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Wahoo (SS 238)


Wahoo returned to Pearl Harbor from her sixth war patrol on 29 August 1943 with the dejected air peculiar to a highly successful submarine who suddenly could not make her torpedoes run true. In twenty-eight days away from port, seven of them spent in her assigned area in the Sea of Japan, Wahoo had expended ten torpedoes in nine attacks without inflicting any damage on the enemy. Her Skipper, Commander D. W. Morton, returned to port to have the torpedoes changed or checked, and requested that Wahoobe sent back to the Japan Sea for her seventh patrol.

On 9 September, Wahoo again departed Pearl. She topped off with fuel at Midway and left there on 13 September heading for the dangerous but important Japan Sea. Shortly afterwards, Sawfish left Midway and also headed for this area. Wahoo was to pass through Etorofu Strait, in the Kurile Islands, and La Perouse Strait, between Hokkaido and Karafuto, and enter the Japan Sea about 20 September. She was to head south and remain below 43 degrees north after 23 September, and below 40 degrees north after 26 September. Sawfish was to follow Wahoo, entering the Japan Sea about 23 September and patrolling the area north of Wahoo.

No transmission was received from Wahoo, either by any shore station or by Sawfish, nor was she sighted by Sawfish after she left Midway. She had orders to clear her area not later than sunset 21 October 1943, and to report by radio after passing through the Kurile Island chain enroute to Midway. This report was expected about 23 October, but Midway waited in vain. By 30 October, apprehension was felt for Wahoo's safety and an aircraft search along her expected course was arranged. When this revealed nothing, Wahoo was reported missing on 9 November 1943.

Although no transmission was received from Wahoo after her departure on patrol, the results of one of her attacks became known to the world via a Tokyo broadcast. Domei was quoted as reporting that on 5 October, a "steamer" was sunk by an American submarine off the west coast of Honshu near the Straits of Tsushima. It was said that the ship sank "after several seconds" with 544 people losing their lives. The submarine could have been none other than Wahoo: none other was operating in that area.

In reporting this broadcast, Time magazine of 18 October 1943 stated:

"KNOCK AT THE DOOR"

"In the rough Tsushima Straits where two-decker, train[s] carrying ferries ply between Japan and Korea, an Allied Submarine upped periscope, unleashed a torpedo. The missile stabbed the flank of a Jap steamer. Said the Tokyo radio: the steamer went down in 'seconds' with loss of 544 persons aboard.

"Fifty miles across at their narrowest, the Tsushima Straits are Japan's historic doors to the Asiatic mainland. Over them centuries ago Regent Hideyoshi's armada sailed to battle the Koreans and send home 38,000 enemy ears pickled in wine. Upon them in 1905 crusty Admiral Togo smashed the Russian Fleet. Presumably the submarine knocking at the door last week was American. It had achieved one of World War II's



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most daring submarine penetrations of enemy waters, a feat ranking with German G[ue]nther Prien's entry at Scapa Flow, the Jap invasion of Pearl Harbor, the U.S. raid in Tokyo Bay."

Information gleaned from Japanese sources since the cessation of hostilities indicates that an antisubmarine attack was made in La Perouse Strait on 11 October 1943. This was two days after Sawfish went through the Straits. Supplementary data on the attack of 11 October state, "Our plane found a floating sub and attacked it, with 3 depth charges." Sawfish was attacked here while making her passage, and that attack is not mentioned in Japanese records; the primary attacking agency in that case was a patrol boat, and about five depth charges were dropped. Thus it is safe to assume that the attack cited here was made on Wahoo, and is not the attack on Sawfish with an incorrect date. Both Tsushima Straits, where the attack on the steamer was made, and La Perouse Straits, through which Wahoo was to make good her exit from the Japan Sea, are known to have been mined. This despite the fact thatSawfish transited La Perouse on 9 October and reported no indications of mining. It is felt, however, that Wahoo succumbed to the attack referred to above, and not to a mine.

Wahoo was one of the Submarine Force's most valuable units during her six patrols, and her feats have become submarine legend. She sank 27 ships, totaling 119,100 tons, and damaged two more, making 24,900 tons, in the six patrols completed before her loss. Her patrolling career began in August 1942 in the Carolines. On this patrol Wahoo sank a freighter. Her second patrol was in the Solomons, and she sank a freighter. Wahoo conducted her third patrol in the Palau area. She sank two large freighters, a transport, a tanker, and an escort vessel. In addition, she entered Wewak harbor, on the north coast of New Guinea, seriously damaged a destroyer, which was later found beached there, and obtained reconnaissance data. For her fourth patrol, Wahoo went to the Yellow Sea west of Korea. Here she sank eight freighters, a tanker, a patrol craft and two sampans in March 1943.

Going to the Kurile chain for her fifth patrol, Wahoo sank two freighters and a large tanker, also doing damage to another freighter and a large (15,600 ton) aircraft transport. The sixth patrol of Wahoo was the disappointing one in the Japan Sea due to poor torpedo performance. Not one of the many attacks on merchantmen resulted in a torpedo hit; Wahoo's only sinkings were of three sampans by gunfire. Wahoo was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation for her third patrol. Commander Morion was considered one of the top notch officers in the Submarine Force, and the loss of this ship was an irreparable blow to the Service.



"Just sight,
track,
shoot
and
Sink!"

- D.W. Morton*

Japanese records now reveal that the following ships were sunk in the Sea of Japan shortly before Wahoo's loss: Tako Maru 2,958T., 25 Sept.; Konron Maru 7,903T., 1 Oct.; Kanko Maru l,288gt., 6 Oct.; and Kanko Maru 2,995gt., 9 Oct. Wahoo was the only submarine who could have sunk these ships.

*As quoted by Newsweek, 3 May 43.



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Submarine insignia.


U.S.S. Wahoo (SS-238)
Name Rate   Name Rate
Anders, Floyd
Andrews, Joseph S.
Bailey, Robert E.
Bair, Arthur I.
Berg, Jimmie C.
Brown, D.R.
Browning, Chester R.
Bruce, Clifford L.
Buckley, James P.
Burgan, William W.
Campbell, J.S.
Carr, William J.
Carter, James E.
Davison, William E.
Deaton, Lynwood N.
Erdey, Joseph S.
Fiedler, E.F.
Finkelstein, Oscar
Galli, Walter O.
Garmon, Cecil E.
Garrett, George C., Jr.
Gerlacher, Wesley L.
Goss, Richard P.
Green, Hiram M.
Hand, William R.
Hartman, Leon M.
Hayes, Dean M.
Henderson, R.N.
Holmes, William H. 
House, Van A.
Howe, Howard J.
Jacobs, Olin
*Jasa, Robert L.
Jayson, Juan O.
Johnson, Kindred B.
Keeter, Dalton C.
Kemp, Wendell W.
Kessock, Paul
Kirk, Eugene T.
Krebs, Paul H.
MM3
EM1
SC3
TM3
MM3
ENS
MoMM2
MoMM1
RM1
LT
ENS
CGM
RM2
MoMM1
TM1
EM3
LTJG
TM3
TM3
MoMM2
MoMM2
S2
MoMM1
LT
EM2
MM3
EM2
LT
EM1
S1
EM3
MoMM1
MM3
Ck3
TM1
CMoMM
GM1
F1
S1
SM3
    Lape, Arthur D.
Lindemann, Clarence A.
Logue, Robert B. 
Lynch, Walter L.
MacAlman, Stuart E.
MacGowen, Thomas J.K.
Magyar, Albert J.
Manalisay, Jesus C.
Mandjiak, Paul a.
Massa, Edward F.
Maulding, Ernest C.
Maulding, George E.
McGill, Thomas J.
McGilton, Howard E.
McSpadden, Donald J.
Mills, Max L.
Misch, G.A.
Morton, Dudley W.
Neel, Percy
O'Brien, Forest L.
O'Neal, Roy L.
Ostrander, Edwin E.
Phillips, Paul F.
Rennels, Juano L.
Renno, Henry
Seal, Enoch H., Jr.
Simonetti, Alfred R.
Skjonsby, Verne L.
Smith, Donald O.
Stevens, George V.
Terrell, William C.
Thomas, William 
Tyler, Ralph O.
Vidick, Joe
Wach, Ludwig J.
Waldron, Wilbur E.
Ware, Norman C.
Whipp, Kenneth L.
White, William T.
Whitting, Roy L.
F1
S1
FC1
F1
PhM1
MoMM1
MM3
St3
MM3
S1
TM3
TM3
CMoMM
TM3
TM1
RT1
LTJG
CDR-CO
TM2
EM1
EM3
MM3
SC1
SC2
S1
TM2
SM2
LCDR-XO
EM1
MoMM2
QM3
S1
TM3
EM2
Cox
RM3
CEM
MM2
Y2
MM3

Note: *Resident of Wahoo, Nebraska, where a Mark 14 torpedo and plaque were dedicated to Wahoo and crew, 8 September 1962.

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Published: Tue Jan 31 07:30:24 EST 2017