Home from the Depths: The Miraculous Return of Renny Creighton

On June 5, 1944, while Americans were girding themselves for news of what would soon be called D-Day, the little town of Jonesboro, Arkansas, got a headline of its own that must’ve felt like resurrection. There, walking through the front door like a man who’d merely gone to the corner store, came Adolph “Renny” Creighton; presumed dead, but very much alive.

Two years earlier, Renny had been serving aboard the USS Sculpin (SS-191), a battle-hardened submarine with eight war patrols and dozens of enemy ships sent to the deep. But in November 1943, during her ninth patrol near the Caroline Islands, the Sculpin went silent. After a desperate engagement involving depth charges and a surface battle against a Japanese destroyer, she was lost along with the brave Captain John Cromwell, who famously chose to go down with the boat rather than risk enemy capture and compromise Allied operations. Some crewmen survived the ordeal only to suffer as POWs—some dying en route to Japan when their transport was sunk by a sister submarine, the USS Sailfish. A twist of fate, darkly poetic.

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June 3, 1944

Charles Andrews Lockwood was born on May 6, 1890, in Midland, Virginia, but came of age in rural Missouri. He did not rise through the U.S. Naval Academy with flair or distinction, graduating in 1912 near the lower third of his class. Yet, what he may have lacked in academic polish, he more than made up for in grit, instinct, and a deep-seated sense of duty to the Navy and to the men under his command.

Drawn to the submarines early, Lockwood began his undersea career aboard the tender USS Mohican in 1914. That same year, he took command of his first boat, the USS A-2, stationed in the Philippines. This marked the beginning of a lifelong bond between Lockwood and the silent service. He would later say he had submarines in his blood. In 1917, as commander of Submarine Division 1 during World War I, Lockwood tackled an early crisis head-on. A pair of deadly gasoline explosions on submarines A-7 and A-2 killed nine sailors. Lockwood led the investigation, ensuring that such disasters would not be repeated.

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