MikeBo’s Blog
Sunny 80°F/27°C at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
Rain 49°F/10°C in Cedar Park, Texas
Buonagiornata miei amici,
When I sat down
at my computer to write my book, LST 920: Charlie Botula’s Long, Slow, Target! in 2016, I realized it was an incomplete story. The story that my father told me and my
USS Arizona Under Attack
Pearl Harbor 1941
|
And that,
gentle reader, is my contribution to the many anniversary stories you will see
on this seventy-seventh anniversary of the day that Franklin Delano Roosevelt
called A Day Which Will Live in Infamy!
Sunday Morning
December 7, 1941 was the perfect day
in a Pacific Island paradise, until about 8
o'clock that morning! While my parents and other Americans were
listening to their radios or looking at their maps to see where Pearl Harbor
was located, World War Two, for Petty Officer Harry Neil Schultz, had already
begun. Schultz was at Pearl Harbor, aboard the Destroyer USS Jarvis (DD 393)
when the first Japanese bombs started falling on the U.S. fleet.
Destroyer Jarvis |
In their
all-out attack, the key targets for the Japanese were the battleships. They
sank Arizona, California, Oklahoma, and West
Virginia. USS Arizona 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, USS Jarvis, escaped to fight another
day, and took her fair measure of vengeance on the attackers.
Harry N.
Schultz was the oldest of seven sons born to Mr. and Mrs. Herman Schultz of 801
“A” Street, Pasco, Washington. Pasco is
inland, about 200 miles east of Seattle. By October 1943, five of the Schultz
brothers – Harry, Dick, Carl, Arthur and Elmer would be in uniform serving
their country, and the two youngest Schultz boys – Paul Herman, 13 and Harold
Eugene, 6 would be waiting their turn to
serve. Harry had enlisted in the peacetime Navy in 1937 and was assigned to the
Jarvis right
after his basic training. When an article appeared in the Pasco
Herald, praising the elder, immigrant Schultzes for their contribution to the
war effort, Harry’s younger brothers were in various military branches on
various wartime assignments. Arthur, 28, was a Sergeant in the Army in North
Africa. Brother Richard, 26, was a
Corporal in the infantry in North Africa. Carl Schultz, 22, was in the Army
Signal Corps in Australia and brother Elmer, 18, was also in the Navy. Even though he planned on making the Navy his
career, a commission as an officer was the farthest thing from Schultz’ mind on
the morning of December 7, 1941.
Schultz in 1937 |
The Destroyer Schultz
served aboard was named for a heroic Navy Midshipman, James C. Jarvis, who
served in the fledgling U.S. Navy during an early conflict with France.
Midshipman Jarvis was born in 1787 and appointed as a Midshipman from the State
of New York in 1799. As was the custom of the day, Midshipman Jarvis went to
sea aboard the famed frigate Constellation.
In 1800, what the history books describe as a quasi-war, broke out between the fledgling United States and its
revolutionary benefactor France over freedom of the seas for American shipping.
A similar dispute with Great Britain would later lead to the War of 1812. During its battle with the
French frigate La Vengeance Deux in
February 1800 young Jarvis was ordered aloft to secure the Constellation’s mainmast. At one point he was ordered down for fear
the mast might topple. The young midshipman disobeyed the order yelling down to
the officer who gave the order, 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, Schultz was aboard the second destroyer named for
Midshipman Jarvis (DD 383) moored next to another destroyer, the USS Mugford
(DD 389), and their tender, USS Sacramento, a converted 1914 vintage gun boat.
The after-action reports of all three ships show the Japanese attack beginning
at 0758 on that Sunday morning. General
Quarters was immediately sounded, and all three destroyers opened fire on
the attacking aircraft. The ship’s log notes that the ship’s anti-aircraft machine
guns commenced firing at 0804 hrs, with the Jarvis’ five-inch gun firing the
first shot of any five-inch gun in the harbor 60 seconds later.
USS Jarvis was
credited with shooting down four enemy aircraft during its escape from Ford
Island to the open sea. It is believed that Jarvis was the first to draw enemy
blood on that bloody Sunday. Among the seamen receiving special commendation
for their action during the Pearl Harbor attack was Quartermaster First Class
Harry Neil Schultz, who had been with the Jarvis since it was commissioned in
1937. So much for the wartime myth, that the Americans at Pearl Harbor were so
surprised by the suddenness and ferocity of the Japanese attack, that they drew
no Japanese blood on that long-ago Sunday. The crew of the Jarvis shattered
that myth almost immediately.
About two weeks
later, the USS Jarvis left Pearl Harbor along with the carrier Saratoga as part
of 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 Wake 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. In
the Jarvis’ crew with Harry Schultz were two young brothers, Lans and Billy
Wilson. It would be their fate in the later action at Guadalcanal that would
enter into the fateful decision by Shultz later in the war to disobey his orders.
The transport ships that Jarvis was escorting came under heavy attack by the
Japanese and the Jarvis took a Japanese torpedo but remained afloat. Nine of
the 26 attacking Japanese planes had been able to penetrate the American
defenses. Following that battle, the
Jarvis steamed 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 Wilson Brothers |
The Jarvis’
skipper, Lt. Commander William Graham, Jr. then ordered the Jarvis to steam for
Sydney, Australia for repairs, unwittingly ordering his ship into the maelstrom
known as the bloody Battle of Savo Island. 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 Jarvis 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. The two Wilson brothers, Billy and Lans were among the 233 crew
members who died that day. The loss of Jarvis’ shook Quartermaster Harry Schultz to his core. In
one fell swoop, the Japanese had wiped out his entire family of shipmates.
Rising through
the ranks, Schultz earned his commission in 1944, and took command of USS LST
920, a tank landing ship that saw action in Europe and the Pacific.
Schultz was one of only three
members of
the LST’s crew of 110 or so who had ever been to sea. Commissioned in June 1944,
LST 920 along with its sister ship LST 921 made a safe journey across the
Atlantic during late July and early August 1944, and on August 14, 1944 was
headed, in another convoy, from Milford Haven, Wales to Falmouth, England, when
the convoy was attacked by the German submarine U 667. The first torpedo broke LST 921 in two, and
the second torpedo which was aimed at my father’s ship, blew the British escort
ship LCI(L)99 out of the water.
Harry Schutz in 1945 |
The three attacked
ships shared a common history. All three; the two LSTs and the British escort
ship had been built at the same shipyard in Massachusetts – the Bethlehem
Hingham Shipyard. The crews of the two LSTs trained together at Camp Bradford,
Virginia prior to their commissioning. In fact, in a coincidence eerily reminiscent
of the ill-fated Wilson brothers aboard the Jarvis, twin brothers were serving
aboard the LST 920 and LST 921. Aboard the LST 921 was Seaman Jerry Hendrixson, twin brother of LST 920
Seaman Harold Hendrixson. Unlike Lans and Billy Wilson, who were lost off
Guadalcanal, the Hendrixson brothers were eventually reunited. I’m sure that
Captain Schultz was also mindful of his other shipmates from the Jarvis, who lived
through the attack on Pearl Harbor only to be lost off Guadalcanal. Thus, was put
in motion for Schultz’s life-saving decision.
Following the
attack on his convoy, Schultz twice ordered Radioman Fred Benck to send
messages to his Command requesting permission to return and rescue survivors.
Twice, his request was denied. Finally. Schultz made his decision. The order
was repeated, DO NOT BREAK CONVOY! Schultz
responded, TO HELL WITH HIM! LST 920 turned
and returned to pick up survivors from her sister ship, LST 921. When the LST
920 eventually reached Falmouth, Captain Schultz was ordered ashore to face a
court-martial. Disobedience during wartime, will not earn the offender any
medals for valor. However, Harry Schultz
argued that an ancient law of the sea – rescuing the survivors of a maritime
disaster – takes precedence, even in wartime. He was exonerated and returned to
his ship.
LST 921
survivor John Abrams told me many years
later, We were left, all by ourselves
feeling helpless. We all knew that the German sub was still in the area. Just
as all hope seemed lost, we saw your dad’s ship coming back. We all
realized that Captain Schultz had disobeyed orders to come back to get us. I owe
my life to that man!
Caio!
Mike Botula
[Mike Botula, the
author of LST 920: Charlie Botula’s Long, Slow Target! is a retired
broadcast journalist, government spokesperson and media consultant. Mike’s book is available from
Amazon or Barnes and Noble Books. You can read more about Mike Botula at www.mikebotula.com]
© 2018
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