by Admiral I.J. Galantin, USN (Ret.)
Introduction by Edward L. Beach, USN (Ret.)
New Softbound edition
262 pages, with 23 B/W photos
New $17.95
| Books: |
| NEW Submarine Books |
| NEW Warship Books |
| USED and Rare Books Large inventory |
| Departments & Information: |
| About Us R.A. Cline Publishing |
| American Submarine Losses |
| Book Reviews |
| Buy Now Dept. |
| Contact Us |
| CD's and Music |
| Dealer Information |
| Dealers & Museums |
| DVDs & Videos |
| FAQ |
| Home |
| How To Buy Our Books |
| News |
| Page Fix |



This Web site best viewed with Internet Explorer
Copyright 2008 by R.A. Cline Publishing. All rights reserved.
Admiral Ignatius Joseph "Pete" Galantin was born in New York City in 1910 and grew up in Illinois. Following his high school graduation, Galantin entered the U.S. Navy Academy in 1929 and graduated from Annapolis in 1933. After brief duty as a junior officer on board the battleship USS New York (BB-34) Galantin looked to the submarine service at New London, CT. 1936 found him as a lieutenant and gunnery officer with the USS Argonaut (SS-166). In 1940 he reported as executive officer of the USS S-24 (SS-129). In August 1942 Galantin assumed command of the submarine USS R-11 (SS-88). The following summer he saw his first war duty with the USS Sculpin (SS-191). Galantin had five Pacific patrols as skipper of the fleet submarine USS Halibut (SS-232) and was awarded the Navy Cross, the Silver Star Medal and two Gold Stars. From 1966 until his retirement in 1970 Galantin was Chief of Naval Material, with the rank of full admiral.
On 12 August 1943, on Midway Island, Lieutenant Commander I.J. "Pete" Galantin assumed command of the fleet submarine USS Halibut (SS-232). The boat was already a veteran of the Pacific war, with five patrols against the enemy. Over the next fourteen months Galantin and his crew would play their part in the unrelenting attack on the Japanese Navy and Merchant Marine. During World War II Halibut sank 13 enemy ships including a 10,000-ton Japanese heavy cruiser. While on patrol in the Luzon Strait in November 1944, Halibut found big trouble. Detected and driven deep, the submarine endured one of the most ferocious dept charge attacks of the war! Halibut and her crew were subjected to an assault of appalling ferocity. Badly damaged, the crippled sub took evasive maneuvers in an effort to survived the terrible ordeal. Eventually the enemy gave up and moved away. When Halibut returned to port the boats' damage was so bad she never returned to action—Commander Galantin earned the Navy Cross.
This new Softbound edition has 262 pages, 23 black and white photos, 2 diagrams an official USS Halibut crew roster, but no index.
Just $17.95
BOOK REVIEWS
"They feared the enemy together and put their faith in the only place they could, in their boat and their skipper. These brought them through against the toughest Anti-Submarine Warfare measures and the greatest damage reported by any submarine of our side. It was the nearest of near misses, and it remains the truest, and strongest, of all possible bonds." Captain Edward L. Beach, USN (Ret.), author of "Run Silent, Run Deep."
"A superb portrait of life on a World War II fleet boat, the best that we are likely to get. One is struck, if not awed, by Galantin's personal courage, particularly in his unhesitating decision to attack Japanese men of war, including on several occasional, destroyers. One such attack resulted in a legendary depth charge attack which came within an ace of destroyring his boat. His account of this action will live forever in the minds of his readers." Clay Blair, author of "Silent Victory."
