| Act Act of 29 August 1916: |
"._._. The President
._._. is hereby
authorized to undertake prior to July first, nineteen hundred and nineteen,
the construction of
._._. |
"Ten first-class battleships, carrying as heavy armor and as powerful armaments
as any vessels of their class, to have the highest practicable speed and
greatest desirable radius of action; four of these at a cost, exclusive of
armor and armament, not to exceed $11,500,000 each, to be begun as soon as
practicable. |
. . . . . . . |
"._._.
Provided, That the
._._. vessels
directed herein to be begun as soon as practicable shall be contracted
for or shall begun in navy yards within six months from the date of the approval
of this Act. |
. . . . . . . |
"The Secretary of the Navy is hereby directed to submit to the Congress
._._. a
report on the largest battle ship which can be undertaken in the United States
in the present state of the shipbuilding and engineering sciences
._._. and
he shall further report on the desirability of building one or more such
vessels.
._._." |
| The second West Virginia was laid down on 12 April 1920
by the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. of Newport News, Virginia;
reclassified to BB48 on 17 July 1920; launched on 17 November 1921; sponsored
by Miss Alice Wright Mann, daughter of Issac T. Mann, a prominent West Virginian;
and commissioned on 1 December 1923, CApt. Thomas J. Senn in command. |
| The most recent of the "super-dreadnoughts," West Virginia
embodied the latest knowledge of naval architecture; and water-tight
compartmentation of her hull and her armor protection marked an advance over
the design of battleships built or on the drawing boards before the Battle
of Jutland. |
| In the months that followed, West Virginia ran her trials
and shakedown and underwent post-commissioning alterations. After a brief
period of work at the New York Navy Yard, the ship made the passage to Hampton
Roads, although experiencing trouble with her steering gear while en route.
Overhauling the troublesome gear thoroughly while in Hampton Roads, West
Virginia put to sea on the morning of 16 June 1924. At 1010, while the
battleship was steaming in the center of Lynnhaven Channel, the quartermaster
at the wheel reported that the rudder indicator would not answer. The ringing
of the emergency bell to the quickly ordered all engines stopped, but the
engine room telegraph would not answer -- it was later discovered that there
was no power to the engine room telegraph of the steering telegraph. |
| The captain then resorted to sending orders down to main control
via the voice tube from the bridge. He ordered full speed ahead on the port
engine; all stop on the starboard. Efforts continued apace over the ensuing
moments to steer the ship with her engines and keep her in the channel and,
when this failed, to check headway from the edge of the channel. Unfortunately,
all efforts failed; and, as the ship lost headway due to an engine casualty,
West Virginia grounded on the soft mud bottom. Fortunately, as Comdr.
(later Admiral) Harold R. Stark, the executive officer, reported: ". . .
not the slightest damage to the hull had been sustained." |
| The court of inquiry, investigating the grounding, found that
inaccurate and misleading navigational data had been supplied the ship. The
legends on the charts provided were found to have indicated uniformly greater
channel width than actually existed. The findings of the court thus exonerated
Capt. Senn and the navigator from any blame. |
| After repairs had been effected, West Virginia became flagship
for the Commander, Battleship Divisions, Battle Fleet, on 30 October 1924,
thus beginning her service as an integral part of the "backbone of the fleet"
-- as the battleships were regarded. She soon proved her worth under a succession
of commanding officers -- most of which later attained flag rank. In 1925,
for example, under Capt. A. J. Hepburn, the comparative newcomer to battleship
ranks scored first in competitive short-range target practices. During Hepburn's
tour, West Virginia garnered two trophies for attaining the highest
merit in the category. |
| The ship later won the American Defense Cup presented by the American
Defense Society to the battleship obtaining the highest merit with all guns
in short-range firing-and the Spokane Cup, presented by that city's Chamber
of Commerce in recognition of the battleship's scoring the highest merit
with all guns at short range. In 1925, West Virginia won the Battle
Efficiency Pennant for battleships-the first time that the ship had won the
coveted "Meatball." She won it again in 1927, 1932 and 1933. |
| During this period, West Virginia underwent a cycle of
training, maintenance and readiness exercises, taking part in engineering
and gunnery competitions and the annual large-scale exercises, or "Fleet
Problems." In the latter, the Fleet would be divided up into opposing sides,
and a strategic or tactical situation would be played out, with the lessons
learned becoming part and parcel of the development of doctrine that would
later be tested in the crucible of combat. |
| During 1925, the battleship took part in the joint Army-Navy maneuvers
to test the defenses of the Hawaiian Islands and then cruised with the Fleet
to Australia and New Zealand. In fleet exercises subsequent to the 1925 cruise,
West Virginia ranged from Hawaii to the Caribbean and the Atlantic,
and from Alaskan waters to Panama. |
| In order to keep pace with technological developments in ordnance,
gunnery and fire control-as well as engineering and aviation-the ship underwent
modifications designed to increase the ship's capacity to perform her designed
function. Some of the alterations effected included the replacement of her
initial 3-inch antiaircraft battery with 5-inch/25-caliber dual-purpose guns;
the addition of platforms for .50-caliber machine guns at the foremast and
maintop; and the addition of catapults on her quarterdeck, aft, and on her
number III, or "high" turret. |
| In the closing years of the decade of the 1930's, however, it
was becoming evident to many that it was only a matter of time before the
United States became involved in yet another war on a grand scale. The United
States Fleet thus came to be considered a grand deterrent to the country's
most probable enemy Japan. This reasoning produced the hurried dispatch of
the Fleet to Pacific waters in the spring of 1939 and the retention of the
Fleet in Hawaiian waters in 1940, following the conclusion of Fleet Problem
XXI in April. |
| As the year 1941 progressed, West Virginia carried out
a schedule of intensive training, basing on Pearl Harbor and operating in
various task forces and groups in the Hawaiian operating area. This routine
continued even through the unusually tense period that began in late November
and extended into the next month. Such at-sea periods were usually followed
by in-port upkeep, with the battleships mooring to masonry "quays" along
the southeast shores of Ford Island in the center of Pearl Harbor. |
| On Sunday, 7 December 1941, West Virginia lay moored outboard
of
Tennessee
(BB-43) at berth F-6 with 40 feet of water beneath her keel. Shortly before
0800, Japanese planes, flying from a six-carrier task force, commenced their
well-planned attack on the Fleet at Pearl Harbor. West Virginia took
five 18-inch aircraft torpedoes in her port side and two bomb hits those
bombs being 15-inch armor-piercing shells fitted with fins. The first bomb
penetrated the superstructure deck, wrecking the port casemates and causing
that deck to collapse to the level of the galley deck below. Four casemates
and the galley caught fire immediately, with the subsequent detonation of
the ready-service projectiles stowed in the casemates. |
| The second bomb hit further aft, wrecking one Vought OS2U Kingfisher
floatplane atop the "high" catapult on Turret III and pitching the second
one on her top on the main deck below. The projectile penetrated the 4-inch
turret roof, wrecking one gun in the turret itself. Although the bomb proved
a dud, burning gasoline from the damaged aircraft caused some damage. |
| The torpedoes, though, ripped into the ship's port side; only
prompt action by Lt. Claude V. Ricketts, the assistant fire control officer
who had some knowledge of damage control techniques, saved the ship from
the fate that befell
Oklahoma
(BB-37) moored ahead. She, too, took torpedo hits that flooded the ship and
caused her to capsize. |
| Instances of heroic conduct on board the heavily damaged battleship
proliferated in the heat of battle. The ship's commanding officer, Capt.
Mervyn S. Bennion, arrived on his bridge early in the battle, only to be
struck down by a bomb fragment hurled in his direction when a 15-inch "bomb"
hit the center gun in Tennessee's Turret II, spraying that ship's
superstructure and West Virginia's with fragments. Bennion, hit in
the abdomen, crumpled to the deck, mortally wounded, but clung tenaciously
to life until just before the ship was abandoned, involved in the conduct
of the ship's defense up to the last moment of his life. For his conspicuous
devotion to duty, extraordinary courage, and complete disregard of his own
life, Capt. Bennion was awarded a Medal of Honor, posthumously. |
| West Virginia was abandoned, settling to the harbor bottom
on an even keel, her fires fought from on board by a party that volunteered
to return to the ship after the first abandonment. By the afternoon of the
following day, 8 December, the flames had been extinguished. The garbage
lighter, YG-17, played an important role in assisting those efforts during
the Pearl Harbor attack, remaining in position alongside despite the danger
posed by exploding ammunition on board the battleship. |
| Later examination revealed that West Virginia had taken
not five, but six, torpedo hits. With a patch over the damaged areas of her
hull, the battleship was pumped out and ultimately refloated on 17 May 1942.
Docked in Drydock Number One on 9 June, West Virginia again came under
scrutiny, and it was discovered that there had been not six, but seven torpedo
hits. |
| During the ensuing repairs, workers located 70 bodies of West
Virginia sailors who had been trapped below when the ship sank. In one
compartment, a calendar was found, the last scratch-off date being 23 December.
The task confronting the nucleus crew and shipyard workers was a monumental
one, so great was the damage on the battleship's port side. Ultimately, however,
West Virginia departed Pearl Harbor for the west coast and a complete
rebuilding at the Puget Sound Navy Yard at Bremerton, Washington. |
| Emerging from the extensive modernization, the battleship that
had risen, Phoenix-like, from the destruction at Pearl Harbor looked totally
different from the way she had appeared prior to 7 December 1941. Gone were
the "cage" masts that supported the three tier fire-control tops, as well
as the two funnels, the open-mount 5-inch/25's and the casemates with the
single-purpose 5-inch/51's. A streamlined superstructure now gave the ship
a totally new silhouette; dual-purpose 5-inch/38-caliber guns, in gun houses,
gave the ship a potent antiaircraft battery. In addition, 40-millimeter Bofors
and 20-millimeter Oerlikon batteries studded the decks, giving the ship a
heavy "punch" for dealing with close-in enemy planes. |
| West Virginia remained at Puget Sound until early July
1944. Loading ammunition on the 2nd, the battleship got underway soon thereafter
to conduct her sea trials out of Port Townsend, Washington. She ran a full
power trial on the 6th, continuing her working-up until the 12th. Subsequently
returning to Puget Sound for last-minute repairs, the battleship headed for
San Pedro and her post-modernization shakedown. |
| Finally ready to rejoin the Fleet from which she had been away
for two years, West Virginia sailed for the Hawaiian Islands on 14
September. Escorted by two destroyers, she made landfall on Oahu on the 23d.
Ultimately pushing on for Manus, in the Admiralities, in company with the
fleet carrier Hancock (CV-19), West Virginia, as a unit of
Battleship Division (Bat Div) 4, reached Seeadler Harbor on 5 October. The
next day, she again became a flagship when Rear Admiral Ruddock shifted his
flag from
Maryland
(BB-46) to the "Wee Vee" as Commander, BatDiv 4. |
| Underway on 12 October to participate in the invasion of the
Philippine Islands, West Virginia sailed as part of Task Group (TG)
77.2, under the overall command of Rear Admiral Jesse B. Oldendorf. On 18
October, the battle line passed into Leyte Gulf, West Virginia steaming
astern of
California
(BB-44). |
| At 1645, California cut loose a mine with her paravanes;
West Virginia successfully dodged the horned menace, it being destroyed
a few moments later by gunfire from one of the destroyers in the screen.
On 19 October, West Virginia steamed into her assigned station in
San Pedro Bay at 0700 to stand by off shore and provide shore bombardment
against targets in the Tacloban area of Leyte. Retiring to sea that evening,
the battleship and her consorts returned the next morning to lay down heavy
gunfire on Japanese installations in the vicinity of the town of
Tacloban. |
| On the 19th, West Virginia's gunners sent 278 16-inch
and 1,586 5-inch shells against Japanese installations, silencing enemy artillery
and supporting the UDT (underwater demolition teams) preparing the beaches
for the assault that came on the 20th. On the latter day, enemy planes made
many appearances over the landing area. West Virginia took those within
range under fire but did not down any. |
| On the 21st, as she was proceeding to her fire support area to
render further gunfire support for the troops still pouring ashore, West
Virginia touched bottom, slightly damaging three of her four screws.
The vibrations caused by the damaged blades limited sustained speeds to 16
knots -- 18 in emergencies. |
| For the next two days, West Virginia, with her augmented
antiaircraft batteries, remained off the beachhead during the daylight hours,
retiring to seaward at night, providing antiaircraft covering fire for the
unfolding invasion operations. Meanwhile, the Japanese, seeing that American
operations against Leyte were on a large scale, decided to strike back.
Accordingly, the enemy, willing to accept the heavy risks involved, set out
in four widely separated forces to destroy the American invasion fleet. |
| Four carriers and two "hermaphrodite" battleship carriers
(Ise and Hyuga) sailed toward the Philippine Sea from Japanese
home waters; a small surface force under Admiral Shima headed for the Sulu
Sea; two striking forces consisting of battleships, cruisers, and destroyers
sortied from Lingga Roads, Sumatra, before separating north of Borneo. The
larger of those two groups, commanded by Admiral Kurita, passed north of
the island of Palawan to transit the Sibuyan Sea. |
| American submarines Darter (SS-247) and Dace (SS-227)
drew first blood in what would become known as the Battle for Leyte Gulf
on 23 October when they sank, respectively, two of Kurita's cruisers --
Maya and Atago. Undeterred, Kurita continued the transit, his
force built around the giant battleship Musashi. |
| The smaller of the two forces, under Admiral Nishimura, turned
south of Palawan and transited the Sulu Sea to pass between the islands of
Mindanao and Leyte. Shima's forces obediently followed Nishimura's, heading
for Leyte Gulf as the southern jaw of a pincer designed to hit the assemblage
of amphibious ships and transports unloading off the Leyte beachhead. |
| Detailed to deal with the force heading in his direction, Admiral
Oldendorf accordingly deployed his sizeable force -- six battleships, eight
cruisers and 28 destroyers -- across the northern end of Surigao Strait.
The American men-of-war steamed along their assigned courses, their bows
cleaving through the smooth sea. |
| At 2236 on 24 October 1944, the American PT boats deployed in
the strait and its approaches made radar contact with Nishimura's force,
conducting a harassing attack that annoyed, but did not stop, the oncoming
enemy. Well into the strait by 0300 on the 25th, Nishimura took up battle
formation when five American destroyers launched a well-planned torpedo attack.
Caught in the spread of torpedoes, the battleship Fuso took hits and
dropped out of the formation; other spreads of "fish" dispatched a pair of
Japanese destroyers and crippled a third. |
| Fuso's sistership Yamashiro, meanwhile, had taken
one hit and was slowed down, only to be hit again within 15 minutes' time.
Fuso herself, apparently ravaged by fires ignited by the torpedo hits,
blew up with a tremendous explosion at 0338. |
| West Virginia, meanwhile, was maintaining
her position ahead of Maryland,
Mississippi
(BB-41), Tennessee, California and
Pennsylvania
(BB-38) -- four of these ships, like West Virginia, were veterans
of Pearl Harbor. From 0021 on the 25th, the battleship had picked up reports
on the PT boat and destroyer attacks; finally, at 0316, West Virginia's
radar picked up Nishimura's force at a range of 42,000 yards. She tracked
them as they approached in the pitch-black night. |
| At 0352, West Virginia unleashed her 16-inch main battery;
she fired 16 salvoes in the direction of Nishimura's ships as Oldendorf crossed
the Japanese "T" and thus achieved the tactical mastery of a situation that
almost every surface admiral dreams of. At 0413, the "Wee Vee" ceased fire;
the Japanese remnants proceeded in disorder down the strait from whence they
had come. Several burning Japanese ships littered the strait; West
Virginia had contributed to Yamashiro's demise, thus averaging
her own crippling in the Pearl Harbor attack. |
| West Virginia had thus taken part in the
last naval engagement fought by line-of-battle ships and, on the 29th, departed
the Philippines for Ulithi, in company with Tennessee and
Maryland. Subsequently heading for Espiritu Santo, in the New Hebrides,
after Admiral Ruddock had shifted his flag back from West Virginia
to Maryland, the former underwent a period of upkeep in the floating
drydock, ABSD-1, for- her damaged screws. |
| The "Wee Vee" returned to the Philippines, via Manus, on 25 November,
resuming-her patrols in Leyte Gulf and serving as part of the antiaircraft
screen for the transports and amphibious ships. At 1139 on the 27th, West
Virginia's antiaircraft guns splashed a suicider and assisted in downing
others while on duty the next day. |
| Rear Admiral Ruddock shifted back on board on the 30th, West
Virginia maintaining her operations off Leyte until 2 December, when
the battleship headed for the Palaus. The battlewagon was then made the flagship
for the newly formed TG 77.12 and proceeded toward the Sulu Sea to cover
the landings made by the Southwest Pacific Force on the island of Mindoro.
Entering Leyte Gulf late on the evening of 12 December, West Virginia
transited the Surigao Strait on the 13th and steamed into the Sulu Sea with
a carrier force to provide cover for the transports in TG 78.3. |
| She subsequently covered the retirement of the transports on 15
December, later fueling in Leyte Gulf before she returned to Kossol Roads,
Palaus, at mid-day on the 19th. There, West Virginia spent the Christmas
of 1944. There was more work to be done, however, for the
battleship, as the "return" to the Philippines continued apace. On New Year's
Day, Rear Admiral Ingram C. Sowell relieved Rear Admiral Ruddock as Commander,
BatDiv 4, and the ship got underway for Leyte Gulf as part of TG 77.2. |
| Entering the gulf during the pre-dawn hours of 3 January, West
Virginia proceeded into the Sulu Sea. Japanese air opposition, intensifying
since the early part of the Philippine campaign, was becoming more deadly.
West Virginia's men saw evidence of that when a twin-engined "Frances"
crashed the escort carrier Ommaney Bay (CVE-79) at 1712 on the 4th.
Fires and explosions ultimately forced the "jeep carrier's" abandonment,
her survivors being picked up by other ships in the screen. Burns
(DD-588) dispatched the blazing CVE with torpedoes. |
| Taking on board survivors from Ommaney Bay from the destroyer
Twiggs (DD-691), West Virginia entered the South China Sea
on the morning of the following day, 5 January 1945, defending the carriers
during the day from Japanese air attacks. Subsequently, the battleship moved
close inshore with the carriers outside to carry out a bombardment mission
on San Fernando Point. West Virginia hammered Japanese installations
ashore with her 16-inch rifles. |
| Suiciders, however, kept up their attacks in the face of heavy
antiaircraft barrages and combat air patrol (CAP) fighters. Losses among
Allied shipping continued to mount; kamikazes claimed damage to HMAS
Australia and the battleships California and
New Mexico
(BB-40) on the 5th. West Virginia participated in putting up volumes
of antiaircraft fire during those attacks, emerging unscathed herself. |
| West Virginia -- in addition to the Ommaney
Bay sailors on board -- soon took on board another group of survivors
from yet another ship: the men from the high-speed minesweeper Hovey
(DMS-11) which had been sunk by a Japanese torpedo on the 6th. Before she
could transfer the escort carrier's and minesweeper's sailors elsewhere,
though, she had to carry out her assigned tasks first. Accordingly, West
Virginia's 16-inch rifles again hammered Japanese positions ashore at
San Fabian on the 8th and 9th, as troops went ashore on the latter day. It
was not until the night of 9 January that the battleship finally transferred
her passengers off the ship. |
| After providing call fire support all day on the 10th, West
Virginia patrolled off Lingayen Gulf for the next week before proceeding
to an anchorage where she replenished her ammunition. During her shore
bombardment tours off San Fabian, West Virginia had proved herself
most helpful, covering UDT operations, destroying mortar positions,
entrenchments, gun emplacements, and leveling the town of San Fabian. In
addition, "Wee Vee" destroyed ammunition dumps, railway and road junctions,
and machine gun positions and warehouses. During that time, the ship expended
395 16-inch shells and over 2,800 5-inch projectiles. |
| Underway again at 0707 on the 21st, West Virginia commenced
call-fire support duties at 0815, operating in readiness for cooperation
with the Army units ashore in the vicinity of the towns of Rosario and Santo
Tomas. After a few more days of standing ready to provide call-fire support
when needed, West Virginia anchored in Lingayen Gulf on 1
February. |
| Subsequently, as part of TG 77.2, West Virginia protected
the shipping arriving at the Lingayen beachheads and stood ready to provide
call-fire for the Army when needed. She later departed Lingayen Gulf, her
duty completed there, on 10 February, bound for Leyte Gulf. Before her departure,
she received 79 bags of United States mail-the first she had received since
the day before Christmas. |
| After touching first at San Pedro Bay, Leyte, West Virginia
arrived at Ulithi on 16 February, reporting for duty with the 5th Fleet upon
arrival. Ordered to prepare in all haste for another operation, the battleship
provisioned and refueled with the highest priority. The ship completed loading
some 300 tons of stores by 0400 on the 17th. At 0730 on the 17th, West
Virginia got underway, bound for Iwo Jima in company with the destroyers
Izard (DD-589) and McCall (DD-400). As she headed off to Iwo
Jima to join TF 61, West Virginia received a "Well-done" from Admiral
Chester W. Nimitz for the manner in which she had readied herself for her
new duty after being released from the 7th Fleet such a short time
before. |
| West Virginia sighted Iwo Jima at a range
of 32 miles at 0907 on 19 February. As she drew nearer, she saw several ships
bombarding the isle from all sides and the initial landings taking place.
At 1125, she received her operations orders, via dispatch boat and, 20 minutes
later, proceeded to her fire support station off the volcanic sand beaches.
At 1245, her big guns bellowed to lend support to the marines ashore-gun
positions, revetments, blockhouses, tanks, vehicles, caves and supply dumps-all
came under her heavy guns. On 21 February, the ship returned and, at 0800,
commenced her support duties afresh. |
| Her 16-inch shells sealed caves, destroyed antiaircraft gun positions
and blockhouses; one salvo struck an ammunition or fuel dump, explosions
occurring for about two hours thereafter. On the 22d, a small-caliber shell
hit the battleship near turret II, wounding one enlisted man. That same day,
another significant event occurred ashore-marines took Mount Suribachi, the
prominent landmark on one end of Iwo Jima. From their position offshore,
West Virginia's sailors could see the flag flying from the top. |
| For the remainder of February, West Virginia continued
her daily fire-support missions for the marines ashore. Again, Japanese positions
felt the heavy blows of the battleship's 16-inch shells. She hit troop
concentrations and trucks, blockhouses, trenches, and houses. During the
course of that time spent off the beaches on 27 February, she spotted a Japanese
shore battery firing upon Bryant (DD-665). West Virginia closed
the range and, when about 600 yards from shore, opened fire with her secondary
(5-inch) battery, silencing the enemy guns. |
| Replenishing her depleted ammunition stocks early on 28 February,
West Virginia was back on the line again that afternoon, firing continuous
night harassing and interdiction rounds, silencing enemy batteries with air
bursts from her secondary batteries. For the first three days of March, West
Virginia continued her firesupport missions, primarily off the northeastern
shore of Iwo Jima. Finally, on 4 March, the ship set sail for the Caroline
Islands, reaching Ulithi on 6 March. |
| Joining TF 54 for the invasion of the Okinawa Gunto area, West
Virginia sailed on 21 March, reaching her objective four days later on
the 25th. In fire support section one, West Virginia spent the ensuing
days softening up Okinawa for the American landings slated to commence on
1 April. At 1029 on 26 March, lookouts reported a gun flash from shore, followed
by a splash in the water some 5,000 yards off the port bow. Firing her first
salvoes of the operation, West Virginia let fly 28 rounds of 16-inch
gunfire against the pugnacious Japanese batteries. |
| The following day, the "Wee Vee" fought against enemy air opposition,
taking a "Frances" under fire at 0520. The twin-engined bomber crashed off
the battleship's port quarter-the victim of West Virginia's antiaircraft
guns. Over the days that followed, enemy opposition continued in the form
of suicide attacks by Japanese planes. Mines, too, began making themselves
felt; one sank the minesweeper Skylark (AM-63), 3,000 yards off West
Virginia's port bow at 0930 on the 28th. |
| After taking on ammunition at Kerama Retto -- the island seized
to provide an advance base for the armada massing against Okinawa -- West
Virginia sailed for Okinawa to give direct gunfire support to the landings.
Scheduled to fire at 0630, the battleship headed for her assigned zone off
the Okinawa beaches. While en route, though, at 0455, she had to back down
all engines when an unidentified destroyer stood across her bow, thus avoiding
a collision. |
| As she prepared to commence her bombardment, West Virginia
spotted a Japanese plane off her port quarter; her antiaircraft batteries
tracked the target and opened fire, downing the enemy aircraft 200 yards
away. Four more enemy planes passed within her vicinity soon thereafter West
Virginia claimed one of them. |
| Finally, at 0630, West Virginia opened fire as landing
craft dotted the sea as far as the eye could reach, all heading for the shores
of Okinawa. West Virginia's sailors, some 900 yards off the beaches,
could see the craft heading shoreward like hundreds of tadpoles; at 0842,
lookouts reported seeing some of the first troops going ashore. The battle
for Okinawa was underway. |
| West Virginia continued her bombardment duties throughout
the day, on the alert to provide counterbattery fire in support of the troops
as they advanced rapidly inland. There appeared to be little resistance on
1 April, and West Virginia lay to offshore, awaiting further orders.
At 1903, however, an enemy plane brought the war down on West
Virginia. |
| The battleship picked up three enemy planes on her radar and
tracked them as they approached; flak peppered the skies but still they came.
One crossed over the port side and then looped over and crash-dived into
West Virginia, smashing into a superstructure deck just forward of
secondary battery director number two. Four men were killed by the blast,
and seven were wounded in a nearby 20-millimeter gun gallery. The bomb carried
by the plane broke loose from its shackle and penetrated to the second deck.
Fortunately, it did not explode and was rendered harmless by the battleship's
bomb disposal officer. Although her galley and laundry looked hard-hit, West
Virginia -- reporting her damage as repairable by ship's force -- carried
on, rendering night illumination fire to the marines ashore. |
| West Virginia buried her dead at sea in the wake of the
kamikaze attack of 1 April and resumed her gunfire support duties soon
thereafter. In the course of her tour offshore in early April, she shot down
a "Val" on the 6th. |
| In early Aril, the Japanese attempted to strike at the invasion
feet in a last-gasp offensive formed around the super-battleship
Yamato. On the night of 7 and 8 April, West Virginia steamed
north and south in the waters west of Okinawa ready to intercept and engage
the Japanese surface force headed her way. The next morning, 8 April, Commander,
TF 58, reported that most of the ships in that enemy force had been sunk,
including Yamato, whose last sortie had been made with enough fuel
to get her to Okinawa but not to return. Thus, the Japanese Navy's largest
kamikaze perished many miles short of her objective. |
| For West Virginia, however, her duties went on, providing
illumination and counterbattery fire with both main and secondary batteries
and giving her antiaircraft gunners a good workout due to the heavy presence
of many suiciders. Her TBS crackled with reports of ships under attack and
damaged -- Zellars (DD-777), Tennessee, Salt Lake City
(CA-24), Stanley (DD-478) -- and others, all victims of the "divine
wind," or kamikaze. Her shore bombardments elicited nothing but praise from
those enjoying the benefits of the ship's firing; one spotter reported happily
on 14 April: "You're shooting perfectly, you could shoot no better, no change,
no change," and, "Your shooting is strictly marvelous. I cannot express just
how good it is." She delivered sterling support fire for the 6th Marines
upon that occasion; later, she continued in that fine tradition for the 10th
Army and the XXIVth Army Corps. |
| West Virginia continued fire support for the Army until
20 April, at which point she headed for Ulithi, only to turn back to Okinawa,
hurriedly recalled because of
Colorado's
(BB-45) suffering damage when a powder charge exploded while she was loading
powder at Kerama Retto. Returning to Hagushi beach, West Virginia
fired night harassment and interdiction fire for the 10th Army and the XXIVth
Army Corps. Ultimately, West Virginia sailed for Ulithi, in company
with San Francisco (CA-38) and Hobson (DD464), reaching her
destination -- this time without a recall en route -- on 28 April. |
| Returning to Okinawa after a brief sojourn at Ulithi, West
Virginia remained in support of the Army and the Marines on the embattled
island into the end of June. There were highlights of the tour -- on 1 June,
she sent her spotting plane aloft to locate a troublesome enemy blockhouse
reportedly holding up an Army advance. A couple of rounds hurled in the enemy's
direction produced no results; she had to settle for obliterating some of
the enemy's motor transport and troop concentrations during the day instead.
The next day, 2 June, while in support of the Army's XXIVth Corps, West
Virginia scored four direct hits and seven near-misses on the blockhouse
that had been hit the day before. |
| West Virginia then operated off the southeast coast of
Okinawa, breaking up Japanese troop concentrations and destroying enemy caves.
She also disrupted Japanese road traffic by scoring a direct hit on a road
intersection and blasted a staging area. On 16 June, she was firing an assignment
for the 1st Marines off southwestern Okinawa when her spotting plane, a Vought
OS2U Kingfisher, took hits from Japanese antiaircraft fire and headed down
in flames, her pilot and observer bailing out over enemy-held territory.
Within a short time, aided by Putnam (DD-757) and an LCI, West
Virginia closed and blasted enemy guns in an attempt to rescue her plane
crew who had "dug in for the day" to await the arrival of the rescuers. The
attempt to recover her aircrew, however, was not successful. Loaned a Kingfisher
from Tennessee, West Virginia kept up her gunfire support
activities for the balance of June. |
| Shifting to San Pedro Bay, Leyte, at the end of June, the battleship
reached her destination on 1 July, escorted by Connolly (DE-306).
There, on the morning of 5 July, she received her first draft of replacements
since Pearl Harbor in 1944. After loading ammunition, West Virginia
commenced training in the Philippine area, an activity she carried out through
the end of July. |
| Sailing on 3 August for Okinawa, West Virginia reached
Buckner Bay on the 6th, the same day that the first atomic bomb was dropped
on the city of Hiroshima. Thee days later, a second bomb obliterated the
greater part of the city of Nagasaki. Those two events hastened Japan's collapse.
On 10 August, at 2115, West Virginia picked up a garbled report on
radio that the Japanese government had agreed to surrender under the terms
of the Potsdam Declaration, provided that they could keep the Emperor as
their ruler. The American ships in Buckner Bay soon commenced celebrating
-- the indiscriminate use of antiaircraft fire and pyrotechnics (not only
from the naval vessels in the bay but from marines and Army troops ashore)
endangering friendly planes. Such celebrations, however, proved premature
-- at 2004 on 12 August, West Virginia sailors felt a heavy underwater
explosion; soon thereafter, at 2058, the battleship intercepted a radio dispatch
from Pennsylvania (BB-38) reporting that she had been torpedoed. West
Virginia sent over a whaleboat at 0023 on the 13th with pumps for the
damaged Pennsylvania. |
| The war ended on 15 August 1945. West Virginia drilled
her landing force in preparation for the upcoming occupation of the erstwhile
enemy's homeland and sailed for Tokyo Bay on the 24th as part of TG 35.90.
She reached Tokyo Bay on the last day of August and was thus present at the
time of the formal surrender on 2 September 1945. For that occasion, five
musicians from West Virginia's band were transferred temporarily to
Missouri
(BB-63) to play at the ceremonies. |
| West Virginia played her part in the occupation, remaining
in Tokyo Bay into September of 1945, weathering a storm on the 15th that
had winds clocked at 65 knots at one point. On 14 September, she received
on board 270 passengers for transportation to the west coast of the United
States. She got underway at midnight on the 20th, bound for Okinawa as part
of TG 30.4. Shifting to Buckner Bay on the 23d, the battle ship sailed for
Pearl Harbor soon thereafter, reaching her destination on 4 October. |
| There, the crew painted ship and kept on board only those passengers
slated for transportation to San Diego, California. Bound for that port on
the 9th, West Virginia moored at the Navy Pier at San Diego at 1328
on 22 October. Two days later, Rear Admiral I. C. Sowell hauled down his
flag as Commander, BatDiv 4. |
| On Navy Day -- 27 October -- 25,554 visitors (more the next day)
came on board the ship. Three days later, on the 30th, she got underway for
Hawaiian waters to take her place as part of the "Magic Carpet" operation
returning veteran soldiers, sailors, marines, and airmen home to the states.
After one run between San Diego and Pearl Harbor, West Virginia made
another, the second time embarking Rear Admiral William W. Smith, who broke
his flag in the battleship for the return voyage to San Francisco,
California. |
| After making yet another run between the west coast and Hawaii,
West Virginia reached San Pedro, California, on 17 December. There,
she spent Christmas debarking her third draft of passengers. The veteran
battlewagon upped-anchor on 4 January 1946 and sailed for Bremerton, Washington.
She reached her distination on the 12th and commenced inactivation soon
thereafter, shifting to Seattle, Washington, on the 16th, where she moored
alongside sistership Colorado. |
| West Virginia entered her final stages of inactivation
in the latter part of February 1946 and was decommissioned on 9 January 1947
and placed in reserve, as part of the Pacific Reserve Fleet. She never again
received the call to active duty, remaining inactive until struck from the
Navy list on 1 March 1959. On 24 August 1959, she was sold for scrapping
to the Union Minerals and Alloys Corp. of New York City. |
| Today, the mast of "Wee Vee" is displayed in Morgantown at
the University of West Virginia on the main campus near Oglebay Hall. Her
flagstaff is on the Main Street side of the courthouse yard at Clarksburg
and other relics are exhibited throughout the "Mountain State". |
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