U.S.S. TANG (SS-306) - Seawolf Park - Galveston, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
N 29° 20.048 W 094° 46.740
15R E 327271 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: WM128YX
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 04/01/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member 3l diesel
Views: 0

U.S.S. TANG
(SS-306)

24 OCTOBER 1944
78 MEN LOST
FORMOSA STRAIT

On Eternal Patrol - The Loss of USS Tang (SS-306)

TANG (SS-306)

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

TANG, under CDR R.H. O'Kane, set out from Pearl Harbor on 24 September 1944, to begin her fifth war patrol. On 27 September she topped off with fuel at Midway and left there the same day, heading for an area between the northwest coast of Formosa and the China Coast.

In order to reach her area, TANG had to pass through narrow waters known to be heavily patrolled by the enemy. A large area stretching northeast from Formosa was known to be mined by the enemy, and O'Kane was given the choice of making the passage north of Formosa alone, or joining a coordinated attack group (SILVERSIDES, TRIGGER, SALMON, under Commander Coye in SILVERSIDES) which was to patrol off northeast Formosa, and making the passage with them. TANG chose to make the passage alone and these vessels never heard from TANG, nor did any base, after she left Midway.

The story of TANG's sinking comes from the report of her surviving Commanding Officer. A night surface attack was launched in the early morning hours of 25 October 1944 against a transport, which had previously been stopped in an earlier attack. The first torpedo was fired, and when it was observed to be running true, the second and last was loosed. It curved sharply to the left, broached, porpoised and circled. Emergency speed was called for and the rudder was thrown over. These measures resulted only in the torpedo striking the stern of TANG, rather than amidships.

The explosion was violent, and people as far forward as the control room received broken limbs. The ship went down by the stern with the after three compartments flooded. Of the nine officers and men on the bridge, three were able to swim through the night until picked up eight hours later. One officer escaped from the flooded conning tower, and was rescued with the others.

The submarine came to rest on the bottom at 180 feet, and the men in her crowded forward as the after compartments flooded. (Editor's Note: According to Commander O'Kane, when the torpedo struck Tang, the three after compartments flooded instantly and the submarine sank by the stern, with her bow hanging at a sharp angle above the surface. Personnel in the control room leveled off the boat by manually flooding number two main ballast tank, bringing her to rest on the ocean floor.) Publications were burned, and all assembled to the forward torpedo room to escape. The escape was delayed by a Japanese patrol, which dropped charges, and started an electrical fire in the forward battery. Thirteen men escaped from the forward torpedo room, and by the time the last made his exit, the heat from the fire was so intense that the paint on the bulkhead was scorching, melting, and running down. Of the 13 men who escaped, only eight reached the surface, and of these but five were able to swim until rescued.

When the nine survivors were picked up by a destroyer escort, there were victims of TANG's previous sinkings on board, and they inflicted tortures on the men from TANG. With great humanity, O'Kane states, "When we realized that our clubbings and kickings were being administered by the burned, mutilated survivors of our own handiwork, we found we could take it with less prejudice."

The nine captives were retained by the Japanese in prison camps until the end of the war, and were treated by them in typical fashion. The loss of TANG by her own torpedo, the last one fired on the most successful patrol ever made by a U. S. submarine, was a stroke of singular misfortune. She is credited with having sunk 13 vessels for 107,300 tons of enemy shipping on this patrol, and her Commanding Officer was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.

On her last patrol TANG fired twenty-four torpedoes in four attacks. Twenty-two torpedoes found their mark in enemy ships, sinking 13 of them; one missed, and the last torpedo, fired after a careful check-over, sank TANG. This vessel was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation twice during her career. Commander O'Kane has been called the Submarine Force's most outstanding officer; he served as Executive Officer of the very successful WAHOO before taking command of TANG.

In her five patrols, TANG is credited with sinking 31 ships, totaling 227,800 tons and damaging two for 4,100 tons. This record is unexcelled among American submarines. In her first patrol, spending February 1944 west of Truk and Saipan, she sank three freighters, a large tanker and a submarine tender. TANG's second patrol was in the area west of Palau, east of Davao and at Truk. She made no ship contacts worthy of attack, but at the latter island she rescued twenty-two Navy airmen during a carrier based strike at Truk on 30 April-1 May 1944. This vessel's third patrol was in the East China and Yellow Seas. Here she sank six freighters, a tanker, and a large aircraft transport. She covered the waters along the southern coast of Honshu in August 1944. She sank a freighter, a large transport, a tanker and two patrol craft, while she damaged another freighter and small craft.

The following men were lost while serving on USS Tang (SS-306)

John George Accardy
Ralph Francis Adams
Dwayne Dale Allen
Phillip Edward Anderson
Charles Andriolo
Homer Anthony
William Franklin Ballinger
Edwin Clarence Bauer
Edward Huntley Beaumont
Edwin Frederick Bergman
Frederick Nicholas Bisogno
Wilfred Joseph Boucher
Bernard Vincent Bresette
John Bush
Benjamin Chiavetta
Walter Junior Clark
Robert James Coffin
James Henry Culp
Arthur John Darienzo
Marvin Verle DeLapp
William Edwin Dorsey
Fred Melvin Enos, Jr.
Lawrence Hall Ericksen
Daniel Clyde Felicetty*
Bruce Hampton Finckbone
John William Fluker
John Morris Foster
William Carter Galloway
Thomas Edison Gentle
George Jacob Gorab, Jr.
Osmer Dennis Gregg
Howard Wayne Hainline
Frank George Harms
Glen Olen Haws
John Francis Henry
John Henry Heubeck
Albert Leroy Hudson
Homer Wesley Ijames, Jr.
Stewart Samuel Imwold
Donald Morgan Jenkins
Sidney William Jones
Louis Charles Kaiser
John Theodore Kanagy
John Thomas Kassube
John Andrew Key
Ralph Bernard Knapp
Richard Jerome Kroth
LeRoy Richard Lane
Paul Lewis Larson
Robert Peter Lee
Lindley Herbert Llewellyn
Charles William London
Chester Loveless
Ellroy Lytton
Robert Vance McMorrow
John Joseph McNabb
John Jefferson Parker
Basil Charles Pearce, Jr.
Rubin MacNiel Raiford
Francis John Reabuck
Darrel Dean Rector
Ernest Reinhardt
James Lester Roberts
George Louis Robertson
Seymour Golding Smith, Jr.
Frank Howard Springer
Edward Frank Stepien
Fred Louis Sunday
Paul Benton Vaughn, Jr.
Charles Waite Wadsworth
Howard Madison Walker
Leland Stanford Weekley
Robert Edward Welch
James Milton White
Walter Herman Williams
Paul Thornton Wines
George Wukovich
George Zofcin

*Last name spelled "Fellicetty" in most sources.

The following USS Tang crew members survived Prisoner of War camp.

Floyd Murel Caverly
Jesse Borges DaSilva
Clayton Oliver Decker
Henry James Flanagan
William Rudolf Leibold
Pete Narowanski
Richard Hetherington O'Kane,
(Commanding Officer, Medal of Honor)
Lawrence Savadkin
Hayes Oliver Trukke
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
7750


Commemoration: U.S.S. TANG (SS-306)

Date of Dedication: Not listed

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