AUGUST 3 "NEVER GIVE UP HOPE"
USS Indianapolis (CA-35) was
a Portland
class heavy cruiser of the United States Navy. She was named for the city of Indianapolis , Indiana .
Her sinking led to the greatest single loss of life at sea in the history of
the U.S. Navy. On 30 July 1945, after delivering parts for the first atomic
bomb to the United States
air base at Tinian , the ship was torpedoed by
the Imperial Japanese Navy submarine I-58, sinking in 12 minutes. Of the
1,196 crewmen aboard, approximately 300 went down with the ship. The remaining
900 faced exposure, dehydration, saltwater poisoning, and shark attacks while
floating with few lifeboats and almost no food or water. The Navy learned of
the sinking when survivors were spotted four days later by the crew of a PV-1
Ventura on routine patrol. Only 317 survived of the almost 1200 man crew. -After
several days drifting at sea in a blazing sun, dying of thirst, many gave up
the hope of being rescued; either drank salt water, or just slipped over the
side of the life raft to die…-Powerfully illustrates what lost hope does to
us;
We loose hope, we loose the
will to live. David Harrell, was one of
the crewman who never gave up hope in God and Harrell, was one of the few who
lived to tell his story in “Out of the Depths”. “Hope is the anchor for the
soul”.
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