1944 USS Tang (SS-306) under Richard O'Kane (a top US
submarine captain of World War II) is sunk by the ship's own torpedo.
History
USS Tang
(Cdr. Richard Hetherington O'Kane) is sunk by a circular-running torpedo fired
by herself near Turnabout Island in Formosa Strait in position 25º06'N,
119º31'E. There were only 9 survivors, including the Commanding Officer,
O'Kane. They were picked up by a Japanese escort and became POW's.
After
his return from Japan, Cdr. O'Kane was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor
on 27 March 1946.
Citation;
Rank
and organization:
Commander, U.S. Navy, commanding U.S.S. Tang. Place and date:
Vicinity Philippine Islands, 23 and 24 October 1944. Entered service at: New
Hampshire. Born: 2 February 1911, Dover, N.H. Citation:
For conspicuous
gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of
duty as commanding officer of the U.S.S. Tang operating against 2 enemy
Japanese convoys on 23 and 24 October 1944, during her fifth and last war
patrol. Boldly maneuvering on the surface into the midst of a heavily escorted
convoy, Comdr. O'Kane stood in the fusillade of bullets and shells from all
directions to launch smashing hits on 3 tankers, coolly swung his ship to fire
at a freighter and, in a split-second decision, shot out of the path of an
onrushing transport, missing it by inches. Boxed in by blazing tankers, a
freighter, transport, and several destroyers, he blasted 2 of the targets with
his remaining torpedoes and, with pyrotechnics bursting on all sides, cleared
the area.
Twenty-four hours later, he again made contact with a heavily
escorted convoy steaming to support the Leyte campaign with reinforcements and
supplies and with crated planes piled high on each unit. In defiance of the
enemy's relentless fire, he closed the concentration of ship and in quick
succession sent 2 torpedoes each into the first and second transports and an
adjacent tanker, finding his mark with each torpedo in a series of violent
explosions at less than l,000-yard range. With ships bearing down from all
sides, he charged the enemy at high speed, exploding the tanker in a burst of
flame, smashing the transport dead in the water, and blasting the destroyer
with a mighty roar which rocked the Tang from stem to stern. Expending his last
2 torpedoes into the remnants of a once powerful convoy before his own ship
went down, Comdr. O'Kane, aided by his gallant command, achieved an illustrious
record of heroism in combat, enhancing the finest traditions of the U.S. Naval
Service


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