Spy Sub. Roger C. Dunham
The chief and I each donned a blue plastic hard hat from the stack near one of the cranes and climbed into an open wooden box at the side of the dry dock. After a shipyard worker signaled the crane operator, the cable over our heads snapped tight. The crane abruptly lifted us high into the air over the cavernous dry dock and then propelled us in the general direction of the Viperfish.
I looked down at the dark concrete far below. At the same instant, the chief yelled, “Don’t look down, it’s a long drop!”
We landed on the Viperfish deck with a jarring thud. Mathews led the way to the forward hatch-a circular hole on the surface of the deck-and down a long vertical steel ladder to the central control station.
The inside of the Viperfish appeared to be in a state of total disorder. As military and civilian personnel worked side by side on numerous pieces of electronic equipment, the tight compartment was buzzing with the electricity of energized circuits. I sniffed the pungent odor of diesel oil mixed with the smells of new linoleum, fresh paint, and sweat and wondered about the oxygen levels inside this tight enclosure of human activity.
The bulkheads (walls) of the compartment were covered with hundreds of red, yellow, and green lights blinking on and off like a Christmas tree. Several drawers, filled with electronic equipment, had been pulled out from the bulkhead. Wires were hanging out of them-some connected to other wires from other drawers, others poking freely into the air. Men in blue dungaree uniforms were busy working on the periscope lens assemblies at the ends of long shafts extending down from the overhead spaces. Others were cursing and struggling with the steering wheels at the diving station, where a pair of cushioned chairs had been bolted. Later, I learned that the chairs were for the planesman and helmsman as they controlled the depth, course, and trim angle of the submarine.
The men in front of us occasionally glanced in my direction. I felt awkward in my clean white uniform. Standing next to Chief Mathews at the bottom of the ladder, I was moving my head back and forth, with my eyes wide open in wonder. I knew that I presented the unmistakable appearance of a rookie.
A couple of the men nodded a greeting to us as the chief guided me out of the control center and up a passageway to the yeoman’s office. I signed a stack of papers filled with legal jargon; the yeoman mumbled something about gamma rays and handed me a clip-on radiation film badge. We moved forward again to the captain’s stateroom. Mathews rapped on the door, and the commanding officer of the Viperfish promptly invited us into his cramped quarters.
Capt. Stuart Gillon was a short man with a worried expression on his face. He looked like the burdens of the world were weighing heavily on him. He was of small frame and spoke with a soft voice that was hard to hear. My first thought was that this could not possibly be the captain of a nuclear warship. The captain should look more like a skipper, I thought-tall, strong voice, square jaw, and the other features that I considered to be requisites for such an important position.
And then I noticed the intensity of the man’s eyes. They reflected a perceptive intelligence as he studied me closely, sizing me up, listening to what I said, and taking measure of the newest enlisted man who would, someday, run his boat’s nuclear reactor. Although his voice was kindly, his words were concise and his thinking tightly organized. He displayed intense concentration and focus of thoughts. Quietly, he began to tell me about future activities on the Viperfish and encouraged me to begin qualifications promptly because the mission mandated a fully qualified crew.
“We’re coming out of dry dock in a couple of months,” he said, “and we’ll be conducting sea trials, followed by a shakedown cruise to Seattle and San Francisco. We’ll be testing the Fish soon thereafter, and, by that time, you should be standing watches at the reactor control panel. Do you think you can handle all that?”
“Yes, sir,” I answered briskly, wondering what fish he was referring to. Jane’s Fighting Ships didn’t mention anything about a fish, and submarine school hadn’t described fish equipment on any submarines in the fleet. Before I had the chance to ask questions, he told me how pleased he was to have me on board and dismissed me with a quick nod to Chief Mathews.
“You’ll find out about the Fish when you start qualifications,” Mathews said after we left the captain’s stateroom and headed aft. “The next stop is the engine room, where you’ll have the pleasure of meeting Bruce.”
We climbed through the thick oval doors into a confining corridor leading to the engine room. Mathews paused and called back to me, “This is the reactor tunnel and the nuclear reactor is directly below you. When we’re at sea and the reactor is running, you’ll want to move through this area pretty fast.” I looked down at my feet and discovered a large circular ring carved in the floor, presumably “ground zero.” The constricted area around me was jammed with valves and pipes, and several signs displayed the nuclear symbol that warned of radiation. As I ducked my 6’2” frame around various steel obstructions protruding from the tunnel’s overhead, we continued to move aft until we reached the last watertight door and the engine room. The room was hot and filled with the suffocating odor of burning diesel fuel. Surrounded by insulated pipes, gauges, valves, and circuit breakers, I came face to face with the man who was in charge of the Viperfish’s nuclear reactor operators.
“Bruce, this is Dunham, fresh from New London, your new reactor operator,” Mathews said. Bruce Rossi was a tough, powerful man with a burr haircut and coal-black eyes that scrutinized me closely. He barked a loud greeting and gave me a tight smile. With his heavily muscled right hand, he reached out and crushed my hand.
“Reactor operator trainee, Paul. Glad you’re here, Dunham,” he growled.
“Happy to be on board, Bruce,” I replied. His pulsating jaw muscles suggested a significant measure of controlled anger.
He stared at me. “Let me get right to the issue at hand because there’s a lot of work to be done,” he said. “The Viperfish is powered by a complex water-cooled S3W nuclear reactor, and our division requires three ROs [reactor operators] qualified to control the system. Two of the ROs will be finishing their tour of duty and will be leaving the boat after the sea trials and our shakedown run. The Viperfish will, therefore, need replacement reactor operators. You are one of the replacements, and Petty Officer Richard Daniels will be the second replacement when he arrives in the next few days. Both of you are going to work your tails off to learn every system in the engine room and on the Viperfish. You need to become qualified on this boat. Fall behind on the qualifications schedule, and you will find yourself on the dink list.”
Mathews smiled and turned to leave. “Don’t be too hard on the guy, Bruce,” he said over his shoulder. “This is his first boat.”
“The dink list?” I asked Bruce.
Rossi’s face looked tougher. “The delinquent list,” he said. “It’s updated every day, posted in the control center near the periscope station, and in plain sight for everyone to see. If you fall behind on qualifications, you will land on the dink list, you will remain on board the Viperfish, and your liberty will be curtailed. That means you can’t leave the boat and you don’t visit Waikiki. You will eat here and sleep here until you get caught up. I don’t want any of my trainees on the goddamn dink list, and I don’t want any of my qualified ROs standing goddamn port and starboard watches.”
An old chief told me, a long time ago, that the Submarine Service is unique because the men are pleasant and they get along so well together-I decided that chief had never met Bruce Rossi. Although the dink list program sounded almost like a prison system, I figured it would never become a threat to me; Rossi looked like he would kill, with his own bare hands, anybody who dared to come close to getting on the dink list.
I nodded to Bruce that I understood and then glanced at the engine-room equipment around us. There were thousands of pipes, valves, and large pieces of powerful-looking steel machinery jammed into every available space. To become qualified, I knew I would have to know where each pipe went, what each valve controlled, and how every piece of machinery worked.
I turned back to Bruce. “Port and starboard watches