
Ships of the U.S. Navy, 1940-1945
CA-35 USS Indianapolis
- Portland class Heavy Cruiser:
- Displacement: 12,411 tons (full load)
- Length: 588'2"
- Beam: 61'10"
- Draft: 24'4"
- Speed: 32.5 knots
- Armament: 3x3 8"/55, 8x1 5"/25, 6x4 40mm, 28x1 20mm, 8x1 .50-caliber MG; 3 planes
- Complement: 1,121
- Propulsion: Steam turbines, 8 boilers, 4 shafts, 107,000 hp
- Built at New York Shipbuilding Corp, Camden, NJ, and commissioned 15 November 1932
Served as Adm. Spruance's Fifth Fleet flagship at Iwo Jima and until struck by a kamikaze
the day before the Okinawa landings, 31 Mar 1945
: Sailing for Leyte, via Guam, after delivering key elements
of the atomic bombs to Tinian, Indianapolis was torpedoed by I-58
on the night of 29-30 Jul 1945. Approximately 800-850 men survived the sinking,
but only 316 remained to be rescued after 3 1/2-5
days in shark-filled waters. The movie "Jaws" contains a powerful scene
recounting the ordeal of the survivors.
Additional Links:
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"Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships" -- USS Indianapolis
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Contract for the Construction of Indianapolis Light Cruiser No. 35
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Naval Historical Center FAQ [USN]
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Sinking of the USS Indianapolis
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Capt. Charles McVay, USN recollects carrying the atomic bomb to Tinian and the sinking of Indianapolis [NHC: oral history]
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Capt. Lewis L. Haynes, MC, USN (Ret.) recollects the sinking of the ship [NHC: oral history]
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Interrogation of Cdr. Mochitsura Hashimoto, IJN (Commanding Officer of I-58
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USS Indianapolis Home Page
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Warship Pictorial: USS Indianapolis, CA-35, Steve Wiper, ed. (Class Warships Publishing: 1996)
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For additional photos, see the Main Page.
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For crew lists, and reunions see the Veterans Info Page.
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For ship's logs and personnel records, see the Reference Page.
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At Mare Island, 10 July 45 -- just before departing for Tinian with the Bomb |
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Ships of the U.S. Navy, 1940-45: Cruisers
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Ships of the U.S. Navy, 1940-1945
Last updated:
23 April 2006