27 February 1942 A.D. USS Langley Sunk
27 February 1942 A.D. USS Langley Sunk
U.S. aircraft carrier Langley is sunk
Editors. “U.S. aircraft carrier
Langley is sunk.” History Channel. N.d.
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/us-aircraft-carrier-langley-is-sunk. Accessed 26 Feb 2015.
U.S. aircraft carrier Langley is sunk
On this day, the U.S. Navy's first
aircraft carrier, the Langley, is sunk by Japanese warplanes (with a
little help from U.S. destroyers), and all of its 32 aircraft are lost.
The Langley was launched in
1912 as the naval collier (coal transport ship) Jupiter. After World
War I, the Jupiter was converted
into the Navy's first aircraft carrier and rechristened the Langley,
after aviation pioneer Samuel Pierpoint Langley. It was also the Navy's first
electrically propelled ship, capable of speeds of 15 knots. On October 17,
1922, Lt. Virgil C. Griffin piloted the first plane, a VE-7-SF, launched from
the Langley's decks. Although planes had taken off from ships before, it
was nevertheless a historic moment. After 1937, the Langley lost the
forward 40 percent of her flight deck as part of a conversion to seaplane
tender, a mobile base for squadrons of patrol bombers.
On December 8, 1941, the Langley
was part of the Asiatic Fleet in the Philippines when the Japanese attacked.
She immediately set sail for Australia, arriving on New
Year's Day, 1942. On February 22,
commanded by Robert P. McConnell, the Langley, carrying 32 Warhawk
fighters, left as part of a convoy to aid the Allies in their battle against
the Japanese in the Dutch East Indies.
On February 27, the Langley
parted company from the convoy and headed straight for the port at Tjilatjap,
Java. About 74 miles south of Java, the carrier met up with two U.S. escort
destroyers when nine Japanese twin-engine bombers attacked. Although the Langley
had requested a fighter escort from Java for cover, none could be spared. The
first two Japanese bomber runs missed their target, as they were flying too
high, but the Langley's luck ran out the third time around and it was
hit three times, setting the planes on her flight deck aflame. The carrier
began to list. Commander McConnell lost his ability to navigate the ship.
McConnell ordered the Langley abandoned, and the escort destroyers were
able to take his crew to safety. Of the 300 crewmen, only 16 were lost. The
destroyers then to sank the Langley before the Japanese were able to
capture it.
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