The Sorcerer Strikes – Aspro’s 5th War Patrol

When USS Aspro (SS-309) pushed away from USS Euryale at Fremantle on September 10, 1944, she was no stranger to the deadly chess game of the Pacific submarine campaign. She had already carried out four successful patrols, sending enemy ships to the bottom, and she bore the scars and the confidence of a seasoned hunter. Her crew, lean from the tropical heat and the endless diet of Navy rations, carried the rhythm of submarine life in their bones. They had endured the long refit—tuning machinery, testing torpedoes, restowing provisions, and saying goodbye to the brief comforts of liberty. Now they were heading back into the South China Sea, where enemy shipping still plied the waters in defiance of the American blockade.

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Jack’s Silver Star Moment

Back in early September, I stumbled on a small piece in the Standard Speaker (PA) from September 2, 1944. It was nothing more than a picture of Ensign Sylvester Kohut shaking hands with Admiral Nimitz and a line about him receiving the Silver Star. That was it. No details, no story.

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From Harbor Tragedy to a Resilient Legacy: The USS R-6 (SS-83)

San Pedro Harbor, late September 1921. The Pacific Fleet’s new base was a place alive with the restless energy of a Navy in transition. Battleships and destroyers filled the anchorage, while a cluster of small, dark-hulled submarines rocked gently in their moorings beside the big tender USS Camden. The sun had set, but the harbor was far from quiet. Ashore, the city of Los Angeles was swelling into one of the nation’s fastest growing metropolises, and the Navy’s presence was both a symbol of American reach and a reminder of unfinished business after the First World War. For the sailors aboard USS R-6, the night of September 26 began as another routine round of preparations for training exercises. Within hours, however, it would end with their boat lying on the harbor bottom and two of their shipmates dead.

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