Description
As night fell and the ship slowly sank, the 22 men on board
face=Calibri>- Lt. Cmdr. Paul W. Burton, USN, the captain, his executive officer and twenty enlisted men-sought refuge in the pilot house. By about 0230 Sunday, that compartment having flooded almost entirely, Burton gave the order to open the portside door and make for the foremast. Three men got to it and climbed it. Most of the rest were swept overboard. Five of the men, including Burton himself, died, as did three sailors from the base at Midway in a pair of unauthorized and effectively suicidal rescue attempts that morning.
Drawing on contemporaneous written statements by survivors of that night and interviews conducted over a span of thirty years, this book traces the lives of the Macaw and her enigmatic captain, from birth on San Francisco Bay to death at Midway. It tells a war story short on combat but not on drama, a wartime tragedy in which the conflict is more interpersonal, and perhaps intrapersonal, than international. Ultimately, for Paul Burton and the Macaw the real enemy was the sea, and in a deadly denouement told here in riveting detail, the sea won. Highlighting the underreported role auxiliary vessels played in the war, A Strange Whim of the Sea: The Wreck of the USS Macaw should engage the military historian and lay reader alike with the previously untold story it tells of struggle, sacrifice, death and survival in the Pacific in World War II.
About the Author
Tim Loughman is a graduate of Dartmouth College and Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. He lives in Morro Bay, California.
Book Information
ISBN 9780813196220
Author Tim Loughman
Format Hardback
Page Count 260
Imprint The University Press of Kentucky
Publisher The University Press of Kentucky