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Bombardment of Fort Stevens

Bombardment of Fort Stevens
Part of the American theater and the Pacific Theater of World War II
Shell crater resulting form Japanese shelling on Fort Stevens. - NARA - 299678.jpg
American service men inspecting a shell crater after the Japanese attack on Fort Stevens.
Date 21 June 1942
Location Fort Stevens, Oregon, Pacific Ocean
Result Indecisive
Japanese retreat successful
Belligerents
 United States Naval Ensign of Japan.svg Japan
Commanders and leaders
unknown Tagami Meiji
Strength
Land:
2 artillery pieces
1 fort
Air:
1 aircraft
1 submarine
Casualties and losses
Minor damage None

The Bombardment of Fort Stevens occurred in June 1942, in the American Theater of the Pacific Theater of World War II. An Imperial Japanese submarine fired on Fort Stevens, which defended the Oregon side of the Columbia River's Pacific entrance.

The Japanese submarine I-25, commanded by Tagami Meiji, had been assigned to sink enemy shipping and attack the enemy on land with their 14 cm deck gun. Transporting a Yokosuka E14Y seaplane, the submarine was manned by a crew of 97. On 21 June 1942, I-25 had entered US coastal waters, following allied fishing boats to avoid the mine fields in the area.

Late that night, Commander Meiji ordered his crew to surface his submarine at the mouth of the Columbia River. His target was Fort Stevens, which dated to the American Civil War and armed with now more or less obsolete Endicott era artillery, including 12-inch coast defense mortars, and several of 10 in (250 mm) disappearing guns.

Meiji ordered the deck gun crew to open fire on Fort Stevens' Battery Russell. Surprisingly, his shots were harmless, in part because the fort's commander ordered an immediate blackout. The commander also refused to permit his men to return fire, which would have revealed their position.


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