Recollection by
"Snuffy" Sneeden, CMM of Ericsson in Rough Seas.
Sent in by John Robinson in memory of his father- Herman
"Robbie" Robinson
25 January 1945
0800 Position – 35 deg 12.5 N, 65 deg 54.0 W
1200 Position – 35 deg 04.7 N, 65 deg 13.0 W
2000 Position – 34 deg 50.0 N, 63 deg 45.5 W
Steaming as before
0056 ATHERTON
returned to station #2 in screen. ERICSSON returned to station #1. Took heavy sea on port side,
lurched heavily to starboard. Lost steering power. Gyro repeater system
disrupted, small fire in I.C. room caused by salt water dripping on electric
panel. Fire extinguished immediately. Motor whale boat carried away. Lost man
overboard.
0303 Steering power
restored. Commenced steering by magnetic compass.
0330 BANGOR ordered
by CTG 60.7 to remaining area to try to rescue man overboard.
0705 Gyro compass restored to service
26 January 1945
0800 Position – 34 deg 59.5 N, 61 deg 28.0 W
1200
Position - 35 deg 01.0 N, 60
deg 45.9 W
2000
Position – 35 deg 15.0 N, 59
deg 14.0 W
0447 BOOTH (DE 170) joined screen, took station
astern of convoy.
0834 AMICK left station to identify contact on
starboard bow of convoy
1015 AMICK returned to screen
1500 BANGOR returned
to normal screening station having rescued man overboard.
What follows is an excerpt from the
personal recollection of the incident from CMM “Snuffy” Sneeden.
“Our watch relieved the forward
engine room at 0000 hours. Things were as normal in the engine room as they
could be in that sea. It seemed like the seas were playing with the ship like a
cat would play a mouse, by throwing it up in the air and catching it on the way
down.
We had an inclinometer in the
compartment and it was indicating that we were rolling from 35 to 45 degrees
both port and starboard……
I do not remember the time but
Ericsson made an extreme roll to the port side and I started to slide down the
floor plates to the port side. I remember sliding past Ray Mylott. He was
holding on to one of the throttle valve wheels and sea water was gushing from
one of the fresh air vents all over him, he looked drowned. At the same time
sea water was pouring from another air vent all over the electric distribution
panel at the #1 generator. There were many electric sparks and the generator
went off line. All the lights went out and the emergency battle lamps came on,
which was very little light. I came to rest against a small stand-up desk on
the port side, lucky all the phones were there. Ray Mylott called out “No
Steam” and everything stopped, the ship was still on it’s port side.
The telephones were out except for
the sound powered one. I called the forward fireroom and they reported sea
water had come down the smokestack and put out fires in both their boilers, the
after fireroom reported water had put out the fire in one boiler but they had
fire left in the other. The after engine room had their generator and pumps
running, but sea water had shorted out their distribution board also…….
I have heard later that the roll
was logged at 68 degrees, that surely must have put the post wing of the bridge
under water and also the port yard arm.”
Snuffy relates that the man washed
overboard was John Nealon.
Copyright
2000, Benson-Livermore class destroyers