Intrepid's starboard beam. The splash and her exploding
bombs showered Intrepid with debris and flaming gasoline but causing no
serious damage.

From 18 March to 16 April Intrepid's flight deck personnel averaged about 4
hours' sleep per 24 hours. On 7 April she located once again Yamato, the
68,000 ton dreadnought flagship of the Imperial fleet, and sank her (by way
of comparison, the American Iowa class battleships displaced, I seem to
recall, 45,000 tons). Intrepid's bomber squadron VB-10 dropped 27 bombs on
Yamato and her torpedo squadron VT-10 put a torpedo into Yamato's port side.

On 16 April Intrepid was again a kamikaze target. Four kamikaze aircraft
aimed at her were destroyed in the air; the fifth struck her flight deck
near elevator #3, starboardside aft. Her bomb pierced the flight deck and
exploded in the hangar bay, creating an enormous gasoline fire. Damage
control had the fires out in 50 minutes and happily no personnel losses but
40 aircraft were so badly damaged that they had to be jettisoned. Two
additional Zekes then approached on the starboard quarter to finish the
kamikaze job. Both were destroyed by Intrepid's anti-aircraft fire. Flight
deck repairs were accomplished with sufficient speed to allow Intrepid to
recover her own returning aircraft three hours later. There followed the
usual return to Hunter's Point for repairs. She sailed under the Golden Gate
Bridge on May 19. Repairs and trials were completed by mid-June and she
sailed again for Pearl Harbor on June 29, arriving July 5 and departing on
July 29 for Eniwetok, anchoring there on August 6 just after the attack on
Hiroshima.

Early on, Intrepid might have been called the Hungry "I" - after four direct
kamikaze hits that might well have destroyed lesser ships, she was for a
time called the Evil "I". She was also called "Drydock I" because of her
propensity to absorb enough damage to require extensive dry-dock repair.
Japanese fleet command had reported Intrepid sunk several times. It is said
that many Japanese naval officers called her a ghost as she kept coming back
from the dead. She was placed on inactive fleet status in December 1945.

All of that said, by the time I reported on board in October 1956, she had
been recommissioned and in service during the Korean conflict and was in
Brooklyn Navy Yard for a complete overhaul and conversion (angle-flight deck
and enclosed hurricane bow), following a Sixth Fleet cruise in the
Mediterranean. She was a very happy and lucky ship, several times winning
the "E" for Excellence given each year by COMAIRLANT, Commander Atlantic
Fleet, for excellence and safety. Owing to a fine Supply Officer, she was
also the best "feeder" in the Atlantic Fleet.

I apologize for having kept awake those of you who have read this far. Can't
imagine why I did this. Guess I just got started and it brought back lots of
recollections, not of this combat history of course but of my almost two
years aboard this great ship, now a museum in New York. Worth a visit too.

And I apologize again to B.D. if he's still with us in this post. And to
Jack, if necessary; and anyone else whom I may have offended, saving only
one.

Seth             LaK 9

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In reply to: Message from "Gerry Walden" <gwpics@lycos.co.uk> ([Leica] OT - Queen Mary 2)
Message from Seth Rosner <sethrosner@direcway.com> (Re: [Leica] OT - Queen Mary 2)
Message from "Greg J. Lorenzo" <gregj.lorenzo@shaw.ca> (Re: [Leica] OT - Queen Mary 2)