Chapter X
The Duration (Part I)
Fort Independence, Castle Island
The Navy’s Castle Island Degaussing Station operated from
1942 to the end of World War II with a complement of ten to fifteen navy and
civilian technicians. New electrical systems, including a deperming process
that reduced (within certain limitations) the permanent magnetism of steel
ships, were installed in mid-January, 1943. A navy barge with emergency
generators, electronic apparatus, and personnel quarters anchored off a nine
hundred-foot wooden pier on the southeast side of Castle Island constituted the
deperming operation.
Fort Warren, George’s Island
Fort Warren’s main function during most of World War II was
the control of the southern minefield. In late May, 1942, a new minefield of
buoyant ovoid mines was laid and tested. In June, 1942, a disturbance in the
outer minefield in Nantasket Roads alerted the evening operator at the Fort
Warren mine casemate. His emergency call to the HECP at Fort Dawes brought the
entire harbor defense system to full alert. Searchlights from Forts Revere and
Warren and the outpost on Calf Island swept the water but the area was clear of
surface vessels. First Naval District Intelligence immediately reported that no
allied submarines were within two hundred miles of Boston Harbor. The mine
casemate operators were puzzled as the sound of underwater propellers increased
and diminished, but it became apparent as the target’s course was plotted that
the unidentified craft was maneuvering adroitly through the newly planted
secret minefield. The military authorities were distressed to consider the
possibility that a spy or carelessness had compromised the minefield. Navy
patrol boats were dispatched to form a line behind Fort Warren to block access
to the Navy Yard if the apparently small submarine attempted entry.
As the unidentified craft turned through the fourth and
final string, or line, of the minefield, one mine signaled that it had
grounded. The mines were not set to explode on contact, but would fire only on
electrical command by the Fort Warren mine casemate. Before the command to fire
could be given the contacted mine, the undersea intruder reversed course and
retraced its route back out of the minefield – an enviable example of
seamanship!
Throughout the incident, rapid-fire gun batteries at the
surrounding forts tracked the area and awaited orders to fire if a periscope
broke surface. The order to activate the minefield or fire the artillery was
never issued because the HECP wished to trap and capture the sneak-craft to
discover where and how minefield data had been acquired. The answer to those
questions as well as the identity of the intruder have not yet been found.
Boston Harbor remained closed and on full alert for two days.
Although there were fluctuations in the underwater magnetic
detection stations at Nahant and Strawberry Point later in the war, these were
abnormalities in the systems and no other enemy sneak craft penetrated Boston
Harbor.
In August, 1943, the Harbor Defenses mine project installed
control apparatus for the new ground mine system. Ground mines rested on the
seabed and could be exploded by contact, high magnetic influence, or by the
mine casemate panel board. Battery D, 9th Coast Artillery Regiment (H.D.)
(redesignated Battery D, 241st Coast Artillery Regiment (H.D.), in March, 1944)
operated and maintained the southern minefield for the duration of World War
II.
The old mine command building atop Bastion B was demolished
and a modern reinforced concrete station was erected in its place. The Fort
Warren mine station operated on a baseline with a new station constructed at
Fort Revere. A highly restricted mine plotting room was installed in a casemate
room under the John Brown Chapel and linked to the southern mine command and
HECP at Fort Dawes. An airlock – secured by heavy steel airtight doors – opened
into the mine plotting room, the chemical warfare service room, and a
neighboring chamber converted to a latrine. Outside the gas-proofed rooms,
another casemate chamber contained their generator and air conditioning
systems.
In January, 1944, R.S. Brine Transit Company of Boston began
removal of the two 12-inch gun tubes of Battery Stevenson to Boston Army Base
where they were stored. The obsolete gun carriages were cut into sections and
salvaged despite heavy winter snow and ice that made the salvage operation
dangerously difficult.
Mine practice was held annually through 1945 at Fort Warren.
New M- and L-boats were delivered to Battery D in 1944 but the mine planter
Abbott remained the primary vessel. The Abbott also served the Harbor Defenses
of Portland, Portsmouth, and Narragansett Bay on various occasions.
Due to Army redesignations, units of the 241st Coast
Artillery Battalion (H.D.) garrisoned Fort Warren from October 1, 1944 through
April 1, 1945. On April 1, 1945, another redesignation occurred and the 187th
and 241st Coast Artillery Battalions were disbanded. Batteries A through E,
Harbor Defenses of Boston then replaced the two battalions. When the war ended,
the mines and cables of the southern mine command were deactivated and stored
at Fort Warren.
Fort Strong, Long Island Head
Until the middle of World War II, Fort Strong controlled the
northern mine group which contained more mines than the southern group. Mining
command systems were transferred to more modern facilities at Fort Dawes and
Greater Brewster Island, and Fort Strong’s mine casemate went to standby
status. Fort Strong still handled minefield maintenance and received a new mine
wharf, concrete runway, and boathouse in 1943. All Fort Strong’s major caliber
guns were removed from Long Island or salvaged on site in 1943.
The formidable line of defenses atop the hill was now empty
while wooden beams or metal plates covered the carriage wells. Fort Strong’s
antiaircraft battery was modified with new directors, electrical appliances,
and high rectangular sandbag enclosures.
Until October, 1944, Fort Strong was garrisoned by elements
of the 241st Coast Artillery Regiment (H.D.). Due to Army redesignations, these
troops became part of the 241st Coast Artillery Battalion (H.D.) from October
1, 1944 to April 1, 1945. When World War II ended, the mines and cables of the
northern mine command were deactivated and brought to storage at Fort Strong.
Fort Heath, Winthrop
Early in World War II, two mobile 155-mm guns, emplaced in
sandbagged field positions to the left of Battery Winthrop, exploited Fort
Heath’s ideal location in the Boston Harbor Defenses. Until the 155-mm guns
were withdrawn in 1944, they were constantly manned by a ready crew with the
rest of the men on alert nearby.
In September, 1943, a special platoon-sized Mobile Group,
equipped with tactical vehicles loaded with assorted weapons, maintained
round-the-clock semi-alert status to meet any unusual emergencies at Fort
Heath. 1943 also saw the establishment at the tip of the reservation of a
Anti-Motor Torpedo Boat battery (designated AMTB Battery Number 945) of four
90-mm guns, two of which were in protected turrets on Model M3 gun mounts.
But the most noticeable sign of change at Fort Heath was the
1943 installation of a SCR-296-A long-range fire control radar. The radar
screen was housed in a wooden cham