USS SHARK (SS-314) - Seawolf Park - Galveston, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
N 29° 20.048 W 094° 46.741
15R E 327269 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: WM128V5
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 03/31/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ištván
Views: 0

U.S.S. SHARK
(SS-314)

24 OCTOBER 1944
ALL HANDS LOST
LUZON STRAIT
THE PHILIPPINES

On Eternal Patrol - The Loss of USS Shark (SS-314)

Shark (SS-314)

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

Joining SEADRAGON and BLACKFISH at Pearl Harbor, the second SHARK (CDR E. N. Blakely) left that place on 23 September 1944, and proceeded to Saipan to begin her third war patrol. The three vessels left the latter island on 3 October to conduct a coordinated patrol in the vicinity of Luzon Strait. Commander Blakely had command of this coordinated attack group, called Blakely's Behemoths. (Editor's Note: According to patrol reports of Seadragon and Blackfish: The boats arrived in Saipan on 3 October. Shark and Blackfish departed shortly after 1700 on 4 October. Seadragon left at 0610 on 5 October.)

On 22 October, SHARK reported having contacted four large enemy vessels in Latitude 20° 28'N, Longitude 117° 50'E. She still had her full load of torpedoes aboard, so had not made an attack. SHARK addressed no further messages to bases, but on 24 October, SEADRAGON received a message from her stating that she had made radar contact with a single freighter, and that she was going in to attack. This was the last message received from SHARK.

However, on 13 November 1944, a despatch originated by Commander Naval Unit, Fourteenth Air Force, stated that a Japanese ship enroute from Manila to Japan, with 1,800 American prisoners of war had been sunk on 24 October by an American submarine in a torpedo attack. No other submarine reported the attack, and since SHARK had given SEADRAGON a contact report only a few hours before the sinking, and could not be raised by radio after it, it can only be assumed that SHARK made the attack described and perished during or after it. Five prisoners who survived and subsequently reached China stated that conditions on the prison ship were so intolerable that the prisoners prayed for deliverance from their misery by a torpedo or bomb. Because many prisoners of war had been rescued from the water by submarines after sinking vessels in which they were being transported, U.S. submarines had been instructed to search for Allied survivors in the vicinity of all sinkings of Empire-bound Japanese ships. SHARK may well have been sunk trying to rescue American prisoners of war. All attempts to contact SHARK by radio failed and on 27 November she was reported as presumed lost.

A report from the Japanese received after the close of the war on anti-submarine attacks records the attack made by SHARK on 24 October 1944, in Latitude 20° 41'N, Longitude 118° 27'E. Depth charges were dropped 17 times, and the enemy reports having seen "bubbles, and heavy oil, clothes, cork, etc." Several American submarines report having been attacked on this date near the position given, but in view of the fact that none reported the attack on the convoy cited above, this attack is considered the most probable cause of SHARK's loss.

SHARK sank five ships, totaling 32,200 tons and damaged two, for 9,900 tons prior to her last patrol. Her first patrol was in the area west of the Marianas. SHARK sank two freighters, a transport and a large tanker, and damaged a freighter. In her second patrol in the Bonins, SHARK sank a medium freighter.

The following men were lost while serving on USS Shark (SS-314).

Steven Douglas Adams
James Marshall Adamson
Joseph William Babig
Donald Eugene Bailey
Charles Marvin Baker
James Joseph Barrett
Claude Anthony Barton, Jr.
Henry Roy Black, Jr.
Edward Noe Blakely
Walter Eugene Borusiewicz
Charles Richard Brown
Leon Maurice Brown
William Emmett Buckey, Jr.
John Edward Burns
Rolland T. Burns
Ralph Michael Cerruti
Orville Gross Chilcote
Robert Ford Click
William Anthony Constantinos
Herbert Andrew Cupper
Jesse Andrew Davis, Jr.
John Scott Davis
Mark Arthur Delehanty
Leslie Garbutt Dobson
Louis Jackson Doyen
Franklin Charles Drury
Perry Leo Dryer
Hal Hunter Dupuy
Andrew Elko
Lawrence Howard Ferguson
Arthur Louis Giles
John Dott Harper, Jr.
Willie Edwin Hawthorn
Ross Charles Hoffman, Jr.
Richard Edward Hooker
Sam Houston
Bunyan Cleveland Hudgins, Jr.
James Roy Huffman
Eugene Nathan Hunting, Jr.
Arthur Thomas Josephs
Steven Jurovaty
Clarence Vernon Kibbons
Alvin Ewald Kirstein
Thomas Francis Kneib
Sterling Schlichter Krecker
Kenneth Eugene Lawson
Raymond Arthur Leecy
Charles Upham Leonard
William Theodore Lewis
Frederick Luedemann
Daniel Benjamin Lyon
Robert Scrymser MacDonald
James Clyde MacIntyre
Byron Tucker Masincupp
Robert William Muntz
Walter Everett Olson
William Ralph Ongerth
Marvin Dewayne Oothoudt
William Oniel Paulsen
Royalston Elijah Perkins, Jr.
Irby Carl Perrin
John Michael Perry
George Washington Pittman
Michael Polikowski
Willis Woodrow Porter
Floyd Earnest Reed
Kenneth Anthony Reich
Francis Stephen Reilly
Rudolph Henry Reinthaler
Arlin Lee Ridgeway
Herbert Austin Satterfield
Lloyd Bernhard Schuermann
Anthony Edward Scutiero
Jesse Lee Selig
Donald Eugene Shaffer
Bernon Foche Shaw
Henry Shefchek, Jr.
William Anthony Simko
Harvey Hubbell Thommen
Kenneth Raymond Tien
Forrest Sterling Tiller
William Harlan Turner
William Riefler Wall
Richard Warren Wansky
Richard Warren Wells
Martin Luther "Bud" Williams
John Joseph Zidziunas

Property Permission: Private

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

Access times: From: 9:00 AM To: 5:00 PM

Website for Waymark: [Web Link]

Location of waymark:
Seawolf Park
Galveston, TX USA
77550


Commemoration: U.S.S. SHARK (SS-314)

Date of Dedication: Not listed

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