In
long lines, the men moved forward, shuffling along the covered San Francisco
pier at night to the ships that would take them to a destination that was, at
present, a secret. Numbering in the thousands, the troops setting out on
February 17, 1942, as part of convoy PW 2034 included a cross section of
American society with a couple of millionaire’s sons and doctors of philosophy
along with men who could not read. There were lawyers, cooks, plumbers, clerks,
brokers, welders, mechanics, watchmakers, and the unemployed. Listed on the
ships’ rosters were such last names as Cassini, Flanagan, Graziani, Johnston,
Brooks, La Pierre, Cohen, Schlotfeldt, Wu, Paulson, Wroblewski, Economos, and
Chalupniczak.
Also
among their company were fourteen correspondents—the largest contingent of
journalists to accompany an American expeditionary force since the American
entry into World War II. The correspondents were, like their shipmates,
somewhat confused about their new surroundings. Three newspapermen mistakenly
boarded the wrong ship. They were fussily informed of their error by a steward,
who shooed them off “with deep contempt with a diagram showing that our cabin
numbers did not match his vessel and never would,” remembered John Lardner, the
son of famed author Ring Lardner and a reporter for the North American
Newspaper Alliance and Newsweek.
As
he made his way to his berth on the SS Monterey,
a former luxury ocean liner of the Matson Line converted for use as a fast
transport under the auspices of the War Shipping Administration, Robert Sherrod
of Time magazine noted that the
soldiers boarding his ship were clad in the new M1 steel helmet meant to
replace the tin-plate models worn by the doughboys of World War I. Sherrod
stopped the soldiers’ commanding officer, the mustachioed Brigadier General
Frank S. Clark, most recently the commander of the Coast Artillery School in
Virginia and known for watching over the soldiers under his command like an
“anxious mother.” Sherrod said to him, “General you don’t know how much it
pleases me to see American troops finally equipped with decent helmets. Time magazine [has] been fighting for
them for years.” Clark laughed and asked him if he might be hinting that he and
the other correspondents, who had been issued the old-style helmets, were
campaigning for their own M1s? Within fifteen minutes, Sherrod noted, the
journalists received the new helmets.
There
was little fanfare as the convoy pulled out of San Francisco. Hundreds of
soldiers stood near the rails on the Monterey’s
upper decks, craning their necks skyward to watch the seagulls screaming at
them from overhead. A few shouted at troops on other ships, “See you in Tokyo.”
The commonest remark among the men, noted Sherrod, was, “Boy, I’ll bet we don’t
see this country again for a long time.”
It
was the beginning of a six-month odyssey for Sherrod, who had been told in
secret by officials in Washington, D.C., that he was on his way to Australia.
During his time in the former British settlement, he traveled 40,000 miles,
including 30,000 as a passenger on five types of U.S. Army Air Corps bombers
and two different U.S. Navy bombers. He met every important American general
stationed in Australia, as well as quite a few Australian generals and politicians,
including the country’s prime minister, John Curtin, leader of the country’s
Labor Party, and opposition leader Arthur Fadden. Sherrod visited every vital
military base then in the area, from small air bases in the extreme north of
Australia to Port Moresby in New Guinea, which suffered through its
seventy-third bombing raid by the enemy during his time there. The danger of an
imminent invasion of Australia by the Japanese was real, as a large portion of
Australia’s best troops were fighting General Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Korps in
the Middle East.
When
Sherrod and the approximately 4,000 men scattered among the ships of the convoy
sailed from San Francisco, they were leaving behind an American public gripped
by an epidemic of panic fueled by the rapid advance of Japanese forces in the
Pacific against possessions controlled by the British, Americans, and Dutch.
U.S. forces on Guam and Wake Island (after a spirited defense by U.S. Marines)
were overwhelmed, effectively isolating the Philippines, and, on January 2,
1942, Manila, the Filipino capital, fell to the enemy. Many people on the West
Coast feared a possible Japanese invasion. General John L. DeWitt, in charge of
the Western Defense Command, failed to calm fears when he warned the citizens
of San Francisco, “death and destruction are likely to come to this city at any
moment.”
Sherrod
had arrived in San Francisco on February 8 and checked in with Lieutenant
Colonel Truman Martin, who served as DeWitt’s “fussy public relations man.” For
more than a week Sherrod waited with his fellow correspondents at the Saint
Francis Hotel with no official word about where they were headed to or when or
how. “It was fairly obvious to anyone who troubled to look at the map that we
were going to Australia (as I had been told in Washington in deep secrecy) or
to the East Indies [Southeast Asia] if they inconceivably held out,” he noted. The
journalists mostly sat around in the bar of their hotel, bought “prodigious”
amounts of equipment and clothing (Sherrod had most of his from his previous
assignment covering army maneuvers for Time),
and were vaccinated for typhoid, tetanus, yellow fever, and diphtheria. “The
second typhoid shot almost killed several of us,” said Sherrod. “I saw dragons
and pink elephants all night, though I hadn’t had a drink.”
From
the moment he boarded the Monterey,
Sherrod realized he had left behind his old civilian life for war. There were
dozens of guns on every side to defend his ship from attack by sea or air, and
they were manned twenty-four hours a day. He and every other passenger on the
convoy had thrust into their hands a mimeographed instruction sheet that
informed them they must wear a life preserver at all times and were ordered to
have it within reach while they slept. Also, blackout conditions prevailed
throughout the voyage and portholes had to be closed even in the hottest
weather. Sherrod noted that the instructions also ominously added, “Be careful.
If you fall overboard the ship will not stop to pick you up.”
In
spite of the constant reminders of being in a war zone, Sherrod and his
journalist colleagues were treated well, having some of the best quarters on
the Monterey—all at a cost of $1.25
per day for food and board. He shared a four-room suite that had beds for eight
with Jack Turcott of the New York Daily
News and photographers Frank Prist of Acme and Ed Widdis of the Associated
Press. “Mostly, the trip has been one meal after another, plus about twelve
hours’ sleep every night, including a couple of hours before lunch and before
dinner,” Sherrod wrote his wife, Betty.
Civilian
waiters served peacetime menus in the wardroom—omelettes for breakfast and
four-course dinners with steaks or lamb chops, a luxury Sherrod never found on
another transport during the war. The fancy fare shocked the austere General
Clark, who soon restricted items such as passion-fruit juice and squab. “Let’s
have honest victuals in honest amounts,” Clark said.
With
fresh water rationed for drinking purposes, the correspondents had to shave and
bathe in gritty salt water. Outside of sleeping and eating, the only duty
required of the journalists was a daily afternoon boat drill, or “abandon-
ship” drill. “We’ve grown so accustomed that we go through that mechanically,”
Sherrod noted. After the first few days he even stopped thinking about enemy
submarines. “You awake with a start from your daydreaming sometimes and find
yourself hoping that the lookouts and the convoy ships aren’t as unmindful of
submarines as you have grown to be,” he said.
Sherrod
estimated that no more than 2 percent of the men aboard the Monterey and its sister transports of
the convoy, the SS Matsonia and SS Mormacsea, had ever been at sea before
and there were a few dozen cases of seasickness before the men gained their sea
legs. “There sure is a lot of water out here,” was a trite phrase he heard
frequently on the ship. The endless vista of water and more water caused one
soldier to vow that on his next sea voyage he planned on filling a bottle with
dirt to bring with him so he could have some land to look at.
Most
of the servicemen were from New England, while among officers were a slightly
disproportionately large number of southerners, who later bristled at the
Australian soldiers’ habit of referring to their American counterparts as
“Yanks.” Also included at the last minute, to the “great surprise” of the
convoy commander and staff, said Sherrod, was a complement of several hundred
“husky” African American stevedore and service troops that included a few from
the South, but a majority from Chicago, Saint Louis, and other Midwestern
cities. They were commanded, as was usually the case in the war, by white
officers. It was surprising to Sherrod that black troops were on a convoy whose
destination might be Australia, as that country had long ago instituted a
“White Australia” immigration policy; its War Cabinet had also tried, but
failed, to keep African American soldiers from entering its shores.
In
a later dispatch to his editors at Time,
Sherrod reported that whites on the convoy were cautioned to never refer to the
black soldiers by any derogatory racial epithet, but as “colored troops.”
Although some feared trouble might occur as blacks and whites mingled on the
tight confines of the transports, no clashes occurred during the voyage (it
would be different once they reached their destination). All of the troops were
“phenomenally healthy,” said Sherrod, in part due to daily calisthenics
conducted for forty-five minutes on the ship’s upper deck. “So assiduously did
General Clark exercise his troops ‘to keep their alimentary canals’ clear that
there were only 13 constipation cases midvoyage,” Sherrod noted. The soldiers
burst out laughing at themselves the first time they attempted to touch their
toes wearing, as mandated, the bulky life preservers that “they called their
wives,” he added.
The
correspondents’ presence engendered plenty of comments from the troops. Lardner
recalled that one private demanded to know what the large, white “C” on his
green armband stood for—Canadian or Cop (it was correspondent). “He had never
seen anything like it,” Lardner said. “Neither had anyone else.” The
journalists ranged in age from twenty-seven to fifty, with most of them married
with children, Sherrod reported. He enjoyed most of their company, writing that
the only “heel” in the crowd was the Englishman, W. B. Courtenay of the London Daily Sketch, who proved to be obnoxious to his American
counterparts from the voyage’s start, locking himself in the bathroom fifteen
minutes before breakfast so nobody else in his quarters could shave.
Of
all the luxuries of civilization, the reporters missed most of all the
information they had been used to reading in daily newspapers. Sherrod called
the ship’s newspaper “terrible,” as the dispatches printed in it were only a
few paragraphs in length and “tell virtually nothing. Sometimes the biggest
news of the day is evidently omitted.” For example, the news about the shelling
of the California coast by an enemy submarine consisted of a two-day old
paragraph quoting U.S. Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles saying it was a
typical Japanese trick. “We never did find out what damage was done, or whether
anybody was killed, or whether the submarine got away,” said Sherrod. To help
matters, the correspondents contributed their own articles, including one about
Australia by Kirkland, who had visited there for four months on assignment from
Life, as well as sports articles from
Lardner, a former sportswriter who knew boxing champion Joe Louis and loved to
ruminate about baseball. In Sherrod’s estimate, Bill Courtney of Collier’s wrote the best article, one
about the other troops he had traveled with—the Germans, Italians, Russians,
and Japanese. The reporters also spent many evenings giving lectures before two
hundred to three hundred soldiers, with Lardner and Kirkland the most in
demand.
To
help relieve the monotony, soldiers played cards, including poker and bridge;
shot craps, especially after payday; and placed bets with Lardner on their
eventual port of call. Brisbane, where they eventually landed, had 11 to 5
odds, while one captain in the quartermaster corps risked a dollar on
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (100–1 odds), telling Lardner he had never “passed up
a hundred-to-one shot in my life.” Lardner, joined by Carleton Kent of the Chicago Times and Martin Barnett of
Paramount Newsreel, formed a singing trio known as the High Seas Hillbillies,
and the group’s renditions of “Moonlight Bay” and “Mandy Lee,” Lardner
recalled, could “empty a cabin faster than the call to ‘Battle Stations.’”
The
favorite shipboard pastime, however, according to Sherrod, involved
rumor-mongering. “One officer delighted in starting rumors then betting on how
long it would take to boomerang back,” he said. Some of the rumors included
that the convoy had sunk a submarine during the night and was being pursued by
five others, the Monterey had been
loaded improperly and was likely to overturn, and, the most distressing of all,
that Tokyo had announced sinking the convoy and the U.S. Navy had confirmed the
news.
Most
of the soldiers wrote an endless stream of letters, so many, in fact, Sherrod
said, that extra censors had to be recruited among the officers. “One censor
remarked at how many soldiers wrote midvoyage, ‘Dear Millie we have arrived
Australia and like it fine,’” he recalled. Troops also relished reviewing a
list of Australian colloquialisms furnished by Matson Lines’ officials:
“bastard” was a term of endearment, “diggers” were Australian soldiers, “screw”
meant weekly wages, and “knocked up” meant tired out. Upon hearing that
Australian earthworms grew to twelve feet in length, one soldier mused, “I
wonder what kind of fish they catch with those.”
The
weather varied greatly on the trip, beginning in “equatorial heat,” noted
Sherrod, but gradually turning cool with stiff breezes. Only a day away from
its destination, Brisbane, now an “open secret” among the crew and passengers,
the convoy ran into a severe storm. The troops, “weary of the wastes of water,”
said Lardner, “saw more water than they had ever dreamed of.” Sherrod
remembered that the preponderant noises were the straining and creaking from
the Monterey, the pounding of the
seas, and the screaming wind. False reports were passed from man to man that
the heavy seas had torn away the ship’s rudder. Sherrod, however, later learned
that the Monterey’s captain had “to
give the order to heave to or lose all steering control.” Nearly half of the
ship’s lifeboats were shattered, with the wooden shards punching out the glass
in numerous portholes. The flying glass badly cut some civilian aviation
mechanics, but most of the injuries caused by the tempest were merely cuts and
bruises.
There
were few signs of panic among the troops. They had been paid that day and
continued their gambling in spite of the rolling seas causing poker chips to
fly into neighboring compartments and dice to roll for long distances. “You
suppose this thing’s going to turn over?” asked some soldiers. Sherrod
questioned the Monterey’s first
officer if it had been the worst storm he had ever seen, and he had responded,
“No, not quite, but it’s the damndest thing this ship’s been in.”
The
night after the storm featured heavy, but not violent, waves. Drama ensued when
Ensign James Parks, a navy signals officer, burst into the correspondents’
suite to relay the news that the London
Daily Mail had just announced that the convoy was only a couple hundred
miles from the Australian coast. Sherrod noted that most of the journalist’s
comments were too salty to be printed. The calmest response came from Byron Darnton of the New York Times who muttered, “Stabbed in
back by [an] ally.”
The
correspondents’ consternation at the slipup in secrecy was heightened by their
discovery that the Monterey had
become separated from the rest of the convoy. Sherrod said that a “helpless
feeling and grimness” underlay the usual banter among those onboard until the
Brisbane harbor finally came within view. “Australia’s green shores and trees
looked mighty good,” he said. Lardner recalled that those on the Monterey had to endure the jibes from
those who had arrived before them, with soldiers lining the decks on other
ships to yell at them, “Hello there, also-ran! Get the lead out of your pants!”
Sherrod
reported that the Australians ashore shouted and waved handkerchiefs at the new
arrivals, and the Americans let out a “mighty yell” when they spied the first
woman they had seen since leaving the United States. They also tossed American
cigarettes and coins at the Australian stevedores and soldiers, who threw back
their own coins.
Standing
at the rail of the ship looking at the green Australian horizon, Sherrod asked
the man next to him, Captain John Dice, a Tennessee-born graduate of West
Point, what it took to win a war in addition to guns, ammunition, and planes.
The captain replied: “Just guts—guts to sit under guns when you know your next
breath may be your last.” When Sherrod wondered if the young men he had grown
to know on the voyage had what it took for such an effort, Dice responded:
“Hell Bob, these are American soldiers."
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