HRNM Educator
The same week that the world’s attention would became transfixed upon over 150,000 Soldiers and Sailors pouring over and dropping behind the beachheads of Normandy in early 1944, nine United States Navy Sailors captured a German submarine on the high seas, although they would be forbidden to tell of their astounding feat for nearly a year. Their leader would also never live to receive the nation's highest award for the operation.
Crew members of USS Pillsbury (DE-133), who made up the the first party to board U-505 after she had been abandoned by her German crew. They are (from left to right): Gunner's Mate 1st Class Chester A. Mocarski; Electrician's Mate 2nd Class William Riendeau; Chief Motor Machinist's Mate George Jacobson; Motor Machinist Mate 1st Class Zenon Lukosivs; Signalman 2nd Class Gordon Hohne; Boatswain's Mate 2nd Class Wayne M. Pickels, Jr.; Radioman 3rd Class Stanley E. Wdowiak; and Torpedoman 2nd Class Arthur W. Knispel. Lt.j.g Albert L. David, who led the boarding party, does not appear in the photograph, which has been heavily retouched to remove an errant chief petty officer who originally stood at Hohne's left, replaced by Pickels, who appears abnormally large (as do Hohne's hands). The original photograph as well as the story of its editing can be found at the Museum of Science and Industry's article about U-505 and its capture. (Naval History and Heritage Command image) |
Daniel V. Gallery as a rear admiral (upper half) (USNI archives) |
In 1944, Capt. Gallery was in command of Task Group 22.3 which was a “Hunter-Killer” group consisting of the escort carrier USS Guadalcanal (CVE 60), and five destroyer escorts, the USS Pillsbury (DE 133), USS Pope (DE 134), USS Flaherty (DE 135), USS Chatelain (DE 149), and the USS Jenks (DE 665). The assembled task group departed Norfolk, Virginia on May 15, 1944 specifically tasked with seeking out German U-boats. While at sea with Task Group 22.3, Gallery pioneered the idea of conducting flight operations 24 hours a day. This would impact the U-boat’s typical tactic of hiding by day and surfacing at night to recharge its batteries.
U-505 leaves Lorient, Brittany, in July 1943. Notice that the buildings in the background have been gutted from Allied bombing. (USNI archives) |
Utilizing
F4F Wildcat fighters from the Guadalcanal,
sonar, and depth charges from the destroyer escorts, the submarine was forced to
surface. Once on the surface, the U-505
was hit with heavy gunfire from .50 caliber machine guns,
anti-aircraft batteries, and strafing runs by the F4F Wildcats. The fire from the destroyers wounded Lange and killed a radioman named
Fischer. Lange gave the order to scuttle
the submarine, and the majority of the crew went into the water.
A nine-man boarding party from Pillsbury made its way to the U-505, led by Lieutenant Junior Grade Albert David, who along with two other men entered the sub’s conning tower hatch and made their way to the control room. David and his men gathered up secret codebooks as well as U-505’s Enigma cryptographic machines. Further exploration inside the submarine led to the discovery of 13 demolition charges. These were disarmed by David and his men, and an additional boarding party of ten men from the Guadalcanal were able to prevent the submarine from flooding. Men from the Guadalcanal attached a cable to the U-505 and began to tow her to the nearest friendly port.A Boarding party from USS Pillsbury (DE 133) works to secure a tow line to U-505's bow. (Naval History and Heritage Command image) |
U-505 was the first foreign man-of-war captured by American forces since the War of 1812. Fifty-nine German sailors out of a crew of 60 spent the rest of the war as POWs. Despite the tremendous success of the capture, Capt. Gallery was threatened with court-martial and his entire task group was ordered not to mention a word about the U-505. The Navy did not want the Germans to know that the U-boat had been captured along with all the secret codes. The American public would not learn about the U-505 and its capture until after the war.
After having kept the secret of the capture safe, Task Group 22.3 was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation, and Capt. Gallery received the Distinguished Service Medal. For leading the daring capture of U-505, which at any point could have ended with his death and those of his men, Lt. Albert David from the Pillsbury was selected to receive the Medal of Honor; the only one awarded in the Atlantic Fleet during World War II. Sadly, he did not live long enough to receive the nation’s highest honor. David died in Norfolk after suffering a heart attack on September 17, 1945, and his widow, Lynda Mae David, received the medal from President Harry S. Truman during a ceremony at the White House on October 5.
Gallery Hall Fleet ASW Training Center San Diego (faswombudsman.com) |
Captain
Gallery eventually made admiral and retired from the Navy in 1960 after 43
years of service. The tactics that he
developed for hunting submarines in Iceland as well as with Task Group 22.3,
proved instrumental in anti-submarine warfare.
The combined efforts of aircraft working in conjunction with surface
ships such as destroyers are still taught by the Navy at commands like the
Fleet ASW Training Center located in San Diego, California.
U-505 as it appears today at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. (MOSI Chicago) |
Today,
people may visit the U-505 at the Museum of Science and Industry, in Chicago,
Illinois. it arrived in 1954, and
it moved indoors, into the building that surrounds it, in 2004. This ensures that many future generations
will be able to see the U-505 and get a firsthand glimpse into what living
conditions were like for a German U-boat sailor during World War II.
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