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The Hamilton County's new mission as a
minesweeper tender started six months before I reported aboard. All
prescribed minesweeper and helicopter supplies that could be loaded aboard were
stored and accounted for. We spent a few days in San Diego testing the
integrity of a wooden hulled minesweeper by trying to blow it out of the water.
We couldn't. We stocked up on stores and provisions needed for a long
tour. As soon as a full complement of officers and men was aboard, we
steamed out of Long Beach for the Western Pacific. This was the ship's first tour as a minesweeper
tender to the combat zones of the far east. We left Long Beach in the late
summer of 1956 with a short stop planned for Honolulu, a convenient liberty port
in route to Sasebo, Japan.
LSTs are not noted for their dashing good
looks, and they wallow from port to port at a top speed of 10 knots with a tail
wind and following seas. The first leg of our journey from Long Beach to
Honolulu was 2,226 nautical miles, a distance covered by today's jets in four
hours. By contrast, our journey boggled the imagination. Averaging nine knots
per hour, a straight line to Honolulu was predicted to take 247 hours, a hair
over ten days travel time. After a few days steaming, the line from the old
song I'd love to get you on a slow boat to China, took on an entirely new
meaning. As there were only sailors on the ship, we had all been got, as we
were on the ship by ourselves. It was peaceful, pleasant, ponderous, and
painful making this first overseas journey.
After the tenth full day of steaming in a straight line, we were
elated to arrive in Honolulu for two days of rest and recreation. We tied-up
alongside a pier in Pearl Harbor, and anticipated making the most of a short,
but relaxing visit on Oahu's Waikiki Beach. The liberty parties were well
prepared, and few died in the rush to get off the gangway as they left the
ship. Liberty on Oahu was all it was expected to be, a great break from
steaming in a straight line hour after hour. Little did we know at the time
that thoroughly scurrilous forces were at work aboard the ship. We were soon to
find out.
About noon of the second day in Pearl Harbor,
the most startling news was reported. The chief engineer, who was responsible
for the ship's propulsion, reported that some iron filings had been found in one
of the main engine's oil filters. For this reason, he said, it was essential
that a thorough examination of the engine be performed. The source of the
filings had to be established beyond any doubt. He further explained to
Captain Weatherby and others that the engine could not be run at all until it
was given a clean bill of health.
Exactly how
long it might take to examine the engine thoroughly was not known. The
engine involved was huge, sitting eight feet in height and fifteen feet long in
the ships starboard-side engine room. While its size was not a
major problem, examining the engine thoroughly might require complete
disassembly until the origin of the metal filings could be found. Once the
source was found, the solution would depend upon the findings. This was the
theory on which we were operating.
The crew was divided into two duty sections, and each duty section
was given liberty on alternate days until the ship was again seaworthy. So here
we were, stranded on a tropical island, a few miles from Honolulu and Waikiki
Beach for some indeterminate period of time. The crew was alternately shocked
and delighted by this startling turn of events. Grudgingly, they took turns
visiting Waikiki Beach, enjoying the white sand and the view of Diamond Head as
it looked in 1956.

Our trying situation was the subject of considerable speculation
aboard ship. We had been steaming at a steady speed in a straight line for ten
continuous days, and throughout that period, the engines performed perfectly.
The oil filters remained clean and pure. On arrival the engines were shut down
and liberty was started. Only on the second day, the day before we were to
resume our journey, did the iron filings appear. Voila! The timing of the iron
filings was magnificent. None of us had any reason for suspicion, so we simply
relaxed, enjoyed the liberty, and the fresh breezes of Oahu.
Each day that followed, the chief engineer reported that their
examination was proceeding on schedule. Each day he reported that they had not
found anything to explain the iron filings. This pattern of reports, and
liberty, reports, and liberty continued for ten days. Throughout this time we
were struggling from day to day, not knowing what to expect. It was a grueling
experience.
Finally the engineer announced that the engine had been completely
disassembled, each part examined under a microscope, and the source of the
suspicious iron filings could not be found. The only thing left to do was to
reassemble the engine, and hope they had not overlooked anything. One more day
in port, he said, and we should be able to resume our trip to Sasebo. That was
the way it happened.
We all knew the engineer as an officer and gentleman. He was a
person of impeccable integrity. He inspired the same qualities among all the
men in his division. At the same time, the ships stewards, who reported to me,
often knew things about certain officers and men from monitoring their personal
living spaces. One of the stewards reported that he had seen a small cup of
iron shavings in the Chief Engineers stateroom. He was not exactly sure when
he had first noticed these shavings, whether it was before or after we arrived
in Hawaii. He also reported that he had experienced some wonderful liberty on
the island. As he grinned from ear to ear, I decided to let his story die a
natural death.
Being nicely refreshed, we resumed our slow float to
Sasebo. A
distance of 3,045 nautical miles, it was destined to consume 14 more days
steaming in a straight line. For some reason, not a single complaint was heard
about the second part of our journey. The trip originally expected to take 27
days actually took 36, just over 10% of an entire year. Because of the wasted
travel time, the Hamilton County's homeport was changed to Sasebo, Japan shortly
after we arrived in the Orient, eliminating for all time the possibility of
another Honolulu hang-up.
We were
all thoroughly refreshed from our ten days of surprise liberty in Oahu. Anyone
aboard the ship might have harbored a small cup of iron filings, ignorant of
their potential value. The chief engineer knew exactly what to do with them,
proving the amazing power of a few iron shavings when placed in the hands of an
expert. We never knew if the iron shavings really came from the engines oil
filter. As it turned out, nobody even cared.
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