Deep-sea search yields torpedoed Indianapolis

In the 72 years since the Indianapolis, a U.S. Navy cruiser, sank about 12 minutes after being torpedoed by a Japanese submarine, the disaster has inspired controversy, dozens of books, a play and a famous scene in Jaws.

But the resting place of the Indianapolis had remained a mystery.

That was until Saturday, when a team led by Paul Allen, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, announced that it had found unmistakable wreckage of the Indianapolis 18,000 feet deep in the Philippine Sea, rekindling memories of one of the Navy's worst disasters at sea.

"While our search for the rest of the wreckage will continue, I hope everyone connected to this historic ship will feel some measure of closure at this discovery so long in coming," Allen said in a statement on his website.

Allen's search expedition released pictures of wreckage on the seafloor, including a telltale piece of hull bearing the number 35 -- evidence to the 22 still-living survivors that the ship they frantically escaped in the early hours of July 30, 1945, had finally been found.

The discovery promises to revive interest in the loss of the Indianapolis, the ordeal of the survivors and the contentious court-martial of the ship's captain, Charles Butler McVay III. Roughly 400 of the 1,196 sailors and Marines onboard died in the initial attack, but those who escaped spent five days floating in shark-infested waters before they were rescued.

Only 316 men were saved after an aviator spotted them by chance.

"Even in a great tragedy like this one, there is valor, there is bravery," Rear Adm. Samuel Cox, who has retired from active duty and is director of the Naval History and Heritage Command, said in a video posted on Allen's website.

"There are also lessons learned, in this case many of them, that need to be preserved and remembered."

The discovery of the ship's remains required detective work to get a more accurate location for the Indianapolis when it was struck with two torpedoes from the Japanese submarine.

A naval historian, Richard Hulver, came across a blog post that led him last year to a ship's log recording a sighting of the Indianapolis. Calculations using that record showed that the cruiser was west of where it had long been assumed to be. Using a ship equipped with advanced undersea search equipment, Allen's team began combing the newly identified area.

Allen, whose father fought in World War II, has made a passion of finding and preserving artifacts from the war. His expedition said that the precise location of the Indianapolis would be kept secret from the public, and that the site would be respected as a grave, as U.S. law requires.

Just before the Indianapolis sank, it had completed a top secret mission: shipping parts of the atomic bomb, code-named "Little Boy," that was later dropped on Hiroshima from San Francisco to Tinian Island in the Western Pacific. Allied forces were closing in on Japan, and the Indianapolis was ordered to sail to Leyte in the Philippines to get ready for the assault.

But as the Indianapolis plowed on in the dark of night, a Japanese submarine spotted it and just after midnight unleashed six torpedoes, two of which struck the U.S. cruiser. The explosions knocked out the ship's communications, and the order to abandon ship came only by word-of-mouth. The ship sank in minutes.

For the 800 or so sailors and Marines who made it overboard, another, longer ordeal waited. They plunged into water covered in fuel oil, and many soon began throwing up. They had 12 or so rafts and few supplies, and it was unclear whether the distress messages had gone out before the communications system failed.

The water was chilling at night, but the sun baked the clusters of men during the day, and their drinking water soon ran out. Those who drank seawater succumbed to diarrhea and other illnesses, and men began to suffer collective hallucinations such as imagining that the Indianapolis was close by, brimming with food and drink.

"In the beginning I took off their dog tags, said the Lord's Prayer and let them go," recalled Capt. Lewis Haynes, the ship's chief medical officer, who tried to care for men dying in the water. "Eventually, I got such an armful of dog tags I couldn't hold them any longer."

There were also the sharks, which have entered the legend of the Indianapolis, especially through Jaws, the horror film released in 1975. In that movie, Quint, a fictional grizzled sailor played by Robert Shaw, recalls the attacks, though not entirely accurately.

"For more than two decades I've been working with the survivors. To a man, they have longed for the day when their ship would be found, solving their final mystery," Capt. William Toti, retired, who acts as a spokesman for survivors of the Indianapolis, said on Allen's website. "They all know this is now a war memorial."

A Section on 08/21/2017

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