U.S.S. R-12 (SS-89) - Seawolf Park - Galveston, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
N 29° 20.043 W 094° 46.737
15R E 327275 N 3246310
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: WM128BM
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 03/27/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member 3l diesel
Views: 0

U.S.S. R-12
(SS-89)

12 JUNE 1943
40 MEN LOST
KEY WEST,
FLORIDA

On Eternal Patrol - The Loss of USS R-12 (SS-89)


R-12 (SS-89)

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

R-12 (LCDR Edward E. Shelby) was lost between 1220 and 1225 on 12 June 1943 at Latitude 24° 24' 30"N and Longitude 81° 38' 30"W in six hundred feet of water with the loss of forty-two lives. The personnel on the bridge, two officers including the Commanding Officer, and three enlisted men, were the only survivors. Those missing consisted of four U.S. Naval officers, two Brazilian Naval officers and thirty-six U.S. Naval enlisted men.

At the time of the accident R-12 was engaged in normal operations off Key West, Florida, being underway to take up her position for a torpedo practice approach. She was rigged for diving (except main induction was open and batteries were ventilating into the engine room) and riding the vents. The Commanding Officer was on the bridge in the act of turning the Officer of the Deck watch over to another officer when the collision alarm was sounded from below and the report that the forward battery compartment was flooding was passed to the bridge. Although the Commanding Officer gave immediate orders to blow main ballast and close the hatches, the ship sank in an estimated fifteen seconds from the time the alarm was sounded until the bridge was completely under water.

It was the opinion of the Court of Inquiry that the cause of the loss of R-12 was unknown but probably was caused by the rapid flooding of the forward part of the ship through a torpedo tube.

Please note -- the wreck of USS R-12 (SS-89) was found in 600 feet of water off Key West, Florida, by an exploration team led by Tim Taylor aboard the expedition vessel "RV Tiburon."

The following men were lost while serving on USS R-12 (SS-89),
including two Brazilian Naval Officers
who were on board to observe a torpedo firing exercise.

Alberto Gonçalves Rosauro de Almeida (Brazilian Navy)
General William Bacon
Robert Burton Bronson
James Joseph Buckley
Fredrick Edward Cashell
Howard Livingston Clayton
Raymond Francis Flisher
Lenard Earl Garbulsky
Frederick Patrick Graziani, Jr.
Joseph Cyril Hall, Jr.
Elmer Larry Harman, Jr.
James Ulysses Horton
Joseph Stephen Horvath
Howard Herbert Knapp
Everett Samuel Krigbaum
Leland Van Kymer, Jr.
Charles Buddy LeVan
Henry Peter Lobeck
Curtis Virgle Mathis
Paul Ralph McKibben
Joseph Moncada
Julio Lima de Moura (Brazilian Navy)
Albert Jackson Mullis
George William Ness
Paul Louis Noonan
John Henry Rabbitt
Edward John Rafferty
Lyle Edmund Schnake
Craig R. Scott
Howard Russell Secor
Harry Henry Shellenberger
Granby Solomon Smith
Roger Norton Starks
Donald Charles Sullivan
Rudolph Albert Thompson, Jr.
James Donald Unger
Ernest William Vincent
Norman William Walker
Edwin Francis Walsh
Kenneth John Wheeler
Willie Daniel Young
George Arthur Zimmerman

The following USS R-12 crew members survived the sinking
or were not aboard when the boat sank.
Two men were later lost on other submarines.

Eric Preston Bailey
Robert Bird Balfe
Percy Edward Barnett
Claude Alphonse Boucher
Joe Lawrence Cross
Daniel Enoch Davis
Robert Durrenberger
Robert Niel England
John Kapral (survived sinking)
William Wilfred Mayer
Glenn Harding Niles
Leif Ovenson
Jack Edward Pinkley
Sydney Herbert Pool (survived sinking)
Adolph John Schnee
Ernest Edward Schwartz
Edward Ellis Shelby, Commanding Officer (survived sinking)
John Joseph Sullivan
Franklin Augustus Van Leuven
William D. Whetstone (survived sinking)
James Henry Wood
Edward Felix Zielinski (survived sinking)
Frank Joseph Zions
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. R-12 (SS-89)

Date of Dedication: Not listed

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