U.S.S. KETE (SS-369) - Seawolf Park - Galveston, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
N 29° 20.048 W 094° 46.737
15R E 327276 N 3246319
This memorial is located between the USS Cavalla and the USS Stewart at the Galveston Naval Museum. A large Compass Rose, 35 foot in diameter, is outlined with the names and information of the 52 submarines lost during World War II.
Waymark Code: WM12889
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 03/26/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ištván
Views: 0

U.S.S. KETE
(SS-369)

MARCH 1945
ALL HANDS LOST
OKINAWA
JAPAN

On Eternal Patrol - The Loss of USS Kete (SS-369)



Kete (SS-369)

Compiled by Paul W. Wittmer and Charles R. Hinman,with editorial notes by Robert H. Downie, originally from: U.S. Submarine Losses World War II, NAVPERS 15,784, 1949 ISSUE

Departing Guam on 1 March 1945, KETE (LCDR Edward Ackerman) headed for her second patrol in the vicinity of the Nansei Shoto. In addition to performing a normal patrol, KETE had orders to submit special weather reports, and to carry out rescue service during air strikes by carrier based planes.

On the night of 10 March 1945, KETE reported having sunk three medium sized freighters on the previous night. She reported on the night of 14 March that she had fired four torpedoes, which missed a small enemy cable laying vessel, and that she had only three torpedoes remaining aboard. In view of the small number of torpedoes left, KETE was directed to depart her area on 20 March, and proceed to Pearl Harbor for refit, stopping at Midway enroute for fuel. On 19 March, she acknowledged receipt of these orders. On 20 March she sent in a special weather report from position 29° 38'N, 130° 02'E. This was the last message received from her. At normal cruising speed she should have arrived at Midway about 31 March 1945. When she was neither sighted nor heard from by 16 April 1945, she was reported as presumed lost.

Japanese information concerning anti-submarine attacks gained since the end of the war gives no positive evidence as to what happened to KETE; none of the attacks on U.S. submarines occurring within the period from 20 March to 31 March 1945 was made in a position in which KETE was likely to be.

There were a few mine-lines in the Nansei Shoto Chain, but since KETE was already east of the islands at the time of her last message on 20 March and was heading home, loss through a mine is considered highly improbable. It is now known that a number of enemy submarines were in the area through which KETE was required to pass enroute to Midway. RO-41 was sunk east of Okinawa by a U.S. destroyer on 23 March 1945, and two other Japanese submarines were sunk southeast of Okinawa near this date. Conditions attendant to KETE's loss suggest the likelihood that one of these submarines might have torpedoed and sunk her and been unable to report the attack before being sunk. Thus, KETE must be considered probably a loss due to an unreported enemy attack. [Editor's note: While this is a tempting conclusion, it is speculative and based entirely on circumstantial evidence. Use of the words "must" and "probably" may be unwarranted.] She is credited with sending three medium freighters, totaling 12,000 tons, to the bottom on this last patrol. During her first patrol, conducted in the East China Sea, KETE encountered no enemy targets.

The following men were lost while serving on USS Kete (SS-369).


LeRoy Albert Abts
Edward Ackerman
John Clausel Adams, Jr.
John David Apking
Donald Lee Bergadine
Leonard Eugene Blodgett
Francis William Braniger
Carl Brooks
William Henry Burnside, Jr.
Perry Charles Callahan
Bernard Cobrin
Hugh Mack Cole
Edward Cooper
Robert William Crowley
Charles Randolph Crutchfield, Jr.
William Howard Dawson
Frederick Robert Deininger
Harold William Derrah
Helmut Otto Dietrich
Calvin Frederick Dortche
Donald Lincoln Drake
Willis Dul
Manuel Lawrence Efferson
Donald Paul Egen
Douglas Grant Fenton
Hugh French
Ben Friesen
Robert Stephan Fuller
John Francis Glynn, Jr.
Fred Joseph Griswold
Joseph Henry Gunzinger
Elmer Ellsworth Gwinn, Jr.
Bernard Henry Haag
Robert Arthur Hart
Glenn Edwin Hartbank
Paul O'Bryan Hayden
Earl Henderson
James Lowell Hines
James Russell Holshouser
Stanton Lee Hooper
Abraham Joseph Katz
Norbert William Kelly
Elmer Neil Kensler
Walter Ernest Kotelman
Richard Paul Kraut
Jack Lee Lasiter
Frank Litzenburger, Jr.
Earl Logsdon
Billie Barton Lowery
Charles Wesley Lynn, Jr.
Glenn Raymond Malko
Anthony Thomas Marsico
Frank Martini
Bernard Eugene McLendon
Grant Richard Messenger
Samuel Arnold Moccabee
Charleton LeRoy Moore
Henry Fredrick Morrison
Archie Vernon Newton
Joseph Albert O'Brien
Mark Angello O'Connor
George Thomas Page
Clair Junior Peterson
Irving Victor Piper
Glenn Owen Price
Donald Calvin Pushee
Robert Russell Racer
Frederick Fay Reimers
Francis Albert Richards
George Joseph Schemm
Maxium Daniels Schenavar
Paul Francis Schumacher
Oliver Harry Simpson
James Irwin Snyder
Russell Henry Spikes
Jacob Granville Starr, Jr.
French Lee Thomas, Jr.
Gordon Ray Thompson
Keith Hugo Thorn
Peter Charles VanDam
Salomon Hernandez Villalba
James Stanley Waggoner
Russel Andrew Wallick
Floyd Stewart Walling
Joseph Allen Westphall
Gordon Weaver Wilson
Galen Irvin Woodward
Property Permission: Private

Access instructions: Parking $6 per vehicle, entrance to museum $13 Adult, $10 Senior, $7 Veteran, $8 Child, Active Duty Free

Website for Waymark: [Web Link]

Location of waymark:
Seawolf Park
Galveston, TX USA
77550


Commemoration: U.S.S. KETE (SS-369)

Date of Dedication: Not listed

Access times: Not listed

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