The
USS Indianapolis (CA-35) was commissioned at the Philadelphia Navy Yard on 15 November 1932. The ship served with honor from Pearl Harbor through the last campaign of World War II, sinking in action two weeks before the end of the war. On 30 July 1945, while sailing from Guam to Leyte,
Indianapolis was torpedoed by Japanese submarine I-58. The ship capsized and sank in twelve minutes. Survivors were spotted by a patrol aircraft on 2 August. All air and surface units capable of rescue operations were dispatched to the scene at once, and the surrounding waters were thoroughly searched for survivors. Upon completion of the day and night search on 8 August, 316 men were rescued out of the crew of 1,199.
read more at
http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq30-1.htm----------
It's a very large web-site, with lots and lots and lots of really good stuff there.
Anyway, I didn't feel compelled to find some sort of really long, really detailed, really comprehensive, story about
USS Indianapolis, because I'm sure most here already know the story, including the fact that
USS Indianapolis had been carrying material for the two atomic bombs later dropped on Japan in August 1945.....and because of the super-secrecy concerning its mission, rescue of the crew was considerably delayed.
As a professional civilian, and I've said this many times before, over at the other place, I'm not fond of this really stupid "compartmentalization of information" policy, this giving information on the basis of "need to know."
That happened with Pearl Harbor, and later with Watergate, where everybody was running around, having some information, but no one had
all information, and everybody from Franklin Roosevelt to Richard Nixon being lousy fillers-in-of-blank-spaces, came to all sorts of conclusions at variance with the facts.
With utterly catastropic consequences.
That's just really stupid.
It wasn't necessary to broadcast to the entire US Navy in the Pacific that
USS Indianapolis was carrying materials for atomic bombs, but it would have been nice if all the secrecy geeks had at least informed the lower ranks that
USS Indianapolis was in the neighborhood.
Probably then the lower ranks would have reasonably assumed, "Oh, it's here to join us," and no harm done.