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SS President Coolidge

15°31′27.12″S 167°14′6.78″E / 15.5242000°S 167.2352167°E / -15.5242000; 167.2352167

SS President Coolidge
History
United States
NamePresident Coolidge
NamesakeCalvin Coolidge
Owner
Operator
Port of registrySan Francisco[1]
RouteSan Francisco – KobeShanghaiManila[5]
Ordered26 October 1929[4]
BuilderNewport News Shipbuilding[1]
CostUS$8,017,690[citation needed]
Yard number340[3]
Laid down22 April 1930
Launched21 February 1931
Sponsored byMrs. Calvin C. Coolidge
Completed1 October 1931 (delivered)
HomeportSan Francisco
Identification
FateSunk by mines, 26 October 1942[3]
General characteristics
TypeOcean liner, then troopship
Tonnage
Length
Beam81.0 ft (24.7 m)[1]
Depth52.0 ft (15.8 m)[1]
Decks9
Installed power12 Babcock & Wilcox water tube boilers
Propulsionturbo-electric transmission
Speed
Range14,400 mi (23,200 km)[6]
Capacity
  • 1,260 all classes (initial service)
  • 350 first class
  • 150 special/intermediate class
  • 988 passengers (modified)[8]
  • First class: 305
  • Tourist class: 133
  • Third class: 402
Troops
  • 3,586[6]
  • 5,000 (number aboard at sinking)[6]
Crew300 (initial service, passenger ship)
Notessister ship: SS President Hoover

SS President Coolidge was an American luxury ocean liner that was completed in 1931. She was operated by Dollar Steamship Lines until 1938, and then by American President Lines until 1941. She served as a troopship from December 1941 until October 1942, when she was sunk by mines in Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides at the Espiritu Santo Naval Base, part of current-day Vanuatu. President Coolidge had a sister ship, SS President Hoover, completed in 1930 and lost when she ran aground in a typhoon in 1937.

History Edit

Building Edit

Dollar Lines ordered both ships on 26 October 1929.[4] The Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company of Newport News, Virginia built the two ships, completing President Hoover in 1930. The keel for President Coolidge was laid 22 April 1930 and the ship was delivered 1 October 1931.[9] They were the largest merchant ships built in the United States up to that time.[4][10] Each ship had turbo-electric transmission, with a pair of steam turbo generators generating current that powered propulsion motors on the propeller shafts. Westinghouse built the turbo generators and propulsion motors for President Coolidge but General Electric built the turbo generators and propulsion motors for President Hoover.[1]

In the President Coolidge twelve Babcock & Wilcox superheater type water tube boilers provided steam for main and auxiliary power. Main power was generated by two Westinghouse 10,200 kilowatt turbine generator sets that normally each drove two 400 volt Westinghouse 13,200 horsepower synchronous motors directly connected to the two screws. If necessary the linkages were present so both motors and screws could be driven by either one of the two generator sets.[11]

Only the boiler feed and main lubricating pumps, driven directly from the steam turbines, were not electrical. Those included everything from cargo winches and other ship's auxiliary machinery to 365 Westinghouse stateroom fans. The 180 ship's auxiliary motors ranged from a tenth horsepower to the 13,250 horsepower main motors. The ship had 67,000 cubic feet (1,897.2 m3) refrigerated cargo space. President Coolidge was initially designed for 350 first class, 150 "special" or intermediate class passengers with space for 1,260 passengers of all classes and a crew of 300.[11]

The ship was launched on 21 February 1931 after Mrs. Calvin C. Coolidge broke a bottle of water that came from a brook on the Coolidge farm in Vermont on the bow.[11]

Pre-war service Edit

President Hoover and President Coolidge ran between San Francisco and Manila via Kobe and Shanghai, and some round the World voyages that continued from Manila via Singapore, the Suez Canal, the Mediterranean Sea, New York City, the Panama Canal and thence back to San Francisco.

President Hoover and President Coolidge were aimed at holiday makers seeking sun in the Pacific and Far East. Passenger luxuries included spacious staterooms and lounges, private telephones, two saltwater swimming pools, a barbers' shop, beauty salon, gymnasium and soda fountain.[citation needed] President Coolidge broke several speed records on her crossings between Japan and San Francisco.[citation needed]

In December 1937 President Hoover ran aground on the Taiwanese coast and was declared a total loss. Dollar Steamship Lines was increasingly in debt, and in June 1938 President Coolidge was arrested for an unpaid debt of $35,000.[5] She was released in bond for a final trans-Pacific voyage, and then Dollar Lines was suspended from operation.[5] In August 1938 the United States Maritime Commission reorganised the company as American President Lines, which then ran the former Dollar Lines fleet until the Second World War.

In March 1939 President Coolidge was the last ship to sight the custom-built Chinese junk Sea Dragon, built and sailed by American explorer Richard Halliburton, before she disappeared in a typhoon some 1,200 miles (1,900 km) west of the Midway Islands.[12]

World War II Edit

As relations between Japan and Britain deteriorated in 1940, President Coolidge helped to evacuate US citizens from Hong Kong. As Japanese aggression expanded, President Coolidge took part in evacuations from other parts of east Asia.

In 1941 the threat of war increased and the US War Department began to use President Coolidge for occasional voyages to Honolulu and Manila. In June 1941 President Coolidge became a troopship, reinforcing garrisons in the Pacific. On December 7, 1941 Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and on December 19 President Coolidge evacuated 125 critically injured naval patients from Hawaii, cared for by three hastily assigned Navy nurses and two Navy doctors from the Philippines that were already among passengers being evacuated from the war zone that had now reached Hawaii.[13] The ship reached San Francisco on 25 December.

On 12 January 1942 the first large convoy, including the large former ocean liners President Coolidge and SS Mariposa, to Australia after Pearl Harbor departed the United States carrying troops, supplies, ammunition and weapons, including P-40 fighters intended for the Philippines and Java with fifty of the planes carried by President Coolidge and Mariposa.[14][15] Arriving Melbourne on 1 February in President Coolidge, along with supplies and munitions not intended for transshipment beyond Australia, were the officers, known as the "Remember Pearl Harbor" (RPH) Group, selected to form the staff of the US Army Forces in Australia (USAFIA) as the command structure for what was to be the Southwest Pacific Area was evolving.[14]

President Coolidge performed these military duties in her pre-war civilian condition. Only in early 1942 was she hastily converted into a troopship. Many of her civilian fittings were either removed for safe keeping or boarded over for their protection. Her accommodation was reorganized to provide capacity for 5,000 troops.[6][16] Guns were mounted on her, she was painted haze gray and the War Shipping Administration assigned her to the US Navy.[17]

After her conversion, President Coolidge resumed service in the South West Pacific theatre. In the spring of 1942, escorted by the cruiser USS St. Louis,[18] she took Manuel Quezon, President of the Philippines from Melbourne[19] to San Francisco.

In her first few months of service President Coolidge's ports of call included Melbourne, Wellington, Auckland, Bora Bora, and Suva. On October 6, she left homeport of San Francisco for New Caledonia and the New Hebrides. Embarked were the 172nd Infantry Regiment, 43rd Division,[20] and a harbor defense unit intended to protect the airfield at Espiritu Santo that was providing bomber support for forces at Guadalcanal.[21]

Loss Edit

 
SS President Coolidge being abandoned after beaching

A large military base and harbor had been established on Espiritu Santo and the harbor was heavily protected by mines. Information about safe entry into the harbor had been accidentally omitted from President Coolidge's sailing orders, and on her approach to Santo on 26 October 1942, President Coolidge, fearing Japanese submarines and unaware of the mine fields, tried to enter the harbor through the largest and most obvious channel. A mine struck the ship in the engine room, and moments later a second mine hit her near her stern.

Captain Henry Nelson, knowing that he was going to lose the ship, ran her aground and ordered troops to abandon ship. Not believing the ship would sink, troops were told to leave all of their belongings behind, under the impression that they would conduct salvage operations over the next few days.

 
Navajo (AT-64) during rescue operations

Over the next 90 minutes, 5,340 men from the ship got safely ashore. There was no panic as they disembarked; many even walked ashore. However, the captain's attempts to beach the ship were thwarted by a coral reef. President Coolidge listed heavily on her side, sank stern first, and slid down the slope into the channel.

There were only two casualties in the sinking.[22] The first was Fireman Robert Reid, who was working in the engine room and was killed by the first mine blast. The second, Captain Elwood Joseph Euart, 103rd Field Artillery Regiment, had safely left President Coolidge when he heard that there were still men in the infirmary who could not get out. He returned through one of the sea doors, successfully rescued the men, but was then unable to escape himself and went down with the ship. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his heroic actions.[23] A memorial to Euart is on the shore near the access points[citation needed] for the Coolidge. In 2013, Euart's body was reportedly located by a local dive guide, and a message was sent to the Australian High Commission, who then passed this on to US authorities in Hawaii. An American recovery team arrived in February 2014, and working with local operators, they found Euart's remains after 73 years, still with his dog tags and personal items, inside deep silt in the bottom of the wreck. Subsequent DNA testing of the remains matched with Euart's relatives, and his family was advised that the US military would perform a full military funeral service and that he would be buried with his parents.[24]

The loss of critical equipment being carried in President Coolidge, forcing redistribution of scarce local stores, combined with loss of the ship when shipping was critically short, delaying deployment of the 25th Division from Hawaii to the theater, complicated logistics during the crisis at Guadalcanal.[21] President Coolidge also held 591 pounds/268 kilos of quinine, at that time the entire stock of quinine held by the US.[25]

Official inquiries Edit

There were three official inquiries surrounding the cause of the sinking. The first preliminary Court of Inquiry convened 12 November 1942 aboard the destroyer tender USS Whitney on the orders of Admiral Halsey. The Court of Inquiry recommended additional[citation needed] charges be laid against Captain Nelson. The matter was referred to a military commission which convened in Nouméa, New Caledonia on 8 December 1942. This commission acquitted Captain Nelson of guilt.

From the Commission of Inquiry it emerged that Merchant Marine vessels were not given all available tactical information, most notably regarding the placement of mines. This would have prevented the sinking. This outcome displeased the Navy Department, so Nelson was referred to a US Coast Guard Investigation Board on his return to the United States on 6 February 1943. However, this Investigation Board took no further action.

Salvage Edit

After the war, items such as the propeller blades, bunker oil, brass casings of shells, electric motors, junction boxes and copper tubing were salvaged from the ship. Earthquakes have since collapsed some sections of the wreck, which now rests on her port side with her bow at a depth of 21 metres (69 ft) and her stern at 73 metres (240 ft).[3][26]

Protected wreck and dive site Edit

In 1980 Vanuatu won independence from France and Britain, and on 18 November 1983, the government of the new republic declared that no salvage or recovery of any artifact would be allowed from President Coolidge.

Since then the ship has been used for recreational diving. Divers see a largely intact luxury cruise liner and a military ship. They can swim through numerous holds and decks. There are guns, cannons, Jeeps, helmets, trucks and personal supplies, a beautiful statue of "The Lady" (a porcelain relief of a lady riding a unicorn) chandeliers, and a mosaic tile fountain. Coral grows around, with many creatures such as reef fish, barracuda, lionfish, sea turtles and moray eels.

President Coolidge is a somewhat accessible shipwreck due to the relatively shallow site, easy beach access, and visibility. The depths involved mean that, with care and decompression stops, recreational divers can explore large parts of the wreck without specialized equipment. The massive size of the wreck, combined with the gradual downward slope, mean that care must be taken monitoring depth, as the diver's horizontal frame of reference may be skewed, preventing awareness of the continual gradual descent.

Footnotes Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lloyd's Register, Steamships and Motor Ships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1933. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  2. ^ Lloyd's Register, Steamships and Motor Ships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1934. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d Pablobini; Vleggert, Nico (10 January 2012). "SS President Coolidge (+1942)". WreckSite. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  4. ^ a b c "Part One: Robert Dollar and the SS President Hoover". SS President Hoover. The Takao Club. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  5. ^ a b c "Part Two: The Wreck of the SS President Hoover". SS President Hoover. The Takao Club. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  6. ^ a b c d Charles, Roland W. (1947). Troopships of World War II (PDF). Washington: The Army Transportation Association. p. 136. LCCN 47004779. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  7. ^ a b Talbot-Booth 1942, p. 376.
  8. ^ "Traveling in style". Vessel History. American President Lines. Archived from the original on 17 January 2013. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  9. ^ "Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Company". Pacific Marine Review. Vol. 28, no. 11. November 1931. p. 471. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  10. ^ . Hoover Heads. Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum. Archived from the original on 26 March 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  11. ^ a b c "Launching of the President Coolidge". Pacific Marine Review. Vol. 28, no. 3. March 1931. pp. 100–101. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  12. ^ Doremus, John (10 September 2007). Evening with Ian Holland. The Passing Parade. 2CH.
  13. ^ Erickson, Ruth. "Oral History of The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 1941". Naval History & Heritage Command. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  14. ^ a b Mayo, Lida (1991). The Ordnance Department: On Beachhead And Battlefront. United States Army In World War II — The Technical Services. Washington, DC: Center Of Military History, United States Army. p. 40. LCCN 67-60000.
  15. ^ Matloif, Maurice; Snell, Edwin M. (1991). Strategic Planning For Coalition Warfare 1941–1942. United States Army In World War II — The War Department. Washington, DC: Center Of Military History, United States Army. p. 132. LCCN 53-61477.
  16. ^ Larson, Harold (1945). The Army's Cargo Fleet In World War II. Washington, D. C.: Office of the Chief of Transportation, Army Service Forces, U. S. Army. p. 136.
  17. ^ Grover, David (1987). US Army Ships and Watercraft of World War II. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. p. 6. ISBN 0-87021-766-6.)
  18. ^ "St. Louis". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  19. ^ "Victoria". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  20. ^ . 43d Infantry Division Veterans Association. Archived from the original on 8 December 2013. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  21. ^ a b Leighton, Richard M; Coakley, Robert W (1995). The War Department — Global Logistics And Strategy 1940–1943. United States Army In World War II. Washington, DC: Center Of Military History, United States Army. p. 394. LCCN 55-60001.
  22. ^ "History – 1920–31 Vessel Statistics". APL History. American President Lines. Archived from the original on 2012-12-17.
  23. ^ "Elwood J. Euart". American Battle Monuments Commission. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  24. ^ DPAA news release 16-065 August 24, 2016
  25. ^ p. 191 Cline, Dennis Skeeter Beaters: Memories of the South Pacific, 1941-1945 DeForest Press, 2002
  26. ^ Harris, Richard (2006). "Tales from the South Pacific – diving medicine in Vanuatu". South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society Journal. 36 (1). Archived from the original on October 10, 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2013.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

Sources and further reading Edit

  • Doubilet, David (April 1988). "Wreck of the Coolidge". National Geographic. Vol. 173, no. 4. pp. 458–467. ISSN 0027-9358. OCLC 643483454.
  • Stone, Peter (2004) [1997]. The Lady and the President: The Life and Loss of the SS President Coolidge (2nd ed.). Yarram: Oceans Enterprises. ISBN 0958665729.
  • Talbot-Booth, E.C. (1942) [1936]. Ships and the Sea (Seventh ed.). London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co. Ltd.

External links Edit

  • Naval History and Heritage Command photos: SS President Coolidge listing before sinking, SS President Coolidge before sinking, Sailors evacuating the sinking SS President Coolidge
  • SS President Coolidge Report, Armed Guard Unit Commander
  • "Dive the SS President Coolidge in Vanuatu". Aquamarine Ltd. 2004–2010.
  • "SS President Coolidge – Main Index". Michael McFadyen's Scuba Diving website.

Audio-visual media Edit

  • Grave of the President (51-minute television documentary). Independent Productions. 1984. Retrieved 6 May 2013. In 1942, ocean liner President Coolidge accidentally struck two allied mines and sank. One of the world's biggest shipwrecks is now a popular dive destination.
  • Diving on the SS President Coolidge July 09 (8-minute video). Espiritu Santo: YouTube. 2009. Archived from the original on 2021-12-17. KBs diving off Espiritu Santo. Gear-up, dive areas. General external and internal video and stills in poor light. Drop tanks, trucks, medical supplies, the Lady etc. Moray (Nessie) appearance. Various video and stills in the Deco stop area.

president, coolidge, 5242000, 2352167, 5242000, 2352167, historyunited, statesnamepresident, coolidgenamesakecalvin, coolidgeownerdollar, steamship, lines, 1931, 1937, american, president, lines, 1937, 1942, operatordollar, steamship, lines, 1931, 1937, americ. 15 31 27 12 S 167 14 6 78 E 15 5242000 S 167 2352167 E 15 5242000 167 2352167 SS President CoolidgeHistoryUnited StatesNamePresident CoolidgeNamesakeCalvin CoolidgeOwnerDollar Steamship Lines 1931 1937 American President Lines 1937 1942 OperatorDollar Steamship Lines 1931 1937 American President Lines 1937 1942 Port of registrySan Francisco 1 RouteSan Francisco Kobe Shanghai Manila 5 Ordered26 October 1929 4 BuilderNewport News Shipbuilding 1 CostUS 8 017 690 citation needed Yard number340 3 Laid down22 April 1930Launched21 February 1931Sponsored byMrs Calvin C CoolidgeCompleted1 October 1931 delivered HomeportSan FranciscoIdentificationofficial number 231219 1 signal code MJPF until 1933 1 Call sign KDMX from 1934 2 FateSunk by mines 26 October 1942 3 General characteristicsTypeOcean liner then troopshipTonnage21 936 GRT 1 13 029 NRT 1 Length615 0 ft 187 5 m 1 p p 653 ft 199 m o a 7 Beam81 0 ft 24 7 m 1 Depth52 0 ft 15 8 m 1 Decks9Installed power12 Babcock amp Wilcox water tube boilersPropulsionturbo electric transmissionSpeed20 5 knots 38 km h 3 or 21 knots 39 km h 7 Range14 400 mi 23 200 km 6 Capacity1 260 all classes initial service 350 first class 150 special intermediate class 988 passengers modified 8 First class 305 Tourist class 133 Third class 402Troops3 586 6 5 000 number aboard at sinking 6 Crew300 initial service passenger ship Notessister ship SS President HooverSS President Coolidge was an American luxury ocean liner that was completed in 1931 She was operated by Dollar Steamship Lines until 1938 and then by American President Lines until 1941 She served as a troopship from December 1941 until October 1942 when she was sunk by mines in Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides at the Espiritu Santo Naval Base part of current day Vanuatu President Coolidge had a sister ship SS President Hoover completed in 1930 and lost when she ran aground in a typhoon in 1937 Contents 1 History 1 1 Building 1 2 Pre war service 1 3 World War II 1 4 Loss 1 5 Official inquiries 1 6 Salvage 1 7 Protected wreck and dive site 2 Footnotes 3 References 4 Sources and further reading 5 External links 5 1 Audio visual mediaHistory EditBuilding Edit Dollar Lines ordered both ships on 26 October 1929 4 The Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company of Newport News Virginia built the two ships completing President Hoover in 1930 The keel for President Coolidge was laid 22 April 1930 and the ship was delivered 1 October 1931 9 They were the largest merchant ships built in the United States up to that time 4 10 Each ship had turbo electric transmission with a pair of steam turbo generators generating current that powered propulsion motors on the propeller shafts Westinghouse built the turbo generators and propulsion motors for President Coolidge but General Electric built the turbo generators and propulsion motors for President Hoover 1 In the President Coolidge twelve Babcock amp Wilcox superheater type water tube boilers provided steam for main and auxiliary power Main power was generated by two Westinghouse 10 200 kilowatt turbine generator sets that normally each drove two 400 volt Westinghouse 13 200 horsepower synchronous motors directly connected to the two screws If necessary the linkages were present so both motors and screws could be driven by either one of the two generator sets 11 Only the boiler feed and main lubricating pumps driven directly from the steam turbines were not electrical Those included everything from cargo winches and other ship s auxiliary machinery to 365 Westinghouse stateroom fans The 180 ship s auxiliary motors ranged from a tenth horsepower to the 13 250 horsepower main motors The ship had 67 000 cubic feet 1 897 2 m3 refrigerated cargo space President Coolidge was initially designed for 350 first class 150 special or intermediate class passengers with space for 1 260 passengers of all classes and a crew of 300 11 The ship was launched on 21 February 1931 after Mrs Calvin C Coolidge broke a bottle of water that came from a brook on the Coolidge farm in Vermont on the bow 11 Pre war service Edit President Hoover and President Coolidge ran between San Francisco and Manila via Kobe and Shanghai and some round the World voyages that continued from Manila via Singapore the Suez Canal the Mediterranean Sea New York City the Panama Canal and thence back to San Francisco President Hoover and President Coolidge were aimed at holiday makers seeking sun in the Pacific and Far East Passenger luxuries included spacious staterooms and lounges private telephones two saltwater swimming pools a barbers shop beauty salon gymnasium and soda fountain citation needed President Coolidge broke several speed records on her crossings between Japan and San Francisco citation needed In December 1937 President Hoover ran aground on the Taiwanese coast and was declared a total loss Dollar Steamship Lines was increasingly in debt and in June 1938 President Coolidge was arrested for an unpaid debt of 35 000 5 She was released in bond for a final trans Pacific voyage and then Dollar Lines was suspended from operation 5 In August 1938 the United States Maritime Commission reorganised the company as American President Lines which then ran the former Dollar Lines fleet until the Second World War In March 1939 President Coolidge was the last ship to sight the custom built Chinese junk Sea Dragon built and sailed by American explorer Richard Halliburton before she disappeared in a typhoon some 1 200 miles 1 900 km west of the Midway Islands 12 World War II Edit As relations between Japan and Britain deteriorated in 1940 President Coolidge helped to evacuate US citizens from Hong Kong As Japanese aggression expanded President Coolidge took part in evacuations from other parts of east Asia In 1941 the threat of war increased and the US War Department began to use President Coolidge for occasional voyages to Honolulu and Manila In June 1941 President Coolidge became a troopship reinforcing garrisons in the Pacific On December 7 1941 Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and on December 19 President Coolidge evacuated 125 critically injured naval patients from Hawaii cared for by three hastily assigned Navy nurses and two Navy doctors from the Philippines that were already among passengers being evacuated from the war zone that had now reached Hawaii 13 The ship reached San Francisco on 25 December On 12 January 1942 the first large convoy including the large former ocean liners President Coolidge and SS Mariposa to Australia after Pearl Harbor departed the United States carrying troops supplies ammunition and weapons including P 40 fighters intended for the Philippines and Java with fifty of the planes carried by President Coolidge and Mariposa 14 15 Arriving Melbourne on 1 February in President Coolidge along with supplies and munitions not intended for transshipment beyond Australia were the officers known as the Remember Pearl Harbor RPH Group selected to form the staff of the US Army Forces in Australia USAFIA as the command structure for what was to be the Southwest Pacific Area was evolving 14 President Coolidge performed these military duties in her pre war civilian condition Only in early 1942 was she hastily converted into a troopship Many of her civilian fittings were either removed for safe keeping or boarded over for their protection Her accommodation was reorganized to provide capacity for 5 000 troops 6 16 Guns were mounted on her she was painted haze gray and the War Shipping Administration assigned her to the US Navy 17 After her conversion President Coolidge resumed service in the South West Pacific theatre In the spring of 1942 escorted by the cruiser USS St Louis 18 she took Manuel Quezon President of the Philippines from Melbourne 19 to San Francisco In her first few months of service President Coolidge s ports of call included Melbourne Wellington Auckland Bora Bora and Suva On October 6 she left homeport of San Francisco for New Caledonia and the New Hebrides Embarked were the 172nd Infantry Regiment 43rd Division 20 and a harbor defense unit intended to protect the airfield at Espiritu Santo that was providing bomber support for forces at Guadalcanal 21 Loss Edit nbsp SS President Coolidge being abandoned after beachingA large military base and harbor had been established on Espiritu Santo and the harbor was heavily protected by mines Information about safe entry into the harbor had been accidentally omitted from President Coolidge s sailing orders and on her approach to Santo on 26 October 1942 President Coolidge fearing Japanese submarines and unaware of the mine fields tried to enter the harbor through the largest and most obvious channel A mine struck the ship in the engine room and moments later a second mine hit her near her stern Captain Henry Nelson knowing that he was going to lose the ship ran her aground and ordered troops to abandon ship Not believing the ship would sink troops were told to leave all of their belongings behind under the impression that they would conduct salvage operations over the next few days nbsp Navajo AT 64 during rescue operationsOver the next 90 minutes 5 340 men from the ship got safely ashore There was no panic as they disembarked many even walked ashore However the captain s attempts to beach the ship were thwarted by a coral reef President Coolidge listed heavily on her side sank stern first and slid down the slope into the channel There were only two casualties in the sinking 22 The first was Fireman Robert Reid who was working in the engine room and was killed by the first mine blast The second Captain Elwood Joseph Euart 103rd Field Artillery Regiment had safely left President Coolidge when he heard that there were still men in the infirmary who could not get out He returned through one of the sea doors successfully rescued the men but was then unable to escape himself and went down with the ship He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his heroic actions 23 A memorial to Euart is on the shore near the access points citation needed for the Coolidge In 2013 Euart s body was reportedly located by a local dive guide and a message was sent to the Australian High Commission who then passed this on to US authorities in Hawaii An American recovery team arrived in February 2014 and working with local operators they found Euart s remains after 73 years still with his dog tags and personal items inside deep silt in the bottom of the wreck Subsequent DNA testing of the remains matched with Euart s relatives and his family was advised that the US military would perform a full military funeral service and that he would be buried with his parents 24 The loss of critical equipment being carried in President Coolidge forcing redistribution of scarce local stores combined with loss of the ship when shipping was critically short delaying deployment of the 25th Division from Hawaii to the theater complicated logistics during the crisis at Guadalcanal 21 President Coolidge also held 591 pounds 268 kilos of quinine at that time the entire stock of quinine held by the US 25 Official inquiries Edit There were three official inquiries surrounding the cause of the sinking The first preliminary Court of Inquiry convened 12 November 1942 aboard the destroyer tender USS Whitney on the orders of Admiral Halsey The Court of Inquiry recommended additional citation needed charges be laid against Captain Nelson The matter was referred to a military commission which convened in Noumea New Caledonia on 8 December 1942 This commission acquitted Captain Nelson of guilt From the Commission of Inquiry it emerged that Merchant Marine vessels were not given all available tactical information most notably regarding the placement of mines This would have prevented the sinking This outcome displeased the Navy Department so Nelson was referred to a US Coast Guard Investigation Board on his return to the United States on 6 February 1943 However this Investigation Board took no further action Salvage Edit After the war items such as the propeller blades bunker oil brass casings of shells electric motors junction boxes and copper tubing were salvaged from the ship Earthquakes have since collapsed some sections of the wreck which now rests on her port side with her bow at a depth of 21 metres 69 ft and her stern at 73 metres 240 ft 3 26 Protected wreck and dive site Edit In 1980 Vanuatu won independence from France and Britain and on 18 November 1983 the government of the new republic declared that no salvage or recovery of any artifact would be allowed from President Coolidge Since then the ship has been used for recreational diving Divers see a largely intact luxury cruise liner and a military ship They can swim through numerous holds and decks There are guns cannons Jeeps helmets trucks and personal supplies a beautiful statue of The Lady a porcelain relief of a lady riding a unicorn chandeliers and a mosaic tile fountain Coral grows around with many creatures such as reef fish barracuda lionfish sea turtles and moray eels President Coolidge is a somewhat accessible shipwreck due to the relatively shallow site easy beach access and visibility The depths involved mean that with care and decompression stops recreational divers can explore large parts of the wreck without specialized equipment The massive size of the wreck combined with the gradual downward slope mean that care must be taken monitoring depth as the diver s horizontal frame of reference may be skewed preventing awareness of the continual gradual descent Footnotes EditReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j Lloyd s Register Steamships and Motor Ships PDF London Lloyd s Register 1933 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Lloyd s Register Steamships and Motor Ships PDF London Lloyd s Register 1934 Retrieved 20 May 2013 a b c d Pablobini Vleggert Nico 10 January 2012 SS President Coolidge 1942 WreckSite Retrieved 6 May 2013 a b c Part One Robert Dollar and the SS President Hoover SS President Hoover The Takao Club Retrieved 7 May 2013 a b c Part Two The Wreck of the SS President Hoover SS President Hoover The Takao Club Retrieved 7 May 2013 a b c d Charles Roland W 1947 Troopships of World War II PDF Washington The Army Transportation Association p 136 LCCN 47004779 Retrieved 10 November 2021 a b Talbot Booth 1942 p 376 Traveling in style Vessel History American President Lines Archived from the original on 17 January 2013 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Newport News Shipbuilding amp Drydock Company Pacific Marine Review Vol 28 no 11 November 1931 p 471 Retrieved 15 October 2018 Hoover Namesakes Hoover Heads Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum Archived from the original on 26 March 2013 Retrieved 7 May 2013 a b c Launching of the President Coolidge Pacific Marine Review Vol 28 no 3 March 1931 pp 100 101 Retrieved 15 October 2018 Doremus John 10 September 2007 Evening with Ian Holland The Passing Parade 2CH Erickson Ruth Oral History of The Pearl Harbor Attack 7 December 1941 Naval History amp Heritage Command Retrieved 5 May 2013 a b Mayo Lida 1991 The Ordnance Department On Beachhead And Battlefront United States Army In World War II The Technical Services Washington DC Center Of Military History United States Army p 40 LCCN 67 60000 Matloif Maurice Snell Edwin M 1991 Strategic Planning For Coalition Warfare 1941 1942 United States Army In World War II The War Department Washington DC Center Of Military History United States Army p 132 LCCN 53 61477 Larson Harold 1945 The Army s Cargo Fleet In World War II Washington D C Office of the Chief of Transportation Army Service Forces U S Army p 136 Grover David 1987 US Army Ships and Watercraft of World War II Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press p 6 ISBN 0 87021 766 6 St Louis Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 5 May 2013 Victoria Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 5 May 2013 43d Infantry Division A Brief History 43d Infantry Division Veterans Association Archived from the original on 8 December 2013 Retrieved 5 May 2013 a b Leighton Richard M Coakley Robert W 1995 The War Department Global Logistics And Strategy 1940 1943 United States Army In World War II Washington DC Center Of Military History United States Army p 394 LCCN 55 60001 History 1920 31 Vessel Statistics APL History American President Lines Archived from the original on 2012 12 17 Elwood J Euart American Battle Monuments Commission Retrieved 1 November 2017 DPAA news release 16 065 August 24 2016 p 191 Cline Dennis Skeeter Beaters Memories of the South Pacific 1941 1945 DeForest Press 2002 Harris Richard 2006 Tales from the South Pacific diving medicine in Vanuatu South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society Journal 36 1 Archived from the original on October 10 2017 Retrieved 10 March 2013 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Sources and further reading EditDoubilet David April 1988 Wreck of the Coolidge National Geographic Vol 173 no 4 pp 458 467 ISSN 0027 9358 OCLC 643483454 Stone Peter 2004 1997 The Lady and the President The Life and Loss of the SS President Coolidge 2nd ed Yarram Oceans Enterprises ISBN 0958665729 Talbot Booth E C 1942 1936 Ships and the Sea Seventh ed London Sampson Low Marston amp Co Ltd External links EditNaval History and Heritage Command photos SS President Coolidge listing before sinking SS President Coolidge before sinking Sailors evacuating the sinking SS President Coolidge SS President Coolidge Report Armed Guard Unit Commander Dive the SS President Coolidge in Vanuatu Aquamarine Ltd 2004 2010 SS President Coolidge Main Index Michael McFadyen s Scuba Diving website Audio visual media Edit Grave of the President 51 minute television documentary Independent Productions 1984 Retrieved 6 May 2013 In 1942 ocean liner President Coolidge accidentally struck two allied mines and sank One of the world s biggest shipwrecks is now a popular dive destination Diving on the SS President Coolidge July 09 8 minute video Espiritu Santo YouTube 2009 Archived from the original on 2021 12 17 KBs diving off Espiritu Santo Gear up dive areas General external and internal video and stills in poor light Drop tanks trucks medical supplies the Lady etc Moray Nessie appearance Various video and stills in the Deco stop area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SS President Coolidge amp oldid 1178573322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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