Wednesday December 7, 2016
Partly Cloudy 42F/5 C at Cedar Park, Texas
Mostly Cloudy 72 F/22 C at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
Buongiorno,
Today's blog originally posted in 2014 on the
73rd anniversary of the December 7th 1941 Japanese attack on the
U.S. Naval Base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Pearl Harbor Day doesn’t always fall
on a Sunday as it did that year. I post this part of the Pearl Harbor story
every year to honor those who died in the attack as well as those who survived
to fight on for the ultimate victory in 1945. InUSS Arizona (BB 39) |
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii: 0800 hours 7 December 1941
Sunday Morning!
It was the day that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt would call A Day That Will Live in Infamy! In their all-out attack on the U.S.
Pacific Fleet, the key targets for the Japanese were the battleships. The big
Navy aircraft carriers, the new backbone of the U.S. Navy’s Pacific fleet were
not in port on that fateful Sunday. The
Japanese attackers sank Arizona, Oklahoma,
Virginia and Utah. The USS Arizona (BB 39) still rests on the bottom, a war
grave with more than a thousand valiant souls still aboard. In the midst of all
of this flame and carnage, one scrappy destroyer escaped to fight another day,
and took her fair measure of vengeance on the attackers. She was the destroyer
USS Jarvis (DD 393) and on board was a young Quartermaster named Harry Neil
SchultzHarry N. Schultz |
The Jarvis was named for Midshipman James C. Jarvis. Three U.S. Destroyers have carried his name into battle: Jarvis I (DD 38) which saw combat in World War I; Schultz’ ship Jarvis II (DD 393) which escaped the Pearl Harbor attack, and Jarvis III, (DD 799), which saw service from the end of World War 2 through the Vietnam War before it was decommissioned and given to the Spanish Navy. Midshipman Jarvis was born in 1787 and appointed as a Midshipman from the State of New York in 1799. In the custom of the day, young Jarvis went to sea aboard the famed frigate USS Constellation. During its battle with the French frigate La Vengeance Deux in February 1800 young Jarvis was sent aloft to secure the ship’s mainmast. At one point he was ordered down for fear the mast might topple. He yelled down, “My post is here. I can’t leave it.” The mast crashed down and Jarvis went over the side with the rigging and was drowned. He was 13 years old.
On the Sunday morning of December 7, 1941, the second destroyer Jarvis was moored next to
the USS Mugford (DD 389) and their tender, USS Sacramento, a 1914 vintage gun boat. The “after
USS Jarvis (DD 393) |
Schultz was later commissioned as an officer and awarded command of the Landing Ship (Tank) that my dad sailed on in WW2. But, on December 7th, Schultz, a career peacetime Navy enlisted man, was aboard the Jarvis. The Jarvis fought its way to the open sea and safety. Its gunners shot down four enemy warplanes and evaded the attackers’ efforts to sink it and block the harbor entrance.
Schultz and the Jarvis survived Pearl Harbor, and about two weeks later Jarvis left Pearl Harbor with the carrier Saratoga to join the Task Force assigned to relieve the Japanese attack on Wake Island, but, in a controversy that resounds to this day, that mission was scuttled and the Japanese took the island on December 23rd. In January 1942, while on an anti-submarine patrol the Jarvis rescued 182 survivors of a Japanese torpedo attack on the fleet oiler Neces. By July, 1942, Schultz and the Jarvis were on their way to the Solomon Islands to take part in the invasion of Guadalcanal on August 7th. The transport ships that Jarvis was escorting came under a heavy attack and the destroyer was torpedoed in spite of the fact that only 9 of the 26 attacking Japanese planes were able to penetrate the American defenses. After the battle the ship moved to Tulagi where seven wounded crewmen were transferred to a hospital on shore. Quartermaster Harry Schultz went ashore with them to make sure they were cared for. That assignment saved his life.
The Jarvis’ skipper, Lt. Comdr. William Graham, Jr. ordered the ship to steam for Sydney Australia for repairs. Shortly after, she steamed across “Iron Bottom Sound” and ran into the approaching fleet of Japanese Admiral Mikawa’s heavy cruisers, which had mistaken the destroyer for an American heavy cruiser. As she continued to steam westward, the Japanese again attacked her with a force of 31 planes, raking her with machine gun fire and torpedoes. USS Jarvis went to the bottom of Iron Bottom sound at 1 o’clock in the afternoon on August 9th with all hands. Brothers Billy and Lans Wilson were among the 233 crew members who died that day. Quartermaster Harry Schultz went on to a new assignment.
Rising from the ranks Schultz earned his commission in 1944, and took command of US LST 920, a landing ship that saw action from the beaches of Normandy to the invasion of Okinawa back in the Pacific. He was one of only three members of the crew of 110 or so who had ever been to sea. Schultz’ executive officer was my father, Lt. Charles Botula, Jr. But unlike my dad, Harry Schultz didn’t talk about his wartime experiences.
On August 14, 1944, the LST 920 and its sister ship the LST 921 were sailing in a convoy across Bristol Channel about 70 miles from Lands’ End, England. At 4 p.m. the LST 921 was struck by a torpedo and broke in two, the aft portion sinking. Half the crew was lost. A second torpedo launched by the attacking U667 was aimed at the 920. My dad recalls seeing the torpedo’s wake, but a British escort vessel came between the attacker and his ship and was blown out of the water. Standing orders were for all ships to remain with the convoy if attacked. Captain Schultz ordered Radioman Fred Benck to send a message to the convoy commander. "WHO IS PICKING UP SURVIVORS?” The reply was an order, “DO NOT BREAK CONVOY!" This message was delivered to the captain. In about two minutes, he came into the Radio Room and ordered Benck to send the message again. This time he waited for the answer which was "DO NOT BREAK CONVOY!" As Benck
Radioman Benck |
Like the Wilson brothers on the Jarvis at Guadalcanal two brothers were serving on the two LSTs in the convoy. One of the Forty-seven crewmembers of the LST 921 pulled on board the 920 was Seaman Gerald F. Hendrixson, the twin brother of LST 920 crew member Harold Hendrixson. Thanks to Harry Schultz, the Hendrixson brothers both made it through their ordeal. A few days later Captain Schultz was called before a court martial but later cleared of any charges. Many years later I learned from Schultz’ family and friends that he had never gotten over the loss of his shipmates at Guadalcanal, and he was not going to let any more good sailors die if he could help them even if it meant disobeying orders. Shultz’ left his command of the LST 920 in 1946, stayed in the Navy after the war, and eventually retired as a Commander. Two of the officers from the 920 that I talked with in researching this story told me that Schultz always “kept a certain distance” from his officers and crewmembers. Knowing about his earlier career as I did, I realized that he had already lost one shipboard “family” in the war, and he probably didn’t want to form any close personal ties with his new one. And, my dad, who was on the bridge at the time of the U-boat attack, never knew why his “Skipper” disobeyed orders that August afternoon. He said he was “stunned” when Captain Schultz broke that convoy rule and gave the order to come about.
A few months later, Captain Harry Schultz and LST 920 sailed through the Panama Canal and on into the Pacific Ocean. Next stop? Pearl Harbor on route to the invasion of Okinawa and the end of World War 2.
Ciao,
MikeBo
[You can read more about Harry Schultz in Mike Botula's book LST
920: Charlie Botula’s Long, Slow Target! (Amazon Books)
©
By Mike Botula 2016
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