What follows below is mainly intended for Juneau history students vs model builders, with the exceptions noted in the 4th paragraph below.
I read Left to Die by Dan Kurzman about 20 years ago.
To see if it had info related to the model in progress I just re read most of it.
Below is a summary of interesting facts. Numbers are pages in the book. I am including info for anyone contemplating a diorama of the ship or survivors. However the majority of the info below is for history students vs model builders. Only the 50 cal info and references to nets mainly apply to model builders. I have long wondered why the explosion from the 2nd torpedo hit was so extreme. So if you do not have interest in these topics I suggest you stop here.
83 Mention of a 50 cal at Battle Station 2. Aerial photos of CL 53/54 show possible 50s forward of aft director but are not clear enough to confirm them as 50s.
99 S1C Friend cut the ropes to all rafts just prior to the first 11/13 battle starting.
108 Bridge hit by gunfire and most signalmen KIA. CO not hurt.
113 Speed 18 kts. after night battle
111/114/118 Damage from first torpedo—forward fireroom/engineroom flooded, plotting room out of commission, no TBS/ECM, mess hall shattered (possibly from gunfire hits)(Compartment diagram shows a mess area directly above forward engine room). Bow down 12’ after 1st hit, down 4’ just prior to 2nd torpedo hit. Juneau fires unknown number of torpedoes at IJN ships in night action. Multiple gunfire hits during surface action, bridge only one detailed. At time of 2nd hit steaming on one engine/prop only and steering power out of operation, rudder controlled manually. Due to TBS out ships nearby unable to warn Juneau even if they had ability to steer out of path of torpedo highly doubtful. Torpedo intended for San Francisco per post war contact with IJN sub CO. Only 2 torpedos fired due to grounding damage to the other 4 tubes.
120 Ships in Y formation. Juneau about 800 yards to starboard of San Francisco at base of stem of Y. Helena in front of San Francisco, DDs Fletcher L tip of Y and Sterret R tip of Y. Juneau at Alert 2.
125 2nd torpedo hits at 1101, possibly entered hole from first and then went off.
129 Survivor hears 2nd explosion after the initial large one
130 Stern vertical aft part highest (George Sullivan quoted elsewhere as saying it capsized. He was WIA by the first torpedo).
131 Rest of ship pitches forward and down.
133 A 5” mount that flew over Helena lands 100 yards behind Fletcher. Range from Fletcher to Juneau approx. one mile according to the book. Depending on the mod of the Mark 29 mount weight either 108/132,000 lbs.=54/66 tons.
142/44 Mention of nets in addition to rafts. Appears only 3 rafts made it to the surface.
144 A net rolled in canvas is mentioned. (The 6/1/42 broadside photo has what looks like a roll directly below the forward 20 MM gun, which in turn looks like the white objects visible below mount 3 in 80-G-304513)
149 3 rafts with 10 nets tied to them. Nets are used for more seriously wounded. As they die nets are discarded.
181 Down to 3 rafts and 3 nets by 11/18.
182 25 men abandoned in nets as healthy guys in rafts depart.
Of possible interest to Juneau students are the locations on the ship of some of the survivors. I could not find the one for Victor Fitzgerald in the book although he is mentioned. By the way the list of survivors in the book differs slightly from on line lists and I have no idea why. They are as follows
Battle Station 2 (Best I can figure from the book in the immediate vicinity of the aft director).
Arthur Friend
Joseph Hartney
Charles Wang (broken leg from the radar falling on it)
Lester Zook
Fantail
Alan Heyn
Frank Holmgren (both 20MM or 1.1 gunners)
Note—George and Albert Sullivan were in the same division. George was also on the fantail confirmed by the 2 men above. Book does not say where Albert was stationed. Per survivor stories in the book George found Albert but not Joseph who had a severe head wound. Both Albert and Joseph were dead within the first day. Book does not say if George knew that fact but suspect he at least knew about Albert. George drank salt water and swam away from the rafts and was quickly killed by 2 or 3 sharks after about 3 or 4 days if my memory is correct.
Inside a wing mount, which one not ID’d but suspect starboard.
Wyatt Butterfield (According to a copy of a letter I have from him to George Horton no other member of that mount crew got out).
Unfortunately if the author interviewed the other survivors he did not describe their battle stations.
Above we have 7 of 10 survivor battle station locations, plus George Sullivan confirmed on the fantail and possibly Albert Sullivan also. That confirms 8 people with known locations all aft of the aft stack.
The compartment diagram that George Horton sent to me shows the torpedo warhead magazine just forward of the steering gear room. Based on the fantail survivors it would appear safe to assume that did not blow up.
Unfortunately the diagram does not show the locations for the magazines for mounts 1-5. It does show them for the aft mounts 6-7. The powder magazines are directly below the mounts and the projectile magazines slightly forward of them. They appear to be just below the waterline. The aft engine room was almost directly below the torpedo launchers and slightly forward of the aft director, and obviously below the waterline, as was the torpedo warhead magazine.
I am not sure but I am guessing “Alert 2”=current Condition 2 as per this site
http://www.combat.ws/S4/SAILOR/SAILOR.HTM and the condition Yoke at this site on page 12-11
http://seabeemagazine.navylive.dodlive. ... ter-12.pdf.
The question of the hour is whether the equivalent of Condition Zebra existed on Juneau at the time of the 2nd torpedo hit. From the severity of the explosion per witnesses on other ships, and especially a 5” mount winding up far forward of the ship, it would appear safe to assume the forward magazines blew up. The forward fire/engine rooms were already flooded and I leave it to the naval architects to figure out if the 2nd torpedo hit could have blown up the aft fire/engine rooms if the watertight doors were not closed. It would appear safe to guess but not provable that the water tight doors between the already damaged plot room just forward of the forward fire room and the forward mount magazines were not closed. Another interesting question WWII 5” powder was in the form of for lack of a better word blank rifle rounds with no bullet, which in turn were inside cases. You can see photos of 5” mount details at
http://www.sarahsundin.com/through-wate ... r-gunnery/ and
http://www.sarahsundin.com/wp-content/u ... ammo-2.jpg. Powder bags as in BB/CA ships were not involved. This website
http://www.alternatehistory.com/discuss ... p?t=357658 says Atlanta class ships carried 7200 5” rounds but also mentions 40 MM rounds so it is not clear whether that number applies to 6 or 8 mounts. Assuming 8 that would be 900 rounds per gun mount which sounds high to me. How severe heat traveled from a hit roughly directly below the forward mast possibly through an already flooded fire room is a mystery. If the final torpedo hit further forward it is less of a mystery. From the witnesses quoted in the book there was no delay between the noise of the hit and total destruction, so I suspect the commentary about a hit in the same place as the first is mostly guess work. All of the above pure guesswork other than M80s and M16/60/79 rounds my explosive background is slim to zero. Most of the survivors are quoted as saying a lot of fuel came down on them but the compartment diagram does not show all of the fuel tanks. If anyone has a set of decent Atlanta class plans perhaps they can comment on this speculation. Last but not least if the light color objects in the 80-G-304513 photo below mount 3 are indeed nets as they appear to be, how did they survive the explosion of the magazines beneath them? Were they all wrapped in canvas, and did the canvas protect them from the blast? Were nets fitted further aft after Santa Cruz? If we have any physics/explosive majors residing in our midst and they are interested, perhaps they can help us on these topics.
My own best guess for what very little it is worth is that the second torpedo blew up at least 2 of the forward magazines and the second explosion one survivor described was the third magazine. The ship was vaporized back to somewhere in the vicinity of the boat deck or aft stack. According to the book a B 17 that arrived shortly after the explosion counted about 180 survivors, some of the survivors themselves gave counts in the 125-50 range. We have no record where the 125-50 came from on the ship other than the sailors above. I also have no idea how many sailors would be on or above decks in Alert 2. I would assume all lookouts and 20 MM/1.1 crews at a minimum. By contrast 487 sailors survived the magazine explosion on the RN BB Barham in 1941, which from the video on you tube appears to have been just as bad as the descriptions of the one on Juneau. Granted RN ships immediately rescued survivors and some got off before it capsized but otherwise the severity of the explosions seem comparable.
The book describes Capt. Swenson as being extremely concerned about the ship’s chances in a surface action long before it left the US. Sadly, he was proven correct on that issue.