Tehachapi News

‘A little bit of history coming back to us’

Wreck of US Navy submarine confirmed last month includes sailor from Kern County

- BY STEVEN MAYER smayer@bakersfiel­d.com Reporter Steven Mayer can be reached at 661-395-7353. Follow him on Facebook and on Twitter: @semayerTBC. Reporter Steven Mayer can be reached at 661-395-7353. Follow him on Facebook and on Twitter: @semayerTBC.

It was 1944, and Jerrold W. Reed Jr. was only 20 when the USS Albacore, the submarine he was serving aboard, was lost at sea.

Had he lived a long and charmed life, the onetime Taft resident might have turned 100 later this year. But that was not to be. The cruelty of war cut short the submariner’s life, and the lives of his shipmates.

Nearly eight decades after the disappeara­nce of the Gato-class submarine and its crew of 85, the U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command confirmed last month the discovery of the wreck of the Albacore off the coast of Japan.

The command’s Underwater Archaeolog­y Branch used informatio­n and imagery provided by professor Tamaki Ura from the University of Tokyo to confirm that the wreck found off the coast of the island of Hokkaido is in fact the Albacore.

“As the final resting place for sailors who gave their life in defense of our nation, we sincerely thank and congratula­te Dr. Ura and his team for their efforts in locating the wreck of Albacore,” NHHC Director Samuel J. Cox, a retired U.S. Navy rear admiral, said in the release.

“It is through their hard work and continued collaborat­ion that we could confirm Albacore’s identity after being lost at sea for over 70 years.”

Like teams of detectives, the Americans and the Japanese used everything at their disposal — including

a remotely operated underwater vehicle used by Ura’s team — to find and identify the Albacore, which is believed to have struck a mine on Nov. 7, 1944, a few weeks before Reed’s 21st birthday.

Ura used data from the Japan Center for Asian Historical Records in his research, the command said in a news release. The location mentioned in the records matched an effort

by Underwater Archaeolog­y Branch volunteers to find the shipwreck.

But it was Jim Gregory, an author, historian and retired teacher in Arroyo Grande, who alerted The California­n that a Kern County man was serving aboard the Albacore when it went down all those years ago.

“I thought it was newsworthy,” Gregory said. “A little bit of history coming back to us.”

But there’s another, even more personal connection.

“My maternal step-grandfathe­r — our Gramps — George Kelly Sr., was a Taft cop,” he said. “My great-uncles were roughnecks; my aunt was a secretary for Union Oil. My parents were married at the Presbyteri­an church (in Taft). My two older siblings and I were born in Taft.”

So when Gregory learned that a Taft man was aboard the highly decorated sub that began its 11th war patrol just two weeks before its sinking, he was compelled to look deeper.

Through military records, high school yearbook informatio­n and other sources,

Gregory began to piece together more background on the young sailor.

“His folks waited more than a year to have his death confirmed,” Gregory learned from a 1946 clipping from The California­n.

“That had to be hard for them,” he said.

Although Reed and the rest of the crew were declared missing in December 1944, it was not until Dec. 12, 1945 — after the war had ended — that the Reed family received an official letter at their home on the Richfield Oil Lease in Elk Hills confirming that the crew had been officially declared dead, The California­n reported at the time.

Gregory sometimes refers to Reed as “Jerry” rather than “Jerrold” because the young Taft man signed, “Jerry W. Reed Jr.” on his own draft card.

Gregory marveled at Reed’s and the entire crew’s service in a cramped American submarine.

“I’m a little claustroph­obic,” he said. “I don’t think I could do it.”

The American submarine Albacore holds one of the most distinguis­hed service records of the war, he said.

“She is credited with 10 confirmed sinkings and three probables,” Gregory said.

One of the enemy ships sunk by Albacore was a light cruiser, 3,300 tons, and another, astounding­ly, was the aircraft carrier Taiho, at 31,000 tons, Gregory said.

The men aboard that lost submarine deserve to be remembered, he said, not just as numbers, but as individual­s.

“My father was a World War II veteran,” Gregory said. “When I write about young men like Jerry Reed, there’s a very powerful feeling.

“I have two sons, and ironically, these young men of my father’s generation become like my own sons.”

Reed’s name is engraved on the Kern County World War II Veterans Memorial, which was opened to the public and dedicated at Jastro Park in downtown Bakersfiel­d last December.

Vietnam veteran Ed Gaede, who led the effort to build the new memorial, agrees with Gregory’s contention that the names of the men of the lost Albacore must be honored and remembered.

“It’s the least we can do,” he said, “for all those who participat­ed in saving the world.”

 ?? NAVSOURCEO­NLINE ?? This historic periscope view from the USS Albacore, a U.S. Navy Gato-class submarine during World War II, shows in the distance the Taiho, or “Great Phoenix,” a highly prized aircraft carrier of the Imperial Japanese Navy. On June 18, 1944, the Albacore struck the heavily armored carrier with a torpedo during the Battle of the Philippine Sea. Hours later, the Taiho sank. It would represent the submarine’s greatest victory. Five months later, the Albacore would be lost.
NAVSOURCEO­NLINE This historic periscope view from the USS Albacore, a U.S. Navy Gato-class submarine during World War II, shows in the distance the Taiho, or “Great Phoenix,” a highly prized aircraft carrier of the Imperial Japanese Navy. On June 18, 1944, the Albacore struck the heavily armored carrier with a torpedo during the Battle of the Philippine Sea. Hours later, the Taiho sank. It would represent the submarine’s greatest victory. Five months later, the Albacore would be lost.
 ?? NAVSOURCEO­NLINE ?? This photo of the USS Albacore was captured off Mare Island in late April 1944.
NAVSOURCEO­NLINE This photo of the USS Albacore was captured off Mare Island in late April 1944.
 ?? STEVEN MAYER / THE CALIFORNIA­N/ ?? Kern County resident Jerrold W. Reed Jr., 20, was serving aboard a U.S. Navy submarine, the USS Albacore, when it was believed to have struck a mine on Nov. 7, 1944.
STEVEN MAYER / THE CALIFORNIA­N/ Kern County resident Jerrold W. Reed Jr., 20, was serving aboard a U.S. Navy submarine, the USS Albacore, when it was believed to have struck a mine on Nov. 7, 1944.
 ?? ?? Reed
Reed

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