Devil Dog History
The Devil Dog is painted to represent ship number three of the
VMB 612. It flew 22 missions before being lost.
The VMB 612
VMB-612, commanded by Lt. Col. Jack Cram, was selected for special
training in night attacks on enemy shipping, using radar to locate
and attack the targets. In addition to conventional bombs and torpedoes,
the new 5-inch HVAR rockets were tried and found to be highly accurate
and effective. By flying level about 300 feet above the water and
correcting for wind and temperature variations, Cram's pilots learned
to judge the rockets range. In one practice attack on a small island
only 200 feet long by 100 feet wide, the squadron fired over 250
HVARs and scored 56 percent hits.
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| VMB 612 with TinyTim
rocket
photo courtesy of NARA |
In November 1944, VMB-612 was stationed on Saipan,
but the nearest shipping targets were near Iwo Jima and Chichi,
630 and 750 miles to the north, respectively. Cram's squadron stripped
their PBJs of excess weight, including the upper turrets and cheek
guns, and carrying 1520 gallons of fuel, successfully flew missions
which lasted 10-12 hours.
From Saipan, VMB-612 moved to Iwo Jima in April 1945,
where it could reach the coast of Japan during its nigh-time anti-shipping
strikes. Cram's squadron claimed 7 ships sunk and 80 damaged during
missions from Saipan and Iwo, with a loss of three PBJs in combat.
On July 28, 1945, VMB-612 departed for its next base on Okinawa.
VMB History from DISPATCH Volume
22, Number 2, Summer, 1997
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