By JEANNETTE J. LEE,
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Aug. 24) - The mangled remains of a vessel found
in the Bering Sea are likely those of a World War II submarine that
disappeared with a crew of 70 off the Aleutian Island of Kiska.
The discovery of the USS Grunion on Wednesday night culminates a
five-year search led by the sons of its commander, Mannert Abele,
and may finally shine a light on the mysterious last moments of the
doomed vessel.
"Obviously, this is a very big thing," the oldest son, Bruce
Abele, said Thursday from his home in Newton, Mass. "I told my
wife about it when she was still in bed and she practically went up
to the ceiling."
In North Carolina, relatives of Moore J. Ledford, a chief yeoman
aboard, told the Asheville Citizen-Times the discovery would
comfort their family. His niece, 66-year-old Haven Teague, was less
than 2 years old when Ledford went missing. Her mother was
Ledford's sister.
"She never really did know what happened to him, just that he
was missing in action," Teague said of her mother. "This is all
very exciting."
A remotely operated vehicle snapped pictures and captured three
hours of video footage of the Grunion on a rocky underwater slope
north of the volcanic island, according to another brother, John
Abele, who was in Kiska Harbor with the search team on Thursday.
The submarine lies 1,000 feet below the surface and had been
crushed by water pressure, said Abele. He is director and
co-founder of the medical equipment company Boston Scientific Corp.
and the youngest of the three brothers.
"The most surprising thing was the damage," he said. "It was
much more than we or anyone else imagined. Initially it was very
hard to recognize as a ship."
The hull had imploded so severely that the interior, including
bunks and a dive wheel, were clearly visible, Abele said. No human
remains were found.
The search team hired by the Abeles, Deep Sea Systems
International, said no identifying markings or lettering could be
seen, however, the location and appearance of the vessel indicate
it is the missing sub.
"There's a 95 percent chance that this is the Grunion and a
less than five percent chance that it's not," said Christopher J.
Nicholson, general manager of the Cataumet, Mass.-based company.
"The fact that they actually found this in an expanse of ocean is
really pretty spectacular."
The Grunion had a propeller guard, which was rare in subs of the
day, Abele said. The vessel discovered yesterday also had the
fence, which prevented docking lines from getting caught in the
propeller.
The Grunion patrolled Alaska's Aleutian Islands during the early
months of World War II. Her last official radio message to the
submarine base at Dutch Harbor came on July 30, 1942 and described
heavy enemy activity at Kiska Harbor.
Earlier that month, the Grunion had sunk two Japanese submarine
chasers and heavily damaged a third near Kiska, one of two islands
in the far west Aleutians captured by the Japanese. Until a few
years ago, the clues to the Grunion's disappearance were too
fragmented to justify a search.
After receiving more information from a model ship builder in
Japan, the Abeles launched an initial expedition to Kiska in August
2006. Sonar images of a sub-shaped silhouette prompted a second
journey this month.
As news of the search spread, several relatives of the Grunion's
crew banded together to locate others with ties to the lost men. To
date, the relatives of 69 men are following the progress of the
search, said Mary Bentz of Bethesda, Md., whose uncle died on the
Grunion.
Bentz said the news is a relief after decades of not knowing
what happened. Her father's youngest brother, Carmine Anthony
Parziale, of Weedville, Penn., was in his early 20s when he served
as a torpedoman third class on Grunion.
"I know when my dad would talk about him, his eyes would well
up with tears," said Bentz. "I was relieved to know that this is
finally over, that now we can say, two and three generations later,
that we know what happened."
A forensic engineer and other experts will use the footage to
piece together the Grunion's final hours and figure out why it
sank. The search crew of 17 plans to spend several more days
looking for sunken Japanese ships in the area.
"Actually seeing the burial site was touching and in a way
rewarding," John Abele said. "It provides a closing and hopefully
an answer to the unknown."
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