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USS Johnston - 7/6/2007 2:30:43 PM   
m10bob


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Career

The FLETCHER Class destroyer USS JOHNSTON was built by the Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Company. She was sponsored by Mrs. Marie S. Klinger, great-niece of LT John Johnston. She was commissioned on October 27, 1943, Commander Ernest E. Evans commanding.

The day JOHNSTON was commissioned, CDR Evans made a speech to the crew, "This is going to be a fighting ship. I intend to go in harm's way, and anyone who doesn't want to go along had better get off right now."

Campaigns

Marshalls - 1 February to 15 May 1944

During the Marshall Islands campaign 3 months later, JOHNSTON bombarded the beaches at Kwajalein on 1 February 1944 and made a five-day bombardment of Einwetok from 17 to 22 February. Next she gave direct support to invasion troops there, destroying several pillboxes and taking revetments along the beach under fire. En route to patrol duty in the Solomons on 28 March 1944, she bombarded Kapingamarangi Atoll in the Carolinas. An observation tower, several blockhouses, pillboxes and dugouts along the beach were shelled.

Two days later she came into the mouth of the Maririca River, southeast of Empress Augusta Bay, Bougainville, Solomon Islands. After laying a heavy barrage into that area, JOHNSTON took up anti-submarine patrol off Bougainville. On 15 May 1944 she depth-charged and sank the Japanese submarine I-16.

Summer of 1944

After three months of patrol in the Solomons, JOHNSTON sailed to the Marshalls to prepare for the invasion and capture of Guam in the Marianas. On 21 July 1944 she teamed up with the battleship PENNSYLVANIA (BB 38) to bombard Guam. The destroyer sent in 4,000 rounds of shells by 29 July. Sending in more than 4,000 rounds of five-inch gunfire, her accurate fire shattered enemy 4-inch battery installations, numerous pillboxes and buildings./P>

Leyte Gulf/Samar - 17 - 25 October 1944

JOHNSTON next helped protect escort carriers which were providing air support for the invasion and capture of the Palau Islands. Following replenishment at Seeadler Harbor, Manus, in the Admiralty Islands, JOHNSTON sailed on 12 October 1944 to Leyte Gulf for the invasion of the Philippines. In the company of the FLETCHER Class destroyers HOEL and HEERMANN, she helped screen Carrier Division 25's four CVE's to Leyte. Arriving on station on 17 October, they joined Carrier Division 26's two CVE's and their screen of four destroyer escorts. The collective force of six escort carriers, three destroyers, and four destroyer escorts was assigned to Task Group 77.4; one of three task units, Task Unit 77.4.3, radio call sign, Taffy III.

On the morning of October 25, 1944, without warning, JOHNSTON and Taffy III were set upon by the Imperial Japanese Navy Centre Force. During the previous night, this powerful enemy force of 4 battleships, six heavy cruisers, two light cruisers, and two squadrons of destroyers had slipped through San Bernardino Strait undetected.

One of the pilots flying patrol reported the approach of the Japanese Centre Force steaming straight for Taffy III. JOHNSTON's Gunnery Officer, LT Robert C. Hagen, later reported, "...we felt like little David without a slingshot." Soon after contact, JOHNSTON was zigzagging between the escort carriers and the Japanese fleet, laying a smoke screen to hide the American task unit from the enemy. For the first twenty minutes the large caliber Japanese battleship and heavy cruiser guns fired upon with Americans without fear of reprisal, the range being too great for the American 5-inch guns. "...even as we began laying smoke, the Japanese started lobbing shells at us and the JOHNSTON had to zigzag between the splashes....we were the first destroyer to make smoke, the first to start firing, the first to launch a torpedo attack...."

As the range closed, JOHNSTON opened her 5-inch battery on the nearest cruiser, scoring damaging hits. About this time an 8-inch shell landed right off her bow, its red dye splashing the face of JOHNSTON Gunnery Officer. He mopped the dye from his eyes while remarking, "Looks like somebody's mad at us!" In five furious minutes, JOHNSTON pumped 200 rounds at the enemy, then Commander Evans gave the order to fire the torpedoes. The destroyer got off a full salvo of ten fish then whipped around to retire behind a heavy smoke screen. When she came out of the smoke a minute later, Japanese cruiser KUMANO could be seen burning furiously from torpedo hits. KUMANO later sank. Shortly thereafter, JOHNSTON took three 14-inch shell hits from a battleship followed closely by three 6-inch shells from a light cruiser. "It was like a puppy being smacked by a truck. The hits resulted in the loss of all power to the steering engine, all power to the three 5-inch guns in the after part of the ship, and rendered our gyro compass useless." Through "sheer providence" a rainstorm came up; and JOHNSTON "ducked into it" for a few minutes of rapid repairs and salvage work.

At 0750, Admiral Sprague ordered the destroyers to make a torpedo attack. But JOHNSTON had already expended her full compliment of ten torpedoes. With one engine, she couldn't keep up with the others "...but that wasn't Commander Evans' way of fighting; 'we'll go in with the destroyers and provide fire support,' he boomed." JOHNSTON went in, dodging salvoes and blasting back with her 5-inch guns. As she charged out of blinding smoke, the ship was pointed straight at the bridge of the gallant task unit destroyer HEERMANN (DD 532), "All engines back full!" was ordered by Commander Evans. That meant one engine for JOHNSTON who could hardly do more than slow down. HEERMANN's two engines backed down hard and the two destroyers missed each other by less than ten feet.

There was so much smoke that Commander Evans ordered no firing unless the gunnery officer could see the enemy. "At 0820, there suddenly appeared out of the smoke a 30,000 ton KONGO Class battleship, only 7,000 yards off our port beam. I took one look at the unmistakable pagoda mast, muttered, 'I sure as hell can see that!" and opened fire. In 40 seconds we got off 30 rounds, at least 15 of which hit the pagoda superstructure....the battleship belched a few 14-inchers at us, but, thank God, registered only clean misses."

JOHNSTON soon observed GAMBIER BAY (CVE 73) under fire from a cruiser. "Commander Evans then gave the most courageous order I've ever heard, 'Commence firing on that cruiser, draw her fire on us and away from GAMBIER BAY'." JOHNSTON scored four hits in a deliberate slug match with a heavy cruiser, then broke off the futile battle as the Japanese destroyer squadron was seen closing rapidly on the American escort carriers.

JOHNSTON outfought the entire Japanese destroyer squadron, concentrating on the lead ship until the enemy quit cold, then concentrated on the second destroyer until the remaining enemy units broke off to get out of effective gun range before launching torpedoes, all of which went wild. JOHNSTON took a hit which knocked out one forward gun, damaged another, and her bridge was rendered untenable by fires and explosions resulting from a hit in her 40mm ready ammunition locker. Commander Evans shifted his command to JOHNSTON's fantail, yelling orders through an open hatch to men turning her rudder by hand. Still the destroyer battled desperately to keep the Japanese destroyers and cruisers from reaching the five surviving American carriers. "We were now in a position where all the gallantry and guts in the world couldn't save us, but we figured that help for the carriers must be on the way, and every minute's delay might count...."

"By 0930 we were going dead in the water; even the Japanese couldn't miss us. They made a sort of running semi-circle around our ship, shooting at us like a bunch of Indians attacking a prairie schooner. Our lone engine and fire room was knocked out; we lost all power, and even the indomitable skipper knew we were finished. At 0945 he gave the saddest order a captain can give: 'Abandon Ship.'..."

At 1010 JOHNSTON rolled over and began to sink. A Japanese destroyer came up to 1,000 yards and pumped a final shot into her to make sure she went down. A survivor saw the Japanese captain salute her as she went down. That was the end of JOHNSTON. From her compliment of 327, only 141 were saved. Of 186 lost, about 50 were killed by enemy action, 45 died on rafts from battle injuries; and 92, including Commander Evans, were alive in the water after JOHNSTON sank, but were never heard from again.

JOHNSTON and her task unit had stopped Admiral Kurita's powerful Centre Force in the Battle Off Samar, inflicting a greater loss than they suffered. Her supreme courage and daring in the battle won her the Presidential Unit Citation as a unit of "Taffy III". Commander Evans was posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor; "The skipper was a fighting man from the soles of his broad feet to the ends of his straight black hair. He was an Oklahoman and proud of the Indian blood he had in him. We called him - though not to his face - the Chief. The JOHNSTON was a fighting ship, but he was the heart and soul of her."

USS JOHNSTON (DD 557) received five Battle Stars for her service in World War II.

Source: Dictionary of American Fighting Ships, Vol. III, 1968, Navy Department, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Naval History Division, Washington, D.C.
and The Battle Off Samar - The Tragedy of Taffy III, by Robert Jon Cox, 1996

http://www.bosamar.com/usforces/dd557.html

< Message edited by m10bob -- 7/6/2007 2:32:06 PM >


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RE: USS Johnston - 7/7/2007 7:39:47 AM   
ilovestrategy


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Wow, that is just too cool for words

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/7/2007 4:04:24 PM   
rtrapasso


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Unfortunately, for the crew, the USN just sailed away and let them swim for a *long* time*... kinda a rotten reward for a gallant act!


(*or so i have read, but for the life of me i can't remember where right now... probably on an article referred to on the forum)

EDIT - found some survivors accounts on the web - they were in the water for around 52 hours before rescued... only (est) 50/186 dead were k.i.a. - the rest perished in those next 52 hours, and the account are distubingly similar to those of the USS Indianapolis, except the USN can't claim they didn't know the ship(s) had been sunk.

< Message edited by rtrapasso -- 7/7/2007 4:13:59 PM >

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/7/2007 5:58:16 PM   
m10bob


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Similar "swims" were also the fate of the Juneau, Houston, and Indianapolis, and gosh knows how many others, all sides and nations.
On these I mention, survivors indicate at least 75% of the crews might have survived had ANYBODY come for them.

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/7/2007 11:23:14 PM   
dtravel


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I recall hearing that the reason often given for accompanying ships not immediately rescuing survivors was fear of being torpedoed by submarines.

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/7/2007 11:28:47 PM   
zeroguy


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What about PBY's?

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/8/2007 6:51:14 AM   
UniformYankee


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Good question...

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/8/2007 7:50:35 AM   
m10bob


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That would be like not sending a squad of infantry to help extricate a trapped patrol cuz' they might get shot??

What a few brave destroyermen might have accomplished..............

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/8/2007 9:45:10 AM   
whippleofd

 

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Please don't take this the wrong way.

But after the original post I find it offensive that the replies are more about what "might have been" than what hapened. With all due respect, if you want to second guess what happened 63 years ago start a new thread about it.

However those shipmates may have died, they deserve to be remembered for what they did. The OP did them justice. The rest of you, shame on you.

Whipple

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/8/2007 3:05:26 PM   
m10bob


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Well Todd, it is my opinion that it is a good thing we pay homage to those brave deeds and the ultimate sacrifice that we now, 63 years later, have not forgotten them, and the comments might in some way be the catalyst to prevent further negligence or low priority in future salvation attempts?





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RE: USS Johnston - 7/8/2007 3:33:59 PM   
Skyros


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I think they were spotted but the location was reported incorrectly and the ships went to the wrong location. I would have to dig out a book or to but I think that is what happened to them.

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/8/2007 4:16:36 PM   
m10bob


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Skyros

I think they were spotted but the location was reported incorrectly and the ships went to the wrong location. I would have to dig out a book or to but I think that is what happened to them.


No....sadly Skyros...I am very well versed on the tragedies of the ships I mentioned, and this was not the case on any of them.
(Juneau.....Houston....Indianapolis.)

See "Left to Die" by Dan Kurzman for the loss of the Juneau (and the Sullivan brothers).


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RE: USS Johnston - 7/9/2007 2:46:15 AM   
Knavey

 

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For an even more detailed telling of this battle, try
 
The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors
 
It is a very good narrative of the battle.

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/9/2007 3:08:45 AM   
ctangus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Knavey

For an even more detailed telling of this battle, try

The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors

It is a very good narrative of the battle.


I'll echo that - it's a great book.

Thermopylae is a poor comparison to what those guys accomplished that day...

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/9/2007 4:02:56 AM   
Skyros


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I am sorry if I was not clear, I was talking about the Johnston.

"The Avenger pilot who saw the Johnston survivors was under radio silence. As soon as he landed, he reported their location, but he misremembered the coordinates. Two destroyer escorts were dispatched, but they found no one, and broke off the search at 11:30 P.M. About twenty miles to the south, the survivors vainly scanned the empty horizon"

pg312 Sea of Thunder by Evan Thomas


quote:

ORIGINAL: m10bob


quote:

ORIGINAL: Skyros

I think they were spotted but the location was reported incorrectly and the ships went to the wrong location. I would have to dig out a book or to but I think that is what happened to them.


No....sadly Skyros...I am very well versed on the tragedies of the ships I mentioned, and this was not the case on any of them.
(Juneau.....Houston....Indianapolis.)

See "Left to Die" by Dan Kurzman for the loss of the Juneau (and the Sullivan brothers).




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RE: USS Johnston - 7/10/2007 9:54:46 AM   
whippleofd

 

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Bob:

I am sorry for my reply to your post. I was out of line, and I appologize. You posted something that brought up memories to me. Unfortunately I took it out on you.

Whipple

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RE: USS Johnston - 7/10/2007 11:08:05 AM   
m10bob


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Todd, we are forum friends and we share common goals, common grounds, and are brothers in arms.
I always look forward to your contributions.

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