ADF Health Vol
99
HMAS Sydney under the command of Captain Anthony
Synnot RAN was on a training cruise around the barrier reef near the Fitzroy
River, and received a signal that the United States submarine USS Tiru
had run aground on Frederick Reef in the evening of 4 November 1966. The
Sydney arrived the following day and stood by to render assistance. The
submarine was hard and fast on the reef with huge waves breaking over her. Her
watertight integrity had not been breached, but one of her sailors had been
tossed by a wave while rigging safety lines. He returned on board, where he
developed increasing abdominal pain. He was the biggest man on board, well over
6’ 5”, so the captain gave up his cabin. Even this was so cramped that a square
was cut out of the bulkhead at the foot of the bunk to accommodate the sailor’s
feet.
HMAS Vendetta was dispatched from
Sydney. She picked up a US salvage team flown out from Hawaii, but no doctor was
on board. I transferred to the Vendetta on 4 November 1966 and the Sydney
continued her cruise.
The seas had only slightly abated
on the morning of 5 November. I donned a wetsuit and flippers and was taken by
the ship’s cutter to just beyond the line of breakers. A gun line was fired to
the Tiru, where a heavier line was fixed while the cutter took the strain at the
other end. I and a sailor were able to pull ourselves hand over hand in an
inflatable liferaft, thankfully without going in the drink.
The injured sailor was unwell
with a silent abdomen. He had been well looked after by a US sickbay man, Ralph
Mummey USN, and we formed a great team. We “sucked and dripped” him, keeping
careful fluid balance and records in alternating 4-hour watches.
The seas remained high. It was
not possible for the warships to carry out the tow. The ocean-going tug Carlock
was dispatched from Brisbane, arriving the following day. The Tiru was towed off
on a rising tide in the early afternoon, and proceeded to Brisbane under her own
power.
We arrived in Brisbane early on 8
November. The next hurdle was to move this huge man out of the tiny cabin
through a maze of dogleg passages and watertight doors. I gave him a very large
dose of morphine. Five of the strongest sailors lifted him out of the bunk and
out through the door into the passageway, where he was strapped into a flexible
stretcher. He was then manhandled to the forward torpedo space, winched out
through the torpedo hatch and transferred to an ambulance. At the Greenslopes
Repatriation Hospital, he was assessed, resuscitated and had 22 cm of necrotic
small bowel excised. His recovery was swift and he was on his way home within a
week.
The following year when HMAS
Sydney was undergoing refit I transferred to HMAS Melbourne. The Melbourne had a
dual mission of a goodwill visit to the west coast cities of the United States
and Canada and to collect Skyhawks, Grumman Trackers and matériel for the
Vietnam War. On our way, we stopped at Pearl Harbour. To my amazement and the
ship’s delight, we were greeted by a large banner proclaiming “Aloha Dr Sam”
held up by some members of the crew of the USS Tiru. Their hospitality was
fantastic and a fitting start to a fabulous visit to Vancouver, San Francisco,
San Diego, Los Angeles and Pearl Harbour.
To my great surprise, I was
awarded the MBE(Mil) in the New Year Honours list 1968.
Sam Sakker MBE(Mil)
HONOURS AND AWARDS
1ST JANUARY 1968
APPOINTED A MEMBER OF THE MILITARY DIVISION OF
THE MOST EXCELLENT ORDER OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE
SURGEON LIEUTENANT SAMUEL SAKKER, R.A.N.
C I T A T I 0 N
For exceptionally meritorious service in boarding the
stranded
United States Submarine in rough seas, and for outstanding
devotion
to duty in treating a seriously injured man in difficult
conditions.
On 4th November, 1966, U.S.S. TIRU grounded on Frederick
Reef
in the Coral Sea and H.M.A.S. SYDNEY was sent to assist on
5th
November. It was learned that a U.S. Petty Officer had been
flung
against equipment in the submarine suffering serious
internal
injuries. Rough seas prevented boarding the submarine that
night
and although there was only a slight moderation by the next
morning
Surgeon Lieutenant Sakker prepared to swim from the
destroyer
H.M.A.S. VENDETTA to the submarine. In the event a
hazardous
boarding was achieved by liferaft.
On board the submarine Surgeon Lieutenant Sakker worked to
keep the Petty Officer alive throughout the 6th and 7th
November and
until the early hours of 8th November when after
transferring the
patient and a full case history to the General Repatriation
Hospital,
Greenslopes, Brisbane, he was finally able to rest. Surgeon
Lieutenant Sakker’s conduct was in keeping with the highest
traditions of the medical profession and the R.A.N.
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