"Praise
The Lord
And Pass The
Ammunition!"
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS TO:

.
BREINING,
ALBERT
L GM3c
Survivor of the sinking of
USS
DE HAVEN DD-469
and USS OAKLAND CL-95 plank
owner
FOR
USS Oakland magazine
infornation
from his little black book
and Albert's personal
recollection
of the
last days of the USS DE
Haven DD-469
EXCERPT FROM THE LAST DAY
OF THE
USS DEHAVEN
By
Ernest A. Herr
.

.
This webpage is dedicated
to the
brave sailors.

Who labored in the
magazines
passing the
ammunition. To
|
|

keep
the guns a firing
for the
protection
of the men and ship.
|
.

.
USS Oakland CL-95
Ammunition Allowance
.
.
.
5" 38 Caliber Projectile
Allowance:
.
.
AA Common (Mechanical Timed
Fuse)
.
|
Turret 1
|
Turret 2
|
Turret 3
|
Turret 4
|
Turret 5
|
Turret 6
|
Total
|
|
325
|
325
|
325
|
325
|
325
|
325
|
1950
|
.
Variable Time (Proximity
Fuze)
.
|
Turret 1
|
Turret 2
|
Turret 3
|
Turret 4
|
Turret 5
|
Turret 6
|
Total
|
|
200
|
200
|
200
|
200
|
200
|
200
|
1200
|
.
Common (Point Detonating
Fuze)
.
|
Turret 1
|
Turret 2
|
Turret 3
|
Turret 4
|
Turret 5
|
Turret 6
|
Total
|
|
175
|
175
|
175
|
175
|
175
|
175
|
1050
|
.
Illuminating (Star
Shells)
(Turret 4 Was Designated
Illumination
Turret)
.
|
Turret 1
|
Turret 2
|
Turret 3
|
Turret 4
|
Turret 5
|
Turret 6
|
Total
|
|
70
|
70
|
70
|
150
|
70
|
70
|
500
|
.
.
.
5"
38 Caliber Powder Allowance:
.
.
Smokeless Powder
|
Turret 1
|
Turret 2
|
Turret 3
|
Turret 4
|
Turret 5
|
Turret 6
|
Total
|
|
520
|
520
|
520
|
550
|
520
|
520
|
3150
|
Flashless Powder
|
Turret 1
|
Turret 2
|
Turret 3
|
Turret 4
|
Turret 5
|
Turret 6
|
Total
|
|
250
|
250
|
250
|
300
|
250
|
250
|
1550
|
Dislodging Powder
|
Turret 1
|
Turret 2
|
Turret 3
|
Turret 4
|
Turret 5
|
Turret 6
|
Total
|
|
3
|
3
|
3
|
3
|
3
|
3
|
18
|
.
.
40mm Ammunition
Allowance:
.

.
|
HEIT
|
HEP
|
APT
|
BLP
|
|
22,096
|
7,888
|
1,584
|
320
|
.

.
20mm Ammunition
Allowance:
.

.
.
|
HEI
|
HET
|
BLP
|
|
42,800
|
22,420
|
540
|
.

.
Magazines Forward:
.

.
A-514-M 40mm
A-515-M Small arms
A-515 1/2-M 20mm
A-206-M 5" 38 cal.
Upper
Handling Room Turret 1
A-504-M 5" 38 cal.
Lower
Handling Room Turret 1
A-505-M 5" 38 cal.
Power
Magazine Turret 1
A-506-M 5" 38 cal.
Lower
Handling Room Turret 2
A-507-M 5" 38 cal.
Power
Magazine Turret 2
A-508-M 5" 38
cal.
Projectile Storage
A-509-M 5" 38 cal.
Lower
Handling Room Turret 3
A-510-M 5" 38 cal.
Power
Magazine Turret 3
Magazines Topside:
A-203-M 20mm
A-101-M 5" 38 cal.
Upper
Handling Room Turret 2
A-0101-M 5" 38 cal.
Upper
Handling Room Turret 3
A-0201-M 20mm
A-0104-M 40mm
A-0105-M 40mm
B-118-M 40mm
B-119-M 40mm
B-0106-M 20mm
B-0106 1/2-M 20mm
B-0108 1/2-M 20mm
B-0112-M 40mm
B-0115-M 40mm
B-0206-M 40mm
B-113-M 40mm
C-0101-M 5" 38 cal.
Upper
Handling Room Turret 4
C-102-M 5" 38 cal.
Upper
Handling Room Turret 5
C-210-M 40mm
Magazines Aft:
C-301-M 40mm
C-304-M 40mm
C-402 1/2-M 40mm
C-407-M 5" 38 cal.
Lower
Handling Room
C-406-M 5" 38 cal.
Projectile
Storage
C-406 1/2-M 20mm
C-401 1/2-M
Demolition Locker
C-411-M 5" 38 cal.
Powder
Magazine
C-412-M 5" 38 cal.
Lower
Handling Room
C-415-M 5" 38 cal.
Powder
Magazine
C-204-M 5" 38 cal.
Upper
Handling Room #6
C-419-M 20mm used as
(Clothes
Storage)
C-316 1/2-M 20mm
C-210-M 40mm

.
Albert
L.
Breining's personal recollection
of the last days of the
DD-469
"Bye-Bye
DD!"
I was seventeen, three
days after
Pearl Harbor, but didn't join up until '42 with
about six others
from Newark, NJ (there is a
point here).
We went to boots
together at Coddington
point, Newport,
RI, and then to Boston to put the
DeHaven into
commission (don't remember the
date). Our
shakedown consisted
of a rough ride in or near
Casco
Bay, Maine. All I remember was being sick
forever. Thank
the Lord we were very much needed
in the
Pacific so we didn't
hang out too long on the
east coast.
I think I was still sick until we entered the
Panama Canal. So
much for tincans!
After the Panama Canal,
our first
port of call was Tongatapu where I got sick
again. I pigged
out on coconuts with the other
city boys
from Newark. Then to
either New Hebrides or New
Caledonia
where we stripped the ship of all
flammable
material. We left shortly, in company
with
other ships for the other
Canal (Guadalcanal) and
Tulagi.
Most of what
was is written by Mr. Herr
appears to be
very accurate. However,
I recall two things
differently.
One, I don't believe we were making 20 knots
because we were
still pacing the LCM's and two,
one more
person left the pilot
house beaten, bowed and
bloody.
Me!
I was a
signalman striker at the time and both
my watch
and GQ station were as
the talker stationed at the
bulkhead
just aft of the helmsman. I was the Captains'
connection to
the lookouts, guns, etc. The bomb
that
blew up #2 mount and just
about "everything forward
of the
stack" trapped me somewhere inside of the
bridge. I must
have been out for a short time (
stunned,
more than likely) and the
first thing I remember was
panic
and the thought that I had very little time left.
The only light I
could see came from a large hole
in
the deck (or more likely the
overhead). I looked down
and saw
what could only be described as hell. I knew I
couldn't get out
and really freaked. I screamed
for help
and a voice somewhere to
my left yelled "over here".
When
I tried to go "over here" I found myself caught
under lots of
junk. Being pretty nutty by now, I
broke
loose and crawled to where
I had heard the voice. God
helped
me and I saw the light, literally. Believe it or
not, I had been
in the pilot house but only had
to step
into the water. I can
remember in bootcamp how I
hardly
passed the swim test and now I'm Olympic
material. I did
turn in time to see the DeHaven
slip
under. When I finally
remembered to inflate my
life belt
I discovered holes in it. Fortunately for me
there were empty
5" 38 aluminum powder cans
floating
nearby which I used until
I found some guys on a life
raft.
I managed to hold on until sometime later when
we were picked
up by one of the LCM's.
I ended up spending a
horrible night
on Guadalcanal and was flown from the
island the next
day on a DC3 to a hospital in
Noumea.
Later is was transferred to
a hospital in New Zealand
so I
lost contact with my shipmates and never really
had a chance to
compare notes.
I did meet up with a
marine that
told me he and some buddies were at Cape
Esperance
watching us get beat up and betting on
how
long it would take to sink
us. He said it only took
seven
minutes.
Many wonder
why the guns of the DeHaven were
late to respond
to the attack. I
know why the guns did not
begin
firing until the last minute. The Jap planes that
got over us came
from the direction of Henderson
Field.
The skipper was
concerned that the planes
might
be ours so he asked me to ask the lookouts to
report as soon
as they could identify them as
enemy.
Nothing! Once more the
question and once more
nothing.
Then the captain exclaimed, "damn, tell them to
hurry up!" After
I relayed his message, soon came
the
reply, "They're Japs, we
can see the meatballs!".
All the delay
in identification combined with
the slow
speed of the ship gave the
aces that dove on us a real
field
day. Bye-bye DD!
This web
page was created by and
is maintained by Paul D.
Henriott
Last updated 31 March 2005
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