carrying 94 survivors from the sunken heavy cruiser
USS Northampton PT-109 was transported from the
Norfolk Navy Yard to the South Pacific in August 1942 on board the
Liberty ship SS Joseph Stanton. Originally Navy grey, it is believed the ship was painted a flat, dark green at
Nouméa, New Caledonia after being offloaded. She arrived in the
Solomon Islands in late 1942 and was assigned to
Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron 2 based on
Tulagi island. She participated in combat operations around
Guadalcanal from 1942 to 1943, when the Japanese withdrew from the island.
Kennedy's training in motor torpedo boats Despite having a chronically bad back and a history of other illnesses, including abdominal pain and scarlet fever as an infant, John F. Kennedy used his father's
Joseph P. Kennedy influence to get into the war. In 1940, the U.S. Army's Officer Candidate School had rejected him as 4-F, for his bad back, ulcers, and asthma. Kennedy's father persuaded his old friend Captain Allan Goodrich Kirk, USN, head of the Office of Naval Intelligence, to let a private Boston physician certify his son's good health. Kennedy started in October 1941 before Pearl Harbor as an
ensign with a desk job for the
Office of Naval Intelligence. He was reassigned to South Carolina in January 1942 because of his affair with Danish journalist
Inga Arvad. On 27 July 1942, Kennedy entered the Naval Reserve Officers Training School in Chicago. , 1941 After completing his Naval Reserve Officers' Training on , Kennedy voluntarily entered the
Motor Torpedo Boat Squadrons Training Center in Melville, Rhode Island, where he was promoted to
lieutenant (junior grade) (LTJG). In September 1942, Joseph Kennedy had secured PT Lieutenant Commander John Bulkeley's help in placing his son in the PT boat's service and enrolling him in their training school, after meeting with Bulkeley in a New York Plaza suite near his office at Rockefeller Plaza. Nonetheless, Bulkeley would not have recommended John Kennedy for PT boat training if he did not believe he was qualified to be a PT captain. In an interview with Kennedy, Bulkeley was impressed with his appearance, communication skills, grades at Harvard, and awards received in small boat competitions, particularly while a member of Harvard's sailing team. Exaggerated claims by Bulkeley about the effectiveness of the PTs in combat against larger craft allowed him to recruit top talent, raise war bonds, and cause overconfidence among squadron commanders who continued to pit PTs against larger craft. But many in the Navy knew the truth; his claims that PTs had sunk a Japanese cruiser, a troopship, and a plane tender in the Philippines were false. Kennedy completed his PT training in Rhode Island on , with very high marks and was asked to stay for a brief period as an instructor. He was then ordered to the training squadron, Motor Torpedo , to take over the command of motor torpedo boat
PT-101, a
Huckins PT boat.
Kennedy's transfer to the Pacific In January 1943,
PT-101 and four other boats were ordered to Motor Torpedo Boat (RON 14), which was assigned to patrol the
Panama Canal. Kennedy detached from in February 1943, while the squadron was in Jacksonville, Florida, preparing for transfer to the Panama Canal Zone. Still desperately seeking a combat assignment, and on his own volition, Lieutenant Kennedy then contacted family friend and crony, Massachusetts
Senator David I. Walsh, Chairman of the
Naval Affairs Committee, who diverted his assignment to Panama, and had him sent to PT combat in the
Solomon Islands, granting Kennedy's previous "change-of-assignment" request to be sent to a squadron in the South Pacific. His actions were against the wishes of his father, who had wanted a safer assignment. John F. Kennedy aboard 1943 The Allies had been in a campaign of
island hopping since securing Guadalcanal in a bloody battle in early 1943. Kennedy transferred on 1943, as a replacement officer to Motor Torpedo Boat , which was based at
Tulagi Island, immediately north of
Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands. Traveling to the Pacific on the large troop carrier , Kennedy witnessed a fierce air strike that killed the ship's captain, and found Kennedy helping to hand shells to supply a large gun on board, giving him his first taste of battle. He arrived at Tulagi on and took command of
PT-109 on . Although
PT-109 was less than a year old it had seen heavy combat service since its arrival in the Pacific. Considerable repairs were required on the boat and, leading by example, Kennedy pitched in to help the crew get his vessel seaworthy. On several PT boats of MTBRON 2, including
PT-109, were ordered to the
Russell Islands in preparation for the invasion of
New Georgia. From their crude base on the northern tip of Rendova Island, on a small spit of land known as Lumbari, PT boats conducted daring and dangerous nightly operations, both to disturb the heavy Japanese barge traffic that was resupplying the Japanese garrisons in New Georgia, and to patrol the Ferguson and
Blackett Straits to sight and to give warning when the Japanese
Tokyo Express warships came into the straits to supply Japanese forces in the New Georgia–Rendova area.
Crew on PT-109s last mission The following men were aboard on PT-109's last mission: •
John F. Kennedy, Lieutenant, Junior Grade (LTJG), commanding officer (Boston, Massachusetts). •
Leonard J. Thom, Ensign (ENS), Ohio State football athlete, and excellent swimmer, executive officer (Sandusky, Ohio). •
George H. R. "Barney" Ross, Ensign (ENS), on board as an observer after losing his own boat. Attempted to operate the
37 mm gun but suffered from
night blindness. (Highland Park, Illinois). •
Raymond Albert, Seaman 2/c, gunner. Killed in action by Japanese POW during a rescue mission 1943 (Akron, Ohio). •
Charles A. "Bucky" Harris, Gunner's Mate 3/c (GM3) (Watertown, Massachusetts). •
William Johnston, Motor Machinist's Mate 2/c (MM2) (Dorchester, Massachusetts). •
Andrew Jackson Kirksey, Torpedoman's Mate 2/c (TM2) Killed in collision. (Reynolds, Georgia). •
John E. Maguire, Radioman 2/c (RM2) (Dobbs Ferry, New York). •
Harold William Marney, Motor Machinist's Mate 2/c (MM2). Killed in collision, manning the turret closest to the impact point. (Springfield, Massachusetts) •
Edman Edgar Mauer, Quartermaster, cook, 3/c (QM3) (St. Louis, Missouri). •
Patrick H. "Pappy" McMahon, Motor Machinist's Mate 1/c (MM1) (Wyanet, Illinois). The only man in the engine room during the collision was badly burned, but recovered from his wounds. Only member of the crew besides Kennedy mentioned by name in
the song. •
Ray L. Starkey, Torpedoman's Mate 2/c (TM2) (Garden Grove, California). •
Gerard E. Zinser, Motor Machinist's Mate 1/c (MM1) (Belleville, Illinois). Erroneously called "Gerald" in many publications, Zinser remained in the Navy for a career following the end of World War II, eventually retiring as a
chief petty officer. The last living survivor of
PT-109, he died in Florida in 2001.
Battle of Blackett Strait At the end of July 1943, intelligence reports were received and decoded by Naval authorities at Kennedy's PT base on Rendova Island, indicating that five enemy destroyers were scheduled to run the night of 1–2 August. The destroyers would cruise from the Solomon
Bougainville Island through Blackett Strait to supply provisions and bring troops to the Japanese garrison on Vila Plantation, on
Kolombangara Island's southern tip. America's sophisticated deciphering of the Japanese naval codes had contributed to the victory at the Battle of Midway, ten months earlier, and the same technology had been used to break their code and provide the report of the Japanese destroyers expected 1–2 August. Despite the recent loss of two boats and two crewmen from a Japanese air attack on , the skippers of
PT-109 and 14 other boats met with Commander Thomas G. Warfield to discuss the details of a mission to head north through a cut in the reefs known as Ferguson Passage, to Blackett Strait between
Gizo and Kolombongara Islands to block or attack the anticipated enemy destroyers. The resulting skirmish, sometimes referred to as the "Battle of Blackett Strait," should not be confused with an
earlier battle of that name fought there on 6 March 1943.
Commander Arleigh Burke had been ordered to sit on the northern approach to Kolombangara with seven American destroyers to ensure the Japanese were prevented from reinforcing their garrison, though he was not on station till 12:30 a.m. All four Japanese destroyers would evade his grasp, as they arrived one hour early, before Burke had reached his post. The resulting battle would become the largest use of PT boats in the war, and the results would not be promising for the future use of PTs against Japanese destroyers. Most of the divisions reached their station by 8:30 p.m. The fifteen PTs carried four torpedo tubes each, for a total of , and roughly half of these were fired at the four advancing Japanese destroyers protected by Japanese float planes. The Navy's official report of the incident listed 5–6 torpedo explosions reaching the destroyer targets, but none, in fact, actually hit. Of the twenty-four torpedoes fired by PT boats from eight of the PTs, not a single hit was scored against the advancing destroyers. Though each division of PTs was assigned a location likely to intercept the destroyers, several of those without radar cruised about aimlessly in the fog and darkness, unable to locate the enemy ships.
Separation of PT-109 from her division Lieutenant Brantingham on
PT-159, leader of Kennedy's division, and originally stationed near Kennedy, first saw radar blips indicating the southbound destroyers just arriving on the scene, and fired his torpedoes from about away. As he advanced, he did not radio
PT-109 to follow, leaving Kennedy and his crew behind in the darkness. All of Brantingham's torpedoes missed the destroyers, and his torpedo tubes caused a small fire, requiring Lieutenant Liebenow's PT, also in Kennedy's division, to swing in front of Brantingham's PT in an effort to block the light from his burning torpedo tubes, which could have given away their location to the destroyers. Liebenow's
157 fired two more torpedoes that failed to hit their target as well, then both boats laid smoke from their smoke generators and zigzagged away to avoid detection. No signal of the destroyer's presence was ever radioed or received by
PT-109, or the other boat in the division, and skippers Brantingham and Liebenow headed blindly west to Gizo Island and away from the destroyers and
PT-109. Many of the torpedoes that were fired exploded prematurely or ran at the wrong depth. A few other PTs, including the leader of Division A to the south of Kennedy, intercepted the destroyers on their southbound route close to Kolombangara, but were unable to hit any with torpedoes. The boats were radioed by Warfield to return when their torpedoes were expended, but the four boats with radar fired their torpedoes first and were ordered to return to base. Commander Warfield's concept of sending orders to the PTs in darkness by radio from away, without a view of the battle, was inefficient at best. The radar sets on the four boats carried were relatively primitive and sometimes malfunctioned. When the four boats with radar left the scene of the battle, the remaining boats, including
PT-109, were deprived of the ability to determine the location or approach of the oncoming destroyers, and were not notified that other boats had already engaged the enemy. Late in the night,
PT-109 and two accompanying PTs became the last to sight the Japanese destroyers returning on their northern route to
Rabaul,
New Britain,
New Guinea, after they had completed dropping their supplies and troops at 1:45 a.m. on the southern tip of Kolombangara. The official Navy account of the incident listed radio communications as good, but PT commanders were also told to maintain radio silence until informed of enemy sightings, causing many commanders to turn off their radios or not closely monitor their radio traffic, including Kennedy.
Rammed by Amagiri, 2 August By 2 a.m. on 1943, as the battle neared its end,
PT-109,
PT-162, and
PT-169 were ordered to continue patrolling the area on orders previously radioed from Commander Warfield. The night was cloudy and moonless, and fog had set amidst the remaining PTs. Kennedy's boat was idling on one engine to avoid her phosphorescent wake being seen by Japanese aircraft when the crew realized they were in the path of the Japanese destroyer , which was heading north to Rabaul from Vila Plantation,
Kolombangara, after offloading supplies and . Most contemporary accounts of the incident, particularly the work of Mark Doyle, do not find Kennedy at fault for the collision. The lack of speed and maneuverability of
PT-109 while the engines were idling put the vessel at risk from passing destroyers, but Kennedy had not been warned by radio of destroyers in the area. Kennedy believed the firing he had heard was from shore batteries on Kolombangara, not destroyers, and was focused on avoiding detection by enemy seaplanes. Kennedy said he attempted to turn
PT-109 to fire a torpedo and have Ensign George "Barney" Ross fire their newly installed 37 mm anti-tank gun from the bow at the oncoming northbound destroyer
Amagiri, but Ross did not have time to load a shell into the closed breech of the weapon.
Amagiri was traveling at a relatively high speed of between to reach harbor by dawn, when Allied air patrols were likely to appear. Kennedy and his crew would have had less than ten seconds to get the engines up to speed to evade the oncoming destroyer, which was advancing without running lights.
PT-109 was struck on her starboard side at a 20-degree angle shearing off a piece of the boat, between Kolombangara and
Ghizo Island, near . There are conflicting accounts as to whether the destroyer captain had rammed PT-109 intentionally.
Amagiris captain, Lieutenant Commander Kohei Hanami, later claimed that he intentionally turned hard to starboard and deliberately
rammed PT-109. However, Hanami's superior officer, Commander of the 11th Destroyer Flotilla, Captain Katsumori Yamashiro, and other crewmembers, recalled Yamashiro ordering Hanami to turn hard to port to try to avoid hitting the torpedo boat, for fear of setting off its torpedoes and damaging their ship. He was however, unable to avoid hitting it despite the evasive maneuver.
PT-109 explodes When
PT-109 was cut in two around 2:27 a.m., a fireball of exploding aviation fuel high caused the sea surrounding the ship to flame. Seamen Andrew Jackson Kirksey and Harold William Marney were killed instantly, and two other members of the crew were badly injured and burned when they were thrown into the flaming sea surrounding the boat. For such a catastrophic collision, explosion, and fire, there were few men lost compared to the losses on other PT boats hit by shell fire.
PT-109 was gravely damaged, with watertight compartments keeping only the forward hull afloat in a sea of flames.
PT-169, closest to Kennedy's craft, launched two torpedoes, but they missed the attacking destroyer;
PT-162s torpedoes failed to launch. Both boats then turned away from the scene of the action and returned to base without checking for survivors of
PT-109. No procedure had been specified by Commander Warfield for searching for survivors or what the PT flotilla should do when a boat was lost. In the words of Captain Robert Bulkley, naval historian, "This was perhaps the most confused and least effectively executed action the PTs had been in. Eight PTs fired 30 torpedoes. The only confirmed results were the loss of
PT-109 and damage to the Japanese destroyer
Amagiri" [from striking
PT-109].
Survival, swim to Plum Pudding Island, 2 August southwest of where the bow section had drifted. They placed their lantern, shoes, and non-swimmers on one of the timbers that had been used as a gun mount and began kicking together to propel it. Kennedy, a skilled swimmer who had been a member of the
Harvard University swim team, used a life jacket strap clenched between his teeth to tow McMahon. It took five hours to swim the to the island, which they reached without encountering sharks or crocodiles.
Additional swims, 2, 4, and 5 August Plum Pudding Island was only in diameter, with no food or water. The exhausted crew dragged themselves behind the tree line to hide from passing Japanese barges. The night of 2 August, Kennedy swam to Ferguson Passage to attempt to hail a passing American PT boat. On 4 August, he and Lenny Thom assisted his injured and hungry crew on a demanding swim south to
Olasana Island, which was visible from Plum Pudding Island. They swam against a strong current, and once again, Kennedy towed McMahon by his life vest. They were pleased to discover Olasana had ripe coconuts, though there was still no fresh water. On the following day, 5 August, Kennedy and George Ross swam for an hour to Naru Island, visible at an additional distance of about southeast, in search of help and food and because it was closer to Ferguson Passage where Kennedy might see or swim to a passing PT boat on patrol. Kennedy and Ross found a small canoe, packages of crackers and candy, and a fifty-gallon drum of drinkable water left by the Japanese, which Kennedy paddled back to Olasana in the acquired canoe to provide his crew. It was then that Kennedy first spoke to Solomon Island scouts
Biuku Gasa and Eroni Kumana on Olasana Island. Months earlier, Kennedy had learned a smattering of the pidgin English used by the scouts by speaking with a native boy. The two scouts had finally been convinced by Ensign Thom that the crew were from the lost
PT-109, when Thom asked Gasa if he knew John Kari, and Gasa replied that he worked with him. Realizing they were with Americans, the scouts brought a few yams, vegetables, and cigarettes from their dugout canoe and vowed to help the starving crew., though it would take two additional days for a full rescue. ==Rescue==