US Navy Report of Japanese Raid on Pearl Harbor, Enclosure E, USS Ramsay

Editor's Note: The following content is a transcription of a period document or a collection of period statistics. It may be incomplete, inaccurate, or biased. The reader may not wish to take the content as factual.

13 Dec 1941

ww2dbase
DM16/A16(012)
U.S.S. Ramsay.


Pearl Harbor, T.H.
December 13, 1941

From: Commanding Officer.
To: Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet.
 
Subject: Report of Offensive Measures During Air Raid Seven December 1941.
Reference: (a) CinCPac desptach 102102.

  1. The Ramsay was moored at berth D-3. A bomb was observed to land on the western end of Ford Island at 0755. Sounded General Quarters and opened fire with fifty caliber machine guns and 3"/23 caliber gun at 0805. Continued firing on enemy planes intermittently as they came within range.
  2. Ramsay liberty party returning in Montgomery boat was strafed by torpedo planes which were observed to fire three torpedoes into Utah and one into Raleigh.
  3. Ramsay got underway at 0855 and proceeded out of harbor. While proceeding down outer channel an enemy plane was taken under fire with fifty caliber machine guns, within effective range. Gun crews report, substantiated by several enlisted observers, the plane destroyed.
  4. Upon clearing entrance buoys assumed anti-submarine patrol.

[signed]
G.L. SIMS.


Copy to:
Combatfor.
Cominbatfor.
Comindiv TWO.
ww2dbase

Source(s):
United States National Archives, Modern Military Branch

Added By:
C. Peter Chen





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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. Gregg Heilman says:
10 Jan 2010 09:50:53 AM

World War II

On 10 December 1940, Ramsay returned to Pearl Harbor and, throughout the next year, operated with Mine Divisions 5 and 2. Moored at Pearl Harbor on the morning of 7 December 1941, she fired her guns in combat for the first time at carrier-based planes delivering Japan's declaration of war on the United States.

Underway from the harbor before 0900, for offshore patrol, Ramsay made sound contact with a submarine at 1120. She released 10 depth charges, then watched an oil slick spread over the attack area. She had damaged, and possibly had sunk one of the midget submarines used by the Japanese in the attack. Eight days later, while escorting a merchant ship off Kauai, she made her second contact. During two runs over the enemy, she dropped her depth charges and again was rewarded by the appearance of an oil slick on the surface indicating damage to her quarry.

Into February 1942, Ramsay continued patrol escort services in the Hawaiian area. On the 22nd, she got underway with TF 19 for Samoa. Arriving Pago Pago 4 March, she planted defensive minefields off Tutuila and Apia, then shifted to Suva for mining activities among the Fiji Islands. On 3 May she steamed out of Suva for the New Hebrides and by 11 June had completed, with Montgomery, the Efate defensive minefields. The next day, she cleared Vila harbor, and returned to Pearl Harbor on 3 July.

For the next 2 months, she again performed escort and patrol assignments in the Hawaiian Islands. Then, on 14 September, she sailed for the Aleutians. Still with Montgomery, she arrived at Adak 22 September and 3 days later resumed mineplanting activities. In November she returned to California underwent overhaul at Hunter's Point and on 13 January 1943 arrived back in the Aleutians for 9 months of escort and patrol duty from Unalaska in the east to Attu in the west.

On 17 September, Ramsay sailed south. Steaming via Pearl Harbor, she put into San Francisco 4 October for another overhaul. Out of the shipyard by 20 December, she sailed west on the 24th. She joined ServRon 6 at Pearl Harbor on 2 January 1944, and on the 21st headed for the Gilberts. After a brief stop at Tarawa, she rendezvoused with TG 50.15 on the 30th and screened Pensacola during the bombardment of Wotje that afternoon. The next day, she guarded Chester during shelling, and, on 2 February, she arrived at Majuro, where she conducted antisubmarine patrols until 14 March. An escort run to the Gilberts followed, and on the 19th she got underway to return to Pearl Harbor. Arriving on the 27th, she was assigned convoy escort duty. Between then and mid-September, she shepherded ships to Majuro, San Francisco and Eniwetok. In October, she served with the Submarine Training Force and, in November, returned to the Marshalls for escort and training duty off Majuro.

With the new year, 1945, Ramsay headed east and during February again worked with the Submarine Training Force. At the end of the month, she sailed for San Pedro, where, after overhaul, she was designated a miscellaneous auxiliary and was reclassified AG-98, effective 5 June. On the 15th, she once more got underway for Pearl Harbor, and for the next 3 months, she served as plane guard for carriers training in Hawaiian waters.

On 24 September, she arrived back at San Pedro to await her third, and final, inactivation. She was decommissioned 19 October 1945, struck from the Navy list 13 November 1945 and sold for scrapping 21 November 1946.

Awards

Ramsay earned three battle stars during World War II.

"This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships."



2. Hugh Louis Nini says:
27 Oct 2010 08:56:07 AM

My brother Earl Felix Nini was on the Ramsay on Dec 7 - I would like to make contact with any others serving on the Ramsay at that time or any family members of the crew of the Ramsay on that fateful Sunday.

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