by Doug Stanton
p. 254 McVay had received the announcement: Washington Post, December 20, 1945, “Captain Takes It Calmly.”
Three months after the court martial: Service Record: McVay, Charles Butler.
CHAPTER TWELVE: BACK IN THE WORLD
Interviews: John Spinelli, Jack Miner, Mike Kuyrla, Ed Brown, Jack Cassidy, Harlan Twible, Robert Gause, Gus Kay, Dr. Lewis Haynes, Giles McCoy, Felton Outland, Gordon Linke, Jocelyn Linke, Scott Linke, Winthrop Smith Jr., Ed Stevens, Florence Regosia.
p. 259 After the court martial: Service Record: McVay, Charles Butler; Times-Picayune, November 9, 1968.
On the plane ride to Indianapolis: Indianapolis Times, July 30, 1960.
EPILOGUE
Interviews: Giles McCoy, Harlan Twible, Dr. Lewis Haynes, Michael Monroney.
p. 265 Twenty-eight years after: Summary of Report on the Court-Martial of Captain Charles B. McVay III, USN, Commanding Officer, USS Indianapolis. Dated: 18 June 1996; Report on the Court-Martial of Captain Charles B. McVay III, USN, Commanding Officer, USS Indianapolis. Prepared by Cdr. R. D. Scott, NJAG. Includes letters to The Honorable Andrew Jacobs Jr., United States House of Representatives. Signed: Steven S. Honigman. Dated: 14 November 1996.
The answer, explains Captain Bill Toti: Commander William J. Toti, U.S. Navy, “The Sinking of the Indy & Responsibility of Command,” Proceedings, October 1999.
p. 266 “We would’ve rode to hell”: Bill Van Daalen, videotaped interview with Bob Brundige, 1990.
The survivors’ efforts to clear: Naval History, July—August 1998, “Timeline to Justice,” Hunter Scott. On October 12, 2000: Conference Report to H. R. 4205, The National Defense Authorization Act of 2001.
p. 267 In response, the navy: Navy spokesperson, October 12, 2000.
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————. “McVay: The Court Decides,” December 31, 1945.
————. “The Navy Relents,” March 4, 1946.
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————. “The Captain Stands Accused,” December 10, 1945.
————. “‘Such Grotesque Proceedings,’” December 24, 1945.
————. “‘The Good of the Service,’” December 31, 1945.
————. “End of the Indianapolis Case,” March 4, 1946.
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————. “The Crew.”
————. “Guestbook.”
————. “The Legislation.”
————. “The Story.”
USS Underhill DE 682, www.nji.com/~roger/index.htm.
NEWSPAPERS
“833 Dead and Missing in U.S. Cruiser Loss,” Bay City Times, August 15, 1945, pp. 1—2.
“Gentle Giant Stirs Memories of Indianapolis,” Dana Point News, June 3, 1999 (editorial: Dennis Kaiser).
“838 Lost, 315 Saved in Sinking of Indianapolis by Jap Sub: Cruiser Had Just Carried Atom Bomb from U.S. to Guam,” The Evening Star, August 15, 1945, p. A1.
“‘You’re Out … in the Middle of Nowhere,’ ” The Herald Palladium, October 22, 1999 (byline: Todd Dvorak), p. 1.
“The ‘Hanging’ of Captain McVay,” Honolulu Advertiser, December 10, 1974 (editorial: Cobey Black).
“Pacific Hero Adm. McVay Dies at 70,” Honolulu Observer, November 8, 1968.
“Tragedy still hurts after 15 years,” The Indianapolis Times, July 30, 1960.
“500 Died in the Shark Horror That Dwarfs ‘Jaws,’” The National Star, September 30, 1975, p. 26.
“Indianapolis Is Lost, Suffers Very Heavy Casualties Off Leyte,” Navy News August 16, 1945.
All of the following are from the New York Times:
“Cruiser Sunk, 1,196 Casualties; Took Atom Bomb Cargo to Guam,” August 15, 1945, p. 1.
“The Indianapolis,” August 17, 1945.
“Cruiser’s Sinking Laid to Submarine,” August 18, 1945, p. 4.
“Captain of Cruiser Pleads Not Guilty,” December 5, 1945.
“McVay Guilty in Indianapolis Loss: Sentence Is Remitted on His Record,” February 24, 1946, p. 1.
“C. B. McVay 3D, 70, Retired Admiral,” November 8, 1968, p. 4.
“40 Years After the Birth of the Atomic Age” (byline: Lansing Lamont), July 14, 1985, Section 4, p. 27.
“Adrian Marks, 81, World War II Navy Pilot” (byline: Richard Goldstein), March 15, 1998.
Other articles from January 1, 1946; January 2, 1946; January 6, 1946; January 9, 1946.
“The Search for the Truth About the Indianapolis,” Plain Dealer Sunday Magazine, December 6, 1998 (byline: Bob Sudyk), p. 8.
“Twist of Fate Made Gwinn a Hero,” San José Mercury
News, July 10, 1993 (byline: Dick Egner).
All of the following are from the Sun Post News:
“Survivor Hopes to Clear His Captain,” May 29, 1998 (byline: Fred Swegles).
“Ex-Navy Crewman Describes His Surviving Shark-Infested Waters,” May 29, 1998 (byline: Fred Swegles).
“Admiral McVay Killed in Conn.,” Times-Picayune, November 9, 1968.
“Author Wouldn’t Write the Same ‘Jaws’ Today,” Traverse City Record Eagle, April 5, 2000, p. B4.
All of the following are from the Washington Post:
“Navy Secrecy,” (editorial) December 4, 1945.
“McVay Court Martial: 850 Men Should Have Survived Indianapolis Blast, Says Officer,” December 5, 1945 (byline: Marshall Andrews), p. 1.
“Captain Takes It Calmly: McVay Held Guilty of Neglect but Acquitted of Inefficiency,” December 20, 1945 (byline: Marshall Andrews), p. 1.
“Court-Martialed in Warship Tragedy: Adm. Charles McVay Dies at 70,” November 14, 1968, p. B6.
“Remembering the Hunger and Thirst, the Sharks, and the Screams,” (byline: Steven Norwitz), August 5 1975, p. B1.
“No-Nonsense Lawyer Claytor Knows When to Bend the Rules,” (byline: William H. Jones), July 21, 1977, p. D8.
“Terror of Shark and Sea, 35 Years After,” August 6, 1980 (byline: Chip Brown), p. El.
“Debates, Doubts Among the Creators,” July 21, 1985 (byline: Walter Pincus), p. A1.
“What It Meant for America,” July 26, 1995 (byline: Haynes Johnson), p. H6.
UNPUBLISHED DOCUMENTS
Hashimoto, Mochitsura, former captain of I-58. Letter to the Honorable John W. Warner, Chairman, Senate Armed Services Committee. Dated: November 24, 1999 (courtesy of Mike Monroney).