War Career of the Seal
Posted: Wed Jul 06, 2011 12:48 am
[center]Part XXII: The Ordeal of the Seal II[/center]
The Seal waited until an hour after dark and then surfaced. The boat’s upperworks were a shambles and she was trailing fuel oil from at least two leaks. The periscope could not be raised even after the auxiliarymen worked for hours to free it. The radiomen set up a temporary whip antenna to allow a SITREP to be transmitted and then CDR Hurd reported the Seal’s dire situation to the squadron commander at Soerabaja.
News of the Seal’s predicament was received with dismay by COMSUBPAC. Nimitz had nominated the Seal for a Presidential Unit Citation and word had been received only two days earlier that Kimmel had forwarded it to the CNO with CINCPAC’s positive endorsement. A rescue effort exceeding that provided for any previous warship of comparable displacement was immediately initiated to save the boats crew if not the storied submarine herself.
The SS Golet was only about 140 miles southwest of the Seal at the time of the nearly successful ASW attack and was ordered to rendezvous with the crippled boat and render assistance. Fearing that the Seal might not survive the transit to Soerabaja, squadron ordered her to make for Hollandia instead. Since the port facilities at that advanced base were too primitive to provide much more than a safe berth for the Seal, the submarine tender AS Sperry and repair ship AR Rigel were ordered to Hollandia. But even Hollandia was over 1200 nautical miles away, and the Seal could safely make only 4 knots in her condition.
More trouble began almost immediately. Less than 12 hours after altering course for Hollandia the exhausted crew was startled by the collision alarms siren. A temporary patch to one of the diesel seawater cooling system pipes had failed and water began pouring into the engine room. The crew was successful replacing the patch but within an hour an engine room watchstander noted that the bilge level was rising despite the drain pump running continuously. A desperate investigation in rising oily water finally identified another leak which was isolated by closing the hull penetrations associated with the Seal’s only other diesel. A failure of the remaining diesel would leave the Seal dead in the water. It did not appear that this piping could be returned to service without a weld repair. [49 system, 67 flotation, and 5 engine damage points following two “Temporary flotation repairs failing on Seal” messages.]
The first help to arrive was the Gollet which took off the Seal’s dead and severely injured personnel. Five of the Gollet’s machinists were temporarily added to the Seal’s complement to assist in making temporary repairs. Rather than leave the damaged submarine without an escort capable of rescuing her crew, COMSUBPAC ordered the APS1 Argonaut to abort her resupply mission and relieve the Gollet of this duty.
The Seal’s crew managed to make slow progress against the hull and piping systems damage, but other equipment that had been badly shaken by the depth charges began to malfunction. The only operable diesel began to smoke and run noisily; to stave off potential failure CDR Hurd reluctantly ordered turns reduced to 3 knots with the boat still 960 miles from Hollandia.
The problem with the diesel was traced to a faulty injector; this was replaced while the Seal continued to labor through choppy seas on her battery. On 27Jun44 with 820 miles to go the Seal raised speed to 4 knots. Breakdowns continued to plague the ship. The radio failed and communications had to be maintained with her escort by flashing light. There was another scare when a damaged hull penetration began to leak badly and it required several hours of damage control efforts to slow it to a trickle. But a higher than normal charging rate on the battery was found to be due to saltwater leakage into the battery compartment; only continuous ventilation would be effective in removing the resulting hydrogen and chlorine gas that were being evolved. If the Seal could dive at all it could only be for a few hours at a time; fortunately, the need to do this did not arise during the remainder of the transit.
The arrival of the Argonaut allowed the Gollet to depart the formation for Hollandia with the injured at flank speed. Seas had grown too rough to risk a transfer to a PBY. The Seal’s slow but stead progress brought her within sigh of land on 3Jul44 and she pulled up to the Hollandia pier the next day [system damage had risen to 56 but the crew had reduced flotation damage to 55]. The shore power trunk was damaged beyond use but base personnel worked with the crew to string cables through the after escape trunk and make jury-rigged connections to one of the few undamaged switchboards. Finally the Seal’s ailing diesel could be shut down and the salted battery open circuited.
[A apologize for the glacial pace of these After Action Report installments. My work and family commitments have eased up and I will have more time to play the remainder of the campaign and write the associated report.]
The Seal waited until an hour after dark and then surfaced. The boat’s upperworks were a shambles and she was trailing fuel oil from at least two leaks. The periscope could not be raised even after the auxiliarymen worked for hours to free it. The radiomen set up a temporary whip antenna to allow a SITREP to be transmitted and then CDR Hurd reported the Seal’s dire situation to the squadron commander at Soerabaja.
News of the Seal’s predicament was received with dismay by COMSUBPAC. Nimitz had nominated the Seal for a Presidential Unit Citation and word had been received only two days earlier that Kimmel had forwarded it to the CNO with CINCPAC’s positive endorsement. A rescue effort exceeding that provided for any previous warship of comparable displacement was immediately initiated to save the boats crew if not the storied submarine herself.
The SS Golet was only about 140 miles southwest of the Seal at the time of the nearly successful ASW attack and was ordered to rendezvous with the crippled boat and render assistance. Fearing that the Seal might not survive the transit to Soerabaja, squadron ordered her to make for Hollandia instead. Since the port facilities at that advanced base were too primitive to provide much more than a safe berth for the Seal, the submarine tender AS Sperry and repair ship AR Rigel were ordered to Hollandia. But even Hollandia was over 1200 nautical miles away, and the Seal could safely make only 4 knots in her condition.
More trouble began almost immediately. Less than 12 hours after altering course for Hollandia the exhausted crew was startled by the collision alarms siren. A temporary patch to one of the diesel seawater cooling system pipes had failed and water began pouring into the engine room. The crew was successful replacing the patch but within an hour an engine room watchstander noted that the bilge level was rising despite the drain pump running continuously. A desperate investigation in rising oily water finally identified another leak which was isolated by closing the hull penetrations associated with the Seal’s only other diesel. A failure of the remaining diesel would leave the Seal dead in the water. It did not appear that this piping could be returned to service without a weld repair. [49 system, 67 flotation, and 5 engine damage points following two “Temporary flotation repairs failing on Seal” messages.]
The first help to arrive was the Gollet which took off the Seal’s dead and severely injured personnel. Five of the Gollet’s machinists were temporarily added to the Seal’s complement to assist in making temporary repairs. Rather than leave the damaged submarine without an escort capable of rescuing her crew, COMSUBPAC ordered the APS1 Argonaut to abort her resupply mission and relieve the Gollet of this duty.
The Seal’s crew managed to make slow progress against the hull and piping systems damage, but other equipment that had been badly shaken by the depth charges began to malfunction. The only operable diesel began to smoke and run noisily; to stave off potential failure CDR Hurd reluctantly ordered turns reduced to 3 knots with the boat still 960 miles from Hollandia.
The problem with the diesel was traced to a faulty injector; this was replaced while the Seal continued to labor through choppy seas on her battery. On 27Jun44 with 820 miles to go the Seal raised speed to 4 knots. Breakdowns continued to plague the ship. The radio failed and communications had to be maintained with her escort by flashing light. There was another scare when a damaged hull penetration began to leak badly and it required several hours of damage control efforts to slow it to a trickle. But a higher than normal charging rate on the battery was found to be due to saltwater leakage into the battery compartment; only continuous ventilation would be effective in removing the resulting hydrogen and chlorine gas that were being evolved. If the Seal could dive at all it could only be for a few hours at a time; fortunately, the need to do this did not arise during the remainder of the transit.
The arrival of the Argonaut allowed the Gollet to depart the formation for Hollandia with the injured at flank speed. Seas had grown too rough to risk a transfer to a PBY. The Seal’s slow but stead progress brought her within sigh of land on 3Jul44 and she pulled up to the Hollandia pier the next day [system damage had risen to 56 but the crew had reduced flotation damage to 55]. The shore power trunk was damaged beyond use but base personnel worked with the crew to string cables through the after escape trunk and make jury-rigged connections to one of the few undamaged switchboards. Finally the Seal’s ailing diesel could be shut down and the salted battery open circuited.
[A apologize for the glacial pace of these After Action Report installments. My work and family commitments have eased up and I will have more time to play the remainder of the campaign and write the associated report.]