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Home > Honda Point Disaster


 

The Honda Point Disaster was the largest peacetime loss of ships the U.S. Navy ever experienced. On the evening of September 8, 1923, nine destroyers, while travelling at 20 knots, ran aground at Honda Point, a few miles from the northern side of the Santa Barbara Channel off the California coast. Seven of the ships were a total loss. Twenty three sailors died in the mishap.


The ships comprised Destroyer Squadron ELEVEN. The squadron, led by Captain Edward H. Watson, was heading from San Francisco to San Diego. Watson was on the flagship leading the squadron of fourteen destroyers. All were Clemson class destroyers, fewer than five years old. The ships turned east, supposedly into the Santa Barbara Channel, at 2100 hours.

The ships were navigating by dead reckoning, estimating their position by their heading and speed, as measured by propeller turns. At the time radio navigational aids were new and not completely trusted. The Delphy was equipped with a radio navigational receiver, but discarded the bearings, believing them to be errorneous. No effort was made to take soundings, or depth measurements, which was another navigational tool. This was not done, because it would require slowing the ships. In this case, the dead reckoning was wrong and the mistake fatal.

Earlier the same day, the mail steamship Cuba ran aground nearby. Some attributed these incidents in the Santa Barbara Channel to unusual currents caused by the Tokyo earthquake of the previous week.

Ultimately, a Navy court ruled it was the fault of the Captain and navigators. They also assigned blame to the Captain of each ship, following the tradition that a Captain's first responsibility is to his own ship, even when part of a formation.

In order the ships were:

The remaining four completely avoided the rocks.

There was one civilian aboard Delphy. Eugene Dooman was aboard as a guest of Captain Watson; they had first met in Japan. Dooman was a Japan expert with the State Department.

Honda Point is located outside of Lompoc, CaliforniaLompoc is a city located in Santa Barbara County, California. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 41,103. History Prior to the arrival of Spanish settlers, the area was inhabited by the Chumash tribe. Mission La Purisma Concepcion wa. It now is part of Vandenberg Air Force BaseVandenberg Air Force Base is a base with a spaceport, located in Santa Barbara County, California. As of the 2000 census, the base had a total population of 6,151. The base was originally established in 1941 as the US Army's Camp Cooke. The facility serve. There is a plaque and memorial at the site.



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