Greatest Generation – First Person Account | Into the Water

This is Part Two of a first person account of the sinking of the USS Block Island (CVE-21), a “baby flattop” aircraft carrier, by a German U-boat in the battle of the Atlantic during World War II. Part One described Warren’s duties as Navy Communications Officer, and ended with the first 2 torpedoes to hit the Block Island. Warren was relaxing in his living quarters, at night, when, in his own words …


BOOM, and then another BOOM!

We hot-footed it out of there and up the ladders to our battle stations. Halfway to the Communications Office, the clanging sound of “general quarters” reverberated throughout the ship. I had been in my slippers, and I noticed that one of them had slipped off on the way. Never mind that.

As soon as I reached the Communications Office, I started gathering the classified documents for storage in the safe, checking them off my list.

One entered the Com Office through the radio shack, where the ship’s powerful transmitters and receivers were located, and where crew members copied the Morse code messages and determined which messages were for our ship. These were then carried into the coding room for “breaking” with special decoding equipment. It was the duty of the communications watch officer to decode these messages and route them throughout the ship to the officers who must see and initial them. He had to indicate also which officers were to receive the message for “action,”, and which for “information” only.

Bill Brault, the communications watch officer then on duty, was already starting to stow the publications. We both gathered the necessary publications from the radio shack and assembled the various ones in the coding room, stuffing them into the safe. We had nearly finished the job, when —

BOOM!

A third torpedo hit the ship. This one really rocked the ship; it was so strong that all the publications stored so carefully on the shelves in the still open safe came tumbling out onto the deck. The ship’s power was knocked out and the lights went off. At about this time Ensign Daly, one of my roommates and my closest friend — also in communications — came by and said the order had been given to “stand by to abandon ship.” Until that fateful moment we knew only that the ship had been torpedoed — and might explode any minute — but we were not certain how bad the damage was. After the Liscomb Bay disaster, we had a sense that we were operating on borrowed time.

Our situation in the coding room was problematic. It was now pitch dark in there, and the numerous publications still had to be re-packed into the safe before we could leave. I grabbed the battle light, only to find that the battery was dead. How ironic, I thought, as I recalled the many hours I had spent in that room decoding messages and facing that battle lantern fastened to the bulkhead in front of me, making a mental note of its location in case I ever needed it. Now I needed it and it was useless.

This was one time when a little bit of common-sense planning on my part paid off. On these anti-submarine missions to and from Casablanca, I always carried in my left-hand shirt pocket a small survival kit which I had put together myself. It consisted of a small steel mirror, a pencil, a little sample box of two cigarettes, a folder of matches, and a pen flashlight — all stuffed inside a condom which was then fastened with a rubber band, making the whole small package waterproof. Now, I broke out the pen flashlight and by its light we hurriedly stuffed all the publications back into the safe, locked it, and beat it out of there, closing both doors behind us.

I ran up to the flight deck and found that most of the crew were already either in the water or going over the side on lines and cargo nets. I ran into one of the other communications officers, a rather gruff, aggressive type who was my superior in rank.

“About time to hit the water,” he called.

“Right,” I said as I headed toward a ladder to go to my abandon ship station just forward of the hangar deck housing. But I shook my head in amazement as I did so, for this pompous officer was wearing not only his inflatable life-belt but also an inflatable aviator’s life jacket that he had somehow gotten hold of. He looked a disgusting sight.

On the well deck, while I was busy supervising the cutting away of a  fouled raft, Charles Brown, officers mess attendant, came up to me excitedly and said what I thought to be that he was unable to get to his abandon ship station aft. I told him in that case to over the side right here and now, since the word had already been passed to abandon ship, and men were already going over the side on lines, many of them already in the water with rafts. Charlie replied, “No sir, I didn’t mean myself. I can get over alright. But there’s a man back here with a broken leg. Can you help us get him over?” This was what he had said the first time, but I had not understood him. Now I saw the man, an officers mess steward. A couple of the mess boys went over the side and got a raft. We tied a line around the mess steward and lowered him into the water. Then I had to tell the others to go over, for they were still looking around for things to do to help, even though this was long after the order to go over the side had been given.

The rafts were of the familiar “doughnut” type — an oblong frame rounded at the corners, from which was suspended by ropes a floor that rode perhaps two-and-a-half feet below the surface. There were several rafts in the water when I went over the side. I swam comfortably with my inflated life-belt, and was about to reach one of the nearly full rafts when I heard behind me someone crying out for help. I turned so I could see the man. He was wearing a large kapok life jacket, but apparently was so panicked that he was thrashing about with his arms and taking water into his mouth, all the while crying out frantically.

I was mortified. The water was full of oil near the ship. Two things made me fearful. I recalled that the Liscomb Bay had gone down in sixty seconds, and there was no way for me to know whether the Block Island would likewise sink, dragging with her everything within a wide range. The other cause of fear was a warning given to us back at Harvard by one of the experienced Navy instructors, that if you are in the water when a depth charge goes off, the impact can tear your insides apart.

There was nothing I could do but swim back towards the carrier some forty or fifty feet to where he was, and tow him to safety. I swam back to the man, calmed him down, and towed him to a life raft, whose occupants hauled us both aboard.

to be continued … 

Greatest Generation – First Person Account | Into the Water | Aiken Bella Magazine
Notice of the loss of the Block Island appeared in the New York Times on D-Day, June 6, 1944. Because of wartime security, details of the battle — location, men lost, and ships involved — were not released until one year later.
Greatest Generation – First Person Account | Into the Water | Aiken Bella Magazine
Roland Leslie Warren, Communications Officer for the Block Island
Greatest Generation – First Person Account | Into the Water | Aiken Bella Magazine
The U-boat that sank the Block Island was subsequently sunk by the destroyer escort USS Eugene E. Elmore (DE-686). U-boat crew survivors were captured, and a funeral was held for their fellow crewmen who were lost. Roland Warren is the leftmost person in this photo; he translated the chaplain’s remarks into German for the benefit of the survivors.
Picture of Roland L. Warren

Roland L. Warren

Picture of Roland L. Warren

Roland L. Warren

In the know

Related Stories

The Beginnings of a New County | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

The Beginnings of a New County | Cabinet of Curiosities

2021 is a special year for the residents of Aiken County — not only is it a new year of hope after a year of chaos, but it’s also the 150th anniversary of Aiken County’s founding. In January of 1871, state legislator Charles D. Hayne (Barnwell District) proposed an act to create a new county with Aiken as its seat. On March 10, 1871, the act was formally enacted by the South Carolina state legislature. While Hayne was not the first person to promote the idea of a new county, he was the one to get the bill through the state legislature successfully. Names for the new county included the

Read More »
To Keep Christmas Well | Palmetto Bella

To Keep Christmas Well

“…and it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well …” It is among the closing lines from Charles Dickens’ classic story, “A Christmas Carol.” It may be one of the best remembered and most cherished sentences in the book. “To keep Christmas well,” I suspect, implies different things to each of us. But in the language of the day when this book was written, it meant to observe, or to honor, or to celebrate something. To actively remember. Perhaps in this year of rather lopsided “celebrations” — with their often double-edged experiences and wobbly sense of imbalance — I have found myself searching for

Read More »
Story of Hanukkah | Palmetto Bella

Story of Hanukkah

Hanukkah is the Jewish Festival of Lights, celebrated to commemorate the rededication of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem after Judah Maccabee’s victory over the occupying Greek army in 165 BC. In the land of Judah, ruling Syrian King Antiochus ordered the Jewish population to reject all their religious beliefs and practices and worship Greek gods. For fear of the occupying Greek military that enforced King Antiochus’ decree, some Jews obeyed that command, but the majority chose to rebel against it. Thus were sown the seeds of what would ultimately become the celebration of Hanukkah. Fights broke out in a village near Jerusalem when Greek soldiers demanded that the Jewish villagers

Read More »
Rocking Around the (Metal? Holly?) Christmas Tree | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

Rocking Around the (Metal? Holly?) Christmas Tree | Cabinet of Curiosities

Have you ever watched A Charlie Brown Christmas television special and wondered about the metal Christmas tree lot that Charlie Brown visits? Did you know that cutting down a holly tree almost became illegal in our area? Let’s explore this curious affinity for metal Christmas trees and an early effort to save the holly tree in the latest episode of the Cabinet of Curiosities! The History of Christmas Trees When imagining our ancestors and how they may have spent Christmases a few hundred years in the past, many of us picture a happy family around a large, decorated tree, with a blazing fire in the hearth and children playing at

Read More »