MEMOIRS OF 
            MY EXPERIENCE 
            WITH THE KAMIKAZE ATTACK 
              
            Frederick W. 
            Mielke, Supply and Disbursing Officer 
             
      
       Ensign Fred Mielke Fred Mielke ca 2001 
            I Brief Account 
            The kamikaze, a Val bomber, tore through 
            Whitehurst’s superstructure from port to starboard, coming to rest 
            on the starboard searchlight platform. Its 500-pound delayed-action 
            bomb continued on and exploded about 50 feet off the starboard bow, 
            with deadly effects on personnel with battle stations on deck.  The 
            plane went completely through the CIC Room and Pilot House, killing 
            all there.  On the deck below, in the Radio Room, where four of us 
            had our battle stations, the plane ripped a gash in the overhead, 
            sending flaming gasoline into the room and adjacent passageways.  
            William Yeager (RDM3c) and I were lucky enough to escape with only 
            burns.  Irving Paul (RDM2c) was killed outright when the door of the 
            Radio Room slammed into him after being blown off its hinges and 
            into the Radio Room by the piston-like pressure of the kamikaze’s 
            impact into the ship’s tightly closed up superstructure. Most sadly, 
            True Lofton (RDM3c) died of asphyxiation trying unsuccessfully to 
            escape the fire and smoke by retreating from it as far as he could 
            (he reached the vacant Captain’s Cabin) to avoid going through a 
            flaming passageway to get to fresh air.  
              
            The two of us who escaped chose to 
            make a seemingly impossible effort to get out of the closed-up space 
            by dashing aft through the flaming passageway to get to the 
            watertight door that led outside to the boat deck. To escape, we 
            knew we had to survive long enough in the flames to unlatch the six 
            lugs (dogs) that held the massive steel door shut. This would 
            require unlatching each of the lugs by hand, because the door was 
            not one with a single central wheel that controlled all the lugs. 
            As it turned out, the two of us 
            were lucky.  The same force that had blown the Radio Room door off 
            its hinges had been strong enough also to blow that heavy steel door 
            off its hinges.  In the process, it had bent or broken away the six 
            heavy steel lugs that clamped the door shut. 
            It was months later, when I rejoined the ship in 
            Pearl Harbor after being treated for burns, that I learned the story 
            of the blown-away door.  I had been in a quandary.  I had no 
            recollection of actually undogging that door, yet I remembered 
            falling down over the coaming of that opened door and someone 
            scrambling over me to get out.  I assumed, but could not believe, I 
            had actually undogged the door.  I also knew, however, that I was 
            confused and desperate in the flames and probably not fully aware of 
            what was happening.  
              
            When I related this quandary to my 
            shipmates, I got this reply:  “You know, we never did find that 
            door.  It was completely blown away and must have gone overboard.  
            We looked for it everywhere.” 
            So there was the answer.  It fitted 
            my memory.  I knew there was no way we could have undogged that door 
            before succumbing to the heat, flame and smoke.  We were lucky. 
              
            II More Details 
            On April 12, 1945, during the 
            Okinawa campaign, Whitehurst was attacked simultaneously by three 
            kamikazes in mid-afternoon (about 1500).  One, approaching from the 
            starboard beam, was brought under fire by the ship’s four starboard 
            20-mm automatic guns.  Another, approaching from the stern, was 
            fired upon by the ship’s two aft 20 mm automatic guns, its single 
            1.l inch automatic gun, and its aft 3”/50 caliber gun.  Both planes 
            crashed in flames nearby. 
            The third plane, more distant, was 
            fired upon as it came within range.  Two friendly fighters were also 
            attacking it from above, but these veered away from the gunfire.  
            The plane started its dive of about 40 degrees off the port beam.  
            It was hit with several 20-mm shots, but the pilot managed at the 
            last moment to avoid crashing into the sea by veering upward from 
            his original aim at the ship’s waterline and crashed into 
            Whitehurst’s superstructure.  The plane was a Val bomber, with a 
            500-pound delayed action bomb. It hit the port side of the ship, 
            went through the CIC Room (Command Information Center) and Pilot 
            House, both located on the deck between the Flying Bridge and the 
            Radio Room (my battle station).[1] 
            After passing completely through the CIC Room and 
            Pilot House, the plane came to rest on the starboard search light 
            platform (where the dead pilot was found in his cockpit the next 
            day).  The bomb went through the ship and exploded in mid-air fifty 
            feet off the starboard bow, causing heavy casualties among those in 
            exposed battle stations on deck.  All personnel in the CIC Room and 
            Pilot House were killed.  The deck of the CIC Room (the overhead of 
            the Radio Room) was ripped open sending flaming gasoline into the 
            Radio Room.  
              
            Of the four of us in the Radio 
            Room, one was killed outright, one died from asphyxiation, and two 
            of us escaped with burns. 
            The official casualty list from the 
            attack was 37 dead or missing and 37 wounded – one-third of the 
            ship’s complement of about 210.[2] 
            Similar Attacks 
            The attached article in “Trim But 
            Deadly” describes two similar Kamikazi attacks, one on USS 
            Oberrender DE 344 and one on USS England DE 635.  Both attacks took 
            place almost simultaneously, at 1853, on May 9, l945, twenty-seven 
            days after the attack on Whitehurst.  All three ships were attacked 
            in similar circumstances. 
            note: England’s 
            experience was similar to the attack on Whitehurst, with the 
            Kamikazi striking from the starboard, not port, side.  England's 
            casualty count was also 42.  The plane similarly struck just below 
            the flying bridge followed by an explosion of the delayed action 
            500-pound bomb. Bowers strike was directly through the sonar shack.  
            A head on blow to the port side above the pilot house. The final 
            count of Bowers casualties was 65.  Witter took a hit in the engine 
            room wit 13 casualties.  mc 
              
            My Experience 
            Needless to say, I survived the 
            Kamikazi attack on Whitehurst, but, as I will explain later, Lady 
            Luck played her part again, or I would not have made it. 
            On this particular GQ, we soon knew 
            we were in the thick of some action, because shortly after we went 
            to GQ, Whitehurst began putting out substantial, though sporadic, 
            gunfire.   
            Suddenly the gunfire became much 
            greater.  In almost no time it appeared that every gun on Whitehurst 
            was firing without let up.  Although the four of us in the Radio 
            Room could not see the action, there was no question that Whitehurst 
            was being targeted by a Kamikazi at close quarters. 
            Then we were hit.  The crash was 
            loud and violent.  Metal wrenched.  The ship was massively shaken.  
            We knew instantly what had happened.  Fire was all about us.  The 
            heat was immediate – like being thrust into an oven.  My first 
            thought was “My God.  So it happened to me.  I’ll be just one more 
            sailor who died trapped in a closed compartment in a stricken ship – 
            but My God, it’s hot, it will be over quick.  I won’t last long.”  
            These thoughts flicked into my mind in a millisecond. 
            But wait!  Death was not going to 
            be instantaneous.  There was some brief time to act.  But do what?  
            The situation was apparent in a glance.  Loften and Yeager sat 
            turned in their chairs, unhurt, not on fire, stunned, looking at 
            me.  On the other side of me, Paul was propped up in a strange 
            upright position, impaled by the door of the Radio Room which had 
            been blown off its hinges and was holding him upright like part of 
            an A-frame made by him and the door, his head protruding through the 
            displaced louvers in the door’s upper panel.  He was still. Parts of 
            his clothing were on fire. 
            But do what?  The only escape was 
            out into the flaming passageway, turn aft, and go back and undog the 
            watertight door to the boat deck.  I did not believe I would survive 
            in that flaming passageway long enough to undog that door.  But not 
            to try would be to die without a struggle.  What else to do in the 
            time left? 
            I looked at Loften and Yeager – I 
            remember trying to conjure up the best command voice I could muster 
            to indicate a degree of confidence – and said something like, 
            “C’mon, let’s go!”  Or maybe, “C’mon, let’s get out of here.”  It 
            was probably the former, because I think it was all I could choke 
            out. 
            All of this took no more than 10 
            seconds, if that.  It bothered me not to attend to Paul, who was 
            there motionless.  I had pangs of feeling about responsibility to 
            rescue him, but I knew it would be impossible if he were 
            unconscious.  However useless it may have seemed, I stopped for a 
            swift moment and shook him, shouting in his ear.  There was no 
            response, but that brief gesture helped my conscience.[3]  
              
            I darted into the passageway with 
            Loften and Yeager behind me and rushed aft with my eyes closed, arms 
            shielding my face, and headed back to the dogged-down door.  I 
            hardly knew what I was doing.  I could not see and was flailing 
            blindly.  The heat was intense.  The next thing I recall was 
            slipping and falling onto the coaming of the open door as someone 
            behind climbed over me to get out. 
              
            I scrambled over the coaming, went 
            a step or two starboard, and without any wasted movement, clambered 
            over the starboard rail of the boat deck and dropped into the 
            water.    
            I ended up deep in the water, and 
            it took a while to surface.  But when I did, what a glorious 
            feeling!  I had made it.  Here I was afloat and alive on a bright 
            day, with fresh air, and cool seawater washing over me.  What a 
            transformation! 
            But no sooner had the euphoria 
            struck than I was immediately sucked down under the water by a 
            powerful force.  I was drawn down very deep, tumbling and twisting.  
            I thrashed and resisted, trying to get right side up, but it was 
            confusing.  At long last, the water became less turbulent and I 
            managed to get headed upward, kicking and thrashing toward the 
            surface.    
            But I had been down a long time and 
            I was very deep.  I struggled hard to get to the surface. It seemed 
            to take forever, and the thought crossed my mind, “My God – how 
            ridiculous to be saved and then die drowning.”  For a long time I 
            thought I would not make it, but just as I felt I could hold out no 
            longer, I could tell I was nearing the surface.  I finally broke 
            through and gulped air – a second great feeling of unbelievable 
            relief.  I realized I had been in the wash of the propellers, and 
            now was out of it.  The ordeal was over.  Now I truly was saved! 
            I looked about for Whitehurst, 
            expecting to find it nearby, where I could be taken back aboard.  
            Somehow, I expected to find the ship stopped in the water, like an 
            automobile smashed into on a highway and no longer moving.  As well 
            ordered as I believed my thought processes were in this crisis, I 
            realized the mind was playing tricks.  The ship was off in the 
            distance, smoke pouring forth from her fires as she proceeded even 
            farther away.   
            Completely irrationally, it had 
            never occurred to me that I would be away from help after I went 
            into the water.  Not that I would have done anything differently.  I 
            had not even thought about the pros and cons of going overboard.  I 
            was on fire, and the quickest way to quench fire was to get into the 
            water.[4]  
            But, like some fanciful dream, I expected everything would be back 
            to normal once I doused the fire.  I would simply get back on the 
            ship.  How strangely the mind can act. 
            When I looked about, I saw, perhaps 
            a hundred yards ahead of me, in the direction of the ship, two other 
            people in the water, so I started toward them.    
            As I did, I noticed something 
            strange about my hands.  They had some stringy white material 
            clinging to them. I thought there must have been a sticky white 
            substance in the water that I had passed through.  I tried 
            unsuccessfully to wipe the stuff away, but it clung tight.  After a 
            few more attempts to get rid of the clinging substance, I came to 
            realize that the stuff was shreds of my skin. 
             
            Up to that moment, I had no 
            awareness of my burns.  The sea was cool and felt good[5].  
            I had no sensation of being burned on my hands or anywhere.  I felt 
            that my dive into the sea had put out the fire on my clothes and 
            that I had miraculously escaped without harm.  But I now knew this 
            was not so.  Certainly the skin on my hands had been damaged, with 
            shards of useless skin hanging there.  Still, I felt no particular 
            discomfort. 
            Swimming toward the others, I felt 
            safe in the water.  Before the war, I was not an experienced 
            swimmer, but after signing up for the Navy, I had taken a course on 
            survival swimming and how to tread water.  At Harvard, I had once 
            tested myself to see how long I could swim, and after forty-five 
            minutes I knew I could swim almost indefinitely if necessary.  I 
            regarded a calm sea as friendly, not threatening.    
            I saw other ships about.  As I made 
            progress swimming toward the two others, I felt confident we would 
            be rescued, 
            Awaiting Rescue 
            When I reached the others, I found 
            they were Lieutenant Vincent Paul and an enlisted man, both from 
            Whitehurst.  I knew Paul well, but was unacquainted with the 
            enlisted man.  Paul was not hurt.  As he greeted me, he suggested 
            that I inflate my life preserver.  Up to then, I had been swimming 
            and had not even thought about the life preserver. Because my hands 
            were too damaged to squeeze the CO-2 cartridges, Paul did the 
            inflation.  The life belt, of course, was a big help, since I was 
            fully clothed – underwear, T-shirt, long-sleeved khaki shirt,[6] 
            khaki pants, socks, shoes. 
            When I spoke to the enlisted man, I 
            learned that he was in considerable pain.  He thought his leg might 
            be broken. 
            The three of us hardly talked.  
            Although the sea was not really rough, there was a good chop to it.  
            We put the backs of our heads to the direction of the wind and chop, 
            which was not only the best defensive posture for the choppy water 
            but also let us face in the direction where we might expect to see 
            any approaching rescue vessel.  Despite the effort to protect 
            against the choppiness, I found I could not keep from swallowing 
            seawater as it washed over my head and down my face.[7]  
              
            I don’t recall any conversation 
            about where anyone of us was when the ship was hit.  Such details 
            seemed unimportant.  We all knew what had happened – and it was 
            difficult to talk with water shipping over our heads.  We were 
            simply waiting to be rescued, as we felt we would be, and that was 
            enough to occupy us – or at least me, because, as we waited, I also 
            began to get quite cold.  The water, which had seemed so refreshing 
            at first, was now chilling me.    
            Rescue 
            In about a half-hour, we saw a 
            camouflaged destroyer-type vessel (it was the USS Crosley APD 87, I 
            later learned) approaching us.  It came near, slowed and launched a 
            boat. When the boat came to us, we were asked about any injuries.  
            The enlisted man with us in the water did not speak, but I remember 
            answering for him and suggesting that he be taken care of first 
            because his leg might be broken, so they pulled him into the boat 
            first.    
            I had been checking my watch and I 
            noted that we had been in the water forty-five minutes.[8] 
            My memory is fuzzy about how we 
            proceeded to get aboard our rescue vessel – whether I got aboard 
            under my own power, was lifted or helped aboard, or what.  I do know 
            that I was cold and tired and welcomed being cared for by people who 
            seemed to know what they were doing.  I was entirely willing to let 
            them take over for me and do what was necessary. 
            First Aid 
            I didn’t know where Paul and the 
            enlisted man with us were taken, but I was laid down on a table in 
            the crew’s general mess (eating) room.  They gave me a shot of 
            morphine, which to me seemed unnecessary because I was not feeling 
            any great pain.  I dismissed it as probably just standard 
            procedure.  They also started cutting away my clothing, which again 
            seemed wasteful and more than necessary, but at that point, I was 
            not about to protest.  They seemed quite experienced in what they 
            were doing.    
            I noticed that they were also 
            giving me blood plasma.  This surprised me.  I knew that wounded 
            soldiers in the field were given blood plasma to counteract the 
            shock effect of the trauma and that it was often a matter of life 
            and death to administer the plasma as soon as possible to avoid 
            death from the shock alone.  So I asked if they thought I was 
            suffering from shock.  Their answer was yes.  They supplemented this 
            by saying that burns create shock and that in the case of injury 
            from burns, it is very important to give plasma to the victim.[9] 
            About this time, I needed to 
            urinate.  Since I was under their control lying flat on my back on a 
            mess table, I asked them how I could go about it.  I thought, 
            because they seemed to be medical people,[10] 
            they might have one of those gadgets used for this purpose with 
            bedridden males.  To my surprise, they told me, “Just let it go.”  
            “Right here?”  “Yeah, right here, just go ahead.”  So I did.  It 
            seemed strange, but I was too dim-witted to realize that it made 
            little difference, since the place was already dripping with 
            seawater from my clothes. 
            Their next step was to slather me 
            with Vaseline (petroleum jelly) wherever I was burned and then cover 
            those areas with layers of gauze.  This meant putting bandages in 
            places on my legs, arms and back, and completely covering up my 
            hands and face with gauze wrapping.  When they finished, I couldn’t 
            use my hands and couldn’t see. 
            During the course of all this, I 
            was talking with them and answering their questions, and they were 
            answering mine.  They seemed dumbfounded when I told them I had been 
            in the radio room.  They had seen the attack and did not think it 
            possible that anyone could have escaped from where I was.  They 
            passed this information around to others who came by and all 
            expressed absolute amazement that anyone could have escaped from 
            there. 
            I learned that their ship was 
            Crosley APD 87, a DE converted to a small attack transport that 
            carried small groups of personnel for specialized landings – for 
            example, the transporting of Navy Seals (Underwater Demolition 
            Teams). 
            Transfer 
            The next step was to transfer me to a suitable 
            place.  This turned out to be a transfer a few hours later to USS 
            Crescent City APA 21.[11] 
            – “about 1900” according to 
             
            notes I subsequently made in my 
            Navy file.[12] 
            I was transported in some kind of 
            small craft to Crescent City.  I could not see or help myself with 
            my bandaged hands, so I did nothing but let whomever it was take 
            charge of me.  Once we were at Crescent City, there was considerable 
            commotion around it and I recall it taking some time for anyone to 
            get to me.  I was in one of those ridged wire stretchers and was 
            lifted aboard by some mechanism.  Once aboard, I was laid in a bunk 
            located in what, from the sounds, seemed to be a small room with a 
            number of other wounded being taken care of.  I was comfortable and 
            do not recall being in any pain.  It was going into nightfall, so 
            the time for further kamikaze attacks had passed.  I rested and 
            slept.  The morphine may have had an effect 
            The next day, my main concern was 
            that I was helpless.  I could not see and could not use my hands.  I 
            could walk, although it hurt a bit when blood rushed into a bandaged 
            lower leg.  I worried about how I could get out of that room if the 
            ship were hit.  I knew the ship was not underway and was somewhere 
            off Okinawa, but not sure where.[13]  
            I therefore assumed it was as vulnerable to another kamikaze attack 
            as any other ship.  I thought it might still be stationed off the 
            beach where it had landed troops.[14] 
            Attendants in the room were busy, but I managed to ask one of them 
            about my concern.  He assured me someone would lead me if I needed 
            to get out.  I knew of course that would be the intention, but I 
            wanted some assurance I would not be forgotten.  I also knew it was 
            an intention that might not be able to be fulfilled.[15] 
            My Navy records show that I was 
            aboard Crescent City for the next four days.  I don’t recall much 
            about those four days – all of which were spent in that bunk – 
            except for the day after my arrival.  There was a radio in the room, 
            and during that next day an announcement came over it that President 
            Roosevelt had died.    
            This of course was major news, and 
            the attention given to it on the radio was not surprising.  But it 
            gave me a strange feeling – all this attention to one man’s dying 
            when all about me I knew of carnage and death in wholesale numbers.  
            Each loss of a human life out here was just as tragic on a personal 
            level as the loss of any other human, and just as wasteful of one of 
            God’s wonderful creations.  But obviously the life of a world leader 
            was something different and justified an enormous amount of 
            attention.  I did not resent the attention, nor did I think it 
            should not be given.  It just left me with a very strange feeling, 
            which even now comes over me as I write. 
            My stay aboard Crescent City for 
            the next three days was just a temporary holding action until I 
            could be transferred elsewhere.  I received no further treatment, 
            nor did any seem necessary.  My bandages remained in place.  Time 
            just passed. 
            Hospital Ship and Homeward 
            On April 16, 1945, I was 
            transferred to the hospital ship, USS Hope AH 7, which after a few 
            days left for Saipan.  By then my burns had been rebandaged and were 
            healing well.  I was transferred to the Naval Hospital at Saipan on 
            April 22, 1945, and was evacuated by air on May 15, 1945.  Arriving 
            at Hawaii on May 16, 1945, I was transferred to the Naval Hospital 
            at Aiea Heights.  Later, in an outpatient status with burns healing 
            nicely, I visited with shipmates aboard Whitehurst.  The ship was 
            under repair at the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard and, among other things, 
            was being outfitted with reels of electric cable in place of her 
            torpedo tubes, so she could use her steam-driven electric drive 
            generators to supply shore power when the invasion of Japan took 
            place.    
            From these visits, I learned for 
            the first time what had happened to the ship and to so many of my 
            shipmates on the day of the attack.  I learned also of the 
            blown-away door to the boat deck that had allowed Yeager and me to 
            escape to safety. 
            I was detached from Aeia Heights 
            Naval Hospital on June 12, 1945 and provided transportation aboard 
            the U.S. Naval Unit S.S Matsonia to San Francisco, where I arrived 
            on June 17 and was transferred to the Naval Receiving Hospital in 
            San Francisco.    
            Unfortunately, my hospitalization 
            was not over, because I came down with Hepatitis B from the blood 
            plasma given me on the day of the attack.  So on July 3,1945 I was 
            transferred from the Receiving Hospital to The Naval Hospital at 
            Oakland (Oak Knoll).    I was not 
            discharged from treatment at Oak Knoll until August 29, 1945.  By 
            then, Japan had surrendered.  World War II was over.
             
                
                [1] 
                Being closed up in the Radio Room, I did not witness the 
                attack.  The details recounted here are from the Whitehurst’s 
                official battle report and from conversations with shipmates. 
                
                [2]The 
                37 wounded figure is taken from published Navy reports.  
                However, on April 13, the day after the attack, J. C. Horton, 
                the commanding officer of Whitehurst reported in a letter to the 
                commander of the task group in which Whitehurst was serving the 
                name, rank, and serial number of the casualties.  He listed 31 
                dead, 6 missing, 22 wounded (as the only wounded officer, I 
                headed the list) and 5 “Death[s] on board hospital ship to 
                date.” A copy of that letter is in my Navy file. 
                
                [3] 
                My conscience was even more relieved when I learned from 
                shipmates months later that Paul had died instantly of a broken 
                neck, undoubtedly caused by the Radio Room door slamming into 
                him.  He was found with his head grotesquely sloshing back and 
                forth as he lay on the deck of the Radio Room in water 
                accumulated from the fire fighting. 
                
                [4]
                Subconsciously, I am sure I was 
                influenced to go overboard by the feeling that I was in safe 
                waters, not far from that small island group now in our control, 
                Kerama Retto, which I looked at daily as we patrolled back and 
                forth off its shore only a mile or so away.  I remember feeling 
                somewhat assured by this proximity and the thought that it might 
                even be possible to swim ashore, if it were ever necessary.  Had 
                Whitehurst been operating alone far at sea, my subconscious 
                decision, I’m sure, would have been to suffer onboard. 
                
                [5] 
                Whitehurst took daily readings of sea temperature.  At Okinawa, 
                the readings were about 72 degrees. 
                
                [6]
                For flash burn protection, all 
                Navy personnel were under orders to wear long-sleeved shirts 
                rolled down to the wrists.  The fact that my hands turned out to 
                be burned worse than my arms shows the wisdom of this rule. 
                
                [7]
                Since the wind and chop were 
                coming from the direction of Kerama Retto, this buffeting action 
                by an otherwise calm sea made me realize how impossible it would 
                have been for me to swim to one of those seemingly close islands 
                and the false comfort I had taken in thinking that I might be 
                able to. (See footnote 4.) 
                
                [8]
                 I had been keeping track of the 
                elapsed time in the water and have remembered it ever since, but 
                I was not particularly noting the time of day.  Months later, 
                before I knew the actual time of the attack, I made a 
                handwritten entry in my Navy file giving the time we were picked 
                up by Crosley as “about 1530.”  It was years later before I knew 
                the actual time of the attack.. The Navy’s “Secret Action 
                Report” of the attack, now declassified, states that Whitehurst 
                “Sounded general quarters and all hands manned battle stations” 
                at 1433 and that the “approximate” time the plane crashed the 
                ship was 1502.  By this estimate, my handwritten note was only 
                fifteen minutes off. 
                
                [9]
                The reason burns can lead to 
                shock, I subsequently learned, is that substantial body fluid 
                (blood plasma) can ooze out through the burns. 
                
                [10]
                I was probably in the hands of a 
                pharmacist’s mate (the navy term for what the army would call a 
                medical corpsman).  Small ships, such as DE’s did not have 
                doctors, but had petty officers with a pharmacist’s mate 
                rating.  All these petty officers, of course, had Navy training 
                for their duties, but they came from various civilian 
                backgrounds.  Aboard the Whitehurst, we found it amusing that 
                our pharmacist’s mate had been an undertaker in his civilian 
                life. 
                
                [11] 
                An APA was a large attack transport used to bring troops to land 
                on enemy territory.  There were about 250 of them commissioned 
                in World War II. According to her ship’s history, Crescent City 
                had been converted to a temporary hospital evacuation ship in 
                March and had arrived at Kerama Retto on April 6, “[r]eceiving 
                casualties from the beaches of Okinawa and from other 
                ships….[She] remained at Okinawa receiving casualties and other 
                transients until the end of the war.” 
                
                [12]
                I entered these notes months later 
                on the Navy’s paper work, which followed me. My Navy file shows 
                that I received orders dated that very day of April 12 
                (undoubtedly delivered to the Medical Officer of Crescent City 
                without my intervention) 
                signed by Whitehurst’s 
                 
                commanding officer, J. C. 
                Horton, reading as follows:   
                “You are 
                hereby detached from all duties assigned you aboard this ship; 
                will report to the Medical Officer, USS. CRESCENT CITY (APA-21) 
                for medical treatment…Diagnosis as follows: # 2508 – Burns, 
                Extremities/Key Letter “K” 
                  
                [Enclosed 
                were my Navy Pay Record (so I could get paid), my Health Record, 
                and my Officer’s Qualification Jacket] 
                
                [13]
                Upon writing these memoirs, and 
                researching the history of Crescent City, I learned that the 
                ship was anchored in Kerama Retto, a relatively safe place to 
                be, because it was ringed with small mountainous islands, making 
                kamikaze approaches difficult.  In addition it always had a 
                concentration of ships there, which could bring some awesome 
                firepower to bear on a kamikaze attack. 
                
                [14]
                Again, it was not until doing 
                research for these memoirs that I learned that this particular 
                APA ship was no longer an attack transport, but had been 
                converted to a hospital evacuation ship. 
                
                [15]
                My concern would not have been so 
                intense if I had known that this APA was not serving as an 
                attack transport.  As an attack transport, which I thought it 
                was, I regarded my presence there as something unusual, where I 
                could easily be overlooked in an emergency involving their 
                regular duties. 
                        
                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------    Excerpt 
                from p. 491, "United States Destroyer Operations in World War 
                II" 
                                      By Theodore Roscoe, 
                US, Naval Institute, 1953       
                Contributed by Roger Ekman, Capt USN. Ret, who served on 
                Whitehurst In the 
                action on the afternoon of April 12th, destroyer escort 
                Whitehurst (Lt J. C. Horton, U.S.N.R. Commanding) was maimed by 
                a small, but vicious bomb and a smash from a suicidal "Val."  
                The plane plunged into the CIC. and the ship's entire bridge 
                superstructure was enveloped in flames. All hands in CIC. and 
                pilot house were killed.  All in the radio room, on the deck 
                below, and at most of the forward gun mounts were killed or 
                badly wounded.  Although this was a baptism of fire for captain 
                and crew, the Whitehurst men fought conflagration, battle 
                damage, and successive Kamikaze attacks with a veteran skill and 
                discipline that saved the DE.   
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