R-14 Under Way, Under Sail
Since 01-01-05
The following article was
provided by CAPT. Richard Harris. (CO, USS Charr (SS 328) 1955-1956)
Here is an interesting story of submarine ingenuity.
R-14 Under Way, Under Sail
By LIEUTENANT COMMANDER ROBERT G. DOUGLAS, U.S. NAVY
(RETIRED)
While at sea off Hawaii in search of a lost vessel in
1921 a U. S. submarine was nearly lost her self when she ran out of fuel.
The sub's innovative captain devised a unique solution- he would sail her
home.
The young acting commanding officer, Lieutenant A. D.
Douglas sat on the bridge of the disabled submarine thinking about his
predicament. The boat was about 100 miles southeast of the island of Hawaii,
with no means of propulsion or radio communication and only a four-day
supply of food and fresh water remaining. Because they were out of the
normal shipping lanes there was little chance of help from a passing ship.
It was mid-morning of 12 May 1921, a fine, clear day with a slight east
wind.
Ten days earlier, Douglas and the third officer,
Lieutenant R. T. Gallemore, and a full complement of 30 enlisted men had
taken the 186-foot, 680-ton submarine to sea, on the surface, as part of a
search group consisting of several Navy ships of various types. Their orders
were to search for the USS Conestoga (AT-54), a fleet tug from the mainland,
which was overdue at Pearl Harbor. The submarine, the USS R-14 (SS-91), had
been assigned a search sector 30 degrees wide in a direction approximately
southeast from Diamond Head.
It was tiring duty for the two officers, who had to
stand alternating - and sometimes consecutive four-hour watches on the
bridge as officer of the deck in addition to their regular duties. The R-14
normally had a complement of three officers. Like the other search ships,
she had put to sea on short notice. It was simple but monotonous duty, back
and forth on ever-in- creasing legs as the search sector widened with
distance from Diamond Head. She had left port with fuel, provisions, and
fresh water for 14 days.
By 12 May, she was dead in the water, a motionless
speck on an empty ocean, and had been that way since late afternoon of the
previous day, when the diesel engines had stopped. At about the same time,
the radio transmitter had failed (not an unusual occurrence then), so the
boat was also without communications to shore.
When the engines had stopped, Gallemore, the
engineering officer, and his men found that the diesel fuel oil was badly
contaminated with seawater, a problem that had appeared intermittently and
temporarily during the preceding two days. Despite working around the clock,
while the captain continuously manned the bridge as officer of the deck,
they could neither prevent the contamination nor purify enough oil to run
the engines for more than a few minutes.
"Permission to come on the bridge," asked Gallemore
from the foot of the access ladder.
"C'mon up, Roy," replied the captain. "Any luck yet?"
"No sir, and we've done everything we can think of,"
replied Gallemore, who then described his efforts in detail. The news was
bad, but the captain did not appear too distressed about it. His mind had
been working while he sat on the bridge all night, and he thought he had a
solution to their problem.
He had wisely given orders the previous day to
conserve electricity by turning off all unnecessary lights and machinery -
including the cook's electric oven and ranges - to minimize the drain on the
main storage battery. There was not enough charge in the battery to run even
one of the two propulsion motors for 100 miles, and he wanted to save what
charge there was for use later. Some machinery had to be kept running, such
as the auxiliary generator that provided electricity for the gyro compass,
necessary lights, and the radio receiver and transmitter that were being
repaired. Douglas also had given orders to conserve fresh water, beyond the
normal restrictions on the use of that precious commodity, and to waste no
edible food. With no oven or range available, the cook could serve only cold
food.
When the engineer finished his disheartening report,
he asked, "Any ideas, skipper?²
"Yes, Roy, I do have an idea," the captain said with
a little smile. "We're going to sail her to Hilo."
The concept of sailing seemed startling at first, but
it was in fact the only course open to the stricken boat. Douglas, who had
spent the past 12 hours as officer of the deck, had worked out the details
during that time. A quiet, self-effacing man with black hair and blue eyes,
he was a problem solver. Just shy of his 27th birth- day, he had graduated
from the U.S. Naval Academy in spring 1917, served during World War 1 for
nearly two years on the destroyer USS Flusser (DD-20), and then supervised
the decommissioning of that ship in Philadelphia after the war. During that
period he courted and married an old friend from high school and later at
tended the recently founded Submarine School in New London, Connecticut,
after which he was assigned to the R-14 in Pearl Harbor in April 1920.
By the time his boat was adrift in the waters of the
Pacific a year later, therefore, Douglas had had only four years of
experience as a naval officer and barely more than a year in the fledgling
and dangerous submarine service. He was a full lieutenant and second officer
of the R-14, as well as the navigator and torpedo and ordnance officer. For
this search mission, because the commanding officer, Lieutenant V. A.
Clarke, was not available, he was designated acting commanding officer.
Douglas's plan for sailing the R-14 was simple. He
would have a foresail made of "twelve hammocks sewed together (two deep by
six long)," as the boat's logbook recorded it. He would use for a mast the
strong steel king post of the torpedo-loading crane, which fitted into a
socket in the deck forward of the bridge. Last, he ordered a "top boom" made
"by lashing five pipe bunk frames end to end." A bunk frame was about six
feet long. (In fact, as the after sail in the photograph shows, the boom
frames were overlapped for stiffness.)
The crew began work on this project at 0930, and by
about 1230 the job was done.
The king post, which was a thick-walled steel pipe
about eight inches in diameter and about eight feet long, was snugly shipped
in its socket. The heavy and ungainly bunkframe boom was tied firmly to its
top, and the canvas sail, about 25 feet wide and 6 feet high, was hung from
the top boom. When the sail was in place, the captain ordered the boom
swiveled until the sail caught the wind and pulled the bow around toward the
northwest. Soon he had the sail set-at the proper angle on a starboard tack
for steering course 320 degrees for Hilo.
The R-14 had become a sailboat, rigged like an
8th-century Viking ship, and she was moving. Her speed, which was calculated
by dropping a can overboard and timing its movement from bow to stern, was
one knot. And she was responding, though slowly, to the rudder. For the next
64 hours there would be thumps, creaks, and snapping sounds as the
improvised foresail varyingly filled and emptied.
Seeing that the foresail worked, the captain ordered
a mainsail made of six blankets, "three wide and two high." At 1845, this
free sail, with sheets at all four comers to keep it spread and set, was
"swung to the radio mast," which was a tall steel post, looking somewhat
like a periscope, at the after end of the bridge superstructure. With two
masts and two sails, the R-14 increased speed to about one-and-a-half knots.
The captain knew his improvised sails would not
withstand a strong wind, and he knew he could not allow men on deck in any
but the calmest weather, but with a sail rigged, men were necessary on deck
to tend the sails, day and night. So he was grateful for the good weather
and gentle wind, and he hoped both would remain that way.
At 1000 on 13 May, the logbook recorded, "Sighted
Cape Kumukahi, Hawaii, three points on the port bow." From that time on, the
boat's heading was governed by the bearing on that cape.
Immediately after that sighting, the impatient
captain ordered a third sail, a mizzen, made of eight blankets, "four wide
and two high," and another bunk-frame top boom from which to hang the sail.
This time the mast was the other part of the torpedo-loading crane, a solid
steel boom longer and thinner than the king post, and it was installed
firmly in the deck aft of the conning tower. The mizzen was set at about
1430, and it raised the estimated speed to two knots. The weather remained
fair and the wind friendly.
With the sighting of the cape and the setting of a
third sail, everyone's spirits lifted, but their bodies were tired. It had
been all-hands work to make and rig the sails, and their use had made it
necessary to have additional sail-tending watches topside.
With 12 hammocks, 10 bunk frames, and 14 blankets
topside catching the wind, the crew below had limited sleeping
accommodations. Hot bunking was necessary. Most had to sleep on the walking
decks; no sleeping was allowed topside for fear of losing a man overboard.
The next day, 14 May, the boat met an opposing
current of one knot, which unfortunately reduced her own speed. Al though
Hilo was then only 25 miles away, it would be another day at the same
sluggish speed before the R-14 would arrive there.
At about midnight on 15 May, the wind reversed
suddenly, requiring the sails to be changed to a port tack. With the west
wind came fog and intermittent rain, resulting in that loss of visibility so
dreaded by vessels at sea in the days before radar. These conditions lasted
varyingly for about four tense hours. In rare clear moments the lights of
the island could be seen to port, and the boat could sometimes roughly
establish her position from these. Fortunately, the opposing current
diminished slightly during this midwatch.
At about 0430, the sky began to lighten in the east,
and the island and the port slowly became visible, again raising the spirits
of the crew. At about 0530, the captain ordered electric propulsion on the
battery, at slow speed, first with the starboard main motor and propeller,
then with the port. Seeing that propulsion and maneuverability were
satisfactory, he had the sails struck and continued under power toward the
port entrance, having by then been under sail for 64 hours. Moments later
the radio shack reported contact with submarine headquarters in Pearl
Harbor, so the captain sent a message briefly describing the events of the
previous four days and requesting fuel and provisions.
At 0945, the R-14's log states, "secured alongside
the Matson Line Pier. Took 600 gallons of fresh water aboard." The next
morning, 16 May, the submarine R-12 (SS-89) moored alongside and transferred
fuel and provisions, and later that morning both boats got under way and
arrived at Pearl Harbor the next day.
The Conestoga, with 56 officers and men on board,
never was found and was declared officially lost by the Navy on 30 June
1921.
The voyage of the R-14 was a notable feat of
seamanship, even with the good weather throughout. It is unique in the
history of submarines. Certainly Douglas's division commander, Commander
Chester W. Nimitz, considered it a job well done, for he gave Douglas a
letter of commendation, praising his "initiative and ingenuity."
Perhaps Douglas should have received something more
than that letter, welcome and valuable as it was. My opinion, however, is
somewhat biased, because that commanding officer of long ago was my father.
Commander Douglas graduated from the U. S. Naval
Academy in 1945 and then served in submarines, culminating with command of
the Segundo (SS-398) in 1957-59. He retired from the Navy in 1964.