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USS Hornet (CV-12)

USS Hornet (CV/CVA/CVS-12) is an Essex-class aircraft carrier built for the United States Navy (USN) during World War II. Completed in late 1943, the ship was assigned to the Fast Carrier Task Force (variously designated as Task Force 38 or 58) in the Pacific Ocean, the navy's primary offensive force during the Pacific War.

The Hornet in the Pacific Ocean in July 1969
History
United States
NameHornet
NamesakeHornet[1]
Ordered20 May 1940
Awarded9 September 1940
BuilderNewport News Shipbuilding
Laid down3 August 1942
Launched30 August 1943
Commissioned29 November 1943
Decommissioned15 January 1947
RenamedFrom Kearsarge, October 1942
IdentificationHull number: CV-12
Recommissioned11 September 1953
Decommissioned26 June 1970
Reclassified
  • CVA-12, 1 October 1952
  • CVS-12, 27 June 1958
Stricken25 July 1989
Honors and
awards
See Awards
StatusMuseum ship at the USS Hornet Museum in Alameda, California
General characteristics (as built)
Class and typeEssex-class aircraft carrier
Displacement
Length
  • 820 feet (249.9 m) (wl)
  • 872 feet (265.8 m) (o/a)
Beam93 ft (28.3 m)
Draft34 ft 2 in (10.41 m)
Installed power
Propulsion
Speed33 knots (61 km/h; 38 mph)
Range14,100 nmi (26,100 km; 16,200 mi) at 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph)
Complement2,600 officers and enlisted men
Armament
Armor
Aircraft carried
  • 36 × Grumman F4F Wildcat
  • 36 × Douglas SBD Dauntless
  • 18 × Grumman TBF Avenger

In early 1944, she participated in attacks on Japanese installations in New Guinea, Palau and Truk among others. Hornet then took part in the Mariana and Palau Islands campaign and most of the subsidiary operations, most notably the Battle of the Philippine Sea in June that was nicknamed the "Great Marianas Turkey Shoot" for the disproportionate losses inflicted upon the Japanese. The ship then participated in the Philippines Campaign in late 1944, and the Volcano and Ryukyu Islands campaign in the first half of 1945. She was badly damaged by a typhoon in June and had to return to the United States for repairs.

After the war she took part in Operation Magic Carpet, returning troops to the U.S. and was then placed in reserve in 1946. Hornet was reactivated during the Korean War of 1950–1953, but spent the rest of the war being modernized to allow her to operate jet-propelled aircraft. The ship was modernized again in the late 1950s for service as an anti-submarine carrier. She played a minor role in the Vietnam War during the 1960s and in the Apollo program, recovering the Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 astronauts when they returned from the Moon.

Hornet was decommissioned in 1970. She was eventually designated as both a National Historic Landmark and a California Historical Landmark, and she opened to the public as the USS Hornet Museum in Alameda, California, in 1998.

Design and description edit

The Essex-class ships were much larger than the preceding Yorktown-class aircraft carriers, which allowed them to carry more aircraft, armor, and armament.[2] The initial ships had a length of 872 feet (265.8 m) overall and 820 feet (249.9 m) at the waterline, although this was revised to an overall length of 888 feet (270.7 m) in the "long-hull" sub-class when the bow was reshaped to accommodate a pair of quadruple 40-millimeter (1.6 in) mounts in the bow compared to the single mount in the earlier "short-hull" ships like Hornet.

All of the ships had a beam of 93 feet (28.3 m) at the waterline and a draft of 30 feet 10 inches (9.4 m) at deep load.[3] They displaced 27,100 long tons (27,535 t) at standard load and 36,380 long tons (36,960 t) at deep load. Their designed complement was approximately 268 officers and 2,362 enlisted men, but more men were added even before the ships were completed; the addition of more light weapons and other equipment greatly increased the overcrowding so that Hornet's sister Intrepid had a crew of 382 officers and 3,003 enlisted men in 1945.[4] The ships had four geared steam turbines, each driving one shaft, using steam supplied by eight Babcock & Wilcox boilers. The turbines were designed to produce a total of 150,000 shaft horsepower (110,000 kW), enough to give a maximum speed of 33 knots (61 km/h; 38 mph). The ships carried enough fuel oil to give them a range of 14,100 nautical miles (26,100 km; 16,200 mi) at 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph).[5]

Flight deck arrangements edit

 
Grumman F6F-3 Hellcat fighter of VF-15 being catapulted from Hornet via the hangar catapult, 25 February 1944

The short-hull Essexes had a flight deck that was 862 feet (262.7 m) long and had a maximum width of 108 feet (32.9 m). Below it was a 654 by 70 feet (199.3 m × 21.3 m) hangar with a height of 18 feet (5.5 m). The hangar was connected to the flight deck by three aircraft elevators, two in the flight deck and a folding one on the port side of the flight deck, abreast the island.[6] Catapult arrangements for the early Essexs varied between ships; Hornet was built with a single hydraulic catapult on the forward part of the flight deck and another was fitted transversely on the hangar deck.[2] All of the Essexs were fitted with arresting gear to allow them to land aircraft over both the stern and the bow.[7]

Early in the design process, the Essexs were intended to carry over 100 aircraft: 27 fighters, 37 scout or dive bombers, 18 torpedo bombers, 3 observation and 2 utility aircraft, plus 21 partially disassembled spares. Early war experience increased the number of fighters to 36 at the expense of the observation and utility aircraft and reduced the number of spares to 9. By mid-1945, the air group typically consisted of 36 or 37 fighters, an equal number of fighter bombers, and dive and torpedo squadrons of 15 aircraft apiece for a total of 103. By this time, the fighter squadrons included specialist photo-reconnaissance and night fighter aircraft.[8]

Armament, armor and electronics edit

 
One of Hornet's quadruple 40 mm Bofors mounts firing under remote control, 16 February 1945

The main armament of the Essex-class ships consisted of a dozen 38-caliber 5-inch (127 mm) dual-purpose guns arranged in two superfiring pairs of twin-gun turrets fore and aft of the island and four guns in single mounts on the port side of the flight deck. These guns were controlled by a pair of Mk 37 directors, mounted on the top of the island; each director was fitted with a Mk 4 fire-control radar. The early short-hull Essexs were equipped with eight quadruple 40-millimeter (1.6 in) Bofors anti-aircraft (AA) guns; one mount each at the bow and stern, four atop the island and two on the port side of the flight deck, next to the 5-inch guns. Each mount was controlled by its own Mk 51 director. The carriers were also fitted with 46 Oerlikon 20-millimeter (0.8 in) light AA guns on single mounts along the sides of the flight deck and on the island.[9]

The waterline armor belt of the carriers was 10 feet (3 m) high, 508 feet (155 m) long and covered the middle 62% of the hull. It was 4 inches (102 mm) thick, tapering to 2.5 inches (64 mm) at its bottom edge. The hangar deck was also 2.5 inches thick and the protective deck below it was 1.5 inches (38 mm) thick. Transverse 4-inch bulkheads closed off the ends of the belt armor to form the ship's armored citadel. The steering gear was protected by 2.5-inches of special treatment steel.[10]

The Essex-class carriers were designed with little space reserved for radar and the additional systems added while under construction contributed to the general overcrowding of the crew and the cramped island of the ships. Hornet was completed with most of her radars mounted on the tripod mast atop her island. It carried the SK early-warning radar, SM height-finding radar and the SG surface search radar. A SC early-warning radar was positioned on a stub lattice mast on the starboard side of the funnel.[11]

Wartime modifications edit

Changes to the numbers of 20 mm guns aboard Hornet during the war are not available in the sources, although she had 35 single mounts by the end of the war.[12] The ship did not return to any naval base in Hawaii or the West Coast until July 1945 when she arrived at San Francisco, California, for repairs for her typhoon damage, so it is unlikely that any major modifications were done before then. Facilities in Ulithi Atoll were limited, but they had been able to install some of the new equipment that was fielded in late 1944 and 1945. Some of the ship's Mk 51 directors may have been replaced by Mk 57 directors with an integral Mk 34 fire-control radar and the Mk 4 fire-control radar atop the Mk 37 directors may have been upgraded to a Mk 12 system that shared its mount with a Mk 22 height finder. The SP height finder was a lighter version of the SM and began to be installed in Essex-class ships in March 1945.[13]

While being repaired, the Navy took the opportunity to refit the ship to the latest standard. Her SK radar was upgraded to a SK-2 model with a dish antenna that improved its performance and her hangar-deck catapult was replaced by one on the flight deck. Her island was remodeled to expand the flag bridge which caused the removal of the forward lower 40 mm mount on the island and 10 new quadruple mounts were added along the sides of the flight deck and the hull for a total of 68 guns in 17 mounts.[14]

Construction and career edit

 
Launching ceremony of Hornet, 30 August 1943

The Chief of Naval Operations had ordered three Essex-class carriers on 10 May 1940 in anticipation of Congress passing the Two-Ocean Navy Act,[15] although the ship that later became Hornet originally had the name Kearsarge with the hull number of CV-12. The contract to build her was awarded to Newport News Shipbuilding on 9 September 1940, and her keel was laid down on 3 August 1942. The seventh Hornet (CV-8) was sunk in the Battle of Santa Cruz on 26 October 1942, and the CV-12 hull was renamed Hornet shortly afterwards.[16] The ship was launched on 30 August 1943 with her sponsor being Annie Reid Knox, wife of Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox. She was commissioned on 29 November 1943 with Captain Miles R. Browning in command.[1]

Hornet worked up off Bermuda before departing Norfolk, Virginia, on 14 February 1944 to join Task Force 58 at Majuro Atoll in the Marshall Islands where she arrived on 20 March.[1] Two days later the Task Force departed to attack warships and airfields in the Palau Islands and the Kossol Roads to eliminate any threat to the scheduled operations in New Guinea and the Admiralty Islands. To block the exits from Kossol and trap all of the ships inside the lagoon, the torpedo bomber squadrons from Hornet and her sisters Lexington and Bunker Hill had trained on aerial minelaying. To avoid detection, the American ships steamed far south of the Japanese naval base at Truk. They were spotted on the 28th and Admiral Mineichi Koga, commander of the Combined Fleet, ordered his warships to withdraw to Tawi-Tawi Island in the Philippines and for the merchant shipping to disperse.[17]

As Task Force 58 approached its targets on the morning of 30 March, its carriers launched a fighter sweep that shot down 30 Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters already airborne and they were soon followed by 39 Grumman TBF Avenger torpedo bombers, each of which carried a pair of magnetic mines that effectively bottled up the 40-odd ships in Kossol Roads.[18] This was the first and only time that carrier aircraft laid mines during the Pacific War.[19] Despite reinforcing fighters that flew in overnight, the Americans sank 24 merchant and auxiliary ships, totaling nearly 130,000 gross register tons (GRT) of shipping, plus two old destroyers, four subchasers and a pair of repair ships on 30 and 31 March. American pilots claimed to have shot down 63 aircraft and destroyed over 100 more on the ground while losing 25 aircraft of their own. On their way back to Majuro, the carriers attacked targets on Woleai on 1 April to little effect.[20]

Before Task Force 58 departed Majuro on 13 April, Rear Admiral Joseph J. Clark had hoisted his flag in Hornet as commander of Task Group 58.1 that consisted of his flagship and the three Independence-class light carriers, Cowpens, Belleau Wood and Bataan. The task group was ordered to attack Sarmi, Sawar, and Wakde Airfields in Western New Guinea while the other task groups supported the amphibious landings at Hollandia. There was little Japanese air activity while the ships were off New Guinea, although the Task Group's fighters did shoot down two Mitsubishi G4M (Allied reporting name "Betty") bombers that were searching for them. Task Force 58 withdrew to Seeadler Harbor on Manus Island on 25 April to replenish for a few days before leaving to attack the shore facilities at Truk. The Japanese spotted the ships during the night of 28/29 April, but their weak attack later that morning was ineffective and the 84 Grumman F6F Hellcats of the morning fighter sweep were opposed by about 60 Zeros. Bad weather and a heavy overcast prevented the Americans from gaining complete air superiority until the mid-afternoon, but they were able to severely damaged the naval base's infrastructure over the next two days. They lost 9 aircraft in accidents and 27 in combat, mostly to anti-aircraft fire while claiming 59 aircraft in the air and 34 on the ground.

En route to Majuro, Task Group 58.1 was detached to cover the bombardments of the airfields at Satawan and Ponape by the portions of the Task Force's escorting ships. Both islands had already been previously attacked and little additional damage appears to have been done in exchange for the loss of one aircraft shot down by AA guns. Task Force 58 arrived at Majuro on 4 May and spent the next month preparing for the Mariana and Palau Islands campaign.[21] The abrasive Browning had made many enemies and his mistakes led him to be relieved for cause[22] on 29 May; he was replaced by Captain William Sample.[23]

Mariana and Palau Islands campaign edit

 
Avengers belonging to Torpedo Squadron 2 (VT-2) overflying Hornet, mid-1944

By June Hornet's air group (Carrier Air Group 2 (CVG-2)) mustered 40 Hellcat fighters, including 4 night-fighter versions, 33 Curtiss SB2C Helldiver dive bombers and 20 Avengers. Task Group 58.1 had exchanged Cowpens for Hornet's sister Yorktown so it mustered a pair each of fleet and light carriers for the campaign. Task Force 58 departed Majuro on 6 June in time to begin the air strikes on the southern Marianas six days later, three days prior to the planned amphibious assault on Saipan, although the Japanese discovered that it had left Majuro on 8 June. Hornet's night fighters began shooting down Japanese reconnaissance aircraft on the night of 10 June. Vice Admiral Marc Mitscher, commander of the task force, decided to move the air strikes forward to 11 June, hoping to catch the Japanese off guard.

The task group's fighters discovered 30 Zeros over Guam during their sweep and claimed to have shot them all down, with Hornet's 16 Hellcats claiming 23 of them as kills. A picket line of destroyers was stationed between the carriers and Guam and they controlled interceptions by the task group's fighters of about a dozen reconnaissance and attack aircraft that afternoon. The following days the task group continued to attack Guam to eliminate all of the aircraft based there as well as any reinforcements. Later that afternoon, Hornet's aircraft discovered a seven-ship reinforcement convoy east of Guam, but it was too far away to attack if the aircraft were to land during daylight. That night the task group closed the distance while the convoy continued to approach Guam and was only 80 nmi (150 km; 92 mi) when it launched 20 bomb-armed Hellcats. Their pilots were not trained for anti-shipping missions and failed to significantly damage the ships of the convoy before it reached Guam.[24]

The new commander of the Combined Fleet, Admiral Soemu Toyoda, was uncertain if the Americans were merely attacking the Japanese facilities in the Marianas until the fast battleships escorting Task Force 58 were detached to make a preliminary bombardment of Saipan on 13 June. Even before he received the report of the bombardment, he ordered the 1st Mobile Fleet to move forward to Guimaras Island to start training their inexperienced aviators in a more protected environment. He then alerted all forces to prepare to implement Plan A-Go, effective on 19 June, once he had word of the bombardment. The plan was intended to inflict a decisive defeat on the USN and cause the American government to sue for peace after the collapse of public will to continue the war. An American submarine spotted the movement and alerted Vice Admiral Raymond Spruance, commander of the entire operation. Not knowing the Japanese intentions, he believed that the Japanese ships would not be able to attack before 17 June. To take advantage of this window of opportunity to destroy Japanese aerial reinforcements gathering in the Bonin Islands, Spruance ordered Task Groups 58.1 and 58.4 to rendezvous on the 14th, attack the airbases there the following day and return in time to concentrate for the battle that he expected on the 17th.[25]

On 15 June, fighters from the two task groups conducted fighter sweeps over Iwo Jima, Hahajima and Chichi Jima, claiming to have shot down 20 Zeros over Iwo Jima for the loss of two Hellcats. Clark stationed his nightfighters over Iwo Jima that night to prevent the Japanese from launching reconnaissance missions or air strikes before launching more air strikes on the 16th. The bulk of the reinforcements intended for A-Go were still in Japan at this time, but the American carriers claimed to have destroyed a total of 81 aircraft, including 40 in the air, for the loss of 4 aircraft in combat and 7 others in accidents, before departing the area later that afternoon.[26]

Battle of the Philippine Sea edit

 
Map of the Battle of the Philippine Sea ( 19–20 June 1944)

Vice Admiral Jisaburō Ozawa, commander of the 1st Mobile Fleet, ordered A-Go to begin on 16 April while he concentrated and refueled his forces east of the Philippines. At nightfall on the 17th his ships were spotted by an American submarine some 900 nmi (1,700 km; 1,000 mi) west of Saipan, although Spruance did not receive its report until the early morning of 18 June. Japanese reconnaissance aircraft located Task Force 58 on that afternoon, but the shorter-ranged American aircraft failed to find the Japanese carriers. Ozawa decided to attack on the 19th rather than subject his inexperienced pilots to night landings that they had not trained for and turned south to keep the range from the Americans constant. Spruance had no idea where the Japanese were until a radio transmission from Ozawa was triangulated at a point 410 nmi (760 km; 470 mi) west of his task force on the night of the 18th. A radar-equipped Martin PBM Mariner patrol bomber discovered the 1st Mobile Fleet at 01:15 on 19 June, but its message was not received for another eight hours due to radio troubles. The early morning searches by the Americans were not successful, but the Japanese had been tracking them continuously since 01:00.[27]

That night the Americans had tracked reinforcements flying from Truk to Guam and Mitscher ordered fighters from Task Group 58.1 to patrol over Orote Field. Hellcats from Belleau Wood were the first to engage Japanese aircraft taking off at 07:00 and they had to be reinforced by fighters from Hornet and Yorktown. By 09:30 they had claimed to have shot down 45 fighters and 5 other aircraft while only losing a pair of Hellcats. At that time Hornet launched an air strike of 17 Helldivers and 7 Avengers, escorted by a dozen Hellcats, that bombed Orote without encountering Japanese aircraft. At 09:50 an incoming Japanese air strike had been picked up on radar and the carriers turned into the wind to begin launching 140 fighters; at 10:04, the fighters patrolling over Guam were summoned to reinforce the Combat Air Patrol (CAP) over Task Force 58, although they were too late to participate in the aerial battle. The CAP, reinforced by the newly launched Hellcats, intercepted the Japanese, shooting down 40 of the 57 Zeros involved and seriously disrupting the Japanese attack which only inflicted minor damage on one battleship.[28] Hornet contributed Hellcats who claimed to have shot down 9 Zeros and 3 Nakajima B6N "Jill" torpedo bombers.[29] The second wave of aircraft was detected at 11:07, but Hornet's fighters did not participate in their defeat. The third wave was given erroneous locations for the American ships and were 120 nmi (220 km; 140 mi) northwest of them at 12:40. Most of them turned back, but about a dozen did not and were detected by Task Group 58.1 at 12:56. They were intercepted by 17 Hellcats from Hornet and Yorktown which shot down 6 Zeros and a Jill, with Hornet's fighters claiming 9 aircraft in exchange for a damaged Hellcat.[30] The fourth wave was also misdirected and most of the aircraft decided to continue onwards and land on Guam. They arrived there around 15:00 and were intercepted by 41 Hellcats from Hornet, her sister Essex, Cowpens and Enterprise. They shot down 40 of the 49 aircraft; two of Hornet's pilots shot down five Japanese aircraft as they were attempting to land.[31]

Two hundred and ninety-five Hellcats, together with five Avengers and Dauntlesses, had engaged the Japanese during the day and they shot down 208 aircraft of the 373 flown off by the carriers. The Americans lost seven Hellcats at sea, nine over Guam and six by accidents; seven bombers had been shot down by AA guns over Guam and two others had crashed. All told they lost 31 aircraft to all causes during the day. The Japanese lost 35 aircraft in accidents and aboard the two carriers sunk by submarines during the battle, together with 18 Guam-based aircraft shot down and 52 destroyed on the ground for a grand total of 313 to all causes, an exchange ratio of almost exactly 10:1 in favor of the Americans. Not without cause did they nickname the battle "The Marianas Turkey Shoot".[32]

 
Zuikaku (upper center) and a pair of destroyers under attack by Hornet's Helldivers, 20 June 1944

At dusk, the Japanese turned away to the northwest to regroup and to refuel and the Americans turned west to close the distance. They discovered the retiring Japanese fleet during the afternoon of the following day and Mitscher ordered an air strike launched even though it meant recovering the aircraft at night. It consisted of 54 Avengers and 51 Helldivers, escorted by 85 Hellcats. The Japanese carriers launched their remaining 68 Zeros of which all but three were shot down for the loss of 20 American aircraft to all causes. Hornet's aircraft badly damaged the carrier Zuikaku while the other aircraft sank the carrier Hiyō, two tankers and lightly damaged three other carriers and a few other ships. Clark ordered his task group to turn on their lights to guide his pilots home before Mitscher ordered the entire task force to do the same. Despite these precautions, 6 Hellcats, 35 Helldivers and 28 Avengers were lost in deck-landing accidents or ran out of fuel, although most of their crews were rescued that night or over the next few days.[33]

Follow-on attacks edit

After refuelling on 22 June, most of Task Force 58 sailed to Eniwetok in the Marshall Islands, but Clark took his task group north to attack the Bonins again to interdict any reinforcements for the Marianas. A reconnaissance aircraft spotted his ships on the morning of the 22nd and alerted the Japanese defenders. They scrambled about 60 Zeros and a few Yokosuka D4Y "Judy" dive bombers to intercept the inbound 51 Hellcats. They shot down 6 Hellcats for the loss of 24 Zeros and 5 Judys. The Japanese had enough remaining aircraft to mount two attacks against the task group. The first airstrike of about 20 torpedo bombers had every aircraft shot down by fighters and anti-aircraft fire and the second of 23 Zeros, 9 Judys and 9 Jills never found the American ships. They were intercepted and the Hellcats shot down 10 Zeros and 7 Jills.[34]

 
Task Group 58.1 reversing course during the attack on Yap, 28 July 1944. Hornet is in the center, with the light carrier Cabot in the left middle distance and Yorktown at right. Seven Hellcats are overhead.

The task group arrived at Eniwetok on 27 June and departed to attack the Bonins again three days later, now reinforced by Task Group 58.2. They attacked on 3–4 July; the surviving 9 Zeros and 8 torpedo bombers attempt to return the favor, but lost 5 Zeros and 7 bombers without inflicting any damage on the ships. The task groups relieved Task Group 58.4, which had been supporting the fighting on Saipan, and remained there a week before returning to Eniwetok. In late July, Task Group 58.1 attacked Japanese bases in Yap and nearby islands before attacking the Bonins again on 4–5 August; it arrived back at Eniwetok on the 9th.[35]

That same day, Sample was relieved to take command of a carrier division and Captain Austin Doyle replaced him.[23] Unwilling to serve under Vice Admiral William Halsey, Clark hauled down his flag and was relieved by Vice Admiral John McCain on 18 August.[36] Clark remained aboard Hornet to assist McCain however he might and to serve as the reserve carrier-experienced admiral in case of need.[37] Eight days later, Halsey relieved Spruance and Task Force 58 was redesignated as Task Force 38.[38]

In a strategy conference in Pearl Harbor in July, President Franklin Roosevelt agreed with General Douglas MacArthur that the Philippines, an American territory, would be liberated and they set the date for 20 December. This required a series of preliminary operations to assault the Japanese bases in the western Caroline Islands and the approaches to the Philippines, including Yap and the Palaus. Mitscher began the process by taking three of his task groups, including Hornet's TG 38.1, to attack the Palaus on 6–8 September before moving further west to attack Mindanao on 9–10 September, the southernmost large island of the Philippines. Encouraged by the lack of opposition, Halsey ordered Mitscher to attack the central Philippine islands, including Leyte and the other Visayan Islands. Resistance was weak during the attacks on 12–13 September and the American pilots claimed 173 aircraft shot down, 305 destroyed on the ground and 59 ships sunk for the loss of 9 aircraft to all causes. The reality was slightly different, the First Air Fleet defending the central Philippines had a strength of 176 aircraft before the American attacks and 85 after them; the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force (IJAAF) lost 31–40 aircraft during the attacks.[39]

One of Hornet's Hellcats was shot down off Leyte on 10 September. The pilot was rescued by Filipino fishermen and he had been contacted by members of the Filipino Resistance and informed that there was no Japanese garrison on Leyte. Halsey, coupling this information with the weak resistance put up by the Japanese during his raids on the Philippines, believed that most of the preliminary attacks planned before invading Luzon on 20 December, could be skipped and suggested to the Joint Chiefs of Staff that the landing date be moved forward to 20 October. They agreed, although Admiral Chester Nimitz, commander of the Pacific Fleet, still required that he should conduct those parts of the plan regarding seizing bases in the Palaus and the Western Carolines.[40]

Halsey sent TG 38.1 south to attack Japanese airfields in the area during the invasion of Morotai that began on the 15th, but summoned them back to rejoin the bulk of TF 38 before his planned attack on Manila on 21 September. Hornet's aircraft participated in the second wave of attacks on Manila Bay and sank the elderly destroyer Satsuki. The American pilots claimed to have shot down 110 aircraft and destroyed 95 on the ground, although the First Air Fleet actually lost less than two dozen aircraft to all causes. TF38 claimed to have sunk or damaged seven oil tankers, but Japanese records show that nine were sunk or wrecked. Bad weather forced the cancellation of most of the airstrikes planned for the second day, but Halsey decided to attack Coron Bay in the Calamian Islands instead, an anchorage often used by Japanese oilers, on the other side of the Philippines with TGs 38.1 and 38.3. Hornet's air group led the combined airstrike which sank two oilers, six freighters, several escorts and the seaplane tender Akitsushima. TG 38.1 then sailed to Seeadler Harbor to replenish and exchange Air Group 2 for Air Group 11.[41] Clark finally departed Hornet on 1 October.[42]

Liberation of the Philippines edit

The four carrier groups of TF 38 rendezvoused west of the Marianas on 7 October, after weathering a typhoon that inflicted only minor damage. At this time, Hornet's Air Group 11 consisted of 39 Hellcats, 25 Helldivers and 18 Avengers. After refueling the following day, they proceeded north with the mission of destroying Japanese aircraft that could reinforce the defenses of the Philippines. Analysis of American radio traffic had alerted the Japanese and they were expecting an attack along the arc between the Ryukyu Islands and Formosa or in the northern Philippines. The Americans obliged with an attack on the Ryukyus on 10 October, claiming to have shot down over 100 aircraft while losing 21 of their own to all causes. This attack caused the Japanese to activate the Sho-1 and Sho-2 variants of their plan that provided for the defense of the Philippines and for the islands between the Philippines and Japan. As part of the plan, the carrier-based aircraft would operate from land bases.[43] After recovering their aircraft, TF 38 headed south that night to refuel east of Luzon the next day. In the early afternoon of 11 October, TG 38.1 and 38.4 launched an airstrike again the airfield in Aparri, on the northern coast of Luzon, which claimed to have destroyed 15 aircraft on the ground.[44]

Attack on Formosa edit

 
A pair of Curtiss SB2C dive bombers overflying Hornet, mid-January 1945

Before dawn, TF 38 launched a fighter sweep of 199 Hellcats against an alerted defense which already had fighters in the air. Despite this, Japanese losses were very heavy while the Americans lost 48 aircraft to all causes on 12 October. Throughout the night, the Japanese made multiple attacks, losing 42 aircraft to no effect. Another series of airstrikes followed on 13 October, although fewer defending aircraft made an appearance and TF 38's carriers lost 12 aircraft to all causes. At twilight, torpedo bombers attacked TG 38.1; Hornet evaded one torpedo that eventually crippled the heavy cruiser Canberra. Halsey had originally planned to withdraw that night to refuel on the 14th, but he had plenty of fuel left and decided to attack the airfields from which the Japanese might mount attacks on Canberra as she was towed westwards. Little opposition was encountered when the naval aviators flew their morning airstrike over Formosa and the carriers began to withdraw that afternoon, having lost 23 aircraft to all causes. TG 38.1 remained behind to protect the ships escorting Canberra. The Japanese repeated their twilight attacks against TG 38.1 and managed to cripple the light cruiser Houston with a torpedo, but both cruisers reached Ulithi about a week later. Admitted Japanese losses during the airstrikes and on the attacks on the fleet amounted to 492 aircraft, including 100 from the IJAAF.[45]

On 18 October TG 38.1 rendezvoused with TG 38.4 off the eastern coast of Luzon. Later that morning TG 38.1's aircraft attacked targets near Clark Air Base and San Bernardino Strait, losing seven aircraft to all causes. Pilots claimed to have shot down 30 aircraft and to have destroyed 29 more on the ground. The following day, the aviators were tasked to attack airfields near Clark Air Base and Manila and claimed to have destroyed 23 aircraft on the ground. After recovering their aircraft, both task groups headed south to where they could support the amphibious landings on Leyte scheduled for 20 October. Halsey ordered on 19 October that the air groups aboard the Essex-class carriers be reorganized with 54 fighters, 24 Helldivers and 18 Avengers, using locally available replacement aircraft beginning on 29 October.[46]

That morning TG 38.1 launched a fighter sweep over northern Mindanao; there was no evidence of Japanese aerial activity in the air or on the ground. One aircraft was reportedly destroyed at Del Monte Airfield and six others were damaged. Both task groups launched large airstrikes later that morning to attack the defenses of the landing beaches themselves and the area immediately behind them. Their effectiveness was inhibited by the dense foliage, heavy smoke in the air and the large number of aircraft involved over a relatively small area. Many aircraft had to wait almost two hours before receiving their targets for lack of sufficient communications channels. That evening the task groups departed the area to refuel the next morning, returning to the area by the morning of the 22nd, although the bad weather prevented most flying. That evening Halsey ordered TG 38.1 to proceed to Ulithi to prepare for the attacks on the Japanese mainland scheduled for 11 November. After receiving reports of Japanese surface ships in the Sibuyan Sea, Halsey ordered the task group to reverse course on the night of 23/24 October.[47]

Battle off Samar edit

 
Movements during the battle

The task group was too far away to intervene when the Japanese surprised the American escort carriers off the coast of Samar on the morning of 25 October with their force of battleships and cruisers, but McCain's carriers were able to close the distance enough by the early afternoon to launch two long-range airstrikes that accomplished little. The Americans lost 14 aircraft to all causes and failed to significantly damage any of Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita's ships. The following morning, after TG 38.1 and 38.2 rendezvoused, they launched an 257-aircraft airstrike that attacked Kurita's ships.[48] Avengers from Hornet and Cowpens hit the light cruiser Noshiro with one bomb that started a quickly extinguished fire. About twenty minutes later another Avenger put a torpedo into the cruiser; the detonation disabled all of her boilers and left her dead in the water. About an hour and a half after that, 28 of Hornet's Avengers and Helldivers hit Noshiro again with a torpedo and she sank an hour later.[49]

Afterwards TG 38.1 resumed their interrupted voyage to Ulithi on the 27th. Four days later McCain relieved Mitscher as commander of TF 38 and Rear Admiral Alfred Montgomery assumed command of TG 38.1. The task group, together with TGs 38.2 and 38.3 returned to the Philippines in early November and attacked airfields in Luzon on 5 November, claiming to have destroyed 439 aircraft, most on the ground, while losing 36 aircraft to all causes. The aviators sank the heavy cruiser Nachi, an oiler and a cargo ship. On 11 November a troop convoy heading for Ormoc Bay was spotted; it was attacked by a large airstrike that sank five troop ships and four of the escorting destroyers despite its defending fighters for the loss of 9 US aircraft. Two days later TF 38 attacked Manila again and sank the light cruiser Kiso, four destroyers and seven merchant ships. The aviators claimed to have damaged forty-three other ships and destroyed 84 aircraft while losing 25 aircraft. McCain attacked Manila again on 19 November, but with much less effect; sinking three merchantmen, damaging thirteen others and claimed to have destroyed 116 aircraft, mostly on the ground, for the loss of 13 planes in combat. TGs 38.1 and 38.2 attacked targets in Luzon on the 25th, sinking the crippled heavy cruiser Kumano and a few smaller ships, and claimed to have shot down 26 Japanese aircraft and destroyed 29 on the ground. Having interdicted the flow of reinforcements to Leyte and maintained control of the air over the Philippines, the carriers retired to Ulithi to recuperate now that the Army Air Force had enough operable aircraft of its own to assume those roles.[50] After Hornet arrived there, Clark hoisted his flag aboard her again, although he was not in command of the task group.[51]

The increasing threat from kamikaze suicide aircraft that had damaged seven carriers since the invasion of Leyte caused the navy to reassess its air group composition. Fighters were obviously needed more to intercept the kamikazes before they could reach the fleet so the groups were reorganized to consist of 73 fighters and 15 dive and torpedo bombers each. The change would take several months to implement and a single fighter squadron that large would prove to be too big for one man to lead, so they were split into two squadrons in January 1945.[52]

Battle of Mindoro edit

The temporary loss of the damaged carriers for repairs caused the reorganization of TG 38 in which Hornet was transferred to TG 38.2 for the upcoming operations in support of the assault on Mindoro scheduled for 5 December. The landings were postponed 10 days and TF 38 sortied on 11 December. The ship mustered 51 Hellcats, 15 Helldivers and 18 Avengers at this time. For this operation, the Army would cover all targets south of Manila, the escort carriers would provide direct support while the fast carriers would gain air supremacy over Luzon. Starting on the 14th, TF 38 flew continuous missions in support of that objective until they had to refuel three days later. The aviators claimed to have destroyed 269 aircraft, mostly on the ground, sunk a few merchant ships and heavily damaged roads and railroads while losing 27 aircraft in combat and 38 to accidents. The task force was unable to refuel on the 17th due to worsening weather and another attempt the next morning also failed before Halsey sailed unwittingly into the path of Typhoon Cobra later that day. Low on fuel, many ships were top-heavy and rolled heavily which sometimes broke aircraft free from their tie-down chains. Across the fleet 146 aircraft were destroyed, three light carriers were damaged when aircraft broke loose inside the hangars and three destroyers were sunk. The Third Fleet was able to refuel on 19 December, but follow-on operations over Luzon scheduled for the 21st had to be canceled when the Americans realized that the typhoon was over Luzon, so TF 38 returned to Ulithi.[53]

South China Sea raid edit

 
Aerial photograph of the light cruiser Kashii sinking, 12 January 1945

On 30 December, TF 38 departed Ulithi to attack Japanese airfields and shipping in Formosa, French Indo-China, Luzon, China, the Ryukyus and the Pescadores Islands in support of the scheduled landings at Lingayen Gulf in Luzon on 9 January 1945 and to interdict the maritime traffic between the Japanese home islands and her conquests in Southeast Asia. The carriers first attacked Formosa on 3–4 January before turning to Luzon for airstrikes on the 6th and 7th and then returned to bomb targets in Formosa on the 9th. While claiming to have destroyed over 150 aircraft with little aerial opposition, the Americans lost 46 aircraft in combat and 40 more in accidents. With his obligation to cover the Lingayen Gulf area until the landings were done, Halsey's ships entered the South China Sea during the night of 9–10 January in search of the two Ise-class battleships that had been partially turned into seaplane carriers and had been mistakenly reported at Cam Ranh Bay.

After refueling on the 11th, the carriers flew off almost 1,500 sorties against targets in French Indochina and off the coast. Halsey turned his ships northward and attacked Formosa and the Hong Kong area on 15–16 January and reattacked Formosa on the 21st after having exited the South China Sea. Until this date, the Third Fleet had not been attacked by the Japanese, but the kamikazes badly damaged Hornet's sister Ticonderoga. En route back to Ulithi, TF 38's planes flew reconnaissance missions over Okinawa on 22 January to aid the planned invasion of that island while also attacking Japanese positions. All told the carriers destroyed some 300,000 GRT of shipping and claimed to have destroyed 615 aircraft while losing 201 aircraft to all causes during their excursion.[54]

Volcano and Ryukyu Islands campaign edit

 
Hornet in dazzle camouflage, 27 March 1945

On 27 January, Spruance relieved Halsey, Clark assumed command of TG 58.1 and brought Hornet back to the task group.[55] The fast carriers, now renumbered as TF 58, departed Ulithi on 10 February for full-scale aerial assaults on the Tokyo area scheduled for 16–17 February that were intended to isolate Iwo Jima. TF 58's pilots claimed to have shot down 341 aircraft and destroyed 190 on the ground; attacks on industrial targets were not very effective and little shipping was sunk, with the most notable example being the recently completed Imperial Japanese Army escort carrier Yamashio Maru. The Japanese admitted losing at least 78 aircraft in aerial combat while claiming to having shot down 134 aircraft themselves; the Americans lost 88 aircraft to all causes. The Japanese did not attack TF 58 during their time off the coast of Honshu.[56]

The carriers turned south late in the afternoon of the 17th to prepare to support the amphibious landings on Iwo Jima on 19 February. TG 58.1 was refueling on the day of the landing, but joined the other task groups providing close support for the Marines ashore on the 20th. Three days later, Spruance released the fast carriers to attack the Japanese Home Islands again in an attempt to neutralize the kamikaze threat. Bad weather limited the effectiveness of the airstrikes around Tokyo on 25 January; continued bad weather forced the cancellation of the airstrikes planned the following day despite moving southwards overnight. Mitscher refueled his ships on the 27th and turned south to attack Okinawa on 1 March before returning to Ulithi on the 4th. American claims were 52 aircraft shot down and more than 60 destroyed on the ground in exchange for 55 aircraft lost to all causes between 19 February and 1 March.[57]

While refitting in Ulithi, Air Group 17 relieved Air Group 11 aboard the Hornet before departing on the 14th for another series of attacks on Japan in preparation for the invasion of Okinawa. A Japanese reconnaissance aircraft spotted TF 58 on 17 March which allowed the Japanese to disperse their aircraft and hide them. American attacks on the airfields in Kyushu were largely ineffective and were fiercely opposed. Hornet's Fighter Squadron 17 encountered many fighters over Kanoya Air Field and claimed to have shot down 25 of them. Japanese attacks on TF 58 lightly damaged three carriers, none of which were under Clark's command. American fighter pilots claimed 126 aircraft shot down and the Japanese admitted losing 110 aircraft, including 32 kamikazes.[58]

 
A bomb near-misses Hornet, 19 March 1945

Reconnaissance aircraft had located the remnants of the IJN in Kure and Kobe on the 18th and Mitscher ordered TGs 58.1, 58.3 and 58.4 to attack the former port. The Japanese caught Clark's carriers with their decks full of aircraft, preparing to fly off the morning's airstrike, but all of the attack aircraft were shot down; one kamikaze crashed a thousand yards (910 meters) astern of Hornet and two other were splashed by her sister Bennington's gunners. After the airstrikes flew off, further Japanese attacks crippled her sister Franklin.[59] As they approached Kure, the 20 Hellcats of Hornet's Fighter-Bomber Squadron 17 encountered 40 fighters from the IJAAF's elite 434rd Kokutai. In a battle which lasted 25 minutes, six American and four Japanese fighters were shot down.[60] The total casualties from the day's fighting over Japan, including the engagement between VBF-17 and the 434rd Kokutai, was 14 American and 25 Japanese aircraft shot down.[61] The attacks on the warships in Kure were fairly ineffectual, with the American pilots lightly damaging four battleships and many other warships, but badly damaging only a single escort carrier and a light cruiser. Hornet lost 13 aircraft in combat during the day. The afternoon's scheduled airstrikes were canceled to allow TF 58 to protect its damaged ships as they withdrew; further attacks on 20 and 21 March failed to significantly damage any more ships.[62]

TF 58 aircraft began hitting Okinawa on 23 March. The following day, TG 581.1 reconnaissance aircraft spotted a convoy that consisted of two troop transports, an ammunition ship and five escorts off Amami Ōshima headed for Okinawa; an 112-aircraft airstrike from Clark's carriers sank them all. Mitscher's carriers continued to attack Okinawa, ultimately flying a total of 3,095 sorties in the last seven days of March. The Japanese heavily attacked TF 58 between 26 and 31 March and damaged 10 ships, at the cost of around 1,100 aircraft. On 1 April, Hornet's planes began to provide direct support to the forces landing on Okinawa. Five days later the Japanese launched a mass airstrike on 6 April that consisted to almost 700 planes, of which at least 355 were kamikazes. Mitscher cleared his flight decks of all non fighters and his pilots claimed to have shot down a total of 249 aircraft. Despite this, three destroyers, two ammunition ships, and one Landing Ship, Tank were sunk by kamikazes and eight destroyers, a destroyer escort and a minelayer were damaged. The following day, the Japanese continued to attack, albeit with fewer aircraft. Kamikazes damaged Hornet's sister Hancock, one battleship, a destroyer and a destroyer escort.[63]

Operation Ten-Go edit

 
The battleship Yamato under attack. A large fire burns aft of her superstructure and she is low in the water from torpedo damage.

Operation Ten-Go (Ten-gō sakusen) was the attempted attack by a strike force of 10 Japanese surface vessels, led by the large battleship Yamato. This small task force had been ordered to fight through enemy naval forces, then beach Yamato and fight from shore, using her guns as coastal artillery and her crew as naval infantry. The Ten-Go force was spotted by American submarines shortly after it put to sea on 6 April. Reconnaissance aircraft from TF 58 found the force the following morning and TG 58.1 began launching aircraft almost two hours later. Hornet's Avengers put at least one torpedo into the battleship, the first of the ten torpedoes and five bomb hits that sank her less than two hours later. Of Yamato's screening force, the light cruiser Yahagi and four of the seven destroyers were also sunk or scuttled. The Americans lost three fighters, four dive bombers and three torpedo bombers to all causes during the attack.[64]

On 8 April, TF 58 returned to its previous mission of providing support to the US forces ashore, although continued kamikaze attacks exacted a toll. A week later, Mitscher ordered a fighter sweep over Kyushu to focus Japanese attention on his ships rather the more vulnerable amphibious shipping sustaining the ongoing battle. His pilots claimed to have shot down 29 aircraft and destroyed 51 on the ground. His strategy worked and the kamikazes attacked TF 58 on 17 April, badly damaging Intrepid despite Clark's pilots claiming 72 attackers. The fast carriers returned to Okinawan waters and none of them were damaged by a kamikaze until 11 May. When the weather worsened in late April, Mitscher sent TG 58.1 to Ulithi to refit and rest his exhausted crews on the 27th. After Clark's ships rejoined him on 12 May, Mitscher sent TG 58.1 and 58.3 the next day to attack airfields in Kyushu and Shikoku. Over 13–14 May, their pilots claimed to have shot down 72 aircraft and destroyed 73 on the ground while losing 14 aircraft. The Japanese evened the score when they badly damaged Enterprise on the 14th.[65]

 
Typhoon damage, 5 June

Halsey and McCain reassumed command and the task force resumed its former designation as TF 38 on 27–28 May, after the pace of aerial combat had slowed down. Bad weather forced the cancellation of air support over Okinawa on 30 May and on 1–3 June. Clark was able to refuel on the following day, despite worsening weather. He took his ships eastwards, hoping to avoid the developing typhoon to his southwest. Halsey, however, ordered him to steer northwestwards shortly after midnight on the 5th to position his ships for the planned airstrikes on Kyushu, which put TG 38.1 right into the path of the typhoon. Despite multiple requests to alter course to avoid the eye of the typhoon, the task group entered the eyewall region, where the most violent weather in a typhoon is located, around dawn when Clark was finally granted the freedom to maneuver. Shortly afterwards a massive wave crashed down on Hornet's bow which collapsed some 25 feet (7.6 meters) of her forward flight deck. Not long afterwards the same thing happened to Bennington and the bow was ripped off the heavy cruiser Pittsburgh. Only six men were killed during the storm, but 76 airplanes were destroyed or lost overboard and 70 were damaged. Both Hornet and Bennington were unable to launch their aircraft over the bow, as was proved when a Marine Vought F4U Corsair was flown off Hornet and almost immediately flipped over and spun into the sea.[66]

Clark ordered that the damaged sisters steam backwards at 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph) and launch their aircraft over the stern on 7 June as they provided the CAP over the task group. He detached Bennington for repairs the next day while Hornet's aircraft participated in the attack on Kanoya Air Field. On 9 April, McCain had Clark's aircraft demonstrate the effectiveness of napalm bombs on the coastal defenses of Okidaitōjima, southeast of Okinawa. The following day, his planes spotted for three battleships as they bombarded Minamidaitōjima. After arriving in Leyte on 13 June, Clark relinquished command of the task group and Hornet was ordered home for repairs,[67] arriving in San Francisco on 7 July. Hornet earned seven battle stars and the Presidential Unit Citation for her service in the war.[68]

Her repairs and refit were complete by 13 September, after which she was assigned to Operation Magic Carpet that had her ferry troops home from the Marianas and Hawaiian Islands, returning to San Francisco on 9 February 1946. Hornet was decommissioned on 15 January 1947 and assigned to the Pacific Reserve Fleet.[68]

Peacetime tensions: 1951 to 1959 edit

 
Hornet following her SCB-27A conversion

"Hornet was recommissioned on 20 March 1951, then sailed from San Francisco for the New York Naval Shipyard, where she was decommissioned on 12 May for conversion to an attack aircraft carrier CVA-12, under the SCB-27A upgrade program."[68] Her sister Wasp badly damaged her bow in a collision on 26 April 1952; Hornet's bow was cut away and used to repair Wasp.[69] "On 11 September 1953, she was recommissioned as an attack carrier. The ship then trained in the Caribbean Sea before departure from Norfolk on 11 May 1954 on an eight-month global cruise."[68]

"After operations in the Mediterranean Sea and the Indian Ocean, Hornet joined the mobile 7th Fleet in the South China Sea to search for survivors of a Cathay Pacific Airways passenger plane, shot down by Chinese aircraft near Hainan Island. On 25 July, Hornet aircraft supported planes from Philippine Sea as they shot down two attacking Chinese fighters. After tensions eased, she returned to San Francisco on 12 December, trained out of San Diego, then sailed on 4 May 1955 to join the 7th Fleet in the Far East. Hornet helped to cover the evacuation of Vietnamese from the Communist-controlled north to South Vietnam, then ranged from Japan to Formosa, Okinawa, and the Philippines in readiness training with the 7th Fleet. She returned to San Diego on 10 December and entered the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard the following month for the SCB-125 upgrade."[68]

 
A Grumman S-2D Tracker of VS-37 aboard Hornet, circa 1963

"Following her modernization overhaul, Hornet operated along the California coast. She departed San Diego on 21 January 1957 to bolster the strength of the 7th Fleet until her return from the troubled Far East on 25 July. Following a similar cruise, 6 January – 2 July 1958,"[68] she entered Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in August, to begin the conversion into an anti-submarine warfare (ASW) carrier. "On 3 April 1959, she sailed from Long Beach to join the 7th Fleet in antisubmarine warfare tactics ranging from Japan to Okinawa and the Philippines. She returned home in October, for training along the western seaboard."[68] In the late 1950s, an anti-submarine air group consisted of one squadron with 20 twin-engined Grumman S2F Trackers ASW aircraft, a squadron of HSS-1 Seabat ASW helicopters and a detachment of Douglas AD-5W Skyraider airborne early warning (AEW) aircraft. A detachment of four McDonnell F2H Banshee fighters was often assigned to protect the other aircraft. After 1960, the ASW air group generally consisted of two squadrons of ASW aircraft, each of 10 Trackers, a helicopter squadron of 16 Seabats or Sikorsky SH-3 Sea Kings and an AEW detachment with Grumman E-1 Tracers. No fighters were assigned between 1960 and 1965. Afterwards, the ASW carriers sometimes received a detachment of Douglas A-4 Skyhawk attack aircraft.[70]

Vietnam and the Space Race: 1960 to 1970 edit

 
Hornet preparing to retrieve the Apollo 11 Command Module Columbia, 24 July 1969

"In the following years, Hornet was regularly deployed to the 7th Fleet for operations ranging from the coast of South Vietnam, to the shores of Japan, the Philippines and Okinawa";[68] she also played a key part in the Apollo program, as a recovery ship for uncrewed and crewed spaceflights.[71] On 6 March 1965, a Sea King helicopter took off from Hornet in San Diego and flew to the aircraft carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt, off Naval Station Mayport, Florida, without refueling or landing. It covered a distance of 2,106 miles (3,389 kilometers) in 16 hours, 52 minutes, and set a Fédération Aéronautique Internationale world record for helicopters. This exceeded the previous record distance by more than 750 miles (1,210 kilometers).[72][73] Hornet was deployed to Vietnam for the first time from October 1965 to January 1966, by this time all of the ASW carriers had received the SCB-144 upgrade as part of the Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization II program. They received an AN/SQS-23 sonar mounted in the bow, as well as improved displays in the Combat Information Center. During these deployments the carriers were responsible for escorting the attack carriers in the South China Sea and providing combat search and rescue. Their Skyhawks were occasionally used to attack ground targets.[74] On 20 September 1965, the destroyer Epperson's steering malfunctioned and collided with Hornet while refueling. Nobody was injured on either ship, but both were lightly damaged.[75]

On 25 August 1966, she was on recovery station for the flight of AS-202, the second uncrewed flight of production Apollo Command and Service Modules. The moonship rocketed three-quarters of the way around the globe in 93 minutes before splashdown near Wake Island. Scorched from the heat of its re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, the Apollo space capsule, designed to carry American astronauts to the Moon, was brought aboard Hornet after its test; that command module is currently on display aboard Hornet.[76][77][78]

"Hornet returned to Long Beach on 8 September, but headed back to the Far East on 27 March 1967. She reached Japan exactly a month later and departed the Sasebo base on 19 May for the war zone."[68] She operated in Vietnamese waters until October and returned for another deployment from November 1968 to April 1969. After the North Koreans shot down a Lockheed EC-121 Warning Star AEW aircraft on 14 April over international waters, Hornet was ordered to reinforce the American ships gathering in the area in what became a pointless show of force.[79]

Hornet recovered the three astronauts (Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin) and their command module Columbia from the first Moon landing mission, Apollo 11, after splashdown about 900 miles southwest of Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean on 24 July 1969.[80] President Nixon was on board to welcome the returning astronauts back to Earth, where they lived in quarantine aboard Hornet prior to transfer to the Lunar Receiving Laboratory at Houston.[81] Hornet also recovered Apollo 12 on 24 November. Returning astronauts Charles Conrad, Jr., Alan L. Bean, and Richard F. Gordon, Jr., were picked up from their splashdown point near American Samoa.[82]

Retirement: 1970 to present edit

 
USS Hornet docked in Alameda
Coordinates37°46′21.15″N 122°18′10.23″W / 37.7725417°N 122.3028417°W / 37.7725417; -122.3028417
AreaAlameda
NRHP reference No.91002065
CHL No.1029[83]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP4 December 1991[84]
Designated NHL4 December 1991[85]

Hornet was decommissioned 26 June 1970 and mothballed at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility. She was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 25 July 1989. In 1991, she was designated a National Historic Landmark.[86][87][88] The carrier was donated to the Aircraft Carrier Hornet Foundation on 26 May 1998. On 17 October 1998, she was opened to the public as USS Hornet Museum in Alameda, California. She was designated a California State Historic Landmark in 1999,[83] and is listed on the National Register of Historic places, #91002065.[86]

Building on her status as an authentically restored aircraft carrier, Hornet has been featured in a number of film and television shows. Several TV shows, including a number of phantom-themed shows, have been recorded on board; and in 1997, she was the subject of an episode of the TV series JAG, the season-three opener titled "Ghost Ship". In 2004, she was the set for scenes from the movie XXX: State of the Union, which starred Ice Cube, and portions of the 2007 film Rescue Dawn, which starred Christian Bale, were shot on board. Hornet was both the subject and the setting of the independent film Carrier (2006).[89][90] Hornet also hosted the final task and finish line of the thirtieth season of the reality show The Amazing Race.[91]

Hornet also hosts CarrierCon, a fan convention for anime, video game, comic and cosplay fans. In 2023, CarrierCon collaborated officially with Azur Lane, a popular Chinese mobile game with an English release that features anthropomorphic "shipgirls" including Hornet herself as Hornet II to distinguish her from the original Hornet.[92] Later that year, Hornet was chosen to host Azur Lane's live event celebrating the 5th anniversary of its English/worldwide release.[93]

Awards edit

Gallery edit

References edit

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  87. ^ ""USS Hornet (CVS-12)", 18 June 1991, by James P. Delgado" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places Registration. National Park Service. 18 June 1991.
  88. ^ "USS Hornet (CVS-12)—Accompanying 4 photos, exterior, from 1943, 1944, 1945, and c.1969" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places Registration. National Park Service. 18 June 1991.
  89. ^ "Venue Rentals". USS Hornet Museum. 12 January 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  90. ^ Carrier at IMDb  
  91. ^ Longeretta, Emily (21 February 2018). "'The Amazing Race' Season 30 Finale: Which Team Won?". Us Weekly. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  92. ^ CarrierCon (17 February 2023). "CarrierCon 2023 Azur Lane Collaboration Announcement". Instagram. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  93. ^ CarrierCon [@CarrierConBA] (21 July 2023). "Calling all Commanders and Ship Girls! We are proud to announce that we are hosting the Azur Lane 5th Anniversary celebration event! Come celebrate with our friends @AzurLane_EN @HornetChanVT!! August 13th, 2023 – 707 W Hornet Ave, Alameda, CA 94501 #AzurLane5thAnniv" (Tweet). Retweeted by Azur Lane. Retrieved 2 August 2023 – via Twitter.

Bibliography edit

  • Bates, Richard (1953). The Battle for Leyte Gulf, October 1944: Strategical and Tactical Analysis, Volume I: Preliminary Operations Until 0719 October 17th, 1944, Including Battle off Formosa. n.p.: US Naval War College.
  • Bates, Richard (1955). The Battle for Leyte Gulf, October 1944: Strategical and Tactical Analysis, Volume II: Operations 0719 October 17th until October 20th (D-day). n.p.: US Naval War College.
  • Bates, Richard (1957). The Battle for Leyte Gulf, October 1944: Strategical and Tactical Analysis, Volume III: Operations from 0000 October 20th (D-day) until 1042 October 23rd. n.p.: US Naval War College.
  • Brown, David (1977). Aircraft Carriers. World War 2 Fact Files. New York: Arco Publishing. ISBN 0-66804-164-1.
  • Brown, J. D. (2009). Carrier Operations in World War II. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-108-2.
  • Chesneau, Roger, ed. (1980). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946. Greenwich: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-85177-146-7.
  • Faltum, Andrew (1996). The Essex Aircraft Carriers. Baltimore, Maryland: Nautical & Aviation. ISBN 1-877853-26-7.
  • Friedman, Norman (1983). U.S. Aircraft Carriers: An Illustrated Design History. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-739-9.
  • "Hornet VIII (CV-12)". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. 22 December 2004. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  • Polmar, Norman & Genda, Minoru (2006). Aircraft Carriers: A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events. Vol. I, 1909–1945. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books. ISBN 1-57488-663-0.
  • Polmar, Norman & Genda, Minoru (2006). Aircraft Carriers: A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events. Vol. II, 1946–2006. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-57488-665-8.
  • Prados, John C. (2016). Storm Over Leyte: The Philippine Invasion and the Destruction of the Japanese Navy. Dutton Caliber. ISBN 978-0-4514-7361-5.
  • Raven, Alan (1988). Essex-class Carriers. Warship Design Histories. Vol. 2. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-021-1.
  • Reynolds, Clark G. (2005). On the Warpath in the Pacific: Admiral Jocko Clark and the Fast Carriers. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-716-6.
  • Tillman, Barrett (1994). The Marianas Turkey Shoot, June 19–20, 1944: Carrier Battle in the Philippine Sea. St. Paul, Minnesota: Phalanx Publishing. ISBN 1-883809-04-5.
  • Tillman, Barrett (2010). Whirlwind: The Air War Against Japan, 1942–1945. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4165-8440-7.
  • Young, Edward M. (2012). American Aces Against the Kamikaze. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-8490-8745-2.

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.

Further reading edit

  • Backer, Steve (2009). Essex–Class Aircraft Carriers of the Second World War. Shipcraft. Vol. 12. Barnsley, UK: Seaforth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84832-018-5.

External links edit

  • USS Hornet Museum official website
  • USS Hornet Sea, Air & Space Museum post on AirMuseumGuide.com
  • USS Hornet by the US Navy 5 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • , hosted by the Historical Naval Ships Association (HNSA) Digital Collections
  • USS Hornet (CV-12) at Historic Naval Ships Association
  • Aviation: From Sand Dunes to Sonic Booms, a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary
  • USS Hornet by Dwayne Miles
  • USS Hornet – Damage to Ship's Structure – Official report written by ship's captain after typhoon damage
  • CAG-17 Carrier Air Group 17 VT-17 Torpedo Group 17 was based on USS Hornet 1944–1945
  • USS Hornet pictures from the U.S. Naval History Center
  • Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. WA-34, "U.S.S. HORNET, Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Sinclair Inlet, Bremerton, Kitsap County, WA", 130 photos, 22 data pages, 11 photo caption pages

hornet, other, ships, with, same, name, hornet, hornet, essex, class, aircraft, carrier, built, united, states, navy, during, world, completed, late, 1943, ship, assigned, fast, carrier, task, force, variously, designated, task, force, pacific, ocean, navy, pr. For other ships with the same name see USS Hornet USS Hornet CV CVA CVS 12 is an Essex class aircraft carrier built for the United States Navy USN during World War II Completed in late 1943 the ship was assigned to the Fast Carrier Task Force variously designated as Task Force 38 or 58 in the Pacific Ocean the navy s primary offensive force during the Pacific War The Hornet in the Pacific Ocean in July 1969HistoryUnited StatesNameHornetNamesakeHornet 1 Ordered20 May 1940Awarded9 September 1940BuilderNewport News ShipbuildingLaid down3 August 1942Launched30 August 1943Commissioned29 November 1943Decommissioned15 January 1947RenamedFrom Kearsarge October 1942IdentificationHull number CV 12Recommissioned11 September 1953Decommissioned26 June 1970ReclassifiedCVA 12 1 October 1952 CVS 12 27 June 1958Stricken25 July 1989Honors andawardsSee AwardsStatusMuseum ship at the USS Hornet Museum in Alameda CaliforniaGeneral characteristics as built Class and typeEssex class aircraft carrierDisplacement27 100 long tons 27 500 t standard 36 380 long tons 36 960 t full load Length820 feet 249 9 m wl 872 feet 265 8 m o a Beam93 ft 28 3 m Draft34 ft 2 in 10 41 m Installed power8 Babcock amp Wilcox boilers 150 000 shp 110 000 kW Propulsion4 geared steam turbines 4 screw propellersSpeed33 knots 61 km h 38 mph Range14 100 nmi 26 100 km 16 200 mi at 20 knots 37 km h 23 mph Complement2 600 officers and enlisted menArmament12 5 in 127 mm DP guns 32 40 mm 1 6 in AA guns 46 20 mm 0 8 in AA gunsArmorWaterline belt 2 5 4 in 64 102 mm Deck 1 5 in 38 mm Hangar deck 2 5 in 64 mm Bulkheads 4 in 102 mm Aircraft carried36 Grumman F4F Wildcat 36 Douglas SBD Dauntless 18 Grumman TBF AvengerIn early 1944 she participated in attacks on Japanese installations in New Guinea Palau and Truk among others Hornet then took part in the Mariana and Palau Islands campaign and most of the subsidiary operations most notably the Battle of the Philippine Sea in June that was nicknamed the Great Marianas Turkey Shoot for the disproportionate losses inflicted upon the Japanese The ship then participated in the Philippines Campaign in late 1944 and the Volcano and Ryukyu Islands campaign in the first half of 1945 She was badly damaged by a typhoon in June and had to return to the United States for repairs After the war she took part in Operation Magic Carpet returning troops to the U S and was then placed in reserve in 1946 Hornet was reactivated during the Korean War of 1950 1953 but spent the rest of the war being modernized to allow her to operate jet propelled aircraft The ship was modernized again in the late 1950s for service as an anti submarine carrier She played a minor role in the Vietnam War during the 1960s and in the Apollo program recovering the Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 astronauts when they returned from the Moon Hornet was decommissioned in 1970 She was eventually designated as both a National Historic Landmark and a California Historical Landmark and she opened to the public as the USS Hornet Museum in Alameda California in 1998 Contents 1 Design and description 1 1 Flight deck arrangements 1 2 Armament armor and electronics 1 3 Wartime modifications 2 Construction and career 2 1 Mariana and Palau Islands campaign 2 1 1 Battle of the Philippine Sea 2 2 Follow on attacks 2 3 Liberation of the Philippines 2 3 1 Attack on Formosa 2 3 2 Battle off Samar 2 3 3 Battle of Mindoro 2 3 4 South China Sea raid 2 4 Volcano and Ryukyu Islands campaign 2 4 1 Operation Ten Go 2 5 Peacetime tensions 1951 to 1959 2 6 Vietnam and the Space Race 1960 to 1970 2 7 Retirement 1970 to present 3 Awards 4 Gallery 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksDesign and description editThe Essex class ships were much larger than the preceding Yorktown class aircraft carriers which allowed them to carry more aircraft armor and armament 2 The initial ships had a length of 872 feet 265 8 m overall and 820 feet 249 9 m at the waterline although this was revised to an overall length of 888 feet 270 7 m in the long hull sub class when the bow was reshaped to accommodate a pair of quadruple 40 millimeter 1 6 in mounts in the bow compared to the single mount in the earlier short hull ships like Hornet All of the ships had a beam of 93 feet 28 3 m at the waterline and a draft of 30 feet 10 inches 9 4 m at deep load 3 They displaced 27 100 long tons 27 535 t at standard load and 36 380 long tons 36 960 t at deep load Their designed complement was approximately 268 officers and 2 362 enlisted men but more men were added even before the ships were completed the addition of more light weapons and other equipment greatly increased the overcrowding so that Hornet s sister Intrepid had a crew of 382 officers and 3 003 enlisted men in 1945 4 The ships had four geared steam turbines each driving one shaft using steam supplied by eight Babcock amp Wilcox boilers The turbines were designed to produce a total of 150 000 shaft horsepower 110 000 kW enough to give a maximum speed of 33 knots 61 km h 38 mph The ships carried enough fuel oil to give them a range of 14 100 nautical miles 26 100 km 16 200 mi at 20 knots 37 km h 23 mph 5 Flight deck arrangements edit nbsp Grumman F6F 3 Hellcat fighter of VF 15 being catapulted from Hornet via the hangar catapult 25 February 1944The short hull Essexes had a flight deck that was 862 feet 262 7 m long and had a maximum width of 108 feet 32 9 m Below it was a 654 by 70 feet 199 3 m 21 3 m hangar with a height of 18 feet 5 5 m The hangar was connected to the flight deck by three aircraft elevators two in the flight deck and a folding one on the port side of the flight deck abreast the island 6 Catapult arrangements for the early Essexs varied between ships Hornet was built with a single hydraulic catapult on the forward part of the flight deck and another was fitted transversely on the hangar deck 2 All of the Essexs were fitted with arresting gear to allow them to land aircraft over both the stern and the bow 7 Early in the design process the Essexs were intended to carry over 100 aircraft 27 fighters 37 scout or dive bombers 18 torpedo bombers 3 observation and 2 utility aircraft plus 21 partially disassembled spares Early war experience increased the number of fighters to 36 at the expense of the observation and utility aircraft and reduced the number of spares to 9 By mid 1945 the air group typically consisted of 36 or 37 fighters an equal number of fighter bombers and dive and torpedo squadrons of 15 aircraft apiece for a total of 103 By this time the fighter squadrons included specialist photo reconnaissance and night fighter aircraft 8 Armament armor and electronics edit nbsp One of Hornet s quadruple 40 mm Bofors mounts firing under remote control 16 February 1945The main armament of the Essex class ships consisted of a dozen 38 caliber 5 inch 127 mm dual purpose guns arranged in two superfiring pairs of twin gun turrets fore and aft of the island and four guns in single mounts on the port side of the flight deck These guns were controlled by a pair of Mk 37 directors mounted on the top of the island each director was fitted with a Mk 4 fire control radar The early short hull Essexs were equipped with eight quadruple 40 millimeter 1 6 in Bofors anti aircraft AA guns one mount each at the bow and stern four atop the island and two on the port side of the flight deck next to the 5 inch guns Each mount was controlled by its own Mk 51 director The carriers were also fitted with 46 Oerlikon 20 millimeter 0 8 in light AA guns on single mounts along the sides of the flight deck and on the island 9 The waterline armor belt of the carriers was 10 feet 3 m high 508 feet 155 m long and covered the middle 62 of the hull It was 4 inches 102 mm thick tapering to 2 5 inches 64 mm at its bottom edge The hangar deck was also 2 5 inches thick and the protective deck below it was 1 5 inches 38 mm thick Transverse 4 inch bulkheads closed off the ends of the belt armor to form the ship s armored citadel The steering gear was protected by 2 5 inches of special treatment steel 10 The Essex class carriers were designed with little space reserved for radar and the additional systems added while under construction contributed to the general overcrowding of the crew and the cramped island of the ships Hornet was completed with most of her radars mounted on the tripod mast atop her island It carried the SK early warning radar SM height finding radar and the SG surface search radar A SC early warning radar was positioned on a stub lattice mast on the starboard side of the funnel 11 Wartime modifications edit Changes to the numbers of 20 mm guns aboard Hornet during the war are not available in the sources although she had 35 single mounts by the end of the war 12 The ship did not return to any naval base in Hawaii or the West Coast until July 1945 when she arrived at San Francisco California for repairs for her typhoon damage so it is unlikely that any major modifications were done before then Facilities in Ulithi Atoll were limited but they had been able to install some of the new equipment that was fielded in late 1944 and 1945 Some of the ship s Mk 51 directors may have been replaced by Mk 57 directors with an integral Mk 34 fire control radar and the Mk 4 fire control radar atop the Mk 37 directors may have been upgraded to a Mk 12 system that shared its mount with a Mk 22 height finder The SP height finder was a lighter version of the SM and began to be installed in Essex class ships in March 1945 13 While being repaired the Navy took the opportunity to refit the ship to the latest standard Her SK radar was upgraded to a SK 2 model with a dish antenna that improved its performance and her hangar deck catapult was replaced by one on the flight deck Her island was remodeled to expand the flag bridge which caused the removal of the forward lower 40 mm mount on the island and 10 new quadruple mounts were added along the sides of the flight deck and the hull for a total of 68 guns in 17 mounts 14 Construction and career edit nbsp Launching ceremony of Hornet 30 August 1943The Chief of Naval Operations had ordered three Essex class carriers on 10 May 1940 in anticipation of Congress passing the Two Ocean Navy Act 15 although the ship that later became Hornet originally had the name Kearsarge with the hull number of CV 12 The contract to build her was awarded to Newport News Shipbuilding on 9 September 1940 and her keel was laid down on 3 August 1942 The seventh Hornet CV 8 was sunk in the Battle of Santa Cruz on 26 October 1942 and the CV 12 hull was renamed Hornet shortly afterwards 16 The ship was launched on 30 August 1943 with her sponsor being Annie Reid Knox wife of Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox She was commissioned on 29 November 1943 with Captain Miles R Browning in command 1 Hornet worked up off Bermuda before departing Norfolk Virginia on 14 February 1944 to join Task Force 58 at Majuro Atoll in the Marshall Islands where she arrived on 20 March 1 Two days later the Task Force departed to attack warships and airfields in the Palau Islands and the Kossol Roads to eliminate any threat to the scheduled operations in New Guinea and the Admiralty Islands To block the exits from Kossol and trap all of the ships inside the lagoon the torpedo bomber squadrons from Hornet and her sisters Lexington and Bunker Hill had trained on aerial minelaying To avoid detection the American ships steamed far south of the Japanese naval base at Truk They were spotted on the 28th and Admiral Mineichi Koga commander of the Combined Fleet ordered his warships to withdraw to Tawi Tawi Island in the Philippines and for the merchant shipping to disperse 17 As Task Force 58 approached its targets on the morning of 30 March its carriers launched a fighter sweep that shot down 30 Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters already airborne and they were soon followed by 39 Grumman TBF Avenger torpedo bombers each of which carried a pair of magnetic mines that effectively bottled up the 40 odd ships in Kossol Roads 18 This was the first and only time that carrier aircraft laid mines during the Pacific War 19 Despite reinforcing fighters that flew in overnight the Americans sank 24 merchant and auxiliary ships totaling nearly 130 000 gross register tons GRT of shipping plus two old destroyers four subchasers and a pair of repair ships on 30 and 31 March American pilots claimed to have shot down 63 aircraft and destroyed over 100 more on the ground while losing 25 aircraft of their own On their way back to Majuro the carriers attacked targets on Woleai on 1 April to little effect 20 Before Task Force 58 departed Majuro on 13 April Rear Admiral Joseph J Clark had hoisted his flag in Hornet as commander of Task Group 58 1 that consisted of his flagship and the three Independence class light carriers Cowpens Belleau Wood and Bataan The task group was ordered to attack Sarmi Sawar and Wakde Airfields in Western New Guinea while the other task groups supported the amphibious landings at Hollandia There was little Japanese air activity while the ships were off New Guinea although the Task Group s fighters did shoot down two Mitsubishi G4M Allied reporting name Betty bombers that were searching for them Task Force 58 withdrew to Seeadler Harbor on Manus Island on 25 April to replenish for a few days before leaving to attack the shore facilities at Truk The Japanese spotted the ships during the night of 28 29 April but their weak attack later that morning was ineffective and the 84 Grumman F6F Hellcats of the morning fighter sweep were opposed by about 60 Zeros Bad weather and a heavy overcast prevented the Americans from gaining complete air superiority until the mid afternoon but they were able to severely damaged the naval base s infrastructure over the next two days They lost 9 aircraft in accidents and 27 in combat mostly to anti aircraft fire while claiming 59 aircraft in the air and 34 on the ground En route to Majuro Task Group 58 1 was detached to cover the bombardments of the airfields at Satawan and Ponape by the portions of the Task Force s escorting ships Both islands had already been previously attacked and little additional damage appears to have been done in exchange for the loss of one aircraft shot down by AA guns Task Force 58 arrived at Majuro on 4 May and spent the next month preparing for the Mariana and Palau Islands campaign 21 The abrasive Browning had made many enemies and his mistakes led him to be relieved for cause 22 on 29 May he was replaced by Captain William Sample 23 Mariana and Palau Islands campaign edit Main article Mariana and Palau Islands campaign nbsp Avengers belonging to Torpedo Squadron 2 VT 2 overflying Hornet mid 1944By June Hornet s air group Carrier Air Group 2 CVG 2 mustered 40 Hellcat fighters including 4 night fighter versions 33 Curtiss SB2C Helldiver dive bombers and 20 Avengers Task Group 58 1 had exchanged Cowpens for Hornet s sister Yorktown so it mustered a pair each of fleet and light carriers for the campaign Task Force 58 departed Majuro on 6 June in time to begin the air strikes on the southern Marianas six days later three days prior to the planned amphibious assault on Saipan although the Japanese discovered that it had left Majuro on 8 June Hornet s night fighters began shooting down Japanese reconnaissance aircraft on the night of 10 June Vice Admiral Marc Mitscher commander of the task force decided to move the air strikes forward to 11 June hoping to catch the Japanese off guard The task group s fighters discovered 30 Zeros over Guam during their sweep and claimed to have shot them all down with Hornet s 16 Hellcats claiming 23 of them as kills A picket line of destroyers was stationed between the carriers and Guam and they controlled interceptions by the task group s fighters of about a dozen reconnaissance and attack aircraft that afternoon The following days the task group continued to attack Guam to eliminate all of the aircraft based there as well as any reinforcements Later that afternoon Hornet s aircraft discovered a seven ship reinforcement convoy east of Guam but it was too far away to attack if the aircraft were to land during daylight That night the task group closed the distance while the convoy continued to approach Guam and was only 80 nmi 150 km 92 mi when it launched 20 bomb armed Hellcats Their pilots were not trained for anti shipping missions and failed to significantly damage the ships of the convoy before it reached Guam 24 The new commander of the Combined Fleet Admiral Soemu Toyoda was uncertain if the Americans were merely attacking the Japanese facilities in the Marianas until the fast battleships escorting Task Force 58 were detached to make a preliminary bombardment of Saipan on 13 June Even before he received the report of the bombardment he ordered the 1st Mobile Fleet to move forward to Guimaras Island to start training their inexperienced aviators in a more protected environment He then alerted all forces to prepare to implement Plan A Go effective on 19 June once he had word of the bombardment The plan was intended to inflict a decisive defeat on the USN and cause the American government to sue for peace after the collapse of public will to continue the war An American submarine spotted the movement and alerted Vice Admiral Raymond Spruance commander of the entire operation Not knowing the Japanese intentions he believed that the Japanese ships would not be able to attack before 17 June To take advantage of this window of opportunity to destroy Japanese aerial reinforcements gathering in the Bonin Islands Spruance ordered Task Groups 58 1 and 58 4 to rendezvous on the 14th attack the airbases there the following day and return in time to concentrate for the battle that he expected on the 17th 25 On 15 June fighters from the two task groups conducted fighter sweeps over Iwo Jima Hahajima and Chichi Jima claiming to have shot down 20 Zeros over Iwo Jima for the loss of two Hellcats Clark stationed his nightfighters over Iwo Jima that night to prevent the Japanese from launching reconnaissance missions or air strikes before launching more air strikes on the 16th The bulk of the reinforcements intended for A Go were still in Japan at this time but the American carriers claimed to have destroyed a total of 81 aircraft including 40 in the air for the loss of 4 aircraft in combat and 7 others in accidents before departing the area later that afternoon 26 Battle of the Philippine Sea edit Main article Battle of the Philippine Sea nbsp Map of the Battle of the Philippine Sea 19 20 June 1944 Vice Admiral Jisaburō Ozawa commander of the 1st Mobile Fleet ordered A Go to begin on 16 April while he concentrated and refueled his forces east of the Philippines At nightfall on the 17th his ships were spotted by an American submarine some 900 nmi 1 700 km 1 000 mi west of Saipan although Spruance did not receive its report until the early morning of 18 June Japanese reconnaissance aircraft located Task Force 58 on that afternoon but the shorter ranged American aircraft failed to find the Japanese carriers Ozawa decided to attack on the 19th rather than subject his inexperienced pilots to night landings that they had not trained for and turned south to keep the range from the Americans constant Spruance had no idea where the Japanese were until a radio transmission from Ozawa was triangulated at a point 410 nmi 760 km 470 mi west of his task force on the night of the 18th A radar equipped Martin PBM Mariner patrol bomber discovered the 1st Mobile Fleet at 01 15 on 19 June but its message was not received for another eight hours due to radio troubles The early morning searches by the Americans were not successful but the Japanese had been tracking them continuously since 01 00 27 That night the Americans had tracked reinforcements flying from Truk to Guam and Mitscher ordered fighters from Task Group 58 1 to patrol over Orote Field Hellcats from Belleau Wood were the first to engage Japanese aircraft taking off at 07 00 and they had to be reinforced by fighters from Hornet and Yorktown By 09 30 they had claimed to have shot down 45 fighters and 5 other aircraft while only losing a pair of Hellcats At that time Hornet launched an air strike of 17 Helldivers and 7 Avengers escorted by a dozen Hellcats that bombed Orote without encountering Japanese aircraft At 09 50 an incoming Japanese air strike had been picked up on radar and the carriers turned into the wind to begin launching 140 fighters at 10 04 the fighters patrolling over Guam were summoned to reinforce the Combat Air Patrol CAP over Task Force 58 although they were too late to participate in the aerial battle The CAP reinforced by the newly launched Hellcats intercepted the Japanese shooting down 40 of the 57 Zeros involved and seriously disrupting the Japanese attack which only inflicted minor damage on one battleship 28 Hornet contributed Hellcats who claimed to have shot down 9 Zeros and 3 Nakajima B6N Jill torpedo bombers 29 The second wave of aircraft was detected at 11 07 but Hornet s fighters did not participate in their defeat The third wave was given erroneous locations for the American ships and were 120 nmi 220 km 140 mi northwest of them at 12 40 Most of them turned back but about a dozen did not and were detected by Task Group 58 1 at 12 56 They were intercepted by 17 Hellcats from Hornet and Yorktown which shot down 6 Zeros and a Jill with Hornet s fighters claiming 9 aircraft in exchange for a damaged Hellcat 30 The fourth wave was also misdirected and most of the aircraft decided to continue onwards and land on Guam They arrived there around 15 00 and were intercepted by 41 Hellcats from Hornet her sister Essex Cowpens and Enterprise They shot down 40 of the 49 aircraft two of Hornet s pilots shot down five Japanese aircraft as they were attempting to land 31 Two hundred and ninety five Hellcats together with five Avengers and Dauntlesses had engaged the Japanese during the day and they shot down 208 aircraft of the 373 flown off by the carriers The Americans lost seven Hellcats at sea nine over Guam and six by accidents seven bombers had been shot down by AA guns over Guam and two others had crashed All told they lost 31 aircraft to all causes during the day The Japanese lost 35 aircraft in accidents and aboard the two carriers sunk by submarines during the battle together with 18 Guam based aircraft shot down and 52 destroyed on the ground for a grand total of 313 to all causes an exchange ratio of almost exactly 10 1 in favor of the Americans Not without cause did they nickname the battle The Marianas Turkey Shoot 32 nbsp Zuikaku upper center and a pair of destroyers under attack by Hornet s Helldivers 20 June 1944At dusk the Japanese turned away to the northwest to regroup and to refuel and the Americans turned west to close the distance They discovered the retiring Japanese fleet during the afternoon of the following day and Mitscher ordered an air strike launched even though it meant recovering the aircraft at night It consisted of 54 Avengers and 51 Helldivers escorted by 85 Hellcats The Japanese carriers launched their remaining 68 Zeros of which all but three were shot down for the loss of 20 American aircraft to all causes Hornet s aircraft badly damaged the carrier Zuikaku while the other aircraft sank the carrier Hiyō two tankers and lightly damaged three other carriers and a few other ships Clark ordered his task group to turn on their lights to guide his pilots home before Mitscher ordered the entire task force to do the same Despite these precautions 6 Hellcats 35 Helldivers and 28 Avengers were lost in deck landing accidents or ran out of fuel although most of their crews were rescued that night or over the next few days 33 Follow on attacks edit After refuelling on 22 June most of Task Force 58 sailed to Eniwetok in the Marshall Islands but Clark took his task group north to attack the Bonins again to interdict any reinforcements for the Marianas A reconnaissance aircraft spotted his ships on the morning of the 22nd and alerted the Japanese defenders They scrambled about 60 Zeros and a few Yokosuka D4Y Judy dive bombers to intercept the inbound 51 Hellcats They shot down 6 Hellcats for the loss of 24 Zeros and 5 Judys The Japanese had enough remaining aircraft to mount two attacks against the task group The first airstrike of about 20 torpedo bombers had every aircraft shot down by fighters and anti aircraft fire and the second of 23 Zeros 9 Judys and 9 Jills never found the American ships They were intercepted and the Hellcats shot down 10 Zeros and 7 Jills 34 nbsp Task Group 58 1 reversing course during the attack on Yap 28 July 1944 Hornet is in the center with the light carrier Cabot in the left middle distance and Yorktown at right Seven Hellcats are overhead The task group arrived at Eniwetok on 27 June and departed to attack the Bonins again three days later now reinforced by Task Group 58 2 They attacked on 3 4 July the surviving 9 Zeros and 8 torpedo bombers attempt to return the favor but lost 5 Zeros and 7 bombers without inflicting any damage on the ships The task groups relieved Task Group 58 4 which had been supporting the fighting on Saipan and remained there a week before returning to Eniwetok In late July Task Group 58 1 attacked Japanese bases in Yap and nearby islands before attacking the Bonins again on 4 5 August it arrived back at Eniwetok on the 9th 35 That same day Sample was relieved to take command of a carrier division and Captain Austin Doyle replaced him 23 Unwilling to serve under Vice Admiral William Halsey Clark hauled down his flag and was relieved by Vice Admiral John McCain on 18 August 36 Clark remained aboard Hornet to assist McCain however he might and to serve as the reserve carrier experienced admiral in case of need 37 Eight days later Halsey relieved Spruance and Task Force 58 was redesignated as Task Force 38 38 In a strategy conference in Pearl Harbor in July President Franklin Roosevelt agreed with General Douglas MacArthur that the Philippines an American territory would be liberated and they set the date for 20 December This required a series of preliminary operations to assault the Japanese bases in the western Caroline Islands and the approaches to the Philippines including Yap and the Palaus Mitscher began the process by taking three of his task groups including Hornet s TG 38 1 to attack the Palaus on 6 8 September before moving further west to attack Mindanao on 9 10 September the southernmost large island of the Philippines Encouraged by the lack of opposition Halsey ordered Mitscher to attack the central Philippine islands including Leyte and the other Visayan Islands Resistance was weak during the attacks on 12 13 September and the American pilots claimed 173 aircraft shot down 305 destroyed on the ground and 59 ships sunk for the loss of 9 aircraft to all causes The reality was slightly different the First Air Fleet defending the central Philippines had a strength of 176 aircraft before the American attacks and 85 after them the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force IJAAF lost 31 40 aircraft during the attacks 39 One of Hornet s Hellcats was shot down off Leyte on 10 September The pilot was rescued by Filipino fishermen and he had been contacted by members of the Filipino Resistance and informed that there was no Japanese garrison on Leyte Halsey coupling this information with the weak resistance put up by the Japanese during his raids on the Philippines believed that most of the preliminary attacks planned before invading Luzon on 20 December could be skipped and suggested to the Joint Chiefs of Staff that the landing date be moved forward to 20 October They agreed although Admiral Chester Nimitz commander of the Pacific Fleet still required that he should conduct those parts of the plan regarding seizing bases in the Palaus and the Western Carolines 40 Halsey sent TG 38 1 south to attack Japanese airfields in the area during the invasion of Morotai that began on the 15th but summoned them back to rejoin the bulk of TF 38 before his planned attack on Manila on 21 September Hornet s aircraft participated in the second wave of attacks on Manila Bay and sank the elderly destroyer Satsuki The American pilots claimed to have shot down 110 aircraft and destroyed 95 on the ground although the First Air Fleet actually lost less than two dozen aircraft to all causes TF38 claimed to have sunk or damaged seven oil tankers but Japanese records show that nine were sunk or wrecked Bad weather forced the cancellation of most of the airstrikes planned for the second day but Halsey decided to attack Coron Bay in the Calamian Islands instead an anchorage often used by Japanese oilers on the other side of the Philippines with TGs 38 1 and 38 3 Hornet s air group led the combined airstrike which sank two oilers six freighters several escorts and the seaplane tender Akitsushima TG 38 1 then sailed to Seeadler Harbor to replenish and exchange Air Group 2 for Air Group 11 41 Clark finally departed Hornet on 1 October 42 Liberation of the Philippines edit Main article Philippines Campaign 1944 1945 The four carrier groups of TF 38 rendezvoused west of the Marianas on 7 October after weathering a typhoon that inflicted only minor damage At this time Hornet s Air Group 11 consisted of 39 Hellcats 25 Helldivers and 18 Avengers After refueling the following day they proceeded north with the mission of destroying Japanese aircraft that could reinforce the defenses of the Philippines Analysis of American radio traffic had alerted the Japanese and they were expecting an attack along the arc between the Ryukyu Islands and Formosa or in the northern Philippines The Americans obliged with an attack on the Ryukyus on 10 October claiming to have shot down over 100 aircraft while losing 21 of their own to all causes This attack caused the Japanese to activate the Sho 1 and Sho 2 variants of their plan that provided for the defense of the Philippines and for the islands between the Philippines and Japan As part of the plan the carrier based aircraft would operate from land bases 43 After recovering their aircraft TF 38 headed south that night to refuel east of Luzon the next day In the early afternoon of 11 October TG 38 1 and 38 4 launched an airstrike again the airfield in Aparri on the northern coast of Luzon which claimed to have destroyed 15 aircraft on the ground 44 Attack on Formosa edit Main article Formosa Air Battle nbsp A pair of Curtiss SB2C dive bombers overflying Hornet mid January 1945Before dawn TF 38 launched a fighter sweep of 199 Hellcats against an alerted defense which already had fighters in the air Despite this Japanese losses were very heavy while the Americans lost 48 aircraft to all causes on 12 October Throughout the night the Japanese made multiple attacks losing 42 aircraft to no effect Another series of airstrikes followed on 13 October although fewer defending aircraft made an appearance and TF 38 s carriers lost 12 aircraft to all causes At twilight torpedo bombers attacked TG 38 1 Hornet evaded one torpedo that eventually crippled the heavy cruiser Canberra Halsey had originally planned to withdraw that night to refuel on the 14th but he had plenty of fuel left and decided to attack the airfields from which the Japanese might mount attacks on Canberra as she was towed westwards Little opposition was encountered when the naval aviators flew their morning airstrike over Formosa and the carriers began to withdraw that afternoon having lost 23 aircraft to all causes TG 38 1 remained behind to protect the ships escorting Canberra The Japanese repeated their twilight attacks against TG 38 1 and managed to cripple the light cruiser Houston with a torpedo but both cruisers reached Ulithi about a week later Admitted Japanese losses during the airstrikes and on the attacks on the fleet amounted to 492 aircraft including 100 from the IJAAF 45 On 18 October TG 38 1 rendezvoused with TG 38 4 off the eastern coast of Luzon Later that morning TG 38 1 s aircraft attacked targets near Clark Air Base and San Bernardino Strait losing seven aircraft to all causes Pilots claimed to have shot down 30 aircraft and to have destroyed 29 more on the ground The following day the aviators were tasked to attack airfields near Clark Air Base and Manila and claimed to have destroyed 23 aircraft on the ground After recovering their aircraft both task groups headed south to where they could support the amphibious landings on Leyte scheduled for 20 October Halsey ordered on 19 October that the air groups aboard the Essex class carriers be reorganized with 54 fighters 24 Helldivers and 18 Avengers using locally available replacement aircraft beginning on 29 October 46 That morning TG 38 1 launched a fighter sweep over northern Mindanao there was no evidence of Japanese aerial activity in the air or on the ground One aircraft was reportedly destroyed at Del Monte Airfield and six others were damaged Both task groups launched large airstrikes later that morning to attack the defenses of the landing beaches themselves and the area immediately behind them Their effectiveness was inhibited by the dense foliage heavy smoke in the air and the large number of aircraft involved over a relatively small area Many aircraft had to wait almost two hours before receiving their targets for lack of sufficient communications channels That evening the task groups departed the area to refuel the next morning returning to the area by the morning of the 22nd although the bad weather prevented most flying That evening Halsey ordered TG 38 1 to proceed to Ulithi to prepare for the attacks on the Japanese mainland scheduled for 11 November After receiving reports of Japanese surface ships in the Sibuyan Sea Halsey ordered the task group to reverse course on the night of 23 24 October 47 Battle off Samar edit Main article Battle off Samar nbsp Movements during the battleThe task group was too far away to intervene when the Japanese surprised the American escort carriers off the coast of Samar on the morning of 25 October with their force of battleships and cruisers but McCain s carriers were able to close the distance enough by the early afternoon to launch two long range airstrikes that accomplished little The Americans lost 14 aircraft to all causes and failed to significantly damage any of Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita s ships The following morning after TG 38 1 and 38 2 rendezvoused they launched an 257 aircraft airstrike that attacked Kurita s ships 48 Avengers from Hornet and Cowpens hit the light cruiser Noshiro with one bomb that started a quickly extinguished fire About twenty minutes later another Avenger put a torpedo into the cruiser the detonation disabled all of her boilers and left her dead in the water About an hour and a half after that 28 of Hornet s Avengers and Helldivers hit Noshiro again with a torpedo and she sank an hour later 49 Afterwards TG 38 1 resumed their interrupted voyage to Ulithi on the 27th Four days later McCain relieved Mitscher as commander of TF 38 and Rear Admiral Alfred Montgomery assumed command of TG 38 1 The task group together with TGs 38 2 and 38 3 returned to the Philippines in early November and attacked airfields in Luzon on 5 November claiming to have destroyed 439 aircraft most on the ground while losing 36 aircraft to all causes The aviators sank the heavy cruiser Nachi an oiler and a cargo ship On 11 November a troop convoy heading for Ormoc Bay was spotted it was attacked by a large airstrike that sank five troop ships and four of the escorting destroyers despite its defending fighters for the loss of 9 US aircraft Two days later TF 38 attacked Manila again and sank the light cruiser Kiso four destroyers and seven merchant ships The aviators claimed to have damaged forty three other ships and destroyed 84 aircraft while losing 25 aircraft McCain attacked Manila again on 19 November but with much less effect sinking three merchantmen damaging thirteen others and claimed to have destroyed 116 aircraft mostly on the ground for the loss of 13 planes in combat TGs 38 1 and 38 2 attacked targets in Luzon on the 25th sinking the crippled heavy cruiser Kumano and a few smaller ships and claimed to have shot down 26 Japanese aircraft and destroyed 29 on the ground Having interdicted the flow of reinforcements to Leyte and maintained control of the air over the Philippines the carriers retired to Ulithi to recuperate now that the Army Air Force had enough operable aircraft of its own to assume those roles 50 After Hornet arrived there Clark hoisted his flag aboard her again although he was not in command of the task group 51 The increasing threat from kamikaze suicide aircraft that had damaged seven carriers since the invasion of Leyte caused the navy to reassess its air group composition Fighters were obviously needed more to intercept the kamikazes before they could reach the fleet so the groups were reorganized to consist of 73 fighters and 15 dive and torpedo bombers each The change would take several months to implement and a single fighter squadron that large would prove to be too big for one man to lead so they were split into two squadrons in January 1945 52 Battle of Mindoro edit Main article Battle of Mindoro The temporary loss of the damaged carriers for repairs caused the reorganization of TG 38 in which Hornet was transferred to TG 38 2 for the upcoming operations in support of the assault on Mindoro scheduled for 5 December The landings were postponed 10 days and TF 38 sortied on 11 December The ship mustered 51 Hellcats 15 Helldivers and 18 Avengers at this time For this operation the Army would cover all targets south of Manila the escort carriers would provide direct support while the fast carriers would gain air supremacy over Luzon Starting on the 14th TF 38 flew continuous missions in support of that objective until they had to refuel three days later The aviators claimed to have destroyed 269 aircraft mostly on the ground sunk a few merchant ships and heavily damaged roads and railroads while losing 27 aircraft in combat and 38 to accidents The task force was unable to refuel on the 17th due to worsening weather and another attempt the next morning also failed before Halsey sailed unwittingly into the path of Typhoon Cobra later that day Low on fuel many ships were top heavy and rolled heavily which sometimes broke aircraft free from their tie down chains Across the fleet 146 aircraft were destroyed three light carriers were damaged when aircraft broke loose inside the hangars and three destroyers were sunk The Third Fleet was able to refuel on 19 December but follow on operations over Luzon scheduled for the 21st had to be canceled when the Americans realized that the typhoon was over Luzon so TF 38 returned to Ulithi 53 South China Sea raid edit Main article South China Sea raid nbsp Aerial photograph of the light cruiser Kashii sinking 12 January 1945On 30 December TF 38 departed Ulithi to attack Japanese airfields and shipping in Formosa French Indo China Luzon China the Ryukyus and the Pescadores Islands in support of the scheduled landings at Lingayen Gulf in Luzon on 9 January 1945 and to interdict the maritime traffic between the Japanese home islands and her conquests in Southeast Asia The carriers first attacked Formosa on 3 4 January before turning to Luzon for airstrikes on the 6th and 7th and then returned to bomb targets in Formosa on the 9th While claiming to have destroyed over 150 aircraft with little aerial opposition the Americans lost 46 aircraft in combat and 40 more in accidents With his obligation to cover the Lingayen Gulf area until the landings were done Halsey s ships entered the South China Sea during the night of 9 10 January in search of the two Ise class battleships that had been partially turned into seaplane carriers and had been mistakenly reported at Cam Ranh Bay After refueling on the 11th the carriers flew off almost 1 500 sorties against targets in French Indochina and off the coast Halsey turned his ships northward and attacked Formosa and the Hong Kong area on 15 16 January and reattacked Formosa on the 21st after having exited the South China Sea Until this date the Third Fleet had not been attacked by the Japanese but the kamikazes badly damaged Hornet s sister Ticonderoga En route back to Ulithi TF 38 s planes flew reconnaissance missions over Okinawa on 22 January to aid the planned invasion of that island while also attacking Japanese positions All told the carriers destroyed some 300 000 GRT of shipping and claimed to have destroyed 615 aircraft while losing 201 aircraft to all causes during their excursion 54 Volcano and Ryukyu Islands campaign edit Main article Volcano and Ryukyu Islands campaign nbsp Hornet in dazzle camouflage 27 March 1945On 27 January Spruance relieved Halsey Clark assumed command of TG 58 1 and brought Hornet back to the task group 55 The fast carriers now renumbered as TF 58 departed Ulithi on 10 February for full scale aerial assaults on the Tokyo area scheduled for 16 17 February that were intended to isolate Iwo Jima TF 58 s pilots claimed to have shot down 341 aircraft and destroyed 190 on the ground attacks on industrial targets were not very effective and little shipping was sunk with the most notable example being the recently completed Imperial Japanese Army escort carrier Yamashio Maru The Japanese admitted losing at least 78 aircraft in aerial combat while claiming to having shot down 134 aircraft themselves the Americans lost 88 aircraft to all causes The Japanese did not attack TF 58 during their time off the coast of Honshu 56 The carriers turned south late in the afternoon of the 17th to prepare to support the amphibious landings on Iwo Jima on 19 February TG 58 1 was refueling on the day of the landing but joined the other task groups providing close support for the Marines ashore on the 20th Three days later Spruance released the fast carriers to attack the Japanese Home Islands again in an attempt to neutralize the kamikaze threat Bad weather limited the effectiveness of the airstrikes around Tokyo on 25 January continued bad weather forced the cancellation of the airstrikes planned the following day despite moving southwards overnight Mitscher refueled his ships on the 27th and turned south to attack Okinawa on 1 March before returning to Ulithi on the 4th American claims were 52 aircraft shot down and more than 60 destroyed on the ground in exchange for 55 aircraft lost to all causes between 19 February and 1 March 57 While refitting in Ulithi Air Group 17 relieved Air Group 11 aboard the Hornet before departing on the 14th for another series of attacks on Japan in preparation for the invasion of Okinawa A Japanese reconnaissance aircraft spotted TF 58 on 17 March which allowed the Japanese to disperse their aircraft and hide them American attacks on the airfields in Kyushu were largely ineffective and were fiercely opposed Hornet s Fighter Squadron 17 encountered many fighters over Kanoya Air Field and claimed to have shot down 25 of them Japanese attacks on TF 58 lightly damaged three carriers none of which were under Clark s command American fighter pilots claimed 126 aircraft shot down and the Japanese admitted losing 110 aircraft including 32 kamikazes 58 nbsp A bomb near misses Hornet 19 March 1945Reconnaissance aircraft had located the remnants of the IJN in Kure and Kobe on the 18th and Mitscher ordered TGs 58 1 58 3 and 58 4 to attack the former port The Japanese caught Clark s carriers with their decks full of aircraft preparing to fly off the morning s airstrike but all of the attack aircraft were shot down one kamikaze crashed a thousand yards 910 meters astern of Hornet and two other were splashed by her sister Bennington s gunners After the airstrikes flew off further Japanese attacks crippled her sister Franklin 59 As they approached Kure the 20 Hellcats of Hornet s Fighter Bomber Squadron 17 encountered 40 fighters from the IJAAF s elite 434rd Kokutai In a battle which lasted 25 minutes six American and four Japanese fighters were shot down 60 The total casualties from the day s fighting over Japan including the engagement between VBF 17 and the 434rd Kokutai was 14 American and 25 Japanese aircraft shot down 61 The attacks on the warships in Kure were fairly ineffectual with the American pilots lightly damaging four battleships and many other warships but badly damaging only a single escort carrier and a light cruiser Hornet lost 13 aircraft in combat during the day The afternoon s scheduled airstrikes were canceled to allow TF 58 to protect its damaged ships as they withdrew further attacks on 20 and 21 March failed to significantly damage any more ships 62 TF 58 aircraft began hitting Okinawa on 23 March The following day TG 581 1 reconnaissance aircraft spotted a convoy that consisted of two troop transports an ammunition ship and five escorts off Amami Ōshima headed for Okinawa an 112 aircraft airstrike from Clark s carriers sank them all Mitscher s carriers continued to attack Okinawa ultimately flying a total of 3 095 sorties in the last seven days of March The Japanese heavily attacked TF 58 between 26 and 31 March and damaged 10 ships at the cost of around 1 100 aircraft On 1 April Hornet s planes began to provide direct support to the forces landing on Okinawa Five days later the Japanese launched a mass airstrike on 6 April that consisted to almost 700 planes of which at least 355 were kamikazes Mitscher cleared his flight decks of all non fighters and his pilots claimed to have shot down a total of 249 aircraft Despite this three destroyers two ammunition ships and one Landing Ship Tank were sunk by kamikazes and eight destroyers a destroyer escort and a minelayer were damaged The following day the Japanese continued to attack albeit with fewer aircraft Kamikazes damaged Hornet s sister Hancock one battleship a destroyer and a destroyer escort 63 Operation Ten Go edit Main article Operation Ten Go nbsp The battleship Yamato under attack A large fire burns aft of her superstructure and she is low in the water from torpedo damage Operation Ten Go Ten gō sakusen was the attempted attack by a strike force of 10 Japanese surface vessels led by the large battleship Yamato This small task force had been ordered to fight through enemy naval forces then beach Yamato and fight from shore using her guns as coastal artillery and her crew as naval infantry The Ten Go force was spotted by American submarines shortly after it put to sea on 6 April Reconnaissance aircraft from TF 58 found the force the following morning and TG 58 1 began launching aircraft almost two hours later Hornet s Avengers put at least one torpedo into the battleship the first of the ten torpedoes and five bomb hits that sank her less than two hours later Of Yamato s screening force the light cruiser Yahagi and four of the seven destroyers were also sunk or scuttled The Americans lost three fighters four dive bombers and three torpedo bombers to all causes during the attack 64 On 8 April TF 58 returned to its previous mission of providing support to the US forces ashore although continued kamikaze attacks exacted a toll A week later Mitscher ordered a fighter sweep over Kyushu to focus Japanese attention on his ships rather the more vulnerable amphibious shipping sustaining the ongoing battle His pilots claimed to have shot down 29 aircraft and destroyed 51 on the ground His strategy worked and the kamikazes attacked TF 58 on 17 April badly damaging Intrepid despite Clark s pilots claiming 72 attackers The fast carriers returned to Okinawan waters and none of them were damaged by a kamikaze until 11 May When the weather worsened in late April Mitscher sent TG 58 1 to Ulithi to refit and rest his exhausted crews on the 27th After Clark s ships rejoined him on 12 May Mitscher sent TG 58 1 and 58 3 the next day to attack airfields in Kyushu and Shikoku Over 13 14 May their pilots claimed to have shot down 72 aircraft and destroyed 73 on the ground while losing 14 aircraft The Japanese evened the score when they badly damaged Enterprise on the 14th 65 nbsp Typhoon damage 5 JuneHalsey and McCain reassumed command and the task force resumed its former designation as TF 38 on 27 28 May after the pace of aerial combat had slowed down Bad weather forced the cancellation of air support over Okinawa on 30 May and on 1 3 June Clark was able to refuel on the following day despite worsening weather He took his ships eastwards hoping to avoid the developing typhoon to his southwest Halsey however ordered him to steer northwestwards shortly after midnight on the 5th to position his ships for the planned airstrikes on Kyushu which put TG 38 1 right into the path of the typhoon Despite multiple requests to alter course to avoid the eye of the typhoon the task group entered the eyewall region where the most violent weather in a typhoon is located around dawn when Clark was finally granted the freedom to maneuver Shortly afterwards a massive wave crashed down on Hornet s bow which collapsed some 25 feet 7 6 meters of her forward flight deck Not long afterwards the same thing happened to Bennington and the bow was ripped off the heavy cruiser Pittsburgh Only six men were killed during the storm but 76 airplanes were destroyed or lost overboard and 70 were damaged Both Hornet and Bennington were unable to launch their aircraft over the bow as was proved when a Marine Vought F4U Corsair was flown off Hornet and almost immediately flipped over and spun into the sea 66 Clark ordered that the damaged sisters steam backwards at 18 knots 33 km h 21 mph and launch their aircraft over the stern on 7 June as they provided the CAP over the task group He detached Bennington for repairs the next day while Hornet s aircraft participated in the attack on Kanoya Air Field On 9 April McCain had Clark s aircraft demonstrate the effectiveness of napalm bombs on the coastal defenses of Okidaitōjima southeast of Okinawa The following day his planes spotted for three battleships as they bombarded Minamidaitōjima After arriving in Leyte on 13 June Clark relinquished command of the task group and Hornet was ordered home for repairs 67 arriving in San Francisco on 7 July Hornet earned seven battle stars and the Presidential Unit Citation for her service in the war 68 Her repairs and refit were complete by 13 September after which she was assigned to Operation Magic Carpet that had her ferry troops home from the Marianas and Hawaiian Islands returning to San Francisco on 9 February 1946 Hornet was decommissioned on 15 January 1947 and assigned to the Pacific Reserve Fleet 68 Peacetime tensions 1951 to 1959 edit nbsp Hornet following her SCB 27A conversion Hornet was recommissioned on 20 March 1951 then sailed from San Francisco for the New York Naval Shipyard where she was decommissioned on 12 May for conversion to an attack aircraft carrier CVA 12 under the SCB 27A upgrade program 68 Her sister Wasp badly damaged her bow in a collision on 26 April 1952 Hornet s bow was cut away and used to repair Wasp 69 On 11 September 1953 she was recommissioned as an attack carrier The ship then trained in the Caribbean Sea before departure from Norfolk on 11 May 1954 on an eight month global cruise 68 After operations in the Mediterranean Sea and the Indian Ocean Hornet joined the mobile 7th Fleet in the South China Sea to search for survivors of a Cathay Pacific Airways passenger plane shot down by Chinese aircraft near Hainan Island On 25 July Hornet aircraft supported planes from Philippine Sea as they shot down two attacking Chinese fighters After tensions eased she returned to San Francisco on 12 December trained out of San Diego then sailed on 4 May 1955 to join the 7th Fleet in the Far East Hornet helped to cover the evacuation of Vietnamese from the Communist controlled north to South Vietnam then ranged from Japan to Formosa Okinawa and the Philippines in readiness training with the 7th Fleet She returned to San Diego on 10 December and entered the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard the following month for the SCB 125 upgrade 68 nbsp A Grumman S 2D Tracker of VS 37 aboard Hornet circa 1963 Following her modernization overhaul Hornet operated along the California coast She departed San Diego on 21 January 1957 to bolster the strength of the 7th Fleet until her return from the troubled Far East on 25 July Following a similar cruise 6 January 2 July 1958 68 she entered Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in August to begin the conversion into an anti submarine warfare ASW carrier On 3 April 1959 she sailed from Long Beach to join the 7th Fleet in antisubmarine warfare tactics ranging from Japan to Okinawa and the Philippines She returned home in October for training along the western seaboard 68 In the late 1950s an anti submarine air group consisted of one squadron with 20 twin engined Grumman S2F Trackers ASW aircraft a squadron of HSS 1 Seabat ASW helicopters and a detachment of Douglas AD 5W Skyraider airborne early warning AEW aircraft A detachment of four McDonnell F2H Banshee fighters was often assigned to protect the other aircraft After 1960 the ASW air group generally consisted of two squadrons of ASW aircraft each of 10 Trackers a helicopter squadron of 16 Seabats or Sikorsky SH 3 Sea Kings and an AEW detachment with Grumman E 1 Tracers No fighters were assigned between 1960 and 1965 Afterwards the ASW carriers sometimes received a detachment of Douglas A 4 Skyhawk attack aircraft 70 Vietnam and the Space Race 1960 to 1970 edit nbsp Hornet preparing to retrieve the Apollo 11 Command Module Columbia 24 July 1969 In the following years Hornet was regularly deployed to the 7th Fleet for operations ranging from the coast of South Vietnam to the shores of Japan the Philippines and Okinawa 68 she also played a key part in the Apollo program as a recovery ship for uncrewed and crewed spaceflights 71 On 6 March 1965 a Sea King helicopter took off from Hornet in San Diego and flew to the aircraft carrier Franklin D Roosevelt off Naval Station Mayport Florida without refueling or landing It covered a distance of 2 106 miles 3 389 kilometers in 16 hours 52 minutes and set a Federation Aeronautique Internationale world record for helicopters This exceeded the previous record distance by more than 750 miles 1 210 kilometers 72 73 Hornet was deployed to Vietnam for the first time from October 1965 to January 1966 by this time all of the ASW carriers had received the SCB 144 upgrade as part of the Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization II program They received an AN SQS 23 sonar mounted in the bow as well as improved displays in the Combat Information Center During these deployments the carriers were responsible for escorting the attack carriers in the South China Sea and providing combat search and rescue Their Skyhawks were occasionally used to attack ground targets 74 On 20 September 1965 the destroyer Epperson s steering malfunctioned and collided with Hornet while refueling Nobody was injured on either ship but both were lightly damaged 75 On 25 August 1966 she was on recovery station for the flight of AS 202 the second uncrewed flight of production Apollo Command and Service Modules The moonship rocketed three quarters of the way around the globe in 93 minutes before splashdown near Wake Island Scorched from the heat of its re entry into the Earth s atmosphere the Apollo space capsule designed to carry American astronauts to the Moon was brought aboard Hornet after its test that command module is currently on display aboard Hornet 76 77 78 Hornet returned to Long Beach on 8 September but headed back to the Far East on 27 March 1967 She reached Japan exactly a month later and departed the Sasebo base on 19 May for the war zone 68 She operated in Vietnamese waters until October and returned for another deployment from November 1968 to April 1969 After the North Koreans shot down a Lockheed EC 121 Warning Star AEW aircraft on 14 April over international waters Hornet was ordered to reinforce the American ships gathering in the area in what became a pointless show of force 79 Hornet recovered the three astronauts Neil Armstrong Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin and their command module Columbia from the first Moon landing mission Apollo 11 after splashdown about 900 miles southwest of Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean on 24 July 1969 80 President Nixon was on board to welcome the returning astronauts back to Earth where they lived in quarantine aboard Hornet prior to transfer to the Lunar Receiving Laboratory at Houston 81 Hornet also recovered Apollo 12 on 24 November Returning astronauts Charles Conrad Jr Alan L Bean and Richard F Gordon Jr were picked up from their splashdown point near American Samoa 82 Retirement 1970 to present edit USS Hornet MuseumU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkCalifornia Historic Landmark nbsp USS Hornet docked in AlamedaCoordinates37 46 21 15 N 122 18 10 23 W 37 7725417 N 122 3028417 W 37 7725417 122 3028417AreaAlamedaNRHP reference No 91002065CHL No 1029 83 Significant datesAdded to NRHP4 December 1991 84 Designated NHL4 December 1991 85 Hornet was decommissioned 26 June 1970 and mothballed at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility She was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 25 July 1989 In 1991 she was designated a National Historic Landmark 86 87 88 The carrier was donated to the Aircraft Carrier Hornet Foundation on 26 May 1998 On 17 October 1998 she was opened to the public as USS Hornet Museum in Alameda California She was designated a California State Historic Landmark in 1999 83 and is listed on the National Register of Historic places 91002065 86 Building on her status as an authentically restored aircraft carrier Hornet has been featured in a number of film and television shows Several TV shows including a number of phantom themed shows have been recorded on board and in 1997 she was the subject of an episode of the TV series JAG the season three opener titled Ghost Ship In 2004 she was the set for scenes from the movie XXX State of the Union which starred Ice Cube and portions of the 2007 film Rescue Dawn which starred Christian Bale were shot on board Hornet was both the subject and the setting of the independent film Carrier 2006 89 90 Hornet also hosted the final task and finish line of the thirtieth season of the reality show The Amazing Race 91 Hornet also hosts CarrierCon a fan convention for anime video game comic and cosplay fans In 2023 CarrierCon collaborated officially with Azur Lane a popular Chinese mobile game with an English release that features anthropomorphic shipgirls including Hornet herself as Hornet II to distinguish her from the original Hornet 92 Later that year Hornet was chosen to host Azur Lane s live event celebrating the 5th anniversary of its English worldwide release 93 Awards editPresidential Unit Citation Meritorious Unit Commendation 3 China Service Medal extended American Campaign Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal 7 battle stars World War II Victory Medal Navy Occupation Service Medal with Europe clasp National Defense Service Medal 2 Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal 2 Vietnam Service Medal 6 battle stars Philippine Presidential Unit Citation Republic of Vietnam Meritorious Unit Citation Gallantry Cross Medal with Palm Philippine Liberation Medal 1 battle star Republic of Vietnam Campaign MedalGallery edit nbsp Hornet leaving Pearl Harbor in March 1944 nbsp Hornet island in April 1945 nbsp Hornet s flight deck in June 1945 nbsp Hornet at anchor in 1958 nbsp Hornet underway at sea in 1960 nbsp Hornet underway in the Pacific Ocean on 5 December 1968 nbsp Hornet s bridge in 1992 nbsp Hornet s scoreboardReferences edit a b c Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships a b Chesneau p 104 Raven pp 9 10 16 Friedman pp 155 156 394 Brown 1977 p 61 Friedman pp 140 394 Friedman p 151 Friedman pp 138 154 Brown 1997 p 60 Friedman pp 146 394 Raven p 9 Friedman pp 143 398 Faltum p 158 Faltum p 160 Friedman p 144 Raven pp 37 66 Chesneau p 105 Raven pp 86 97 98 Faltum pp 160 161 164 Friedman p 134 Faltum p 168 Brown 2009 pp 243 244 Brown 2009 p 244 Polmar amp Genda I p 373 Brown 2009 pp 244 245 Faltum p 61 Polmar amp Genda I p 373 Brown 2009 pp 246 248 Polmar amp Genda I pp 373 374 Rems Alan 1 April 2016 Out of the Jaws of Victory Naval History 30 2 ISSN 1042 1920 Retrieved 10 April 2019 a b Miles Dwayne USS Hornet Commanding Officers www its caltech edu USS Hornet Association Retrieved 10 April 2019 Brown 2009 pp 252 255 Faltum pp 64 65 Polmar amp Genda I p 385 Reynolds pp 343 344 Brown 2009 p 255 Brown 2009 p 256 Faltum pp 65 66 Brown 2009 pp 257 258 Polmar amp Genda I pp 386 388 391 Brown 2009 pp 259 260 Polmar amp Genda I pp 391 394 Tillman 1994 p 17 Brown 2009 p 260 Polmar amp Genda I p 394 Tillman 1994 p 23 Brown 2009 pp 260 261 Polmar amp Genda I p 394 Brown 2009 p 262 Polmar amp Genda I p 394 Brown pp 263 265 Polmar amp Genda I pp 398 400 Reynolds pp 360 364 Faltum p 72 Polmar amp Genda I pp 406 407 Faltum pp 72 73 Polmar amp Genda I pp 406 407 Faltum p 192 Reynolds p 384 Polmar amp Genda I pp 409 410 Brown p 266 Faltum p 76 Polmar amp Genda I pp 409 412 Prados pp 78 79 Faltum p 76 Polmar amp Genda I p 412 Prados pp 79 80 83 84 Faltum p 77 Polmar amp Genda I p 413 Prados pp 86 88 90 Reynolds p 385 Brown 2009 p 269 Prados pp 118 120 128 Bates Vol 1 p 98 Bates Vol I pp 100 117 122 Brown 2009 p 270 Prados pp 133 145 Bates Vol II pp 181 182 307 308 311 Vol III pp 103 104 Bates Vol III pp 109 113 348 349 579 582 774 776 777 Faltum p 87 Polmar amp Genda I p 438 Hackett Bob Kingsepp Sander 2016 IJN Noshiro Tabular Record of Movement www combinedfleet com Retrieved 15 May 2019 Brown 2009 pp 276 277 Faltum pp 89 90 Polmar amp Genda I pp 440 443 Reynolds p 392 Brown 2009 p 277 Faltum p 91 Polmar amp Genda I pp 445 446 Brown 2009 pp 277 278 Faltum pp 92 93 Polmar amp Genda I pp 446 447 Brown 2009 p 278 Faltum pp 93 95 Polmar amp Genda I pp 449 455 458 Reynolds p 397 Brown 2009 p 280 Faltum p 97 Polmar amp Genda I pp 463 464 Tillman 2010 pp 119 123 Brown 2009 pp 280 281 Faltum pp 97 98 Polmar amp Genda I p 467 Reynolds pp 402 403 Brown 2009 pp 281 282 Faltum p 99 Polmar amp Genda I pp 469 470 Reynolds pp 405 406 Tillman 2010 pp 124 125 Faltum p 99 Polmar amp Genda I pp 470 471 Young pp 37 39 Tillman 2010 p 128 Brown 2009 pp 281 282 Faltum pp 99 101 Polmar amp Genda I pp 474 475 Reynolds pp 406 408 Brown 2009 p 282 Faltum pp 102 104 Polmar amp Genda I pp 475 478 480 Reynolds pp 411 413 Faltum pp 103 104 Polmar amp Genda I pp 477 480 Reynolds p 413 Faltum pp 104 105 Polmar amp Genda I pp 480 482 Reynolds pp 413 419 Reynolds pp 419 425 Reynolds pp 425 427 a b c d e f g h i Hornet VIII CV 12 Polmar amp Genda II p 95 Faltum p 136 137 Polmar amp Genda II 155 156 Hornet Plus Three Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 3 September 2009 Polmar amp Genda II p 209 Swopes Bryan R 2017 USS Hornet CVS 12 Archives This Day in Aviation Retrieved 19 May 2019 Faltum pp 137 168 159 Melman Stan 1996 Question 25 93 USN USCG Collisions with Merchant Vessels Warship International XXXIII 3 319 ISSN 0043 0374 NASA NSSDCA Spacecraft Details nssdc gsfc nasa gov Chariots for Apollo A History of Manned Lunar Spacecraft Archived 4 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 8 2 Qualifying Missions NASA Special Publication 4205 Courtney G Brooks James M Grimwood Loyd S Swenson 1979 Apollo amp Other Space Program Artifacts USS Hornet Museum 10 October 2018 Retrieved 19 May 2019 Faltum p 168 Polmar amp Genda II pp 268 269 Apollo 11 Command and Service Module CSM nssdc gsfc nasa gov NASA Retrieved 30 May 2019 A Front Row Seat For History Archived from the original on 19 March 2006 Retrieved 10 May 2008 Apollo 12 Command and Service Module CSM nssdc gsfc nasa gov NASA Retrieved 30 May 2019 a b USS Hornet Office of Historic Preservation California State Parks Retrieved 30 March 2012 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service 23 January 2007 USS Hornet Cvs 12 Aircraft Carrier National Historic Landmark summary listing where year designated appears as 1992 believe to be incorrect National Park Service September 28 2007 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 a b Hornet CVS 12 USS 12 04 91 List of NHLs by State National Park Service USS Hornet CVS 12 18 June 1991 by James P Delgado PDF National Register of Historic Places Registration National Park Service 18 June 1991 USS Hornet CVS 12 Accompanying 4 photos exterior from 1943 1944 1945 and c 1969 PDF National Register of Historic Places Registration National Park Service 18 June 1991 Venue Rentals USS Hornet Museum 12 January 2016 Retrieved 30 May 2019 Carrier at IMDb nbsp Longeretta Emily 21 February 2018 The Amazing Race Season 30 Finale Which Team Won Us Weekly Retrieved 31 December 2019 CarrierCon 17 February 2023 CarrierCon 2023 Azur Lane Collaboration Announcement Instagram Retrieved 2 August 2023 CarrierCon CarrierConBA 21 July 2023 Calling all Commanders and Ship Girls We are proud to announce that we are hosting the Azur Lane 5th Anniversary celebration event Come celebrate with our friends AzurLane EN HornetChanVT August 13th 2023 707 W Hornet Ave Alameda CA 94501 AzurLane5thAnniv Tweet Retweeted by Azur Lane Retrieved 2 August 2023 via Twitter Bibliography editBates Richard 1953 The Battle for Leyte Gulf October 1944 Strategical and Tactical Analysis Volume I Preliminary Operations Until 0719 October 17th 1944 Including Battle off Formosa n p US Naval War College Bates Richard 1955 The Battle for Leyte Gulf October 1944 Strategical and Tactical Analysis Volume II Operations 0719 October 17th until October 20th D day n p US Naval War College Bates Richard 1957 The Battle for Leyte Gulf October 1944 Strategical and Tactical Analysis Volume III Operations from 0000 October 20th D day until 1042 October 23rd n p US Naval War College Brown David 1977 Aircraft Carriers World War 2 Fact Files New York Arco Publishing ISBN 0 66804 164 1 Brown J D 2009 Carrier Operations in World War II Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 108 2 Chesneau Roger ed 1980 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 Greenwich Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 85177 146 7 Faltum Andrew 1996 The Essex Aircraft Carriers Baltimore Maryland Nautical amp Aviation ISBN 1 877853 26 7 Friedman Norman 1983 U S Aircraft Carriers An Illustrated Design History Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 739 9 Hornet VIII CV 12 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command 22 December 2004 Retrieved 20 April 2019 Polmar Norman amp Genda Minoru 2006 Aircraft Carriers A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events Vol I 1909 1945 Washington D C Potomac Books ISBN 1 57488 663 0 Polmar Norman amp Genda Minoru 2006 Aircraft Carriers A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events Vol II 1946 2006 Washington D C Potomac Books ISBN 978 1 57488 665 8 Prados John C 2016 Storm Over Leyte The Philippine Invasion and the Destruction of the Japanese Navy Dutton Caliber ISBN 978 0 4514 7361 5 Raven Alan 1988 Essex class Carriers Warship Design Histories Vol 2 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 021 1 Reynolds Clark G 2005 On the Warpath in the Pacific Admiral Jocko Clark and the Fast Carriers Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 59114 716 6 Tillman Barrett 1994 The Marianas Turkey Shoot June 19 20 1944 Carrier Battle in the Philippine Sea St Paul Minnesota Phalanx Publishing ISBN 1 883809 04 5 Tillman Barrett 2010 Whirlwind The Air War Against Japan 1942 1945 New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 8440 7 Young Edward M 2012 American Aces Against the Kamikaze Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 8490 8745 2 This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here Further reading editBacker Steve 2009 Essex Class Aircraft Carriers of the Second World War Shipcraft Vol 12 Barnsley UK Seaforth Publishing ISBN 978 1 84832 018 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to USS Hornet CV 12 category USS Hornet Museum official website USS Hornet Sea Air amp Space Museum post on AirMuseumGuide com USS Hornet by the US Navy Archived 5 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine General Plan for the U S S Hornet CV 12 hosted by the Historical Naval Ships Association HNSA Digital Collections USS Hornet CV 12 at Historic Naval Ships Association Aviation From Sand Dunes to Sonic Booms a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary USS Hornet by Dwayne Miles USS Hornet Damage to Ship s Structure Official report written by ship s captain after typhoon damage CAG 17 Carrier Air Group 17 VT 17 Torpedo Group 17 was based on USS Hornet 1944 1945 USS Hornet pictures from the U S Naval History Center Historic American Engineering Record HAER No WA 34 U S S HORNET Puget Sound Naval Shipyard Sinclair Inlet Bremerton Kitsap County WA 130 photos 22 data pages 11 photo caption pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USS Hornet CV 12 amp oldid 1179542333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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