. standing by his
Yokosuka E14Y "Glen" seaplane. Following his successful observation flights on the second and third patrols, Warrant Officer Nubuo Fujita was specifically chosen for a special incendiary bombing mission to create forest fires in North America.
I-25 left Yokosuka on 15 August 1942 carrying six
incendiary bombs. On 9 September, the crew again deployed the "Glen", which dropped two bombs over forest land near
Brookings, Oregon. This attack by an enemy airplane was later called the "
Lookout Air Raids", and was the
only time that the mainland United States was ever bombed by enemy aircraft and the second continental territory to be bombed as such during wartime, after the
bombing of Dutch Harbor in
Unalaska, Alaska. Warrant Officer Fujita's mission had been to trigger
wildfires across the coast; at the time, the
Tillamook Burn incidents of 1933 and 1939 were well known, as was the destruction of the city of
Bandon, Oregon by a smaller out-of-control wildfire in 1936. But light winds, wet weather conditions and two quick-acting
fire lookouts kept the fires under control. In fact, had the winds been sufficiently brisk to stoke widespread forest fires, the lightweight Glen may have had difficulty navigating through the bad weather. Shortly after the Glen seaplane had landed and been disassembled for storage,
I-25 was bombed at by a United States Army
A-29 Hudson piloted by Captain Jean H. Daugherty from
McChord Field near
Tacoma, Washington. The Hudson carried general-purpose demolition bombs with delayed fuzes rather than depth charges. The bombs caused minor damage, but quick response by a
Coast Guard cutter and three more aircraft caused
I-25 to be more cautious on a second bombing raid on 29 September 1942. The Glen seaplane was assembled and launched in pre-dawn darkness using
Cape Blanco Light as a reference. The plane was heard at 0522 by a work crew at the Grassy Knob Lookout east of
Port Orford, Oregon; but fire crews from the
Gold Beach Ranger Station were unable to locate any evidence of the two incendiary bombs dropped. The Glen seaplane was again recovered, but
I-25 decided not to risk a third flight with the two remaining incendiary bombs. Captain Tagami took I-25 to rest "...on the bottom [of the harbor of
Port Orford ] until night time. At 0415 4 October 1942
I-25 torpedoed the tanker
Camden en route from
San Pedro, California, to Puget Sound with a cargo of of gasoline. The damaged tanker was towed to the mouth of the Columbia River. When its draft was discovered to be too great to reach repair facilities in Portland, Oregon, another tow was arranged to Puget Sound; but the tanker was destroyed on 10 October by a fire of unknown origin during the second tow. On the evening of 5 October 1942
I-25 torpedoed the
Richfield Oil Company tanker
Larry Doheny, which sank the next day. The cargo of of oil was lost with 2 of the tanker's crew and 4 members of the
United States Navy Armed Guard. Survivors reached
Port Orford, Oregon on the evening of 6 October. Two submarines were sighted on 11 October 1942 about off the coast of Washington as
I-25 was returning to Japan.
I-25 fired its last torpedo at the lead submarine, which sank in 20 seconds with the loss of all hands.
I-25 reported sinking a U.S. submarine, but the submarine was actually Soviet
L-16 which was sailing with
L-15 en route from
Vladivostok to the
Panama Canal via
Unalaska, Alaska, and
San Francisco. United States Navy Chief Photographer's Mate Sergi Andreevich Mihailoff of
Arcadia, California, was aboard
L-16 as a liaison officer and interpreter, and was killed with the remainder of the submarine crew. The United States Navy
Western Sea Frontier denied loss of any submarine and withheld information about the Soviet loss because, at the time, the
Soviet Union was officially neutral in the war between Japan and the United States.
SS H.M. Storey was bringing
fuel oil from
Noumea,
New Caledonia, in the
South Pacific Ocean to
Los Angeles. On May 17, 1943,
I-25 torpedoed and fired shells at the ship. The attack killed two of the crew; 63 of the crew made it in to the ship's
lifeboats before she sank. US
destroyer USS Fletcher rescued the crew in the lifeboats and took them to
Port Vila Efate,
Vanuatu, in the South Pacific.
1942 North American west coast ==Loss==