USS TANG (SS-306)
Lost 24 October 1944
Displacement: 1870 tons (surf.), 2391 tons (subm.); l. 311.7'; b.
27';
Speed: 20.25k (surf.), 8.75k (subm.);
Test Depth. 400';
Armament. 1-5"/25;torpedo tubes 6-21" . fwd, 4-21"
aft;
Complement:. 6 officers - 60 enlisted men;
Class Submarine:"BALAO"
War Patrol Reports
Patrol 1
Patrol 2
Patrol 3
Patrol 4
Patrol 5
Visit Tang II
USS
TANG SS-563
Keel laid down by the Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, CA 15JAN43;
Launched: 17AUG43; Sponsored by Mrs. Antonio S. Pitre;
Commissioned: 15OCT43 with LCDR Richard H. O'Kane in command.
USS TANG (SS-306) completed fitting out at Mare Island and then
moved south to San Diego for 18 days of intensive training before sailing
for Hawaii. She arrived at Pearl Harbor on 8 January 1944 and conducted
two more weeks of exercises in preparation for combat. TANG stood
out of Pearl Harbor on 22 January to begin her first war patrol in the
Caroline-Mariana Islands area.
On the morning of 17 February, she sighted a convoy of two freighters,
their escorts, and five smaller ships. The submarine tracked the convoy,
plotted its course, and then prepared to attack. An escort suddenly appeared
at a range of 7,000 yards and closing. TANG went deep and received
five depth charges before the escort departed. Undamaged, she returned
to periscope depth and resumed the attack. The range on the nearest freighter
closed to 1,500 yards, and TANG fired a spread of four torpedoes.
Three of them hit and the freighter sank by the stern. The submarine cleared
the area by running deep and then attempted to get ahead of the convoy
for a dawn attack, but the remaining freighter passed out of range under
air escort.
During the night of 22 February, TANG made a surface attack on
a convoy of three cargo ships and four escorts. She tracked the Japanese
ships for half an hour before attaining a firing position 1,500 yards off
the port bow of a freighter. A spread of four torpedoes hit one of the
cargomen from bow to stern, and the enemy ship disintegrated. Early the
next morning, TANG made another approach on the convoy. The escort
of the lead ship moved from its covering position on the port bow, and
the submarine slipped into it and fired four torpedoes. The first hit the
stern of the cargoman, the second struck just aft of the stack; and the
third burst just forward of the bridge and produced a terrific secondary
explosion. The ship was twisted, lifted from the water, and began belching
flames as she slid beneath the waves.
On the morning of the 24th, TANG sighted a tanker, a freighter,
and a destroyer. Rain squalls hampered her as she attempted to attain a
good firing position, so she tracked the ships until night and then made
a surface attack. She fired four torpedoes and scored three hits which
sank the freighter. The two remaining ships commenced firing in all directions,
and TANG submerged to begin evasive action. She shadowed the enemy
until morning and then closed the tanker for a submerged attack. Additional
lookouts had been posted on the target's deck and, when the spread of torpedoes
from TANG struck her, they were hurled into the air with other debris
from the ship. The tanker sank in four minutes as TANG went deep
and rigged for the depth charge attack that followed. The next day, the
submarine sank a 1,794-ton cargo ship.
TANG contacted a convoy consisting of a freighter, transport,
and four escorts on the evening of the 26th. She maneuvered into position
to attack the wildly zigzagging transport and fired her last four torpedoes.
All passed astern as the transport speeded up. Having expended all of her
torpedoes and scored 16 hits out of 24 attempts, the submarine put into
Midway Island for refit.
TANG's second patrol began on 16 March and took her to waters
around the Palaus, to Davao Gulf, and to the approaches to Truk. She made
only five surface contacts and had no opportunity to launch an attack before
she was assigned to lifeguard duty near Truk. TANG rescued 22 downed
airmen and transported them to Hawaii at the conclusion of the patrol.
Her third war patrol was one of the most devastating carried out against
Japanese shipping during the war. TANG got underway from Pearl Harbor
on 8 June and hunted enemy shipping in the East China Sea and Yellow Sea
areas. On the 24th, southwest of Kagoshima, the submarine contacted a convoy
of six large ships guarded by 16 escorts. TANG closed for a surface
attack and fired a spread of three torpedoes at one of the ships and quickly
launched a similar spread at a second target. Explosions followed, and
TANG
reported two ships sunk. However, postwar examination of Japanese records
revealed by the Japanese government show that two passenger-cargo ships
and two freighters were sunk. The ships must have overlapped, and the torpedo
spread must have hit and sunk two victims in addition to their intended
targets. Those sunk added up to 16,292 tons of enemy shipping.
On 30 June, while she patrolled the lane from Kyushu to Dairen, TANG
sighted another cargo ship steaming without an escort. After making an
end around run on the surface which produced two torpedo misses, TANG
went deep to avoid depth charges, then surfaced and chased the hapless
ship until she closed the range to 750 yards. A single torpedo blew it
in half, and the merchantman sank.
The next morning, TANG sighted a tanker and a freighter. While
she sank the freighter, the tanker fled. The submarine trailed until dark,
then fired two torpedoes which sent the latter down. TANG celebrated
the Fourth of July at dawn by an end-around, submerged attack on an enemy
freighter which was near shore. However, with rapidly shoaling water and
her keel about to touch bottom, TANG backed off; fired a spread
of three with two hits and then surfaced as survivors of the 6,886-ton
cargo ship were being rescued by fishing boats. That afternoon, TANG
sighted another cargo ship of approximately the same size, and sank her
with two torpedoes. The submarine surfaced and, with the aid of grapnel
hooks and Thompson submachine guns, rescued a survivor who had been clinging
to an overturned lifeboat. While prowling the waters off Dairen late the
next night, the submarine sighted a cargo ship and, during a submerged
attack with her last two torpedoes, sank it. The box score for her third
patrol was 10 enemy merchant ships sunk that totaled 39,160 tons.
Her fourth war patrol was conducted from 31 July to 3 September in Japanese
home waters off the coast of Honshu. On 10 August, she fired a spread of
three torpedoes at a tanker near the beach of Omai Saki with no hits. The
next day, after locating two freighters and two escorts, she launched three
torpedoes at the larger freighter and two at the other. The larger freighter
disintegrated apparently from a torpedo which exploded in her boilers.
As the submarine went deep, her crew heard the fourth and fifth torpedoes
hit the second ship. After a jarring depth charge attack which lasted 38
minutes, TANG returned to periscope level. Only the two escorts
were in sight, and one of them was picking up survivors.
On the 14th, TANG attacked a patrol yacht with her deck gun and
reduced the Japanese ship's deck house to a shambles with eight hits. Eight
days later, she sank a 225-foot patrol boat. On 23 August, the submarine
closed a large ship; Japanese in white uniforms could be seen lining its
superstructure and the bridge. She fired three torpedoes, and two hits
caused the 8,135-ton transport to slip under the waves. Two days later,
TANG
sank a tanker and an escort with her last three torpedoes and then returned
to Pearl Harbor.
TANG set out from Pearl Harbor on 24 September 1944, to begin
her fifth war patrol during WWII. On 27 September she topped off with fuel
at Midway and left there the same day, heading for an area between the
northwest coast of Formosa, and the China coast.
In order to reach her area, TANG had to pass through narrow waters
known to be heavily patrolled by the enemy. A large area stretching northeast
from Formosa was known to be mined by the enemy, and TANG was given
the choice of making the passage north of Formosa alone, or joining a coordinated
attack group of USS SIVERSIDES (SS-236), USS TRIGGER (SS-237),
and USS SALMON (SS-182), under Cdr. Coye in SILVERSIDES
which
was to patrol off northeast Formosa, and making the passage with them.
TANG
chose
to make the passage alone and these vessels never heard from
TANG, nor
did any base, after she left Midway.
The story of TANG's sinking comes from the report of her surviving
Commanding Officer. A night surface attack was launched on 24 October 1944
against a transport which had been stopped in an earlier attack. The first
torpedo was fired, and when it was observed to be running true, the second
and last was loosed. It curved sharply to the port, broached, porpoised
and circled. Emergency speed was called for and the rudder was thrown over.
These measures resulted only in the torpedo striking the stern of TANG,
rather
than amidships.
The explosion was violent, and crewmembers as far forward as the Control
Room received broken limbs. The boat went down by the stern with the after
three compartments flooded. Of the nine officers and men on the bridge,
three were able to swim through the night until picked up eight hours later.
One officer escaped from the flooded Conning Tower, and was rescued with
the others.
The submarine came to rest on the bottom at 180 feet, and the men in
her crowded forward as the after compartments flooded. Publications were
burned, and all assembled to the Forward Torpedo Room to escape. The escape
was delayed by a Japanese patrol, which dropped charges, and started an
electrical fire in the Forward Battery. Thirteen men escaped from the forward
room, and by the time the last made his exit, the heat from the fire was
so intense that the paint on the bulkhead was scorching, melting, and running
down. Of the 13 men who escaped, only eight reached the surface, and of
these but five were able to swim until rescued.
When the nine survivors were picked up by a destroyer escort, there
were victims of TANG's previous sinkings on board, and they inflicted
tortures on the men from TANG.
With great humanity, O'Kane states,
"When
we realized that our clubbings and kickings were being administered by
the burned, mutilated survivors of our own handiwork, we found we could
take it with less prejudice."
The nine captives were retained by the Japanese in prison camps until
the end of the war, and were treated by them in typical fashion. The loss
of TANG by her own torpedo, the last one fired on the most successful
patrol ever made by a U.S. submarine, was a stroke of singular misfortune.
On her last patrol TANG fired twenty-four torpedoes in four attacks.
Twenty-two torpedoes found their mark in enemy ships, sinking 13 of them;
one missed, and the last torpedo, fired after a careful checkover, sank
TANG.
Cdr. O'Kane has been called the Submarine Force's most outstanding officer;
he served as Executive Officer of the very successful USS WAHOO (SS-238)
before taking command of TANG.
TANG received four battle stars and two Presidential Unit Citations
for World War II service. Her commanding officer received the Congressional
Medal of Honor for TANG's final action.
Shipmates on Eternal Patrol in USS TANG (SS-306):
Accardy, J. G. SM3
Adams, R. F. STM2
Allen, D. D. MOMM2
Anderson, P. E. TM3
Andriolo, C. RM2
Anthony, H. F1
Ballinger, W. F. CTM
Bauer, E. C. Y3
Beaumont, E. H. LT
Bergman, E. F. RM1
Bisogno, F. N. TM3
Boucher, W. J. TM3
Bresette, B. V. QM3
Bush, J. EM2
Chiavetta, B. S1
Clark, W. J. QM3
Coffin, R. J. EM3
Culp, J. H. CEM
Darienzo, A. J. EM2
DeLapp, M. V. CMOMMA
Dorsey, W. E. MOMM1 Enos, F. M.,
Jr. LTJG Eriksen, L. H.
F1
Fellicetty, D. C. Y3
Finckbone, B. H. EM2
Fluker, J. W. TM1
Foster, J. M. TM1
Galloway, W. C. TM2
Gentle, T. E. F1
Gorab, G. J., Jr. EM3 Gregg,
O. D. COX
Hainline, H. W. QM3
Harms, F. G. MOMM2
Haws, G. O. F1
Henry, J. F. F1
Heubeck, J. H. LTJG
Hudson, A.L. CMOMMA Ijames, H. W., Jr.
RCM3 Imwold, S. S. MOMM2
Jenkins, D. M. Y3
Jones, S. W. CQM
Kaiser, L. C. MOMM3 Kanagy, J. T. EM1
Kassube, J. T. COX
Key, J. A. SC3
Knapp, R. B. FC3
Kroth, R. J. LTJG
Lane, L. R. EM1
Larson, P. I. CPHMA
Lee, R. P. RM3
Llewellyn, L. H. RM2
London, C. W. F1
Loveless, C. MOMM1
Lytton, E. MOMM1
McMorrow, R.V. MOMM1 McNabb, J. J. F1
Parker, J. J. CCSA
Pearce, B. C., Jr. ENS Raiford, R. M. CK3
Reabuck, F. J. F1
Rector, D. D. GM3
Reinhardt, E. F1
Roberts, J. L. SC3
Robertson, G. L. MOMM2
Smith, S. G., Jr. QM3
Springer, F. H. LT
Stepien, E. F. S1
Sunday, F. L. EM3
Vaughn, P. B., Jr. COX
Wadsworth, C. W. TM3 Walker, H. M. ST3
Weekley, L. S. CTMA
Welch, R. E. QM2
White, J. M. GM1
Williams, W. H. Y2
Wines, P. T. LTJG
Wukovich, G. MOMM1
Zofcin, G. MOMM1
"Sailors, Rest Your Oars!"
Survivors
Caverly, F. M. RT1
DaSilva,
J. B. MOMM2 (His story)
Decker, C. O. MOMM3
Flanagan, H. J. LTJG
Liebold, W. R. CBMA
Narrowanski, P. TM3
O'Kane,
R. H. CDR
Savadkin, L. LT
Trukke, H. O. TM2
Compiled by SUBNET from "UNITES STATES SUBMARINE LOSSES - WORLD WAR
II,"
U.S. Navy Department, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Naval
History Division, Washington, D.C.
and U.S. NAVAL SUBMARINE FORCE INFORMATION BOOK '95 -- J. Christley