Japanese attack on Cavite Navy Yard, the Philippines, December 10, 1941 On December 10, 1941 the
Pigeon was docked at the
Cavite Navy Yard on
Manila Bay for repairs to her steering gear when Japanese warplanes attacked. Since
Pearl Harbor three days before, Hawes had main steam pressure up and the full crew aboard, ready to get underway at an instant. Lashed to the
minesweeper , which provided steering for both,
Pigeon cleared the docks and headed for the relative safety of the bay to dodge the enemy bombs. By this time Cavite had become a hellish inferno. After separating from
Quail Hawes could see that the submarine was about to be engulfed by bombs and fire in her berth. Through heavy bombing and strafing, Lieutenant Hawes maneuvered the 187-foot
Pigeon back to the flaming dock to haul the helpless submarine stern first from her berth. Another submarine and a minesweeper had just been sunk there by direct hits. The heat and flames were so intense that they blistered the ship's paint, singed off body hair, and melted the brim of Hawes' cap. But
Pigeon's crew managed to rig a line on the
Seadragon and tow her to safety. For this heroic action, Hawes received his second Navy Cross and
Pigeon was awarded the
Presidential Unit Citation, the first warship to receive the award in World War II.
Seadragon went on to distinguished service, earning eleven
battle stars before the war ended. Immediately after the attack Hawes found and mounted on his ship two 3-inch guns and twelve .50 caliber machine guns from the wrecked Navy Yard. By the end of December the new "gunboat" had received her second Presidential Unit Citation for shooting down several enemy planes and bombarding enemy troops. She was the only surface warship to win two Presidential Unit Citations in World War II.
Later service Hawes was reassigned to command the submarine tender
USS Holland (AS-3) in 3 February 1942. Later in the war he would command the submarine rescue ship from 20 November 1942 and the submarine tender from 15 September 1944 until January 1945. Except for the brief periods when he was in transit or putting the submarine rescue ship and the submarine tender into commission, Hawes spent virtually all of World War II at sea in the Pacific in command of his three ships. Like Hawes himself, his ships always had a reputation for efficiency and readiness. When he put
Chanticleer into commission, he had
depth-charge racks installed so he could prosecute Japanese submarines. When he put
Anthedon into commission, 92% of his crew were inductees and had never been to sea, but he sailed directly from commissioning to the Pacific war and within two hours of his arrival was servicing submarines. He received the
Bronze Star Medal for "undaunted courage and professional skill" for his command of that ship. As he left the Western Pacific theater in January 1945, the Commander, Submarines, Philippine Sea Frontier sent
Anthedon a message of thanks and good wishes, describing Commander Hawes and his men as "ever ready, ever fearless." Hawes was promoted to
captain on March 25, 1945. ==Retirement and later years==