| On To Eniwetok
Atoll in the Marshall Islands
The time had finally come for the Yosemite to join the
fleet as it advanced across the Pacific. Heading
southwest toward the equator, we arrived in Eniwetok
as part of a small convoy. There wasn't much on the
Atoll which consisted of 30 small islands of sand and
coral. Eniwetok Island is two miles long and
one-quarter of a mile wide. Earlier, the big guns from
our battlewagons and cruisers had almost leveled the
island before the 22nd Marines and elements of the
106th Infantry captured Eniwetok Atoll in a swift
amphibious operation that lasted less than five days
from the landing in February of 1944.
The radio blared the announcement, "On the rock at
Eniwetok". It was so hot that we often took our sack
and slept on deck. We were only there for five days
but liberty did allow us all to go ashore. It seems
that a lot of the crew had made little crap tables and
intended to open them for dice games. I never could
figure out where they got the wood and felt. Some of
the crew thought they might find some sea shells and
made Plexiglas bottomed buckets to use to look in the
shallow water.
Eaten By Ants
The liberty boats were filled and we just had everyday
dungarees and work shirts as uniform of the day. Each
of us got a chit for a couple of cans of beer. Once on
the atoll, it was evident that it was hotter than hell
there. Some body left the picnic tables on the beach
and under them, it was packed with sailors trying to
find some shade. You could smell the odor of burnt
flesh and sand as we heard the Marines had to burn out
the last Japs from underground sand caves.
Bulldozers from the Seabees covered them up.
I had found one curved old slab of palm tree and
relaxed in the cradle of it with my beer when I
experienced what felt like a surge of needles going
into my back. I threw my beer in the air and sprawled
on the sand. Some of the onlookers thought I was
having a fit but I was being attacked by flesh eating
"Piss Ants" and suffered over 220 bites from what was
most likely a variety of the fire ant. The medics on
the ship cleaned me up with alcohol but it took me a
month to heal.
Ulithi In The Caroline Islands
We left Eniwetok without an escort which was risky
business. The Yosemite wasn't exactly the greyhound of
the seas so we hoped that a rogue Jap sub would not
see us and triangulate our exact position for a kill.
We dyed our white hats blue and had special lookouts
to keep the ship dark at night. The Japs had a big
base at
Truk, which we bypassed. There was a small island,
Yap
that was said to have underground hangers and a couple
planes. During the day, the normal maintenance routine
went on. One day we heard that a seaman on the fantail
fell overboard. They said the Captain turned around
and went back to pick him up. I never
found out if this was true or not, I only know it was
scuttlebutt. Finally, we arrived at
Ulithi
(2nd
link,
3rd link) and the net tenders opened the gate to
the harbor. We were glad we made it okay from the
Marshall's.
Once we got our berth inside the rim of the Ulithi
Atoll in the
Caroline Island
(map), we found plenty to do
to keep the tin cans coming and going from the front
lines.
There was and endless parade of damaged ships and
heroic crews alongside. For instance, the USS Powell came alongside
with most of a Jap plane imbedded near her bridge. I
was part of the special working party who went aboard
and had to literally cut the plane up in little
pieces. I still have a small portion of the wing tip.
It has the date of March 25th marked on it. Some people thought
it had a female pilot but we couldn't find evidence of
anything because the fuselage was burned so badly that
it was unidentifiable. |