ONE OF THE BEST KEPT SECRETS OF WORLD WAR II
Pearl Harbor's Second Disaster Remembered
Story Number: NNS030527-07 Release Date: 5/27/2003 2:54:00 PM
By Journalist 2nd Class John Watts, Naval Media Center Pearl Harbor Public
Affairs
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (NNS) -- May 21, 1944, for the second time in less than
three years, Pearl Harbor’s skies were choked with black smoke and her waters
littered with death. Fifty-nine years to the day, Sailors from Naval Magazine
Pearl Harbor gathered to
commemorate the anniversary and honor those Sailors and Marines who lost their
lives in
the West Loch Disaster.
“Most people are completely unaware of the event that we are remembering
today,” said
Capt. John Mclawhorn, commanding officer Naval Magazine Pearl Harbor. “But we
remember.” Their memories begin at an isolated and sleepy tree lined portion
of Pearl Harbor, where 29 tank landing ships (LSTs) prepared for a major battle
during World War II. The United States was planning a massive attack on Saipan.
Sailors and Marines hustled to load the LSTs and prepare for war. It was
to be the D-Day of the Pacific.
But something went wrong. Amidst the loading of ordnance, hundreds of thousands
of
gallons of fuel, trucks and small arms, one of the LSTs exploded for a reason
never
definitively determined.
Quickly, a chain reaction of explosions dealt flaming shards of steel into the
air. Thick black
smoke billowed into the air, while oil slicks crept across the water. The
Sailors and Marines
scattered. Some attempted in vain to put out the growing number of fires. Others
tried to
save themselves and their shipmates. Their mission was complicated by debris in
the water that fowled rescue boat’s engines. Once again, Pearl Harbor was in a
panic.
“In all, six LSTs were sunk, and several severely damaged. Dead were 163 men,
and 396
were wounded,” said Naval Region Hawaii Public Affairs Officer Lt. Cmdr. Jane
Campbell. Campbell went on to say that the West Loch disaster was veiled in secrecy so as
not to compromise the U.S. operations in the ongoing war. The attack, however, was
delayed only
by one day and was a major catalyst leading to the surrender of the Japanese.
Unfortunately, many Pearl Harbor shipmates could not be a part of the attack.
Today, According to Mclawhorn, the West Loch disaster serves as a reminder to
the Sailors working at Naval Magazine of just how important and how dangerous
their job can be. While the ships are different, the mission is very much the
same. Arm the fleet.
Just across from Naval Magazine is the bow of LST 480. Rusted and wrecked, she
is the only remaining visible evidence of the heroic actions and mournful loss
of life during Pearl Harbor’s
second disaster.
Snapshot photo by Robert L. Dennebaum, U. S. Navy, taken from LST-272
| West Loch (Pearl Harbor) LST explosions May 21, 1944 ravage Saipan Invasion Forces. |
Snapshot photo by Robert L. Dennebaum, U.S. Navy, taken from LST-272
| Catastrophe in West Loch (Pearl Harbor), May 21, 1944 when fire and explosions killed or injured 559 men and destroyed six LSTs (Landing Ship, Tank) and three LCTs (Landing Craft, Tank), plus critically needed supplies of the Saipan Invasion Forces. |
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Note: the LST 480 is still there today , across the loch from the naval magazine at West Loch ( Pearl Harbor) with its bow sticking out of the water rusting away. Picture curtsey of the Star Bulletin Honolulu Hawaii |