USS Whitehurst Logo by: Pat Stephens, Webmaster, DESA
 

St. Helenan remembers kamikaze hit
This article was published in the St Helena Star, Dec. 17, 2009 (St Helena, CA)

By John Lindblom
STAFF WRITER

Thursday, December 17, 2009

From his battle station in the forward engine room of the USS Whitehurst, a destroyer escort, Engineering Officer Sydney Calish felt the horrific explosion and scrambled1 topside to see what had happened.


John Lindblom photo From a photo preserved on a DVD of the incident, St. Helena’s Sydney Calish points out the Japanese kamikaze that hit his ship, the USS Whitehurst, on April 12, 1945, on his TV screen. Note the tail section of the plane at far left.6

One of his first observations was the helmsman, slumped but still standing at the helm with both hands on the wheel, and his close friend in the combat information center still stood with his arms outstretched around two radarmen as if trying to protect them.

All were dead, as were 34 other of Calish’s shipmates. Twenty-three more were injured — most of them seriously. Two of the 23 later died.

It was April 12, 1945 — a fateful day for Americans, as it was the day President Franklin Delano Roosevelt died. And especially fateful for the men of the Whitehurst, one of 21 U.S. ships hit by Japanese kamikazes that day.

“I didn’t see the explosion. All I saw was the aftermath. Those who were still there looked like figures in a wax museum, because a lot of them were killed by the concussion,” Calish, a St. Helena resident, recalled. “They were burned, too, but it was the concussion that killed them, like being hit over the head, I guess.”

At the time, the Whitehurst was in a picket line in the waters off Okinawa, patrolling for submarines and “Vals,” the Japanese code name
2 for their kamikaze suicide planes.

For its part in the last big naval battle of World War II, Calish’s ship had been ordered to join an attack force and had steamed in from Ulithi naval base in the Caroline Islands.

“We were apprehensive in Okinawa,” he remembered, “because there had been so many ships lost there. We were assigned to a radar picket station where two ships had just been hit.”

But the Whitehurst crew knew its business. In the battle of Leyte Gulf they had sunk a Japanese submarine (albeit unofficially because all anyone ever saw was an oil slick and debris floating to the surface) and were credited with downing four fighter planes.
3 So when trouble from the air came in the form of four Vals, three of them wound up at the bottom of the sea. The fourth, however, came directly at the Whitehurst.

“It hit the port side, went all the way through the deckhouse and wound up on the starboard side,” said Calish. “It was carrying a 500-pound armor-piercing bomb, but it didn’t hit the ship; it went on [through the ship] and detonated in the air.”

Reflecting on the kamikazes and the pilots who flew them, he added, “They (Japanese military) would provide only enough fuel that the planes couldn’t get back to their home base. It was the same (logic) as suicide bombers today. I don’t understand it, and I don’t think the Western mind can grab hold of it.”

Calish was a member of the Whitehurst’s 210-man crew, and had an almost familial feeling for the ship. He is a “plank owner,” and was present at its commissioning ceremony in San Francisco in November 1943.
It was a rare fighting ship, one of only six destroyer escorts powered by a turbo-electric engine in World War II.
4

A newly minted officer, Calish was an Easterner who came west with his family and graduated from UC Berkeley as a chemistry major in 1941. After entering the Navy, he spent four months at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, and learned most of what he knew about engineering at Cornell University’s diesel school and a sub-chasing center in Miami, Fla. He might have stayed in the Navy beyond the three years he served, but his new bride saw what military families endured while growing up in Long Beach and would have none of it. Instead, Calish went to Chevron as a researcher.

The patched-up Whitehurst, meanwhile, sailed on, distinguishing itself in the Korean War with three battle stars in less than a year. It also played a role in the film “The Enemy Below” as a destroyer escort under a fictional name, and survived a collision with a Norwegian freighter that culminated in both vessels running aground.

At the ripe old age of 25 in 1969, the Whitehurst was finally decommissioned. Two years later, the ship was torpedoed and sunk as a target off Puget Sound.

Calish has a tattered ensign
5 from the Whitehurst, and the ship’s destruction, he said, was a sad moment for him and, doubtless, his surviving shipmates.

“I think it was,” he said. “You certainly form an attachment to the people who served with you. I’ve been to a couple of reunions with them. There aren’t many of us left.”

notes by Max Crow, Webmaster USS Whitehurst Assn.
*corrections to the misleading statements identified by numbers above.
1. He did not leave his battle station to scramble topside. He went topside to survey the damage after the ship was at her birth in Kerama Retto.
2. American Code name for the Aichi D3A, a Japanese Dive Bomber

3
. Prior to April 12, Whitehurst had downed only a twin engine bomber. During the battle, her gunners shot down two Vals before the Suicide strike and one after.
4. Whitehurst was one of 6 Turbo-Electric DEs manufactured by Bethlehem Steel.  There were many other  TE DEs in the war.
5. Syd has a photo of Whitehurst’s tattered battle ensign.  The actual flag is in the possession of the Whitehurst veterans and families who attend the reunions.  It is now in a protective glass case which is shown at every reunion.
6. The picture displayed is from the Whitehurst WWII History DVD which I produced from the war time log kept by George Baskin.  There was no battle photographer aboard Whitehurst or nearby when the suicide bomber struck.  The picture is a photo  which has been edited to illustrate the strike.

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