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USS Oglala (ID-1255/CM-4/ARG-1) was a minelayer in the United States Navy. Commissioned as Massachusetts , she was renamed Shawmut a month later, and in 1928, was renamed after the Oglala , a sub-tribe of the Lakota , residing in the Black Hills of South Dakota .
USS Oglala: Sunk 7 December 1941 during the Pearl Harbor attack by torpedo bombers from aircraft carrier Sōryū. Later raised and converted to engine repair ship. USS Palmer Sunk by Japanese aircraft, January 7 1945. USS Penguin: Scuttled after strafing damage at Guam on 8 December 1941. USS Perry Sunk after hitting a mine, September 13 1944.
In the foreground is the capsized minelayler USS Oglala (CM-4), with the light cruiser USS Helena (CL-50) further down the pier, at left. Beyond Helena is Drydock No.1, with USS Pennsylvania (BB-38) and the burning destroyers USS Cassin (DD-372) and USS Downes (DD-375).
USS Nevada World War II: Attack on Pearl Harbor: The Nevada-class battleship was torpedoed and damaged by Imperial Japanese Navy aircraft. She was beached in a sinking condition at Hospital Point. Ahw was refloated on 12 February 1942, repaired and returned to service. USS Oglala United States Navy
He was present at the attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, when he was on board his flagship, the minelayer USS Oglala, when it capsized after being strafed and torpedoed by the Japanese. From December 12, 1941, to nearly the end of the war, he was commander of the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard and was charged with salvaging and repairing ships ...
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In 1935, Cogswell commanded the minelayer USS Oglala, the flagship of a flotilla of minesweepers assisting the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey in charting the Aleutian Islands. Cogswell was naval attaché in Paris, France, in the late 1930s. Cogswell died at Puget Sound Naval Hospital in Bremerton, Washington, on 22 September 1939.