CRUISER NIGHT ACTION OF 12-13 NOVEMBER
Transcribed by Jerry Holden.
Earlier in the
day, reports from our scouting aircraft
revealed that strong enemy surface
forces were bearing down on Guadalcanal
and were close enough to arrive during
the night. Three separate groups were
sighted:
-
Two
battleships or heavy cruisers, one
heavy or light cruiser, and six
destroyers sighted at 1035 bearing
008° T. from Guadalcanal
(practically due north of the
northwest tip of Malaita Island),
distance 335 miles. This group was
later identified as two Kongo
-class battleships, one
Tenryu -class light cruiser,
and six destroyers.
-
Five
destroyers sighted at 1045 bearing
347° T., about 100 miles due north
of Santa Isabel Island (distance
from Guadalcanal, 195 miles). This
was more likely one or two
Natori -class light cruisers
and three or four destroyers.
-
Two small
carriers and two destroyers sighted
at 1450 bearing 264° T. (south of
New Georgia Island), distance 150.
These "carriers" were never
confirmed as such because of
exceptionally heavy cloud cover and
rain squalls and were perhaps
seaplane tenders taking float planes
to Rennell Island. A Marine attack
group sent out to destroy them was
forced to turn back by the weather
and approaching darkness.
No transports
were discovered heading for Guadalcanal,
so it was thought that the enemy's
intent was to attack our own transports
that night in Indispensable Strait or to
bombard our Guadalcanal positions.
Considering the Japanese strength
previously reported at Buin, it was
possible that additional cruisers and
destroyers might be on the way, and the
presence of heavy cruisers in the
ensuing action proved that this was the
case. The first two groups mentioned
above were probably from Truk.
To meet this
gathering armada, Rear Admiral Turner
now had at his disposal 2 heavy
cruisers, 1 light cruiser, 2
antiaircraft light cruisers, 11
destroyers, and 2 fast minesweepers,
besides his transports. He decided to
assign to Admiral Callaghan all the
cruisers and 8 destroyers, thus leaving
1 damaged destroyer, 2 low-fuel
destroyers, and 2 minesweepers for the
protection of the transports.
By late
afternoon it was seen that the
transports could be 90 percent unloaded
before night, but that it would be
several days before the cargo vessels (
Betelgeuse and Libra )
were emptied. In view of the enemy's
approach in force it was determined that
all the transports should be withdrawn,
after which Admiral Callaghan would
strike the Japanese in Indispensable
Strait or Savo Sound and damage them as
much as possible. This delaying action
might make it possible for Task Force K
ING to blast the major enemy landing
attempt with the help of the planes from
Henderson Field. Admiral Kinkaid's force
had not sailed from Noumea till
Wednesday noon and was not close enough
to help during the coming night. It was
now steaming to get the Enterprise
in fly-off position south of
Guadalcanal on the morning of Friday,
the 13th.
SECOND
PHASE--CRUISER NIGHT ACTION OF 12-13
NOVEMBER
"This
desperately fought action . . . has few
parallels in naval history. We have come
to expect, and to count on, complete
courage in battle from officers and men
of the United States Navy. But here, in
this engagement, we had displayed for
our lasting respect and admiration, a
cool but eager gallantry that is above
praise. These splendid ships and
determined men won a great victory
against heavy odds. Had this battle not
been fought and won, our hold on
Guadalcanal would have been gravely
endangered."--R. K. TURNER.
|
12-13
November |
|
1815
|
|
Task Force
T ARE leaves Savo Sound.
|
|
0000
|
|
Admiral
Callaghan returns via Lengo
Channel for a sweep of Savo
Sound. |
|
0124
|
|
Helena
's SG radar picks up three
enemy groups--nearest 27,100
yards. |
|
0148
|
|
"Odd ships
fire to starboard, even ships to
port." |
|
0149
|
|
Natori
CL blows up, Natori
or Tenryu CL on
fire. Enemy CL or CA also on
fire. Sinks a few minutes later.
Enemy DD blows up. Two others on
fire. |
|
0150
|
|
Atlanta sinks a DD and is
torpedoed. |
|
0151-2
|
|
Atlanta on fire. San
Francisco attacks BB
Hiyei . Portland
sinks a Hibiki DD.
Laffey shells Hiyei
and is knocked out and
torpedoed. |
|
0154
|
|
"Cease
firing, our ships." |
|
0155-6
|
|
Cushing and O'Bannon
torpedo Hiyei .
Barton blows up.
Portland and Juneau
have heen torpedoed.
|
|
0200- 0204
|
|
Laffey
blows up. San Francisco
and Portland
attack Hiyei . San
Francisco seriously
damaged. Helena
silences cruiser. |
|
0205
|
|
Monssen torpedoes Hiyei
. |
|
0210
|
|
Sterett torpedoes Hiyei
. |
|
0212
|
|
Helena
tries to reassemble our
forces. |
|
0220
|
|
Sterett sinks a Fubuki
DD. |
|
0240
|
|
Monssen abandoning ship.
|
|
0630
|
|
Portland sinks Shiguri
DD. |
|
1101
|
|
Juneau
again torpedoed and blows
up. |
|
1700
|
|
Cushing sinks. |
|
2015
|
|
Atlanta sinks. During the
night Hiyei also sinks,
after having been bombed by
planes all day. |
At 1815 Task
Force T ARE proceeded eastward out of
Savo Sound. The transport group and its
screen ( McCawley (Admiral
Turner), Betelgeuse ,
Crescent City , Libra ,
President Adams , President
Jackson , Buchanan ,
Hovey , McCalla , Shaw
, Southard ) left via
Lengo Channel. The combatant group,
commanded by Admiral Callaghan in
San Francisco and Admiral Scott in
Atlanta , used Sealark Channel
and preceded the transports into
Indispensable Strait, which it swept
before they arrived. Admiral Turner then
headed for Espiritu Santo, where he
arrived on Sunday. Admiral Callaghan
reversed his course and proceeded toward
Lengo Channel. His ships were in Battle
Disposition "Baker ONE"--the single
column being led by the Cushing
, followed by the Laffey ,
Sterett , O'Bannon ,
Atlanta , San Francisco ,
Portland , Helena ,
Juneau , Aaron Ward ,
Barton , Monssen , and
Fletcher , in that order. The
distance maintained between the
destroyers was about 500 yards. Between
cruisers and between divisions it was
700-800 yards. Signals were made by
voice code over TBS.
At 0000 Friday
the 13th, the 13 ships entered Lengo
Channel at 18 knots for a search of the
Savo Island area, which since 7 August,
1942 has witnessed the destruction of as
mighty an array of naval power as was
sunk at the Battle of Jutland. The moon
had set, the sky was overcast, the night
was very dark. The sea was calm, and a
slight breeze--9 to 10 knots--was
blowing from south southeast.
The first sign
of the enemy's presence was a probable
torpedo wake which was sighted by the
O'Bannon at 0036. About half an
hour later the same ship observed a
bright light on the port bow, apparently
on the Guadalcanal beach. The San
Francisco saw two white lights,
with the eastern one sending long
flashes. The same phenomenon had been
noted on the night of 11-12 October just
before the Battle of Cape Esperance. Now
a red air raid warning as well ("planes
overhead") was received from Guadalcanal
Control. Look-outs saw unidentified
aircraft above with running lights on.
Near Lunga
Point at 0124, while on course 280° T.,
the Helena 's SG radar picked
up three groups of enemy vessels, the
first bearing 312° T. at 27,100 yards,
the second 310° T. at 28,000 yards, and
the third 310° T. at 32,000 yards. This
information was relayed to Admiral
Callaghan by TBS, because the flagship
was not provided with SG radar. Only the
Portland , Helena ,
Juneau , O'Bannon ,
and Fletcher possessed this
invaluable equipment.
From the
strength of the signals received by the
Helena it was believed that the
two nearer groups constituted part of
the screen for the more distant one. At
0130 the Helena 's radar plot
reported target course was approximately
134° T., speed 20 (later altered to 120°
T., speed 20-23). Other radar contacts
confirmed the fact that there were 3
groups rapidly closing our column, which
was now on course 000° T., 1 being ahead
and 2 to port. Course was changed to
310° T. to steam directly for the enemy,
but at 0137 it was shifted back to 000°
T. At 0140 the O'Bannon made SG
radar contacts as follows: one group
bearing 287° T., distant 11,000 yards,
and containing 3 or more units; a second
group bearing 318° T., distant 8,500
yards, and composed of 2 or 3 units; and
a third group bearing 042° T., distant
6,000 yards, and containing 3 units.
From the earlier air reports and later
observations it seems clear that the
left-hand group consisted of 2 heavy
cruisers (1 being a Maya
-class) and 2 or 3 destroyers. The
center group included 1 battleship of
the Kongo class (the Hiyei
) with a Tenryu -class
light cruiser and several destroyers.
The right-hand group probably contained
2 Natori -class light cruisers
and 3 or 4 destroyers. To the north was
another battleship with escorting
vessels. All told, there were between 18
and 20 ships. Our squadron was not only
outnumbered but heavily outclassed.
The picture at
the time, however, was not clear to
Admiral Callaghan, who had apparently
received radar information from the
Helena alone. At 0139 that ship
reported four targets in line but gave
no bearing or range. The OTC requested
the distance. Just as this was being
received, ComDesDiv TEN in the
Cushing announced that ships were
crossing from port to starboard at 4,000
yards. Later the Helena
reported a total of 10 targets.
The TBS, in the
words of Admiral Spruance, "became
chaotic with queries and incomplete
information." At 0142 the Cushing
informed the OTC that she was
turning left to get in position to fire
torpedoes at the ships crossing and
asked leave to do so. This permission
was granted by Admiral Callaghan, and
course was changed to 310° T. The
Cushing turned to port but did not
fire because she recognized the targets
as destroyers which were sheering away.
Also, the OTC had ordered all ships back
to course 000° T. again.
With this
latest shift our column became
disorganized. The Atlanta was
forced to turn left to miss the
O'Bannon which was making many
rudder changes to avoid ramming the
Sterett . The OTC ordered the
Atlanta to return to course.
Several other times he requested the
column to maintain 000° T., but the
order did not get through to all
vessels. Some steered 315° T. The
cruisers turned as far left as 270° T.
The San Francisco maintained
this course and went between the left
and center enemy groups, 2,000 and 3,000
yards away respectively, leaving the
Atlanta on her starboard hand.
Meanwhile the van mingled with the
Japanese ships and a melee existed even
before firing began.
At 0145 Admiral
Callaghan ordered the Task Force to
stand by to open fire, range 3,000. At
the same time the O'Bannon 's
radar picked up a fourth set of signals
from the north, but there is no evidence
that the OTC received this information.
The new enemy group was in two sections,
one distant 9,000 yards and the other
13,500 yards. The existence of these
ships and the presence in the formation
of at least one battleship is confirmed
by the fact that heavy firing was
reported from this area during the
action, and by the fact that the San
Francisco took a 14-inch shell (a
dud) at an angle of 20° with the
horizontal. Most of the Japanese vessels
were so close to our flagship that all
her other damage was caused by shells
with very flat trajectories.
At this point
enemy ships were on both sides of our
column, which was in the path of the
group containing the first battleship.
Suddenly the Japanese illuminated from
both right and left and commenced
firing.
The time was
0148. The OTC immediately gave the
command, "Odd ships fire to starboard,
even to port." The guns of the Task
Force
opened up, and
a free-for-all fight began with little
semblance of coordination on either
side.
At a
conservative estimate, the Japanese
could throw three times as much metal
per broadside as the American units.
They were also in a position to pound
our ships from both sides and from
ahead. Yet despite initial accuracy of
fire, the amount of damage they did was
restricted by the fact that they were
using bombardment ammunition. They had
obviously been expecting to shell our
Guadalcanal installations, not to fight
an engagement.
The gunfire of
the American ships was most effective.
Immediately after the illumination by
the enemy, which was accompanied,
according to some reports, by the
dropping of flares from planes, one of
the illuminating ships to starboard,
probably a Natori light
cruiser, came under fire from the
San Francisco , Sterett ,
and other ships. This cruiser was 3,700
yards off the San Francisco 's
beam. Our flagship illuminated it with
her starboard 5-inch battery and fired
seven main battery salvos. The Japanese
ship blew up within a minute, and other
light units to starboard reversed course
and fell back toward the central main
body, which still had not been sighted
by the majority of our force.
On the port
side the Atlanta , Juneau
, Helena , Aaron Ward
, Barton , Fletcher
, Laffey , and
O'Bannon opened on illuminating
vessels. The fire of the three light
cruisers and the Barton and
Fletcher apparently was
concentrated on two targets in line. The
Atlanta and Juneau
blasted a light cruiser, while the
Helena , Barton and
Fletcher attacked a vessel which
was either a heavy or a light cruiser.
Both ships burst into flames. Seeing
that her target was out of action, the
Fletcher shifted fire to the
next ship in line (possibly the target
of the Atlanta and Juneau
), which she reported as "either a
Natori - or Tenryu
-class light cruiser." She was joined by
the Sterett , which fired 13
salvos. Both the Japanese vessels were
seen to sink almost immediately. In the
same area "an enemy destroyer exploded"
(this may have been one of the
cruisers), and two others were seen to
be on fire.
The Atlanta
, an odd-numbered ship, had been
unable to open fire to starboard as
ordered because our destroyers were in
the way. While she was shooting at the
cruiser to port, a division of Japanese
destroyers crossed 1,200 yards ahead of
her. The forward group of guns was
shifted and put 20 shells into the last
in line, possibly a Shiguri .
It "erupted into flame and disappeared."
The after group of guns continued to
fire at the enemy cruiser until it
ceased firing and sank. A destroyer
astern of the latter vessel, which had
opened up on the Atlanta , also
stopped shooting. At this point the
Atlanta had received thirteen
5.5-inch hits and some 3-inch from the
light cruiser, mostly in the bridge
section, and twelve 5-inch from the
destroyers. There were fires forward. As
the enemy ceased fire, our cruiser was
struck by one or two torpedoes forward
on the port side, perhaps from the
destroyer to port. All power was lost,
except the auxiliary Diesel, and the
rudder was jammed left. The ship began
to circle back toward the south.
Meanwhile the
San Francisco , which had
altered course to 280° T., shifted fire
from her stricken enemy ship to a "small
cruiser or large destroyer further ahead
on the starboard bow. [This vessel] was
hit with two full main battery salvos
and set afire throughout her length."
The range was 3,300 yards. At about the
same time, as nearly as can be judged, a
heavy cruiser came up on the Atlanta
's port quarter and opened fire at
a range of about 3,500 yards, bearing
240° R. The Atlanta reported
that 19 hits were scored on her with
8-inch armor-piercing ammunition.
Although many of the projectiles failed
to explode, her hull was holed several
times, and her damaged bridge was
shattered. The shells were loaded with
green dye, the San Francisco 's
color. As the first shot struck, Capt.
S. P. Jenkins of the Atlanta
rushed to the port side to get off
torpedoes. When he returned to
starboard, Admiral Scott and three
officers of his staff had been killed,
as well as a large number of other
personnel. The foremast collapsed, fires
were blazing everywhere, and the
Atlanta was dead in the water.
The
illuminating ship to port on which the
O'Bannon and Aaron Ward
opened fire was a Kongo
battleship, later identified as the
Hiyei . The O'Bannon 's
guns shot out the searchlight, and
several blazes were noted on the enemy
vessel, probably the result of the
combined efforts of the two destroyers.
The San
Francisco , still heading in a
westerly direction, took the Hiyei
under fire 2 or 3 minutes later.
Range was 2,200 yards and the bearing
was about 300° T. Target heading was
northeasterly. Many hits were scored at
the water line with two salvos. The
battleship was seen to be under fire
from our van (presumably the
O'Bannon ) and was burning
intensely at the mast. She did not
return the flagship's fire. The
Cushing was about 1,000 yards to
starboard of the Hiyei and saw
her "repeatedly hit by ships astern,"
illuminated as she was by a burning
enemy light cruiser. Many shells were
seen to strike the foremast and
superstructure. The Cushing
opened fire with her 20-mm. guns (this
also may have been noted aboard the
San Francisco ) and fired one
torpedo from No. 2 mount with unobserved
results. Personnel manning this mount
were then wounded, so no more torpedoes
were launched.
At this time
the OTC gave the command over TBS,
"Cease firing, our ships." The order did
not get through to all vessels, but the
San Francisco stopped shooting
at the Hiyei.
The enemy
battleship continued on her course and
bore down on our second destroyer, the
Laffey . Only by speeding up
did the Laffey manage to cross
the enemy's bows with a few feet to
spare. Two torpedoes were fired, but the
range was so short that there was not
time enough for them to arm. The
Laffey then shelled the
battleship's bridge with all guns that
would bear, damaging it severely before
she was silenced by a heavy caliber
salvo which smashed her own bridge, as
well as No. 2 turret, the after
fireroom, and the electrical workshop.
Meanwhile, at
0152, the Portland 's second
salvo to starboard blew up a Hibiki
destroyer. At this time other enemy
ships in the same location began firing
torpedoes, one of which struck the
damaged Laffey in the fantail
as she sheered in a westerly direction.
At 0153 the
O'Bannon turned hard right to avoid
ramming the Sterett , which had
stopped because of a hit on her port
quarter which had jammed her rudder. The
Sterett began steering with her
engines, while the O'Bannon
circled left to rejoin the column astern
of the wavering Laffey . The
Cushing and Laffey
were seen to be receiving many hits from
port and starboard. The O'Bannon
continued to fire on the Hiyei
, which apparently doubled back to
the left after passing through our
column astern of the Laffey ,
so that she was bearing down on the
Cushing 's starboard quarter on a
westerly course.
At 0154 the OTC
again directed "cease firing." Some
ships still did not receive the command.
Some continued firing, perhaps because
they were sure of their targets. Others
obeyed, including the Helena ,
Fletcher , O'Bannon ,
and the Portland , which
verified the order over TBS. When the
O'Bannon opened fire again, she
selected a Tenryu cruiser to
starboard. The Cushing , having
observed the Hiyei coming in on
her starboard quarter, had turned to the
right to get in position to fire
torpedoes, although hard hit and losing
headway. Six torpedoes were launched at
a range of about 1,200 yards. Shortly
thereafter three explosions were heard,
and at least one large column of water
rose on the starboard side of the
battleship, which was seen to be under
heavy shellfire. The Cushing
was then hit by destroyer and cruiser
salvos port and starboard which put all
her guns out of commission except the
20-mm.
The
O'Bannon was now in the lead of our
scattered "column," since both the
Cushing and Laffey had
disappeared to starboard. She was on
course 280° T., about 1,800 yards from
the Hiyei and coming up on the
battleship's starboard quarter. The
O'Bannon 's radar showed that the
three nearby enemy groups had become
intermingled, while the two sections of
the fourth group were respectively 8,000
and 12,500 yards away. Light enemy units
to starboard appeared to be drawing
ahead. Our formation had ceased to
function as a force. Each ship had
become an independent entity faced with
the problem of not firing on friendly
vessels.
At about this
time a large enemy ship rolled over and
sank 1,500 yards from the Aaron Ward
, which was leading our rear
destroyers into the melee. This
occurrence was also noted by the
Helena , which had to stop to keep
from colliding with the wreck. The
Helena 's guns remained silent for
several minutes after the OTC's cease
firing order, as she had not received
permission to open up again.
At 0155 the
Barton stopped to avoid collision
with a friendly ship and was struck by
one and then another torpedo. She broke
in two and sank in 10 seconds. Shortly
afterward, one of our destroyers passed
through the survivors at high speed.
Others were injured by depth charges
exploding in the vicinity. At about the
same time the Fletcher reopened
fire on a cruiser astern of her original
target to port.
By 0156 the
O'Bannon had closed to within 1,200
yards of the Hiyei . There were
numerous fires on the battleship, and
gunfire had slackened. The O'Bannon
fired three torpedoes. There was a
tremendous explosion on the enemy ship,
which was enveloped in a sheet of flame
from bow to stern. Burning particles
fell on the destroyer. She fired no more
torpedoes and soon swung north, because
her course was converging with the
Hiyei 's. Five burning ships were
astern.
At this
juncture planes were overhead, but it
was impossible to identify them.
Torpedoes passed under the Monssen
and the Aaron Ward . The
Cushing had been heavily hit
again, and propulsion was failing. The
Portland had been torpedoed, as
had the Juneau . The latter
ship had been struck on the port side of
the forward fireroom after firing only
about 25 rounds of 5-inch. Nineteen men
were killed. The chief engineer believed
that the keel had been snapped. The
vessel settled and listed to port, and
since all fire control was gone, she
began to limp from the scene of action,
having shifted steering to aft.
The torpedo
that struck the Portland
sheered off the inboard screws, flooding
Steering Aft and bending out the shell
plating on the starboard side to form an
extensive right rudder. The ship began
circling, and it was found impossible to
counteract this with the outboard
screws.
After the lull
created by the OTC's order to cease
fire, the San Francisco again
had the Hiyei on her starboard
bow, but this time the battleship was
steaming on approximately the same
heading as our flagship. The Hiyei
was illuminating with three lights,
two over one. On the San Francisco
's starboard quarter was an enemy
cruiser which was getting the range. A
Japanese destroyer, which had cut across
the bow, was passing down the port side
with all guns blazing.
On hearing of
the San Francisco 's
predicament over TBS, about 0200, the
Portland asked the bearing of
the battleship. At the same time the
Helena requested permission to open
fire on targets of her own. The Task
Force Commander asked what type of
target she had, saying he "wanted the
big ones." He then told the Portland
to take the battleship along with
the San Francisco . The
Portland , after completing the
first circle to starboard resulting from
the torpedo, fired 4 main battery salvos
at a range of 4,000 yards, making 10 to
14 hits. The San Francisco also
gave the Hiyei everything she
had. The American flagship, however, was
struck by the enemy cruiser's second
salvo, and the Hiyei 's third
salvo smashed her bridge, killing
Admiral Callaghan and mortally wounding
Capt. Young and others. Steering and
engine control were shifted to Battle
II, which was immediately destroyed, and
Conn took over.
The San
Francisco kept firing at the
Hiyei as long as the main battery
would bear. Before she was completely
knocked out by the battleship, the last
remaining gun of her secondary battery
set off the depth charges on the stern
of the enemy destroyer on the port side.
It blew up and was thought to have sunk.
While the
San Francisco was dueling with the
Japanese battleship, the O'Bannon
barely managed to avoid the sinking
Laffey and was unable to keep
from passing through some of the crew in
the water. Life belts were thrown
overside. Shortly thereafter the
Laffey blew up, and numerous
casualties were caused by descending
debris.
At this time
the Helena 's radar plot
reported 6 ships to starboard which were
retiring to the northward. One of them
was the light cruiser which was firing
on the San Francisco . The
Helena 's main battery opened on
this vessel at 8,800 yards, silencing it
with 125 rounds before the San
Francisco came into the line of
fire on the starboard hand. The
secondary battery had simultaneously
fired 40 rounds at a destroyer 7,200
yards away.
The Hiyei
ceased firing on our flagship after
5 or 6 salvos. The San Francisco
had received 15 major caliber hits,
as well as numerous others, and 25
separate fires were burning. What had
saved her from complete destruction was
the enemy's use of bombardment
ammunition. She was still between 2
Japanese groups, but apparently they
were now shooting at each other. The
officer of the deck, Lt. Comdr. Bruce
McCandless, was conning the damaged
ship, while Lt. Comdr. Schonland, who
had succeeded to command, continued
fighting the fires below. Lt. Comdr.
McCandless decided to make his escape
around Cape Esperance, but as he
continued to head west a large vessel
opened up on him, and he circled to the
eastward, astern of the enemy forces.
After a
quarter-hour of battle most of our ships
were seriously shot up. The Cushing
had received up to 20 hits from
cruisers and destroyers and lay
helpless. The Laffey had sunk;
the Sterett had just been hit
in the foremast and had lost SC radar,
identification lights, and TBS
transmitting antenna; the O'Bannon
was slightly damaged. The
Atlanta was burning, and the
San Francisco and Portland
were badly holed. The Helena
had suffered minor injury. The
Juneau had left the scene of
action. The Barton had blown
up. Only the Aaron Ward ,
Monssen , and Fletcher
were untouched.
The Aaron
Ward did not have long to wait for
her share. She passed through what was
apparently the entire enemy formation,
if such a term could still be used,
receiving three 14-inch, two 8-inch, and
five smaller hits. However, her officers
believed that she sank or helped to sink
a Katori -class light cruiser
or large destroyer at a range of 3,000
yards. The target was showing fighting
lights, white over red over green.
At about 0205
the Monssen launched five
torpedoes at the Hiyei , 4,000
yards to the northwest of her. Soon
there were two explosions at the target.
Five minutes later the Sterett
located the Hiyei to port,
illuminated by star shells and by a
burning vessel to the south. She was
seen to be considerably damaged. A full
salvo of four torpedoes was fired at a
range of 2,000 yards, and the 5-inch
battery opened on the battleship's
bridge structure. Two of the torpedoes
hit and exploded. A few minutes later
men were seen going over the side of the
Hiyei fore and aft, as if
abandoning ship. The Sterett at
this time was under heavy cross-fire,
and several 5-inch shells struck her
bridge.
At 0212 the
Helena had been unable for some
minutes to raise the OTC on the TBS, so
she tried to reassemble our scattered
units. At 0215 her radar showed that the
major portion of the Japanese force was
in disorderly retirement. Several
reports state that the remaining enemy
vessels of the center and left-hand
groups were now firing at each other.
The Sterett , despite her
serious damage, closed a belated
Fubuki destroyer and sank her with
two torpedoes and two 5-inch salvos at
1,000 yards. The target did not get a
chance to fire a single shot. When the
Japanese destroyer blew up, the entire
area was illuminated, and heavy
cross-fire began. Eleven direct hits
were received by the Sterett
and many near-hits. Ready service powder
was set afire, and severe casualties
were caused. Only two guns were still
serviceable, and the remaining two
torpedoes were jammed in their tubes.
The engines were still delivering full
power, however, and the Sterett
managed to retire at flank speed (later
reduced to 23 knots.)
Star shells
began to burst slightly ahead of the
Monssen , apparently coming from
the port quarter. The destroyer changed
course to about 040° T. at full speed.
Another destroyer was sighted close
aboard to starboard at a range of 500 to
1,000 yards on course 150° T., either
stopped or moving very slowly. The
Monssen 's starboard 20-mm. guns
sprayed the other ship's upper works and
were joined by No. 4 gun, firing point
blank. Fire was not returned. (This may
have been one of our own destroyers.)
Soon the
Monssen was again illuminated by
star shells to port. She believed them
to have been fired by a friendly vessel
and flashed recognition lights.
Immediately searchlights 2,500 yards
away illuminated her and she was hard
hit by medium caliber shells. Number 1
gun was put out of action, but the rest
of the battery eliminated the
searchlight and continued firing until
silenced. Steering was lost next, and
the destroyer's upper works became a
mass of flames. As she had no more guns,
torpedoes, or power, abandon ship was
ordered. The commanding officer and
several others were trapped on the
bridge but jumped from the rail to the
water, suffering more or less serious
injury.
At 0205 the
Fletcher had turned south at 35
knots to round up ahead of a Maya
cruiser which was proceeding on a
southerly course at 20 knots. The
Fletcher gradually drew ahead to a
position about 6,000 yards on the
target's starboard bow. At 0221 the
Maya had slowed to 17 knots and was
on course 070° T. The Fletcher
came left to course 030° T. At
this time the
enemy ship was firing at vessels to the
northward which may well have been
Japanese. No other action was going on.
The Fletcher slowed to 15 knots
and fired five torpedoes set for 36
knots. Six minutes later there were two
or three explosions at the target.
Increasingly heavy detonations were
followed by flames. Twenty or 30 minutes
later the Maya blew up and
"completely disintegrated."
This was the
last episode of the action proper.
At 0226 the
Helena ordered all ships to form on
her and take an easterly course. By 0230
the Cushing was abandoning
ship, since her fires were totally out
of control. The Portland ,
which was still turning in tight circles
at speeds up to 20 knots, asked the
Helena for a tow, but this was not
considered safe due to the danger of
torpedoes. At 0235 the Helena
instructed all ships to turn on their
fighting lights briefly. Five minutes
later she located the San Francisco
, although the latter was unable to
show lights because they had been shot
away. The flagship signaled the news of
Admiral Callaghan's death by flashlight,
the only means of communication left.
The Fletcher joined, and the
three ships stood out Sealark Channel.
Later they fell in with the Juneau
in Indispensable Strait. The
O'Bannon and Sterett
retired through Lengo Channel.
When the firing
ceased, the Portland observed
nine ships burning, only three of these
being ours (the Atlanta ,
Cushing , and Monssen ).
At 0330 she saw what was thought to he a
Nachi -class heavy cruiser blow
up. A Tenryu light cruiser or
large destroyer also exploded.
At daybreak she
could see the Hiyei steaming
slowly in circles northwest of Savo
Island, with a cruiser or destroyer
nearby. The Atlanta lay 5,000
yards to the south, not burning any
longer. The Cushing and the
Monssen were burning to the
northwest and the north, and the
Aaron Ward was 15,000 yards north.
At 12,500 yards, south of Savo Island,
lay a Shiguri -class destroyer
with two small boats alongside. After
checking identification by signaling the
Atlanta , the Portland
fired six 6-gun salvos at this ship. The
last one exploded the after magazine and
the destroyer sank. This destruction of
an enemy vessel while steering was still
out of control was "one of the
highlights of the action," according to
Admiral Nimitz.
Half an hour
later the Japanese battleship began
firing two-gun salvos at the Aaron
Ward , which was about to be taken
under tow by the tug Bobolink
(Lieut. James L. Foley), from Tulagi.
The third salvo straddled. The Hiyei
gave up firing after the fourth
because planes from Guadalcanal had
started to attack her.
At 1000 the
Atlanta and the Portland
were still in waters off the enemy-held
shore. Eventually the Bobolink
returned from taking the Aaron Ward
to Tulagi and towed the Atlanta
to Lunga Point. During this
operation efforts were made to jettison
heavy weights to port, but it was found
impossible to cut away the foremast
which was hanging over that side. The
cutting equipment proved inadequate to
deal with aluminum. The list to port
continued, and the ship settled lower in
the water. At 1400 the Atlanta
, now lying off Lunga, informed the
Portland that she could no longer
check flooding conditions. The
Portland 's commanding officer
communicated with COMSOPAC and relayed
his permission to scuttle. The
Atlanta 's crew was taken off by
Higgins boats from Tulagi, and the
demolition party, headed by Capt.
Jenkins, went to work. A charge was set
in the Diesel engine room, and there was
a small explosion. Patrol was maintained
around the ship till she sank at 2015.
At 1432 the
Bobolink came back for the
Portland , but the latter did not
reach Tulagi till 0108. Only 2 or 3
knots could be made because of the
difficulty in overcoming the rudder
effect produced by her damaged stern.
At daylight the
Monssen was boarded by members
of her crew, who removed the eight
remaining wounded men. At 0800 survivors
were picked up from the water by landing
boats and taken to Guadalcanal. At 0900
more fires broke out, and some hours
later the ship blew up and sank. The
Barton 's survivors were picked up
by Higgins boats from Guadalcanal and by
rescue parties from the Portland
.
Meanwhile the
rest of our Force was proceeding through
Indispensable Strait in its retirement
to Espiritu Santo. San Cristobal Island
was about 20 miles to port. Heavy ships
present were the San Francisco
(severely damaged) and the Helena
(slightly damaged), with the
torpedoed Juneau maintaining a
station 800 yards on the San
Francisco 's starboard quarter
because only one screw was operating and
she could not turn quickly except to the
right. She was down 10 to 12 feet by the
bow, but was able to maintain 13 knots.
The Sterett was on the port bow
and the Fletcher on the
starboard.
At 1101 a
Helena talker reported a
disturbance in the water like that made
by a porpoise. This proved to be one of
three torpedoes, apparently aimed at the
San Francisco . The first
crossed that ship's bow and just missed
the Juneau 's stern, while the
third passed astern of both ships. The
second, however, which seemed to come
from beneath the San Francisco
, struck the Juneau on the port
side, at about the same point where the
hit had been made the night before.
There was a terrific explosion, and the
ship broke in two and disappeared in 20
seconds in a cloud of black, yellow, and
brown smoke. Debris showered down among
the vessels of the formation to such an
extent that some observers thought that
a high-altitude bombing attack was going
on.
No sight or
sound contact with the submarine was
made. It was not feasible to stop and
search for survivors due to the crippled
condition of the ships and the weakness
of the antisubmarine screen. Furthermore
it seemed unlikely that any of the
personnel could have survived the force
of the explosion. Actually, however,
about 120 men were left struggling in
the water, two-thirds of them wounded.
Sixty were still alive when sighted by a
search plane at 1100 the next day. They
had three rafts and several life nets.
The plane dropped a rubber boat but air
contact was not maintained, and no
effective attempt at a rescue was made.
The destroyer
Meade
conducted a
search on Monday, 16 November, but found
nothing, nor was she sighted by the
survivors. Three men in the rubber boat
reached Santa Catalina Island on the
night of the 18th and were picked up by
a PBY on the 21st. On the 19th, 3 rafts
with 10 men were sighted. Seven of these
were later rescued.
At 1121 on the
13th a B-17 appeared over the Task Force
and the loss of the Juneau was
signaled for relay to COMSOPAC. For
reasons as yet unexplained, the message
never arrived. The surviving vessels
proceeded to Espiritu Santo, arriving at
1600 the next day.
In the
34-minute Cruiser Night Action of 12-13
November, one of the most furious sea
battles ever fought, our ship losses
admittedly were large. The enemy,
however, suffered more severely, and his
bombardment of Guadalcanal was
frustrated with results which became
impressively apparent during the next
two days. United States losses were as
follows:
| |
Sunk
|
Damaged |
|
CA
|
0
|
2 (
Portland , San
Francisco ) |
|
CL
|
0
|
1 (
Helena ) |
|
CLAA
|
2 (
Atlanta , Juneau )
|
0
|
|
DD
|
4 (
Barton , Cushing ,
Laffey , Monssen
) |
3 (
Aaron Ward , O'Bannon
, Sterett )
|
"Sober
hindsight" caused CINCPAC in the final
report on this engagement to limit
claimed Japanese losses to the following
ships:
| |
Sunk
|
Damaged |
|
BB
|
1
|
1
|
|
CA
|
1
|
1
|
|
CL
|
1
|
1
|
|
DD
|
4
|
0
|
Casualties on
both sides were heavy, with the American
force having the serious misfortune to
lose both its commander, Admiral
Callaghan, and its second in command,
Admiral Scott.
As has been
pointed out, the enemy undoubtedly
expected to bombard Guadalcanal in
preparation for a landing. The
appearance of our fleet was a surprise.
It is conceivable that the Japanese knew
from aerial observation on the previous
day just what strength we had available
and did not believe that we would dare
to oppose their greatly superior forces.
At all events,
the only ammunition they had readily
available was bombardment type, which
caused great damage to upper works but
did not produce as many sinkings as AP
shells might have done. Most of the hull
injuries were due to torpedoes, which,
as usual, the enemy used most
effectively. Our destroyers also fired
numerous torpedoes, but the results were
not commensurate with the number of hits
obtained. American shellfire was more
accurate and more destructive than the
enemy's and was responsible for the
greater part of the damage inflicted by
our ships. The radar ranges used by
United States vessels proved highly
reliable, while Japanese use of
searchlights was outstanding. Often one
ship would illuminate while others
joined in firing at the target. However,
the reports indicated that our ships
concentrated on and immediately
destroyed three of the enemy vessels
which first illuminated. If we had
stayed out of range of searchlights and
had opened fire first, our superior
radar equipment would have given us a
distinct advantage.
It is not clear
whether Admiral Callaghan knew that he
was about to engage a battleship when he
swung his column between the two groups
of lighter enemy forces, unless he was
informed of the O'Bannon 's
radar contacts and drew such a
conclusion from them. (There is no
evidence that he was so informed.) When
a battleship did appear, there was, as
Admiral Nimitz pointed out, "nothing he
could do but fight his way out, as he
did."
In summing up
the battle CINCPAC wrote: "This action
in which a brave and gallant leader . .
. took in brave men against superior
forces, was a turning point in the
Solomons Islands campaign. Had the
powerful enemy fleet succeeded in its
mission of bombarding our airfield on
Guadalcanal, the task of preventing a
major enemy attack and landing of
large-scale reinforcements would have
been much more difficult if not
impossible. The calculated decision of
Admiral Turner to send in the cruiser
force, the resolution with which Rear
Admirals Callaghan and Scott led the
ships in, the well-directed fire and
courage of our personnel, merit the
highest praise." |