FIRST EDITION OF ONLY 317 SURVIVED!, SIGNED BY 15 SURVIVORS AND RESCUERS FROM THE WWII USS INDIANAPOLIS TRAGEDY
USS INDIANAPOLIS SURVIVORS. Only 317 Survived! (Indianapolis, Indiana: Printing Partners, 2002). Octavo, original gilt-stamped pictorial navy cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of the autobiographical narrative of the tragic World War II torpedoing of the USS Indianapolis, signed by 14 survivors from the USS Indianapolis and a member of the rescue crew from the USS Bassett.
This work was written by the last living survivors of the sinking of the USS Indianapolis, of whom fewer than 200 remain. The Indianapolis was charged with secretly transporting atomic bomb components to Tinian island in July of 1945 (the Little Boy bomb later dropped on Hiroshima). It successfully completed that mission. However, four days later, at 12:14 a.m., the ship was hit by two torpedoes from a Japanese submarine. It sank in 12 minutes. Of the 1196 men on board, 297 died or were lost immediately. The remaining 900 went into the sea, where they had few lifeboats and virtually no food or fresh water. In the water, they fended off exposure, dehydration, saltwater poisoning, and shark attacks. Many died. In August, several days later, the survivors were accidentally spotted on routine patrol and heroically rescued. As the title states, only 317 of the original 1196 survived. It was the single greatest loss of life at sea from a single ship in the history of the Navy. The captain of the ship was initially court-martialed; his record was not cleared until 2001. With two USS Indianapolis Museum bookmarks laid in.
Book fine, dust jacket near-fine with light rubbing to extremities. A desirable signed copy.