Why Lieutenant Lester Gamble attacked eleven destroyers with a wooden boat during WW2 — and sank the largest warship ever destroyed by a PT boat. This World War 2 story reveals how a 77-foot plywood vessel killed Japan's 440-foot flagship.
December eleventh, nineteen forty-two. Lieutenant Lester H. Gamble, commanding PT-37, watched eleven Japanese destroyers move through Iron Bottom Sound off Guadalcanal. His boat was seventy-seven feet of mahogany. Forty tons. The lead destroyer, Teruzuki, was Rear Admiral Tanaka's flagship. Four hundred forty feet of steel carrying eight rapid-fire guns and the newest fire control system in the Japanese fleet. Every commander knew attacking destroyers in wooden boats was suicide. PT boats died fast in the Solomons. Eighteen men had been killed in two months. Naval tacticians called it a waste of resources.
They were all wrong.
What Gamble discovered that night wasn't about firepower or armor. It was about positioning and timing in a way that contradicted everything Navy doctrine taught. By the end of that engagement — the night that changed PT boat warfare — destroyers throughout the Japanese fleet started fearing the wooden mosquitoes. And American PT crews started believing they could win.
This tactic spread unofficially through Motor Torpedo Boat Squadrons, crew to crew, saving hundreds of lives and disrupting the Tokyo Express supply line before appearing in any official manual. The principles discovered off Guadalcanal continue to influence small craft tactics in modern naval warfare today.
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