| Long before the
legendary bravery of the seven submariners who received the Medal of
Honor in World War II, an enlisted man, Torpedoman’s Mate Second
Class Henry Breault, distinguished himself as a hero of the
Submarine Force. He is the only enlisted submariner to be awarded
the Medal of Honor for actions aboard a United States submarine.
On 28 October 1923,
the USS O-5 (SS-66) was operating with other units of the U.S.
Atlantic Fleet under the command of Commander Submarine Force, Coco
Solo, Canal Zone. At approximately 0630, O-5, under the command of
Lieutenant Harrison Avery, was underway leading a column of
submarines consisting of O-5 (SS-66), O-3 (SS-64), O-6 (SS-67), and
O-8 (SS-69) across Limon Bay toward the entrance to the Panama
Canal. The steamship SS Abangarez, owned by the United Fruit Company
and captained by Master W.A. Card, was underway toward Dock No. 6 at
Cristobal. Through a series of maneuvering errors and
miscommunication, the SS Abangarez collided with the O-5 and struck
the submarine on the starboard side of the control room, opening a
hole some ten feet long and penetrating the number one main ballast
tank. The submarine rolled sharply to port – then back to starboard
– and sank bow first in 42 feet of water.
The steamship
picked up eight survivors – including the Commanding Officer – who
had either been topside or climbed up quickly through the conning
tower hatch. Nearby tugs and ships rescued several others. Eight
minutes after O-5 sank, Chief Machinist’s Mate C.R. Butler surfaced
in an air bubble. In all, 16 crewmen were rescued. Five were
missing. These included Chief Electrician’s Mate Lawrence T. Brown,
Motor Machinist’s Mate First Class Clyde E. Hughes, Mess Attendant
First Class Fred C. Smith, Fireman First Class Thomas T. Metzler,
and Torpedoman’s Mate Second Class Henry Breault
Henry Breault had
been working in the torpedo room when the collision occurred, and he
headed up the ladder topside. As he gained the main deck, he
realized that Chief Brown was asleep below. Instead of going over
the side, Breault headed back below to get Brown and shut the deck
hatch over his head just as the bow went under. Brown was awake, but
unaware of the order to abandon ship. Both men headed aft to exit
through Control, but the water coming into the Forward Battery
compartment made that escape route unusable. They made it through
the rising water to the torpedo room and had just shut and dogged
the door when the battery shorted and exploded. Breault knew the bow
was under, and they were trapped.
Salvage efforts
began immediately, and divers were sent down from a salvage tug that
arrived from Coco Solo. By 1000, they were on the bottom examining
the wreck. To search for trapped personnel, they hammered on the
hull near the aft end of the ship and worked forward. Upon reaching
the torpedo room, they heard answering hammer blows from inside the
boat. In those days before modern safety and rescue devices, the
only way the salvage crew, under the command of Captain Amos
Bronson, Jr., could get the men out of the boat was to lift it
physically from the mud using cranes or pontoons. There were no
pontoons within 2,000 miles of the site, but there were two of the
largest crane barges in the world, Ajax and Hercules, in the Canal
Zone. They were built specifically for handling the gates of the
canal locks. However, there had been a landslide at the famous
Gaillard Cut and both barges were on the other side of the slide,
assisting in clearing the Canal. The excavation shifted into high
gear and by 1400 on the afternoon of the sinking, the crane barge
Ajax squeezed through and was on its way to the O-5 site.

Divers worked to
tunnel under the O-5’s bow so lifting cables could be attached. Ajax
arrived about midnight, and by early morning, the cable tunnel had
been dug, the cable run, and a lift was attempted. Sheppard J.
Shreaves, supervisor of the Panama Canal’s salvage crew and himself
a qualified diver, had been working continuously throughout the
night to dig the tunnel, snake the cable under the submarine, and
hook it to Ajax’s hoist. Now the lift began. As the crane took a
strain, the lift cables broke. Shreaves and his crew worked another
cable set under the bow and again Ajax pulled. Again, the cable
broke. All through the day, the men worked. Shreaves had been in his
diving suit nearly 24 hours. As midnight on the 29th approached, the
crane was ready for another lift, this time with buoyancy being
added by blowing water out of the flooded Engine Room. Then, just
after midnight, the bow of O-5 broke the surface. Men from the
salvage force quickly opened the torpedo room hatch, and Breault and
Brown emerged into the fresh air.
Two of the other
missing men’s bodies were recovered from alongside the boat and
interred at the Mount Hope Cemetery in the Canal Zone. Petty Officer
Clyde E. Hughes’ body was never found.
Petty Officer
Breault was awarded the Medal of Honor by President Calvin Coolidge
on 4 April 1924. It was awarded for Breault’s uncommon valor in
going to the aid of a fellow shipmate who most certainly would have
died if Breault had not intervened, with complete disregard of his
own safety. For his role in the rescue, Sheppard Shreaves later
received the Congressional Life Saving Medal, presented personally
by Breault and Brown that same year.
James
Christley served on submarines from 1962 to 1982, retiring as a
Senior Chief Electrician. |