By Hal G.P. Colebatch on 6.10.08 @ 12:08AM
A forgotten story that America's friends -- and enemies -- would do well to remember.
This is the story of a forgotten ship with a prosaic name. But
when I came across it accidentally in the course of some other
research I thought it a story that it would be good for America to
be reminded of. And, possibly, good for America's enemies to be
reminded of, too.
The Stephen Hopkins was a Liberty Ship built during the
Second World War to carry cargo, mainly across the Atlantic. It was
armed with a single 4-inch gun, firing shells weighting about 32
pounds, mounted aft and meant to discourage pursuing submarines, a
smaller gun forward, and some machine-guns.
These were meant to be manned by an "armed guard" of 15 men, and
it had a merchant crew of about 40. Commanded by Captain Paul Buck,
the Stephen Hopkins made its first voyage in September
1942.
The Stier was a German auxiliary cruiser, converted for
commerce-raiding. It was armed with six 150-mm guns, firing shells
of about 100 lbs., two torpedo-tubes and heavy and light
anti-aircraft weapons. Thus its main guns fired shells about 20
times the weight of the Stephen Hopkins's gun, with a shattering
effect a multiple of that.
It had modern gun-directors and fire-control. A similarly-armed
raider had sunk a battle-hardened cruiser with all hands in a
point-blank gun duel a few months before. It carried a crew of
324.
ON SEPTEMBER 27, 1942, the Stier was taking on supplies
from the German armed support-ship Tannenfels in the South
Atlantic when she spotted the Stephen Hopkins. Because of
rain-squalls and poor visibility, the ships were very close
together before they sighted one another.
Instead of surrendering to its overwhelmingly more powerful
enemy when the first German shells arrived, the Stephen
Hopkins turned its stern to the Stier to bring its
4-inch gun to bear and started shooting back.
The smaller forward gun, which would not bear on the
Steir, was firing at the Tannenfels. With the
distance down to about 1,000 yards, every machine-gun on the three
ships was also firing, the Stier and the
Tannenfels sweeping the Stephen Hopkins's decks
and the exposed gun-positions.
The Stier concentrated its fire on the freighter's
stern gun. As one gun-crew was mown down or blown to pieces,
another took its place, the merchant seamen replacing the "armed
guard" men as they died, until there was no one left, and the gun
fell silent.
Cadet Edwin O'Hara saw the 4-inch gun deserted and its crews
dead and dismembered on the deck around it. O'Hara loaded and fired
all 5 shells left in the ready box. A few moments later he too was
killed by a shell-burst.
With all the ammunition gone, and the Stephen Hopkins
on fire from end to end, the last 19 men somehow got away in the
only surviving lifeboat.
FINALLY THE STIER stopped firing. The Stephen
Hopkins was a burning, sinking wreck -- but so was the
Stier. Estimates of how many of the Stephen
Hopkins's shells hit vary between 15 and 35.
According to some survivors' accounts, all the last five shells
O'Hara fired hit. However many hits there were, they were enough.
The Stier's rudder was smashed, its engine-room was
ablaze, and the fuel-oil pipes to the furnaces were wrecked, the
spilt oil feeding the fires. Its store of torpedoes was about to
explode.
The Stephen Hopkins's scratch and amateur gun-crews,
working the gun in fire and flying steel that turned men into
instant anatomist's diagrams, without even a rudimentary
gun-shield, and with no central fire-control or direction, had
fired with astonishing coolness and accuracy, hitting the raider
again and again at the waterline.
The burning Stier was dead in the water. It was
flooding and its pumps were gone.
The Tannenfels, also badly damaged, took off the
Stier's crew as it sank and headed for home. The
Stephen Hopkins had cost the German navy not only a raider
but also, and perhaps almost equally importantly, a
supply-ship.
As far as I can discover, the Stephen Hopkins was the
only U.S. ship, naval or merchant, to sink a German surface warship
in World War II. The Stier's captain reported that he had fought a
"heavily armed cruiser."
FOR THE STEPHEN HOPKINS's 19 survivors, another ordeal was
just beginning. The Tannenfels apparently searched for
them but missed them in the rain-squalls. With little food and
water in an open lifeboat, they sailed 2,200 miles to Brazil. It
took 31 days. Fifteen of them survived the voyage.
Somehow, the story of the Stephen Hopkins was largely
lost among the many other stories of wartime heroism.
Several other Liberty Ships were named after members of the
crew, and there was a Stephen Hopkins II, but they are all
broken up and forgotten now. The survivors received some awards,
and a painting of Cadet O'Hara firing the gun to the end is on
display at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy.
Captain Buck, who went down with the ship, received a posthumous
Merchant Marine Distinguished Service Medal, one of 141 such
recipients. In 1985 the Military Sea Lift Command took delivery of
a 30,000-ton tanker named Paul Buck. But it does not seem
enough.
I am not an expert on U.S. decorations, but it seems to me that
at least the Naval personnel who originally manned the Stephen
Hopkins's guns, or one to represent them, would be eligible
for, and deserving of, a Medal of Honor, even if the merchant
seaman were not eligible. (Hasn't the Medal of Honor has been
awarded to civilians in some circumstances?)
However, as far as I can discover, none was awarded here. Is it
too late for this? And if a Medal of Honor is out of the question,
surely, at least, the story is worth re-telling? Could not a great
film be made celebrating such valor?
topics:
Military, NATO, Oil