Sinking of the Robert E. Lee,
72 Years Later, Snubbed Captain Credited With Downing German U-Boat
High-resolution mapping sheds new light on battle off the coast of Louisiana.
Photograph by Ocean Exploration Trust
Published December 17, 2014
WASHINGTON—When Herbert G. Claudius's family would ask him if he'd ever sunk an enemy submarine during his decades in the U.S. Navy, Claudius would say that he thought he did once. He'd seen oil and debris after a fierce battle he'd led against a German U-boat in the Gulf of Mexico in 1942.
The U.S. Navy certainly didn't seem to think so. After the
battle, just 25 miles (40 kilometers) from the U.S. mainland, the Navy
removed Claudius from command and sent him to anti-sub-warfare school.
But on Tuesday, Claudius was posthumously vindicated at the
Pentagon, thanks in part to exploration supported by the National
Geographic Society. The U.S. Secretary of the Navy announced that his
ship had indeed fired the depth charges that sank German U-boat U-166.
"Seventy years later, we now know that [Claudius's] report after the action was absolutely correct," Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said in a small ceremony attended by members of Claudius's family.
"[Claudius's ship] did sink that U-boat, and it's never too late to
set the record straight," Mabus said, as he presented the late captain
with a posthumous Legion of Merit with a Combat "V" device, which
recognizes heroism in battle.Claudius's son, Gordon Claudius, accepted the medal and said that he wished his father could have known about the correction to a largely forgotten chapter in American history. Claudius passed away in 1981, after a 33-year career in the Navy.
"He would have felt vindicated," Gordon Claudius said.
U-boat expert Richie Kohler, who also attended the ceremony, put it
more bluntly. "Claudius was shafted," Kohler said. "He should have
returned home a hero, but he was humiliated and sent back to school."The new understanding of Claudius's role is based on recent exploration of the wreck of U-boat U-166 off the coast of Louisiana, supported by a grant from the National Geographic Society.
The wreck was discovered by an oil company in 2001, under 5,000 feet (1,500 meters) of water.
Last summer, oceanographer and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Robert Ballard returned to the site with remotely operated vehicles to conduct high-resolution mapping and try to reconstruct what happened. (Learn about a deep wreck found off the U.S.)
Photograph by HO C&C Technologies, Inc., Associated Press
Unbeknownst to Most Americans
In the summer of 1942, Claudius was a newly minted captain of a brand-new patrol ship, PC 566.
He was assigned to escort the passenger ship Robert E. Lee with PC 566 in the Gulf of Mexico. The Robert E. Lee was transporting hundreds of survivors of other U-boat attacks to New Orleans.
During the early years of World War II, the U.S. was
ill-prepared to defend its coasts, and the technologically advanced
U-boats exploited that weakness by disrupting shipping.
Unbeknownst to most Americans at the time, German U-boats had been sinking civilian and military ships just off the coast.
Parts of the U.S. coast were so defenseless that "at first it was like a turkey shoot," Ballard told National Geographic.
Photograph by Ocean Exploration Trust
Over 20 U-boats sank more than 70 ships in the Gulf of
Mexico between 1942 and 1943. The Germans called it "Operation Drumbeat"
or the "Second Happy Time," following up on previous attacks on the
United Kingdom.
The raids on the U.S. were rarely discussed by leaders or in the media, for fear of spreading panic.
On July 30, 1942, U-boat U-166 attacked the Robert E. Lee
southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi. The passenger ship sank,
taking 25 lives (404 survived). Claudius and his crew fought back with
guns and depth charges.
Oil and debris rose to the surface and they didn't see the
U-boat again, so captain and crew reported that they thought it had been
destroyed.
The Navy had doubts about the crew's report, especially
since Claudius and the men had not yet received anti-submarine training.
Things got more muddled when, a few days later, a patrol plane shot at a
U-boat nearby. The pilots thought they sunk it.
But it wasn't until this week that PC 566 was credited with making the U-166 kill.
Photograph by Ocean Exploration Trust
Mapping the Wrecks
Ballard and Kohler used remotely operated vehicles to explore and map the wreck of U-166, which lies near the wreck of the Robert E. Lee, just as Claudius had predicted. The scene is surrounded by the remains of lifeboats and shards that broke off the submarine.
The U-boat's stern is intact and highly preserved thanks to
the great depth at which it was resting, says Ballard, and still
features a gun on its deck. The rusticles, or rust icicles, on the
structure reminded him of his discovery of the Titanic.
"The conning tower looks like you could knock on the door,"
Ballard says, referring to the raised platform on the top of the sub.
Photograph by Ocean Exploration Trust
But the bow had been blasted into fragments, suggesting the
work of a depth charge, he added. Ballard's exploration of the site
will be featured in an upcoming NOVA/National Geographic documentary.
Kohler says the bow's damage shows that Claudius "did exactly what he said he did."
The wrecks are protected as war graves and will remain the final resting places for the German and American dead.
At the Tuesday ceremony at the Pentagon, Mabus praised Claudius and his crew for braving "very dangerous waters."
"It was a very tough time," Mabus said.
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