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USS San Francisco (CA-38)

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For other uses and meanings of "CA-38" see CA-38 (Disambiguation).
Entering San Francisco Bay in December 1942.
Career USN Jack
Ordered:
Laid down: 9 September 1931
Launched: 9 March 1933
Commissioned: 10 February 1934
Decommissioned: 10 February 1946
Struck: 1 March 1959
Fate: Sold for scrap,
9 September 1959
General characteristics
Displacement: 9,950 tons
Length: 588 ft 2 in (179.2 m)
Beam: 62 ft 9 in (19.1 m)
Draft: 19 ft 5 in (5.9 m)
Propulsion:
Speed: 32.7 knots (61 km/h)
Range:
Complement: 708 officers and enlisted
Armament: • 9 × 8 in,
• 8 × 5 in,[1]
• 8 × .50 calibre guns
Aircraft:

USS San Francisco (CA-38), a New Orleans-class heavy cruiser was the second ship of the United States Navy named after the city of San Francisco, California. She saw extensive action during World War II.

Pre-War

San Francisco was laid down on 9 September 1931 at the Mare Island Navy Yard, Vallejo, California; launched on 9 March 1933; sponsored by Miss Barbara M. Bailly; and commissioned on 10 February 1934, Capt. Royal E. Ingersoll in command.

After an extensive shakedown cruise—which included operations off Mexico, in Hawaiian waters, off Washington and British Columbia, and a voyage to the Panama Canal Zone—the cruiser returned to the Mare Island Navy Yard. Gunnery installation and conversion to a flagship took her into the new year, 1935. In February, she joined her division, Cruiser Division 6 (CruDiv 6) at San Diego. In May, she moved north; participated in Fleet Problem XVI; then returned to southern California. A few weeks later, she was back off the northwest coast for fleet tactics; and, in July, she steamed farther north to Alaska. In August, she returned to California and, through the end of 1938, San Francisco continued to range the eastern Pacific, cruising from the state of Washington to Peru and from California to Hawaii.

In January 1939, she departed the west coast to participate in Fleet Problem XX, conducted in the Atlantic east of the Lesser Antilles. In March, she became flagship of CruDiv 7 and commenced a goodwill tour of South American ports. Departing Guantanamo Bay in early April, she called at ports on the east coast of that continent; moved through the Strait of Magellan; visited west coast ports; and, in early June, transited the Panama Canal to complete her voyage around the continent.

On 1 September, World War II started; and, on the 14th, San Francisco moved south from Norfolk, Va. to join the Neutrality Patrol. The cruiser carried freight and passengers to San Juan, P.R., thence sailed for a patrol of the West Indies as far south as Trinidad. On 14 October, she completed her patrol back at San Juan and headed for Norfolk, where she remained into January 1940. On the 11th, she headed for Guantanamo Bay, where she was relieved of flagship duties by Wichita (CA-45), and whence she returned to the Pacific.

Transiting the Panama Canal in late February, she called at San Pedro and, in March, continued on to her new home port, Pearl Harbor, where she rejoined CruDiv 6. In May, she steamed northwest to the Puget Sound Navy Yard for an overhaul, during which she also received four 3-inch (76 mm) guns. On 29 September, she returned to Pearl Harbor. In early May 1941, she became flagship of CruDiv 6; and, at the end of July, she moved east for a cruise to Long Beach, returning to Hawaii on 27 August. In September, the flag of Com-CruDiv 6 was hauled down; and, on 11 October, San Francisco entered the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard for an overhaul which was scheduled for completion on 25 December.

Early War

On 7 December 1941, San Francisco was in Pearl Harbor and was awaiting docking and the cleaning of her heavily fouled bottom. Her engineering plant was largely broken down for overhaul. Ammunition for her 5 inch and 8-inch (203 mm) guns had been placed in storage. Her 3-inch (76 mm) guns had been removed to permit installation of four 1.1 inch quadruple mounts. The 1.1 inch mounts had not been installed. Her .50 caliber machine guns were being overhauled. Only small arms and two .30 caliber machine guns were available. Moreover, a number of San Francisco's officers and men were absent.

At 07:55, Japanese planes began bombing dives on Ford Island; and, by 08:00, the surprise air attack on Pearl Harbor was well underway. The men in San Francisco secured the ship for watertightness and began looking for opportunities to fight back. Some crossed to New Orleans (CA-32) to help man antiaircraft batteries on that ship. Others began using available rifles and machine guns. Fifty caliber machine gun ammunition was transferred to Tracy (DD-214) for use.

The San Francisco was not bombed or damaged during the Japanese air raid. After the attack was over, work resumed to make the San Francisco seaworthy and combat-ready.

On 14 December, the cruiser left the yard; the scaling of her keel had been postponed in favor of more necessary repairs on other ships. On 16 December, she sortied with Task Force 14 (TF 14) to relieve Wake Island. The force moved west with a Marine Corps fighter squadron on board Saratoga (CV-3) and a Marine battalion embarked in Tangier (AV-8). However, when Wake Island fell to the Japanese on the 23d, TF 14 was diverted to Midway which it reinforced. On the 29th, the force returned to Pearl Harbor.

On 8 January 1942, the San Francisco again moved west. In TF 8, she steamed toward Samoa to rendezvous with, and cover the off-loading of, transports carrying reinforcements to Tutuila, Samoa. Thence she joined TF 17 for raids on Japanese installations in the Gilberts and Marshalls. The San Francisco arrived in the Samoan area on the 18th and, on the 24th, was detached to continue coverage for the transports while the remainder of the task force and TF 17 conducted offensive operations to the northwest.

On 8 February, the San Francisco departed from Tutuila. On the 10th, she rejoined CruDiv 6, then in TF 11, and she set a course for an area northeast of the Solomons to strike Rabaul. However, the American force was sighted and attacked by two waves of twin-engined Japanese Betty bombers. Sixteen of the planes were destroyed, but since the element of surprise had been lost, TF 11 retired eastward.

During the next few days, TF 11, centered on Lexington (CV-2), conducted operations in the South Pacific, then headed for New Guinea to participate with TF 17 in a raid against Japanese shipping and installations.

On 7 March, one of San Francisco's scout planes was reported missing and could not be found.

On the night of 9 March and 10 March, TFs 11 and 17 entered the Gulf of Papua, whence, at dawn, Lexington and Yorktown (CV-5) launched their aircraft to cross the Owen Stanley Range and attack the Japanese at Salamaua and Lae.

The next day, the missing plane was sighted by Minneapolis (CA-36) and recovered by San Francisco. It had landed on the water, but had been unable to communicate. The pilot, Lt. J. A. Thomas, and the radioman, RMS O. J. Gannan, had headed for Australia, sailing the plane backwards as it tended to head into the prevailing east wind. In five days and 21 hours, they had covered approximately 385 miles (715 km) on a course within 5 degrees of that intended.

San Francisco returned to Pearl Harbor on the 26th. On 22 April, the cruiser departed Oahu for San Francisco in the escort of convoy 4093. At the end of May, she headed west, escorting convoy PW 2076, made up of transports carrying the 37th Army Division, destined for Suva, and special troops bound for Australia. The cruiser remained in the escort force as far as Auckland, New Zealand; thence steamed for Hawaii, arriving at Pearl Harbor on 29 June.

San Francisco steamed west with Laffey (DD-459) and Ballard (AVD-10) to escort convoy 4120 to the Fiji Islands. From there, she got underway to rendezvous with the Solomon Islands Expeditionary Force.

Guadalcanal

Operation Watchtower, the Guadalcanal-Tulagi offensive, opened on the morning of 7 August. Through that day and the remainder of the month, San Francisco helped to cover the American forces in the area. The flag of Rear Admiral Norman Scott, commanding the cruisers attached to TF 18, was shifted to San Francisco.

On 3 September, San Francisco's force put into Nouméa, New Caledonia, for fuel and provisions. On the 8th, the ships departed that island to cover reinforcements moving up to Guadalcanal. On the 11th, San Francisco's force, TF 18, rendezvoused with TF 17, the Hornet group; and, the next day both groups refueled at sea. On the 14th, the reinforcement convoy departed the New Hebrides. TF 61 commenced covering operations with TF 17 operating to the eastward of TF 18 and conforming to the movements of TF 18.

At about 14:50, on the 15th, Wasp (CV-7) was torpedoed on the starboard side. Fires broke out on the carrier. Explosions multiplied the fires. Rear Admiral Scott took command of TF 18. San Francisco and Salt Lake City (CA-25) prepared to take the carrier in tow; but, by 15:20, the fires were out of control and destroyers began taking on survivors. Lansdowne (DD-486) torpedoed the burning hulk. TF 18 then headed for Espiritu Santo.

On the morning of 17 September, San Francisco, Juneau (CL-52), and five destroyers put back to sea to rendezvous with TF 17 and resume coverage of reinforcement convoys. Other units of TF 18 had headed for Nouméa with Wasp survivors.

On 23 September, cruisers San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Minneapolis, and Chester, light cruisers Boise, and Helena, and Destroyer Squadron 12 (DesRon 12) became TF 64, a surface screening and attack force under the command of Rear Admiral Scott in San Francisco. On the 24th, the force headed to the New Hebrides.

Battle of Cape Esperance

On 7 October, TF 64 departed from Espiritu Santo, the New Hebrides, and moved back into the Solomons to cover Allied reinforcements and to intercept similar operations by the Japanese. On the 11th, at about 16:15, the ships commenced a run northward from Rennel Island, to intercept an enemy force of two cruisers and six destroyers reported heading for Guadalcanal from the Buin-Faisi, Bougainville, area. The force continued north, to approach Savo Island in The Slot from the southwest.

By 23:30, when the warships were approximately six miles northwest of Savo Island, they turned to make a further search of the area. A few minutes after setting the new course, radar indicated unidentified ships to the west, several thousand yards distant. At about 23:45, the Battle of Cape Esperance began.

Initial confusion caused both sides to momentarily check their fire in fear of hitting their own ships. Then, the battle was reopened and continued until 00:20 on the 12th, when surviving Japanese ships retired toward the Shortland Islands. Two American cruisers, the Salt Lake City and the Boise, and the two destroyers, Duncan (DD-485) and Farenholt (DD-491), had been damaged. Later, Duncan went down. The Japanese cruiser Furutaka and a destroyer had been sunk during the surface action. Two more enemy destroyers were sunk on the 12th by USMC planes from Henderson Field. After the engagement, TF 64 retired to Espiritu Santo.

On 15 October, the San Francisco resumed operations in support of the Guadalcanal campaign. On the evening of the 20th, her group was ordered back to Espiritu Santo. At 21:19, submarine's torpedoes were reported. The Chester was hit amidships on the starboard side but continued under her own power. Three other torpedoes exploded: one off Helena's starboard quarter; a second between Helena and San Francisco; and the third about 1,200 yards (1,100 m) off San Francisco's port beam. Two others were sighted running on the surface.

San Francisco reached Espiritu Santo on the night of the 21st, but departed again on the 22d to intercept any enemy surface units approaching Guadalacanal from the north and to cover friendly reinforcements. On the 28th, Rear Admiral Scott transferred to Atlanta. On the 29th, San Francisco returned to Espiritu Santo; and, on the 30th, Rear Admiral Daniel J. Callaghan, the commanding officer of San Francisco when the United States entered the war, returned to the ship and raised his flag as Commander Task Group 64.4 (CTG 64.4) and prospective CTF 65.

On the 31st, the newly-designated TF 65 departed from Espiritu Santo; the ships again headed into the Solomons to cover troop landings on Guadalcanal. Bombardment missions in the Kokumbona and Koli Point areas followed. On 6 November 1942, the transport group completed unloading, and the force retired, arriving at Espiritu Santo on the 8th. On the 10th, San Francisco, now flagship for TG 67.4, got underway again toward Guadalcanal.

Just before noon, a Japanese twin-float reconnaissance plane began shadowing the formation.

The force arrived off Lunga Point on 12 November, and the transports commenced unloading. By mid-afternoon, an approaching Japanese air group was reported. At 13:18, the ships got underway. At 14:08, 21 enemy planes attacked.

San Francisco (centre) after being hit by a Japanese plane in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, 12 November 1942. Ship at left is President Jackson.

At 14:16, an already-damaged torpedo plane dropped its torpedo off San Francisco's starboard quarter. The torpedo passed alongside, but the plane crashed into San Francisco's control aft, swung around that structure, and plunged over the port side into the sea. Fifteen men were killed, 29 wounded, and one missing. Control aft was demolished. The ship's secondary command post, Battle Two, was burned out but was reestablished by dark. The after anti-aircraft director and radar were put out of commission. Three 20 millimeter mounts were destroyed.

The wounded were transferred to President Jackson, just before the approach of an enemy surface force was reported. The covering force escorted the transports out of the area, then reassembled and returned. At about midnight, San Francisco, in company with one heavy cruiser, three light cruisers, and eight destroyers, entered Lengo Channel.

At 01:25 on the 13th, a Japanese naval force was discovered about 27,000 yards (25,000 m) to the northwest. Rear Admiral Callaghan's task group maneuvered to intercept in what became the first engagement in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal. At 01:48, in almost pitch darkness, San Francisco opened fire on an enemy cruiser 3,700 yards (3,400 m) off her starboard beam. At 01:51, she trained her guns on a small cruiser or large destroyer 3,300 yards (3,000 m) off her starboard bow. Then in an attempt to locate other targets, San Francisco accidentally targeted the US light cruiser Atlanta. The San Francisco's gunfire caused extensive damage to the already damaged Atlanta, plus killing Admiral Scott and most of the Atlanta's bridge crew. Belatedly, the San Francisco realized she was firing on a "friendly" ship and ceased fire. The green dye that San Francisco used to distinguish her shells from those of other ships, was later found stained on the Atlanta's superstructure before the Atlanta sank. Shortly thereafter, the battleship Hiei was sighted and taken under fire, at an initial range of only 2,200 yards (2,000 m).

At about 02:00, San Francisco trained her guns on a second battleship, Kirishima. At the same time, she became the target of the Nagara off her starboard bow and of a destroyer which had crossed her bow and was passing down her port side. The enemy battleship joined the cruiser and the destroyer in firing on San Francisco whose port 5 inch battery engaged the destroyer but was put out of action except for one mount. The battleship put the starboard 5 inch battery out of commission. San Francisco swung left while her main battery continued to fire on the battleships which, with the cruiser and the destroyer, continued to pound San Francisco. A direct hit on the navigation bridge killed or badly wounded all officers except the communications officer, Lt.Cmdr. Bruce McCandless. Command devolved on the damage control officer, Lt.Cmdr. Herbert E. Schonland, but he thought his own efforts were needed to keep the ship "afloat and right-side up", so he ordered McCandless to stay at the conn. Steering and engine control were lost and shifted to Battle Two. Battle Two was out of commission by a direct hit from the port side. Control was again lost.

Control was then established in the conning tower which soon received a hit from the starboard side. Steering and engine control were temporarily lost, then regained. All communications were dead.

Soon thereafter, the enemy ceased firing. San Francisco followed suit and withdrew eastward along the north coast of Guadalcanal.

Seventy-seven sailors, including Rear Admiral Callaghan and Capt. Cassin Young, had been killed. One hundred and five had been wounded. Of seven missing, three were subsequently rescued. The ship had taken 45 hits. Structural damage was extensive, but not serious. No hits had been received below the waterline. Twenty-two fires had been started and extinguished.

At about 04:00, San Francisco, all her compasses out of commission, joined Helena and Juneau and followed them through Sealark Channel to sail to Espiritu Santo for initial repairs.

At about 10:00, the Juneau's medical personnel transferred to the San Francisco to assist in treating the numerous wounded. An hour later, the Juneau took a torpedo on the port side from the Japanese submarine I-26, in the vicinity of the bridge. "The entire ship seemed to explode in one mighty column of brown and white smoke and flame which rose easily a thousand feet in the air. The Juneau literally disintegrated." San Francisco was hit by several large fragments from Juneau. One man was hit, both his legs were broken. Nothing was seen in the water after the smoke lifted. The surviving ships were ordered to keep going without stopping to look for survivors. Unfortunately, the survivors of the Juneau were forced to wait eight days for rescue while floating in the ocean, undergoing intense shark attacks. Only 10 survived.

On the afternoon of 14 November, San Francisco returned towards Espiritu Santo. For her participation in the action of the morning of the 13th, and for that of the night of 11 October12 October, she received the Presidential Unit Citation. On 18 November, the cruiser sailed for Nouméa; and, on the 23d, she got underway toward the United States. She reached San Francisco on 11 December. Three days later, repairs were begun at Mare Island.

1943 – 1944

On 26 February 1943, she got underway to return to the South Pacific. After escorting convoy PW 2211 en route, San Francisco arrived at Nouméa on 20 March. Five days later, she continued on to Efate. She arrived back in the Hawaiian Islands in mid-April; thence headed north to the Aleutians to join the North Pacific Force, TF 16; and reached Alaska toward the end of the month. Based at Kuluk Bay, Adak, she operated in the Aleutians for the next four and one-half months. She patrolled the western approaches to the area; participated in the assault and occupation of Attu in May and of Kiska in July; and performed escort duties.

In mid-September, she was ordered back to Pearl Harbor for repairs and reassignment to TF 14. On the 29th, San Francisco departed Pearl Harbor in Task Unit 14.2.1 (TU 14.2.1) for a raid against Wake and Wilkes Islands. On 5 October, the group arrived off the target area and conducted two runs by the enemy positions. On the 11th, her task unit returned to Pearl Harbor.

On the 20th, the force arrived off Makin. San Francisco participated in the pre-invasion bombardment of Betio, then patrolled outside the transport area to the west of Makin. On the 26th, she was detached and assigned to TG 50.1, joining Yorktown (CV-10), Lexington (CV-16), Cowpens (CVL-25), five cruisers, and six destroyers. With that force, she steamed toward the Marshalls to strike Japanese shipping and installations in the Kwajalein area. On 4 December, the carriers launched their planes against the targets. Shortly after noon, enemy aerial activity increased; and, at 12:50, San Francisco came under attack. Three torpedo planes closed her on the port bow. Her guns "splashed" two. The third was shot down by Yorktown. But, during the attack, the cruiser had been strafed several times. One man had been killed; 22 were wounded. After dark, the Japanese returned; and, on that night, Lexington was torpedoed. The force moved north and west. Shortly after 01:30, on the 5th, enemy planes faded from the radar screens. On the 6th, the ships headed back to Pearl Harbor.

On 22 January 1944, San Francisco sortied with TF 52 and again headed for the Marshalls. On the 29th, the division, screened by destroyers, left the formation and moved against Japanese installations on Maloelap to neutralize them during the conquest of Kwajalein. Following the bombardment, the ships proceeded on to Kwajalein. San Francisco arrived off the atoll at about 06:30 on the 31st. At 07:30, she opened fire on targets of opportunity, initially a small ship inside Kwajalein lagoon. At 08:49, she ceased firing. At 09:00, she resumed firing at targets on Berlin and Beverly islands. Through the day, she continued to shell those islands, and, in late afternoon, added Bennett Island to her targets. During the next week, she provided pre-landing barrages and support fire for operations against Burton, Berlin, and Beverly islands. On the 8th, the cruiser sailed for Majuro, whence she would operate as a unit of TF 58, the fast carrier task force.

On 12 February, San Francisco, in TG 58.2, cleared Majuro lagoon. Four days later, the carriers launched their planes against Truk. On the night of 16 February17 February, Intrepid (CV-11) was torpedoed. San Francisco, with others, was assigned to escort her eastward. On the 19th, the group split: Intrepid, with two destroyers, continued toward Pearl Harbor; San Francisco and the remaining ships headed for Majuro. On the 25th, San Francisco sailed for Hawaii with TG 58.2. On 20 March, the group returned to Majuro, refueled, and departed again on the 22d to move against the Western Carolines. From 30 March to 1 April, carrier planes hit the Palaus and Woleai. San Francisco's planes flew rescue missions.

On 6 April, the force was back in Majuro lagoon. A week later, the ships set a course for New Guinea. From the 21st to the 28th, TG 58.2 supported the assault landings in the Hollandia (currently known as Jayapura) area. On the 29th, the ships moved back into the Carolines for another raid against Truk. On the 30th, San Francisco was detached and, with eight other cruisers, moved against Satawan. On completion of that bombardment mission, the cruisers rejoined TG 58.2 and headed back to the Marshalls.

Initially at Majuro, San Francisco shifted to Kwajalein in early June, and, on the 10th, departed that atoll in TG 53.15, the bombardment group of the Saipan invasion force. On the 14th, she commenced two days of shelling Tinian; then, after the landings on Saipan, shifted to fire support duties. On the 16th, she temporarily joined CruDiv 9 to bombard Guam. Word of a Japanese force en route to Saipan, however, interrupted the cannonade, and the ships returned to Saipan.

On the 17th, San Francisco refueled and took up station between the approaching enemy force and the amphibious force at Saipan. On the morning of the 19th, the Battle of the Philippine Sea opened for San Francisco. At about 10:46, she was straddled fore and aft by bombs. "... a mass of enemy planes on the screen at 20 miles (30 km)." At 11:26, the cruiser opened fire. A 40 millimeter shell from Indianapolis set off San Francisco's smoke screen generators. By noon, quiet had returned. At 14:24, dive bombers made the last Japanese attack. By the 20th, San Francisco steamed westward in pursuit of the Japanese force. On the 21st, she returned to the Saipan area and resumed operations with the covering force for the transports. On 8 July, San Francisco again steamed to Guam to bombard enemy positions. During the next four days, she shelled targets in the Agat and Agana areas. On the 12th, she returned to Saipan; replenished; refueled; and, on the 18th, again took station off Guam.

On that day and on the 19th and the 20th, she shelled enemy positions, supported beach demolition units, and provided night harassing and defense repair interdiction in the Agat and Faci Point areas. On the 21st, she began to support Marines assaulting the Agat beaches. On the 24th, the cruiser shifted her fire to the Orote Peninsula.

On the 30th, she headed, via Eniwetok and Pearl Harbor, for San Francisco. The cruiser arrived back on the west coast on 16 August for overhaul.

On October 31, she steamed west again and, on 21 November, arrived at Ulithi where she resumed flagship duties for CruDiv 6. On 10 December, she cleared the anchorage and moved toward the Philippines in TG 38.1. On the 14th and 15th, during carrier strikes against Luzon, San Francisco's planes were employed on antisubmarine patrol and in rescue work. On the 16th, the force headed for a rendezvous with TG 30.17, the replenishment force. A typhoon interrupted the refueling operations; and, on the 17th and 18th, the ships rode out the storm. On the 19th, she participated in a search for survivors from three destoyers which had gone down during the typhoon.

On the 20th, TF 38 turned westward again to resume operations against Luzon; but high seas precluded strikes. On the 24th, the force returned to Ulithi.

1945

Six days later, the force again sortied from Ulithi. On 2 January and 3 January 1945, strikes were conducted against Formosa. On the 5th, 6th, and 7th, Luzon was hit. On the 9th, fighter sweeps against Formosa were resumed. The force then headed for the Bashi Channel and a five-day, high-speed strike against enemy surface units in the South China Sea and against installations along the coast of Indochina. On the 15th and 16th, the Hong Kong-Amoy-Swatow area was hit; and, on the 20th, the force passed through Luzon Strait to resume operations against Formosa. On the 21st, aerial opposition was constant. Bogies appeared on the screen throughout the day. Langley (CVL-27) and Ticonderoga (CV-14) were hit. On the 22d, strikes were launched against the Ryukyus; and, on the 23d, the force headed for the Western Carolines.

Arriving on 26 January, the ships sailed again on 10 February. On the 16th and 17th, strikes were conducted against air facilities in central Honshū. On the 18th, the force moved toward the Volcano and Bonin Islands; and, on the 19th, covering operations for the Iwo Jima assault began. The next day, San Francisco closed on Iwo Jima with other cruisers and assumed fire support duties, which she continued until the 23d. Then she headed back toward Japan. On the 25th, Tokyo was the target. Poor weather prohibited operations against Nagoya on the 26th; and, on the 27th, the force headed back to Ulithi.

On 21 March, San Francisco, now attached to TF 54 for Operation Iceberg, departed Ulithi for the Ryukyus. On the 25th, she approached Kerama Retto, west of Okinawa, and furnished fire support for minesweeping and underwater demolition operations. That night, she retired and the next morning moved back in to support the landings and supply counter battery fire on Aka, Keruma, Zamami, and Yakabi Islands.

By the morning of the 27th, aerial resistance had begun. On the 28th, San Francisco shifted to Okinawa for shore bombardment in preparation for the assault landings scheduled for 1 April. On that day, she took up station in fire support sector 5, west of Naha, and, for the next five days, shelled enemy emplacements, caves, pill boxes, road junctions, and tanks, truck, and troop concentrations. At night, she provided harassing fire near the beachhead.

On 6 April, the cruiser retired to Kerama Retto; refueled and took on ammunition; assisted in splashing a Nakajima B6N "Jill" torpedo plane; then, rejoined TF 54 off Okinawa as that force underwent another air raid. San Francisco downed a Nakajima B5N "Kate" torpedo bomber. Dawn of the 7th brought another air raid, during which a kamikaze attempted to crash the cruiser. It was splashed 50 yards (50 m) off the starboard bow. After the raid, San Francisco shifted to TF 51 for fire support missions on the east coast of Okinawa, rejoining TF 54 on the west coast in late afternoon. On the 11th, air attacks increased; and, the next day, San Francisco set an Aichi D3A "Val" dive bomber on fire. The plane then glanced off a merchant ship and hit the water, enveloped in flames.

On the 13th and 14th, the cruiser again operated with TF 51 off the east coast of the embattled island. On the 15th, she returned to Kerama Retto; thence proceeded to Okinawa and operations with TF 54 in the transport area. There she provided night illumination to detect swimmers and suicide boats and, just before midnight, assisted in sinking one of the latter. During the night, two further attempts by suicide boats to close the transports were thwarted.

With dawn, San Francisco returned to the Naha area to shell the airfield there. On the 17th, she moved up the coast and fired on the Machinate air field. On the 18th, she again shifted to the eastern side of the island and, that night, anchored in Nakagusuku Wan. The next day, San Francisco supported troops in the southern part of the island. From 21 April through 24 April, she shelled targets in the Naha airstrip area; and got underway for Ulithi.

On 13 May, San Francisco returned to Okinawa, arriving in Nakagusuku Wan and resuming support activities against targets in southern Okinawa. For the next few days, San Francisco supported the 96th Infantry Division in an area to the southeast of Yuna-baru. On the 20th, she shifted to Kutaka Shima; and, by the night of the 22d, she had depleted her supply of ammunition for her main batteries. On the 25th, the Japanese launched a large air attack against Allied shipping in Nakagusuku Wan. On the 27th, San Francisco provided fire support for the 77th Infantry Division; and, on the 28th, she retired to Kerama Retto. On the 30th, the cruiser returned to the western side of Okinawa and, for the next two weeks, supported operations of the 1st and 6th Marine Divisions.

On 21 June, San Francisco was ordered to join TG 32.15, 120 miles (220 km) southeast of Okinawa. A week later, she put into Kerama Retto for a brief stay; then rejoined that group. In early July, she provided cover for the eastern anchorage. On the 3d, she sailed toward the Philippines to prepare for an invasion of the Japanese home islands. The cessation of hostilities in mid-August, however, obviated that operation, and San Francisco prepared for occupation duty.

Post War

On 28 August, the cruiser departed Subic Bay for the China coast. After a show of force in the Yellow Sea and Gulf of Pohai areas, she covered minesweeping operations and, on 8 October, anchored at Jinsen, Korea. From the 13th to the 16th, she participated in another show of force operation in the Gulf of Pohai area, then returned to Jinsen, where Rear Admiral Jerauld P. Wright, ComCruDiv 6, acted as senior member of the committee for the surrender of Japanese naval forces in Korea.

On 27 November, San Francisco headed home. Arriving at San Francisco in mid-December, she continued on to the east coast in early January 1946 and arrived at Philadelphia, Penn. for inactivation on the 19th. Decommissioned on 10 February, she was berthed with the Philadelphia Group of the Atlantic Reserve Fleet until 1 March 1959 when her name was struck from the Navy list. On 9 September, she was sold, for scrapping, to the Union Mineral and Alloys Corp., New York; she was scrapped at Panama City, Florida in 1961.

War Memorial

During the November 1942 repair at Mare Island it was necessary to extensively rebuild the bridge. The bridge wings were removed as part of the repair and are now mounted on a promontory in "Lands End" at Golden Gate National Recreation Area overlooking the Pacific Ocean. They are set on the great circle course from San Francisco to Tokyo.

Awards

San Francisco (CA-38) earned 17 battle stars during World War II. For her participation in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, 12 November13 November 1942, she was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation. For the same action, three members of her crew were awarded the Medal of Honor: Lt.Cmdr. Herbert E. Schonland, Lt.Cmdr. Bruce McCandless, and Boatswain's Mate 1st Class Reinhardt J. Keppler (posthumous).

Notes

  1. ^ Fahey 1941 p. 9

References

  • Fahey, James C. (1941). The Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet, Two-Ocean Fleet Edition. Ships and Aircraft.
  • Frank, Richard B. (1992). Guadalcanal : The Definitive Account of the Landmark Battle. New York: Penguin Group. ISBN 0-14-016561-4.
  • Grace, James W. (1999). Naval Battle of Guadalcanal: Night Action, 13 November 1942. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-327-3.
  • Hammel, Eric (1999). Guadalcanal: Decision at Sea : The Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, Nov. 13–15, 1942. (CA): Pacifica Press. ISBN 0-7434-7931-9.
  • Hara, Tameichi (1961). "Part Three, The "Tokyo Express"". Japanese Destroyer Captain. New York & Toronto: Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-27894-1.- First-hand account of the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal by the captain of the Japanese destroyer Amatsukaze.
  • Kurzman, Dan (1994). Left to Die: The Tragedy of the USS Juneau. New York: Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-74874-2.
  • Morison, Samuel Eliot (1958). "The Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, 12-15 November 1942". The Struggle for Guadalcanal, August 1942 – February 1943, vol. 5 of History of United States Naval Operations in World War II. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0-316-58305-7. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)


Public Domain This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.