LST 921, LCI(L)99, U-667
Brushy Creek Journal
Memorial Day
Monday May 27, 2019
Cloudy 61°F/ 16°C off Falmouth, UK
Partly Cloudy 62°F/ 17°C off La Pallice, France
Buonagiornata,
We have a shared responsibility
to look directly into the eye of history,
and ask what we must do
differently to curb such suffering again!
President Barack Obama at
Hiroshima, May 27, 2016
When I was a little boy, Memorial
Day was still called Decoration Day and it fell on May 30th. My
mother told me it was a memorial event that started at the end of the Civil
War, because that’s when Americans would pay tribute to the fallen who wore
both blue and gray by decorating their graves with flowers. The observance
actually began with former slaves celebrating the Emancipation Proclamation by
decorating the wartime graves of African-Americans who fought for their freedom
from slavery. Decoration Day quickly became a memorial day honoring Americans
who fell in all of our country’s wars. After World War I, we honored the fallen
of The Great War on each November 11th. For many years, November 11 was Armistice
Day, and on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th
month of the year there was a moment of silence to commemorate the end of The War to End All Wars. In 1968
Congress revamped our national holidays, combining these hallowed days into a
pair of three-day weekends. Decoration Day is now Memorial Day and
Armistice Day is now Veterans Day. Today we will again honor those who fought and died for their
country. But, as the years pass, the real meaning of both days is sometimes
lost in the holiday atmosphere that accompanies any long weekend.
New Edition Cover |
When my father returned from his
US Navy service in World War II, he told my brother and I a story that is retold
to each new generation in my family as every new Memorial Day approaches. It
begins with a few terse lines from the LST 920’s Ship’s Log:
LST 920 Ship’s Log: Monday 14 August
1944
1654 hours: First hit on LST 921,
directly astern of us. Presumably by torpedo.
1654 hours: General Quarters sounded
1656 hours: LCI #99 (British) hit by torpedo presumably
1657 hours: All stations manned and ready; approximate position…50°54’
North, 4°45’ West
1657 hours: Relieved on conn by Captain Schultz and went to GQ station
Ensign John J. Waters, Officer of
the Deck
My father, Lieutenant Charles Botula, Jr. died in 1965 without ever knowing the full story about the afternoon of August 14th 1944 off the west coast of England. It’s taken me years to research it. Neither my Dad nor his Captain – Harry N. Schultz ever knew which enemy submarine attacked them or what happened to that U boat after the LST 921 and HMS LCI(L)99 were torpedoed. Most of the survivors of that terrible afternoon have also faded from our midst, but their story is well worth the retelling. For in the retelling, we can pay them a long overdue honor.
Monday, 14 August 1944 -16:54
hrs. - USS LST 920, commanded by Lieutenant Harry N. Schultz and USS LST 921,
under the command of Lieutenant John Werner Enge were underway in convoy EBC 72
from Milford Haven, Wales to Falmouth, England. They were suddenly attacked by
the German submarine U667, was under the command of Kapitӓnleutnant Karl-Heinze
Lange. LST 921 was hit by the first torpedo and broke in two with the aft
section sinking minutes later. Some survivors scampered to safety on the bow
section. Others went overboard into the chilly water. When the aft section
sank, it took half of the ship’s crew to the bottom. General Quarters was
sounded on the LST 920 and Captain Schultz came to the bridge. Seeing survivors
in the water, Schultz ordered his radioman, Seaman Fred Benck to send a request
for permission to turn his ship around to pick up survivors. Permission was
denied and the LST 920 was ordered to proceed to Falmouth. Shortly after
receiving these orders, Schultz ordered Radioman Benck to send the message again.
This time, Captain Schultz disregarded the order to proceed and ordered the LST
920 to turn around to rescue any survivors of the attack.
As my father watched from the
bridge of the LST 920, he spotted a torpedo coming straight at him. Just then,
a British escort vessel, LCI(L)99 came alongside, took the full brunt of the
torpedo and was blown out of the water. There is no way of knowing if the
Captain of that British escort vessel deliberately steered his ship into the path of that
oncoming enemy torpedo or if it was happenstance that put the crew of LCI(L)99
into harm’s way. Either way, the Skipper, Lt. Commander Arthur John Francis Patrick Reynolds, Royal Navy,
died a hero.
The 920 came about and Captain Schultz
ordered two small boats into the water with Ensign John Waters in one and
Ensign Harold Willcox in the other, along with nine other sailors to rescue
survivors. Willcox tied a line around his waist and jumped into the water
numerous times to help pull survivors aboard. In his After Action Report,
Captain Schultz singled out Waters and Willcox and the nine seamen for
outstanding performance during the action. In all, 48 survivors were rescued
and brought aboard the LST 920. Seaman Joe Wallace tells this part of the
story, I remember one of the 921 crew
members coming up to the bridge all wet and oily. I gave him my locker keys and
location, and he showered and put on some clean dry clothes. By this time it
was dark. We gathered the survivors and were on our way to Falmouth. There, I
had the task of counting the departing survivors - 42 walking and 6 stretcher
cases.
A number of other
survivors from the 921 as well as the LCI(L) 99 were rescued by a British ship
that joined in the rescue operation. All told, about 65 survivors were picked
up, but fully half of the LST 921’s complement of 107 officers and crew had
been lost. Years would pass before a dusty and forgotten archive* would reveal the
names of the sailors – Americans, British and German who lost their lives on
that August afternoon more than seventy years ago. I would like us to remember:
LST 921
Baker, Thomas
A.,
USNR
Seaman First Class
Banit, Roman J.,
USNR Seaman
Second Class
Bennett, Frederick W.,
USNR Seaman
First Class
Bent, Eugene E.,
USNR Seaman
First Class
Clements, Charles M.,
USNR Seaman
First Class
Dove, Raleigh J.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Feeney, Lawrence E.,
USNR
Fireman Second Class
Fitton, Edward Joseph,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Freely, James Joseph, USNR
Boatswain's Mate 1st Class
Furino, Louis A.,
USNR
Coxswain
Guthrie, Edward J.,
USNR
Ensign
Guziak, Walter V.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Hoak, William K.,
USNR
Gunner's Mate Third Class
Jerzewski, Chester R.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Jones, Oscar R.,
USNR
Coxswain
Kozlik, John H.,
USNR
Seaman First Class
Lowe, Samuel M.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Micheline, Carmine A.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Mindlin, Daniel,
USNR
Ensign
Monaco, Robert Chester,
USNR
Radioman Second Class
Moore, Charles H.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Mulholland, William P.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Newberry, Clyde,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Pizon, John J.,
USNR
Seaman First Class
Potasky, Joseph E.,
USNR
Seaman First Class
Progy, Henry,
USNR
Motor Mach Mate 3rd Class
Richard, Donald James,
USNR
Gunner's Mate 3rd Class
Siring, Ronald John,
USNR
Ship's Cook Third Class
Smith, Kenneth J.,
USN
Boatswain's Mate 2nd Class
Smith, Lee I., USNR
Seaman Second Class
Smith, Ray R.,
USNR
Seaman First Class
Sprague, Herbert K.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Suazoe, Ray M.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Totulis, Albert G.,
USN
Gunner's Mate 3rd Class
Trachsel, Ernest W.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Van Why, Henry,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Verity, Edward C.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Vitense, Glenn,
USNR
Seaman First Class
Widmer, Richard C.,
USNR
Seaman Second Class
Yavornitzky, Andrew J.,
USNR
Shipfitter Second Class
The British escort vessel –
LCI(L) 99 was a much smaller ship than the wounded LST 921. It was about 150
feet long compared to the LST’s 328 feet. And, instead of a ship’s complement
of 110 officers and crew, LCI(L) 99’s casualty list shows a crew of eight – two
officers and six enlisted men, including the 19 year-old ship’s cook, Able
Seaman William Todd. Todd’s great-niece, Gillian Whittle told me in an email, Bill as he was known was only 19 when he died, and he
came from Chorley, Lancashire, England. I imagine he was called up when he
turned 18, I don't know his birthday. He was acting able seaman and he was
actually the ships cook. We as a family are very proud of him and I go to Kent,
England when I can to lay flowers at the naval memorial. I am afraid I don't
know much else about my Uncle, but I have his medals and I had the privilege
of wearing them proudly on remembrance parade for him one year and we
keep his memory going.
Also aboard the Escort Ship LCI(L) 99 on
that deadly August 14, 1944 were:
Sub-lieutenant
Douglas Edwin Swatridge, RNVR, Age 25
Leading Seaman
Gordon Henry Astor House, RN, Age 21
Able Seaman
James Quine, RN, Age 21
Able Seaman
Francis Ernest Dennis Shacklock, RN, Age 19
Ordinary Seaman
John Shields, RN, Age unknown
Ordinary Seaman
Donald Maurice Thompson, RN, Age 20
Able Seaman
William Todd, RN, Age 19
Toward the end
of November 2018, I received an email from Able Seaman William Todd’s great-niece,
Gillian Whittle. In her correspondence, she admitted that she never really knew
her great-uncle, but she thanked me for my efforts to keep the memories of all
who died that day fresh in the memories of Americans and Britons alike. She
wrote, We as a family are very proud of
him and I go to Kent, England when I can to lay flowers at the naval memorial.
I am afraid I don't know much else about my Uncle, but I have his medals and I
had the privilege of wearing them proudly on remembrance parade for him
one year.
The attacking submarine, U 667,
had sunk four ships including the LST 921 and LCI (99), the Liberty Ship SS
Ezra Weston and HMS Regina on what turned out to be its most successful cruise,
as well as an RAF bomber on a previous mission. But as it headed back to its
base and a hero’s welcome, its jubilant crewmen could not know that their luck
was about to change. In all of the research I did for this story, the US Navy
and German Kriegsmarine archives revealed only that U 667 struck a
mine on or about August 25th on the way back to its home base.
But, as I researched further, I found the answer on a specialty internet
site: uboat.net, which is devoted to the archives of the Kriegsmarine and
its unterseebooten. According to the archives, the RAF had carried
out a series of aerial mine-laying missions off the coast of France in an area
code-named Cinnamon right after the U 667 left port on its final cruise.
The RAF dropped mines into the U 667’s inbound route back to base. An
RAF report that I read showed that the coordinates of that August
1944 mine-laying sweep matches the location where the U 667 was finally
found and examined by diving crews. The loss of the U 667 was recorded by
the Kriegsmarine after it missed a scheduled radio check-in on
August 25th. When any U boat failed to meet its daily radio check-in,
Admiral Karl Dönitz’ high command assumed that the sub had been lost. And so it
was when U 667 missed its scheduled radio check on 25 August 1944.
The exploding mine sent U 667 to
the bottom of the Bay of Biscay, where it remains with its entire crew. Along
with the U 667’s Kapitӓnleutnant
Karl-Heinze Lange, the identities of the other sailors in his crew are
listed from the roster of all the sailors who served aboard her. They are:
Name
|
Rank (In German)
|
Age
|
Lange,
Karl-Heinze
|
Kapitӓnleutnant
|
26
|
Bauch,
Walter
|
Omasch
|
30
|
Bensel,
Rolf-Rudiger
|
Olt.z.S.
|
21
|
Borowsky,
Helmut
|
MaschMt
|
23
|
Brübach, Friedrich
|
MtrOGfr
|
20
|
Brunk,
Kurt
|
MaschOFfr
|
21
|
Drewes,
Gustav
|
MaschMt
|
23
|
Eder,
Franz
|
MaschOGfr
|
21
|
Ederer,
Hans
|
OfkMt
|
24
|
Ehrenfeld,
Kurt
|
OfkMt
|
25
|
Erasimus,
Johann
|
MaschOGfr
|
20
|
Faust,
Erich
|
Olt.z.S
|
23
|
Fickert,
Wilhelm
|
MtrOGfr
|
23
|
Figlon,
Herbert
|
MechOGfr
|
22
|
Flach,
Hans
|
OsanMt
|
23
|
Grimm,
Kurt
|
MaschOGfr
|
20
|
Hagelloch,
Hans-Georg
|
OLt.ing.d.R
|
23
|
Hahl,
Adam
|
MaschOGfr
|
21
|
Hantel,
Artur
|
MtrOGfr
|
22
|
Hochstetter,
Wilhelm
|
OMaschMt
|
23
|
Holle,
Oswald
|
MaschOGfr
|
20
|
Kabs,
Helmut
|
MaschOGfr
|
21
|
Krӧller, Helmut
|
Olt.z.S
|
23
|
Laschke,
Kurt
|
MaschMt
|
21
|
Leisler-Klep,
Jürgen
|
Lt.z.S
|
n/a
|
Matthias,
Heinz-Karl
|
OMaschMt
|
25
|
Mӓurer, Ludwig
|
FkOGfr
|
21
|
Mittler,
Arnold
|
MaschOGfr
|
21
|
Mrziglod,
Heinrich
|
BtsMt
|
22
|
Oehler,
August
|
MtrHGfr
|
38
|
Proske,
Walter
|
MtrOGfr
|
21
|
Reiβach, Werner
|
StOStrm
|
30
|
Reitor,
Emil
|
MechOGfr
|
21
|
Richter,
Georg
|
OMasch
|
32
|
Richter,
Helmut
|
OMechMt
|
24
|
Sauer,
Helmut
|
MtrOGfr
|
21
|
Schӓfer, Richard
|
MaschOGfr
|
19
|
Scheit,
Reinhold
|
ObstMt
|
27
|
Schӧmetzler, Rudolf
|
MaschOGfr
|
20
|
Schrӧder, Gerhard
|
MtrOGfr
|
21
|
Schrӧder, Günther
|
Olt.z.S
|
30
|
Schulz,
Kurt
|
OMaschMt
|
24
|
Seeliger,
Willi
|
MtrOGfr
|
20
|
Senden,
Wilhelm
|
MtrOGfr
|
21
|
Steigerwald,
Wilhelm
|
FkOGfr
|
20
|
Warmbold,
Adolf
|
MtrOGfr
|
23
|
Weiβ, Rudolf
|
MaschOGfr
|
21
|
Witzel,
Hans
|
BtsMt
|
23
|
Christophe Moriceau, the French
diver who has explored the U 667’s final resting place and photographed the
site extensively for his dive organization L’Expédition Scyllias and its web site www.scyllias.fr
explained to me that unlike the United States and Great Britain, France has no
legal protection for wreck sites that might contain human remains. War graves
carry the protections of international law. But that protection does not exist
in France’s territorial waters.
It’s fitting that we remember all
who perished.
Eternal Father, strong to save,
Whose arm hath bound the restless wave,
Who bid'st the mighty ocean deep
Its own appointed limits keep;
Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee,
For those in peril on the sea!
US Navy HymnWhose arm hath bound the restless wave,
Who bid'st the mighty ocean deep
Its own appointed limits keep;
Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee,
For those in peril on the sea!
[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]
*LST 921; LCI(L)99; U 667
casualty lists via US Navy Archives,
Royal Navy and Uboat.net.
©
By Mike Botula 2019
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