Lansdale was nearly split in two and started listing to port. The plane smashed into the ship's forecastle with a large explosion; its torpedo detonated a few minutes later, causing more casualties. A trio of A6M Zero fighters made bombing runs on the ship. The navy presumed the ship was lost on 7 March 1942. She was hit by a torpedo, several 250kg bombs, and possibly an 800kg bomb. Famous racing yacht. USSPorcupine(IX-126) damaged by kamikaze attack off Mindoro, Philippine Islands, scuttled by destroyer Gansevoort (DD-608), 30 December 1944. When the sub failed to return from patrol by 27 November 1944; she was declared lost. fifteen men were killed and 38 wounded in the attack. USS LSMR-190 sunk by kamikaze attack off Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands, 4 May 1945. USSKendrick(DD-612) was en route to Oran on 2 September 1943 when she was surprised by a German He-111 flying 50 feet over the water which dropped two torpedoes at the Kendrick. Escorting vessels attacked the American submarine with depth charges until wood chips and oil came to the surface. USS YC-1272 lost near San Pedro, California, June 1945. USS LCT(5)-413 sunk off northern France, June 1944. When the turret responded with Astoria's 12th and final salvo, the shells missed Kinugasa but struck the No. Fires swept the ship as she listed to starboard and began to settle by the bow. Steam, compressed air, and fire-main pressure were lost throughout the ship. Sunk by aerial torpedo and shore batteries.
Ship - Wikipedia She would be out of action for several months. Although a wing was shot off by the crew as it came in, the suicide plane crashed Abner Read amidships starting a large fire. 18 men were killed and another 17 wounded. USSSigsbee(DD-502) was operating radar picket duty off Okinawa on 14 April 1945 when her group of ships were targeted by kamikazes. Over 100 aircraft took off. One struck her starboard side aft and the other crashed close aboard. Off Choiseul Island, near Bougainville, Solomon Islands. USSFranklin(CV-13) was damaged by aircraft bombs on 19 March 1945, 50 miles south of Shikoku, Japan during the Battle of Okinawa. Some 300 of the 1,195 crewmen aboard went down with the ship. 2. USSMayrant(DD-402) was conducting anti-aircraft duties off Palermo, Italy on 26 May 1943 when she was attacked by German dive bombers. USS LSM-12 foundered after being damaged by a Japanese suicide boat off Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands, 4 April 1945. PT-32 destroyed to prevent capture, Tagauayan Island, Philippine Islands, 13 March 1942. USSNashville(CL-43) was shelling Vila airfield on Kolombangara when on the night of 12 May, she suffered a powder charge explosion in one of her forward turrets, killing 18 and injuring 17. The GIS database has records of 3,800 vessels lost in WWII while the AMIO database has records of a further 3,950 vessels. Only 11 men survived on a lifeboat for more than 36 hours before being rescued. in Japanese hands. The first was during the Battle of the Eastern Solomons, in which 74 men were killed and 95 wounded by dive bomber attacks, and again during the Battle of Santa Cruz when 44 crewmen died. USSS-27(SS-132) was on her first and only patrol of the war to reconnoiter Kiska Island in the Aleutians on 19 June 1942. Intentionally beached after flooding. The explosion severed the ship and everything aft of turret No.4 leaving her dead in the water. USSWasp(CV-7) was operating some 150 nautical miles southeast of San Cristobal Island on 15 Sept 1942 when she sighted torpedo wakes coming straight for her. A few minutes later around 11:00, the ship capsized after taking another massive wave hit. USS YW-58 lost due to enemy action in the Philippine Islands and stricken from the Navy List, 24 July 1942. In the opening attack of the famous Battle of Leyte Gulf, Darter attacked and sunk the heavy cruiser Atago with four torpedoes, which turned out to be Admiral Kurita's flagship of the Center Force. The crew sent out distress dispatches and began to abandon the sub at 03:30. Sunk by Japanese shore defense batteries. Not one man from the salvage crew lost his life. USSZellars(DD-777) was screening the battleship USSTennessee(BB-43) on the afternoon of 12 April off Okinawa when at 14:50, three Nakajima B6N "Jill's" were sighted approaching low on the water from the port quarter. USS LCT(6)-777 sunk off northern France, 6 June 1944. As the warship turned, Kinugasa's searchlight illuminated her, and men on deck passed the order to No. USSRobert L. Barnes(AG-27) captured at Guam, Marianas Islands, 10 December 1941. Houston was targeted by four torpedo bombers, three of which were shot down but one managed to score a hit on the cruiser in the engine room, knocking out propulsive power to the ship. USSHaynsworth(DD-700) was steaming off Okinawa on 6 April 1945 fighting off sporadic attacks on her task group by kamikazes through the early morning hours when at 12:50, a single D4Y "Judy" dive bomber broke from its formation and headed straight for the ship. The two submarine captains agreed to position themselves ahead of the convoy for a better attack angle after a brief gunfight with escorting vessels had driven the two subs away. 24 of her crew went down with the ship, and another 60 were wounded. The submarine was never seen or heard from again after leaving Midway, and was reported as "presumed lost" on 26 July 1944. USS YMS-133 foundered off Coos Bay, Oregon, 21 February 1943. Another kamikaze crashed close aboard and showered the port side with shrapnel and burning debris. Only eight-six ofHoel's complement survived; two hundred and fifty three officers and crew died with their ship, at least forty men perished in the water while awaiting rescue. The Baya arrived at her agreed upon location and after failing to reach the Lagarto for over a half hour decided to attack alone which yielded no success. After leaving San Francisco on 16 July, she arrived at Tinian Island on 26 July. USS LCT(6)-823 sunk off Palau, Caroline Islands, 27 September 1944. All others were lost due to accidents. Seventy-four men were lost with the Triton. USS YMS-409 foundered in the North Atlantic, 12 September 1944. At 0210, the Japanese retired, leaving Savo Island and the burning hulks of three American cruisers in their wakes. USSFinch(AM-9) sunk by Japanese aircraft off Corregidor, Luzon, Philippine Islands, 11 April 1942. USS LCT(5)-196 sunk off Salerno, Italy, 27 September 1943. USS Tecumseh. Another crashed close aboard her port quarter and exploded, flooding her blisters. USSDickerson(APD-21) damaged by Japanese aircraft off Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands, 2 April 1945, and scuttled, 4 April 1945. Bailey returned to service in October 1943. USSLCI(L)-339 sunk off New Guinea, 4 September 1943.
List of US Navy ships sunk or damaged in action during World War II The kamikaze's bomb exploded under the ship and two more suicide planes struck the ship during the attack, but luckily Rodman's crew kept her from sinking. USS YF-579 lost at San Francisco, California, 20 September 1943. USS LCT(5)-19 sunk off Salerno, Italy, 15 September 1943. Braine managed to make it back to the states under her own power with her remaining crew. The ship went down by 04:18 after several more explosions, taking 64 of her crew and 52 Marines with her. She survived the war and atomic bomb tests at Operation Crossroads to be scuttled off California in 1951. The plane smashed into the ship's main radio transmitter room spreading a large fire over the ship's superstructure, fortunately the plane had lost its bomb as it violently maneuvered to hit the ship, certainly sparing the ship more damage. The ship was back in service by October 1944. On the evening of 27 April, Ralph Talbot was screening off Hagushi when two kamikazes attacked her at 2040. USS LST-499 sunk by a mine off Normandy, France, 8 June 1944. On 6 April 1945 just off Iejima, Leutze had pulled alongside her sister ship Newcomb which had been hit by multiple kamikazes to give assistance fighting fires and rescuing wounded. On her way home, the crew got revenge by sinking the U-boat believed to have torpedoed her. Amberjack was never heard from again, as all sent messages to the sub went unanswered and she never returned to base. The sub was reported as presumed lost by the navy on 10 April 1943. USS LCT(5)-185 sunk off Bizerte, Tunisia, 24 January 1944. Scuttled after attack by Japanese aircraft. After over four hours battling fires, throwing ammunition overboard and helping the wounded, the ship was finally brought under control. The fire punctuated by the frightful explosion of eight-inch projectiles in her Number 3 turret gradually subsided. USSShark(SS-174) was on her second patrol of the war near the Philippines in February 1942. This book has a complete list in the back of . PT-112 destroyed by Japanese warships off Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands, 11 January 1943. The Americans made contact with the enemy convoy 0730, but soon realized they were outnumbered and outgunned. Her casualties were 5 dead and 9 wounded.[1]. Hit by 2 torpedoes from Japanese submarine. Within just a couple minutes a second plane would crash into the ship's midsection, followed quickly by two more simultaneously striking the bow and fantail. In addition, several fires were kindled, total steering control was lost, and the ship acquired a 3 list to the port. Although an effort was made to tow the ship to safety, further air attacks prompted her abandonment and scuttling. The plane smashed into the ship's port main deck waist, both of its bombs went off on the deck and gasoline fires engulfed the area near the crash. Grounded by Typhoon Louise. Prompt and effective damage control restored power and communications within three minutes and she was able to remain in formation by overspeeding her port engine to compensate. She would be scrapped after the war. The fire was nearly under control when about two minutes later, a second plane, likely attracted by the ship's glow against the darkness, struck the aft elevator shaft, exploding on impact, killing the majority of the fire-fighting party and destroying the fire fighting salt-water distribution system, thus preventing any further damage control. USSSavannah(CL-42) was providing gun support for US troops attacking Salerno Bay as a part of Operation Avalanche on 11 September 1943 when her task force came under assault from the German Luftwaffe unit KG-100. USSDuncan(DD-485) was operating with TF 64 of 4 cruisers and 5 destroyers during the night of 1112 October 1942, aiming to ambush approaching Japanese warships that were intending to bombard US Marine positions on Guadalcanal. On January 21, a plane returning from a sortie made a normal landing, taxied forward abreast of the ship's island and disintegrated in a blinding explosion that killed 50 men and wounded 75. USSSelfridge(DD-357) was attempting to intercept Japanese destroyer transports that were evacuating troops from Vella Lavella. USSWake(PR-3) captured at Shanghai, China, 7 December 1941. USSFletcher(DD-445) was bombarding Japanese strongholds defending Manila Bay on 14 February 1945, when the ship was hit by Japanese shore batteries at Los Cochinos Point which killed eight and wounded three crewmen. USS SC-709 grounded off Cape Breton, France, 21 January 1943. Scuttled after being damaged by Japanese destroyer, Cause unknown; possibly sunk by minelayer. Her gunners kept firing, while damage control crews fought the fires and helped the wounded. USSDe Haven(DD-469) was escorting landing craft near Guadalcanal on 1 February 1943 when her group was attacked by six Japanese planes. USSEdsall(DD-219) was responding to distress calls from USS Pecos near Java on 1 Mar 1942 when she stumbled upon Kido Butai; Japan's fast carrier force escorted by two battleships. PT-117 destroyed by Japanese aircraft bombing, Rendova Harbor, Solomon Islands, 1 August 1943. Grounded and destroyed to prevent capture. By 1 May 1945, the submarine and her crew of sixty men were considered lost. William B Preston would finish the war as a tender and occasional transport. The explosion killed three of her crew, and broke the ship in half. St. 3 vols. Captain Ralph O. Davis gave the order to abandon ship shortly before Chicago sank stern first 20 minutes later, taking 62 of her crew with her, most of them killed by the torpedo detonations. 1 turret out of action and started a serious fire in the plane hangar that burned brightly and provided the enemy with a self-illuminated target. PT-363 destroyed by Japanese shore batteries in Knoe Bay, Halmahera, Netherlands East Indies, 25 November 1944. Torpedoed by Japanese submarine and disabled. Another thirty-seven were wounded by the crash and explosion, but damage control parties were able to save Ingraham. Evans would survive her ordeal losing thirty-three men and twenty-nine wounded; the ship was towed for repairs and scrapped in 1947. USSR-12(SS-89) was training new submariners in conducting a torpedo practice approach off Key West, Florida on 12 June 1943. The ship made it through the night, but by early morning the storm grew in intensity, and began to severely hamper the Warrington. The sub called for help and soon HMAS Katoomba was dispatched to assist. A Japanese plane dove down out of the cloud cover and hit the water close aboard to the Claxton, its bomb detonating in the water. The ship began to quickly flood and listed severely to port. USSBache(DD-470) was performing radar picket duty off Okinawa on 13 May 1945 when thirteen Japanese aircraft attacked the area Bache was stationed. The American submarine also hit and seriously damaged Takao. USS SC-694 sunk by aircraft off Palermo, Italy, 23 August 1943. USS YC-647 lost due to enemy action in the Philippine Islands and stricken from the Navy List, 24 July 1942. PT-121 destroyed by Australian aircraft, mistaken identification, Bangula Bay, New Britain, 27 March 1944. At 17:12, a Yokosuka P1Y penetrated the screen undetected and made for Ommaney Bay, approaching directly towards the ship's bow. Accidentally grounded then sunk by US warships. Japanese records examined postwar revealed that Shark had most likely sunk the "hell ship" freighter she had been stalking Arisan Maru (which had been holding over 1,700 Allied POW) shortly after sending her last message. USSMissouri(BB-63): On 11 April, a low-flying kamikaze Zero, although fired upon, crashed on Missouri's starboard side, just below her main deck level. Sunk by shore batteries after accidental grounding. Postwar analysis of Japanese records conclude that Herring had sunk two ships on 3031 May near Matua Island, and on the morning of 1 June she sunk two additional Japanese cargo ships which were anchored near the island. USS YC-961 lost at Biorka Island, 1 May 1945.[8]. USS LCT(5)-242 sunk off Naples, Italy, 2 December 1943. At 01:57 the Americans opened up with radar directed fire, quickly sinking several enemy destroyers. The USS Thresher (SSN-593) Considered the fastest, quietest, and most advanced sub of its day, the Thresher was commissioned in 1960 to detect and destroy Soviet Submarines. Water rushed through the ship's vents and knocked out all power. USSWasp(CV-18), on 19 March 1945, was hit with a 500lb armor-piercing bomb which penetrated both the flight and hangar decks, then exploded in the crew's galley. USSRowan(DD-405) was assisting the landings in the Gulf of Salerno on 10 September 1942 when her convoy of ships was attacked by German E-boats shortly after midnight. No hits had been received below the waterline. Salt water had entered the fuel oil feed lines. 11 of Gregory's crew were killed. On board the Seawolf when she was lost were eighty-three crew and an additional seventeen Army passengers, the exact circumstances of their disappearance is unknown to this day. 7 men were killed and 25 were wounded by the explosion which almost broke the ship in two. The next day while the Jarvis was slowly steaming towards Australia down by the bow, with no radio and few working guns; she was pounced on by 31 Japanese planes. While leaving the Guadalcanal area on 9 August 1942, at 0130 she steamed right past a Japanese task force on their way to meet the Americans near Savo Island. More than 2,000 Japanese people and 300 Americans were killed in the battle that ensued, and a total of seven ships were sunk - four of which were Japanese carriers. Soon after H-Hour, the destroyer was struck amidships by several large caliber shells. During the chaos of battle, it had not been known that Helena was hit and sinking by the other ships in her task force. USS LCT(5)-459 sunk off western France, 19 September 1944. USS LCT(5)-319 sunk at Kiska, Aleutian Islands, 27 August 1943. The battleship suffered only superficial damage, and the fire was brought quickly under control. PT-109 sunk after being rammed by Japanese destroyer Amigiri off Kolombangara Island, Blackett Strait, Solomon Islands, 2 August 1943. Sunk on 11 May 1942, after being heavily damaged during the, Sunk by Japanese airplanes from aircraft carrier, Sunk after being torpedoed by German submarine. At 17:25, a second plane dove on the ship, crashing in between the stacks and nearly breaking the ship in half. Fired from an enemy battleship, the large-caliber shell (14-inch or 16-inch) struck the starboard side of the hangar deck just abaft the forward elevator. Inoguchi, Rikihei, Captain, Commander Tadashi Nakajima, and Roger Pineau. Burning gasoline covered the deck area of the crash and the boilers were put out of commission by the impact. USSFrederick C. Davis(DE-136) sunk after being torpedoed by German submarine U-546 in the North Atlantic, 24 April 1945. USSDarter(SS-227) was conducting her fourth patrol of the war near Palawan on 23 October 1944 when just after midnight, a huge fleet of Japanese battleships and cruisers appeared on the submarine's radar. At dawn, she was one of three U.S. ships still too damaged to withdraw on her own power. Pensacola turned left to prevent collision with two damaged American ships ahead of her. The Allies lost some 5,150 ships during World War II. The next minute a fourth wave of seven bombers released bombs at Marblehead. USSSkylark(AM-63) sunk by a mine off Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands, 28 March 1945. The ship lost all power and had to be towed over 1,500 miles to Ulithi where she received sufficient repairs to power herself home. King, Ernest J., Fleet Admiral. Her port batteries dispatched one, and the CAP splashed another; but a third attacker, survived the gauntlet of fire to crash into Bryant just below the bridge. 0910'S, 15945'E Off Savo Island, Solomons. Two of the attackers coordinated their attacks so that one plane caught most of the anti-aircraft fire on the starboard side, while the other plane approached from the portside. The ship's 20mm guns opened fire, but within 15 seconds the plane was over the ship. She was the last Allied ship sunk by a kamikaze attack during World War II. USSRich(DE-695) sunk by a mine off Normandy, France, 8 June 1944. Several bombs struck the bridge knocking out all communications, steering, and gun control. As Rowan turned to have all her guns engage the enemy, she was struck by a torpedo. Damage to the wreck indicates the sub was indeed struck by a large aerial bomb. The collision caused extensive damage to her bow. USS LST-460 sunk by kamikaze attack off Mindoro, Philippine Islands, 21 December 1944. Wasp sank with the loss of 193 dead and 366 wounded. Sunk by collision with Japanese destroyer. USSShubrick(DD-639) was acting as escort to the cruiser USSSavannah on the night of 4 Aug when she was attacked by Italian bombers. While most US accounts report this as an eight-inch shell from the Japanese heavy cruiser Chikuma, Japanese sources report it was more likely a damaging near-miss from Yamato as both Yamato and Kong claimed hits on an aircraft carrier at this time but Yamato had the shorter range and a better target angle. USS LCT(5)-27 sunk off northern France, 6 June 1944. USS YCK-8 lost off Key West, Florida, 13 December 1943. The destroyer was able to evade the kamikaze and it splashed down in the water just yards away. Six men were killed and twenty-three wounded. Shrapnel was sent flying over the deck but the ship had taken only minor damage. USS YDG-4 lost off New Caledonia, 1 October 1943. A party of men collected the dead and prepared them for burial. By 11:00 only a skeleton crew remained on board. Grounded on a coral reef and destroyed to prevent capture. On 7 March 1943, she left Sydney for Puget Sound, sailing backward the entire voyage, where a new bow was fitted with the use of Minneapolis's No. The detonation sheared off nearly the entire rear end of the carrier, killing everyone behind the forward bulkhead of the aft engine room. USS SC-1024 sunk after collision off North Carolina, 2 March 1943. Her engine room flooded, three gun turrets went out of commission, and her oil tanks ruptured to make a soaked torch of her mast. One hit 10 feet below the waterline abreast the after engine room, and four seconds later, the second hit 40 feet further aft, ripping away decks and bulkheads. The ship was declared neither seaworthy or habitable and was not repaired. Grounded and damaged and then scuttled to prevent capture. USS YSP-41 lost due to enemy action in the Philippine Islands and stricken from the Navy List, 24 July 1942. While the crew fought fires, she was stalked by additional kamikazes which also sank the destroyer Colhoun. USS YC-886 lost at Guantanamo, Cuba, 3 February 1943. USS YF-177 lost due to enemy action in the Philippine Islands and stricken from the Navy List, 24 July 1942. In 1941 Germans sank five Allied merchant ships off . USSTang(SS-306) left Midway Island on 24 September 1944 headed for the Formosa Strait. Remarkably, no one was killed, and only three crewmen were wounded. Salvaged and repaired. San Francisco was one of the Navy's most decorated ships, being awarded 17 Battle stars for her service. The ship returned to service in March 1945. During the battle, Salt Lake City fired on multiple Japanese ships scoring many hits. Although structural damage was minor, a fire broke out and quickly spread due to burning gasoline, thus causing further explosions. Fifty crewmen were killed and seventy-six wounded by the kamikaze which sent O'Brien back to the states. USS LST-921 torpedoed by German submarine U-764 off the channel entrance to Bristol, England, 14 August 1944, and struck from the Navy list, 14 October 1944. Gansevoort was towed to a nearby anchorage and had to endure more air raids before she was sufficiently repaired to make for a larger naval yard. O'Neill, Richard. USSOklahoma(BB-37) was consecutively hit by at least five torpedoes during the attack on Pearl Harbor. The ship's crew raced to their battle stations and two minutes after the torpedo hit, the backup forward diesel generator had been turned on, restoring power to the guns. USSVaga(YT-116) scuttled to prevent capture off Corregidor, Luzon, Philippine Islands, 5 May 1942. USS LCI(L)-1 sunk off Bizerte, Tunisia, 17 August 1943. The ship would make repairs in the Admiralty Islands then rejoin the fleet in time for the Invasion of Lingayen Gulf.
USSLong(DD-209) was conducting minesweeping operations in Lingayen Gulf on 6 January 1945 when a "Zero" kamikaze crashed into get portside, below the bridge about 1ft above the water line. During the gun duel between ships, Bailey was hit by three eight-inch shells from Japanese cruiser Nachi, killing 5 men, wounding 8 more, and bringing the ship to a stop. USSSkill(AM-115) sunk after being torpedoed by German submarine U-593 south of Capri, Italy, 25 September 1943. USSRescuer(ARS-18) lost by grounding in the Aleutian Islands, 1 January 1943. PT-111 destroyed by Japanese warships off Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands, 1 February 1943. Towed to Philippines and scuttled off of Samar on 7 March 1946. The hulk of Emmons exploded at 1930 and was scuttled the next day. A few hours later, a second, larger explosion shook the Princeton, possibly caused by an explosion of one or more bombs in the magazine. USS YM-13 lost due to enemy action at Guam, Marianas Islands, and stricken from the Navy List, 22 February 1942. 12 of her crew were killed and 6 seriously wounded. With the keel having been broken by the second and third hit, the girders that supported the hull structure began to buckle, collapsing the entire structure amidships and breaking the hull in half. Turning to the right to avoid Quincy's fire at about 0201, Astoria reeled as a succession of enemy shells struck her aft of the foremast. USS St. Although several were shot down, at least six bombers were able to launch their warheads. USS YF-487 lost in the Caribbean Sea, 18 July 1943. The ship was able to use its engines to steer itself away from the destruction that wrecked Darwin. 16 men were killed and 27 wounded. USS LCT(5)-23 sunk at Algiers, Algeria, 3 May 1943. A Union stern-wheel tinclad minesweeper and gunboat sunk by a naval mine (called a "torpedo" at the time) in Mobile Bay . USSHank(DD-702) was patrolling as radar picket off Okinawa the afternoon of 11 April 1945 when the ship's crew sighted an incoming [A6M] "Zero" coming in low off the port bow heading for the bridge. USS LST-675 grounded off Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands, 4 April 1945, and abandoned, USSGilmer(DD-233) was operating off Okinawa on 26 March 1945 when the ship was hit by a kamikaze in her galley deckhouse which killed 1 man and wounded 3 more. The sound of the general quarters alarm soon rang throughout the ship and stirred her to action. USSBrooks(APD-10) scrapped after being damaged beyond repair by kamikaze attack in Lingayen Gulf, Philippine Islands, 6 January 1945. Oil storage ship. USS YW-50 lost due to enemy action in the Philippine Islands and stricken from the Navy List, 24 July 1942. A Dutch launch was dispatched from nearby Makassar City to pick up the crew off S-36.
List of US Navy ships sunk or damaged in action during World War II USS YC-668 lost due to enemy action at Guam, Marianas Islands, and stricken from the Navy List, 24 July 1942. USSMacaw(ASR-11) lost by grounding on a reef in Midway Channel, 12 February 1944. It remains unknown to this day exactly why S-28 sank, but taken down with her were the lives of forty-nine men. Lo. The ship was scrapped in 1959. Two crewmen from the USS Eichenberger were struck and killed by airborne debris. USSIngraham(DD-444) was escorting a convoy off the coast of Nova Scotia on 22 August 1942 when she was called to investigate the USSBuck(DD-420), which had suffered a collision with a merchant vessel. The ship reached San Francisco for repairs on 11 December 1942. USSBorie(DD-215) was hunting German U-boat "U405" on 1 November 1943 when the submarine surfaced and the vessels engaged each other with gunfire. Glennon was towed in an attempt to salvage her but on 9 June 1945, a German shore battery found its range on the ship and hit her with salvos of shells. All crew members of 20mm guns 710 were killed or wounded.
Liberty Ships and Victory Ships, America's Lifeline in War (Teaching Stripped and blown up 14 May 1946. A gasoline fire erupted, followed by six secondary explosions, including detonations of the ship's torpedo and bomb magazine. USS PC-1261 sunk by shellfire from shore batteries off Normandy, France, 6 June 1944. During the action in a pitch-black night, the two sides of ships mixed, firing on friend and foe alike. She was sunk by Atomic testing during Operation Crossroads in 1946. Postwar Japanese records revealed that during the same engagement with Baya, escorting Japanese minelayer Hatsutaka dropped depth charges on a submerged submarine which most likely was the Lagarto. Six were shot down, but the aircraft launched at least five torpedoes, one of which hit the carrier's starboard quarter. The suicide plane ran a parallel course with Haggard but turned sharply towards the ship's starboard beam, striking the water just a few yards from the ship. Longshaw's crew lost eighty-six men killed including the captain, and ninety-five more were wounded.