Growlers Legendary Down-the-Throat Torpedo Attack of September 12, 1944

The night sea was calm, almost deceptively so. A thin scatter of clouds drifted across the stars, and the horizon was a dark, featureless smear. Below the surface lay silence, but on the bridge of Growler, men kept their eyes sweeping and their nerves sharp. This was wolf pack country now, waters between Luzon and Formosa, where Japanese convoys crept through the straits and where three American submarines waited to pounce.

In the conning tower, red lamps threw their dull glow over the dials and the men hunched around them. Commander Thomas B. “Ben” Oakley Jr. stood steady, his voice measured, his presence calm. He had a knack for that, keeping himself even while every other heart on the boat ran a little faster.

Continue reading “Growlers Legendary Down-the-Throat Torpedo Attack of September 12, 1944”

Contact Off Kiska: USS Growler, July 5, 1942

 

In the cold gray dawn of July 5, 1942, the crew of USS Growler (SS-215) was deep in the fight. She was five miles northeast of Kiska Harbor, patrolling the rough waters of the Aleutians as part of the silent service’s early wartime thrust into the North Pacific. The island, then held by Japanese forces, was a linchpin in the enemy’s bold move to stretch their Empire’s grip eastward across the Aleutian chain.

For the men aboard Growler, the day began as it often did on patrol. Visibility had improved since the previous night, and the morning hours were spent submerged, listening. At 0413 hours, at a quiet periscope depth, the boat’s sonar picked up a formation of enemy ships. The contact was sharp and clear—three vessels bearing 240 degrees true, estimated at 8000 yards and closing. The estimated course of the targets was 090 to 110 degrees true. Their size and profile suggested something more serious than patrol boats. It looked like cruisers leaving Kiska.

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Howard Gilmore – Medal of Honor

Howard Gilmore had always been a man of the sea. Born in Selma, Alabama, in 1902, he was drawn to the Navy early, enlisting in 1920 and earning an appointment to the U.S. Naval Academy two years later. He wasn’t just another midshipman—he stood out, graduating in 1926 and beginning a career that would lead him to command in the silent service, where men fought unseen beneath the waves. His early service saw him posted to the battleship USS Mississippi, but it was under the surface, in the cold steel belly of a submarine, that he found his calling. Continue reading “Howard Gilmore – Medal of Honor”

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