In August 2017, researchers announced they had found one of history’s most significant—and sought-after—shipwrecks. More than 72 years after it sank in July 1945, the final resting place of USS Indianapolis has been discovered in the Pacific Ocean. But the heavy cruiser isn’t just a cool maritime find; it’s a graveyard. The wreck was the U.S. Navy’s largest-ever single loss of life at sea: an event that left hundreds of sailors dead, hundreds more ambushed by sharks and the American public reeling at the magnitude of a tragedy that took place so close to the end of World War II.
Before it plunged to the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, Indianapolis, named after the capital city of Indiana, played a critical role in the war. In 1941, it narrowly missed the Pearl Harbor attack while participating in military exercises a few hundred miles away. Then, led by Rear Admiral Charles B. McVay III, it supported multiple campaigns throughout the Pacific, including helping provide cover for the Iwo Jima landings in 1945.
But its most famous mission was top secret. As the war hurtled toward its end, Indianapolis was tasked with bringing parts for “Little Boy,” the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, from San Francisco to the Mariana Islands. After completing its mission, and following a quick stop in Guam, the ship was heading toward the Philippines carrying nearly 1,200 sailors—without an escort—when disaster struck on the night of July 30, 1945.