In keeping with Sir Ralph's appreciation of junior officers -
Richard H. O'Kane - U.S. submarine officer who served on two of the most successful U.S. subs during the war Wahoo (as Executive Officer) and Tang (as Commanding Officer). On Tang he sank a Japanese ship every 11 days over 5 war patrols, an incredible record considering the distances travelled just to reach Japanese waters. His second patrol was spent "Lifeguarding" off of Truk where Tang picked up 22 downed fliers, winning a Presidential Unit Citation, but no kills. On his 4th patrol in Tang he sank a record 10 ships (U.S. Fleet Boats only carried 24 torpedoes).
Like Nelson, he often sailed right through an enemy convoy, firing torpedoes fore and aft and using enemy shipping to screen himself from enemy escorts. He sank 8 ships on his 5th and final patrol including a destroyer. He himself was sunk by his last torpedo on that patrol, which ran in a circle and struck the Tang. Only 9 crewmembers survived the sinking, and ended up in a Japanese prison camp where they were severely mistreated. O'Kane weighed only 88 lbs when he was released at the end of the war.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_O'Kane
Richard H. O'Kane - U.S. submarine officer who served on two of the most successful U.S. subs during the war Wahoo (as Executive Officer) and Tang (as Commanding Officer). On Tang he sank a Japanese ship every 11 days over 5 war patrols, an incredible record considering the distances travelled just to reach Japanese waters. His second patrol was spent "Lifeguarding" off of Truk where Tang picked up 22 downed fliers, winning a Presidential Unit Citation, but no kills. On his 4th patrol in Tang he sank a record 10 ships (U.S. Fleet Boats only carried 24 torpedoes).
Like Nelson, he often sailed right through an enemy convoy, firing torpedoes fore and aft and using enemy shipping to screen himself from enemy escorts. He sank 8 ships on his 5th and final patrol including a destroyer. He himself was sunk by his last torpedo on that patrol, which ran in a circle and struck the Tang. Only 9 crewmembers survived the sinking, and ended up in a Japanese prison camp where they were severely mistreated. O'Kane weighed only 88 lbs when he was released at the end of the war.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_O'Kane
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