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Raymond Vernon True
Cenotaph

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Raymond Vernon True

Birth
Death
5 Aug 1943 (aged 24)
At Sea
Cenotaph
Flomot, Motley County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Plot
row 16
Memorial ID
View Source
U.S. Navy (USNR) WORLD WAR II
Fireman 1st Class, Raymond V. True MIA/KIA
Entered the service from Texas
Ship: USS Plymouth PG-57
Service #6162560
Awards: Purple Heart
Captain: Lt. Ormsby M. Mitchel Jr., USNR

Target: Convoy escort to Key West
Mission Date: 5-Aug-43
Location: Near Cape Henry
Cause: U-Boat Torpedo
Crew: 176 87MIA/KIA 4KIA

On her last voyage USS Plymouth left New York to escort a convoy to Key West when on Aug. 5, 1943 the U-566 slammed a torpedo into her. The ship took on a heavy list and sank in two minuets. Her commander, Lt. Ormsby M. Mitchel Jr., USNR was terribly wounded when he was thrown into a bulkhead after the explosion, but continued to oversee the abandonment of the ship. He survived, but lost a leg from his injuries. For his devotion to duty he was awarded the Navy Cross. Because of the swiftness of the sinking ninty-one crewmen were killed, four died of wounds the following day. Only eighty-five survivors were picked up and landed at Norfolk

This ship was built by the Germans in 1931 and twelve years later she was sunk by the Germans. The USS Plymouth PG-57 began life as the yacht Alva, built at Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft, Kiel, Germany for William K. Vanderbilt II. He used the ship on expeditions to the South Pacific, Mediterranean and South America from 1931 to 1935. On Nov. 4, 1941 he gave the ship to the U.S. Navy, they converted her into a patrol gunboat and used her for convoy escort duty along the U.S. east coast and to Cuba.

Fireman True appears Tablets of the Missing at East Coast Memorial New York City, USA his memorial at Memorial Park Cemetery Flomot Motley County
Texas is a cenotaph his body was never recovered.

Visit the virtual cemetery of USS Plymouth Crew
U.S. Navy (USNR) WORLD WAR II
Fireman 1st Class, Raymond V. True MIA/KIA
Entered the service from Texas
Ship: USS Plymouth PG-57
Service #6162560
Awards: Purple Heart
Captain: Lt. Ormsby M. Mitchel Jr., USNR

Target: Convoy escort to Key West
Mission Date: 5-Aug-43
Location: Near Cape Henry
Cause: U-Boat Torpedo
Crew: 176 87MIA/KIA 4KIA

On her last voyage USS Plymouth left New York to escort a convoy to Key West when on Aug. 5, 1943 the U-566 slammed a torpedo into her. The ship took on a heavy list and sank in two minuets. Her commander, Lt. Ormsby M. Mitchel Jr., USNR was terribly wounded when he was thrown into a bulkhead after the explosion, but continued to oversee the abandonment of the ship. He survived, but lost a leg from his injuries. For his devotion to duty he was awarded the Navy Cross. Because of the swiftness of the sinking ninty-one crewmen were killed, four died of wounds the following day. Only eighty-five survivors were picked up and landed at Norfolk

This ship was built by the Germans in 1931 and twelve years later she was sunk by the Germans. The USS Plymouth PG-57 began life as the yacht Alva, built at Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft, Kiel, Germany for William K. Vanderbilt II. He used the ship on expeditions to the South Pacific, Mediterranean and South America from 1931 to 1935. On Nov. 4, 1941 he gave the ship to the U.S. Navy, they converted her into a patrol gunboat and used her for convoy escort duty along the U.S. east coast and to Cuba.

Fireman True appears
Tablets of the Missing at East Coast Memorial New York City, USA his memorial at Memorial Park Cemetery Flomot Motley County
Texas is a cenotaph his body was never recovered.

Visit the virtual cemetery of USS Plymouth Crew

Inscription

Died while on duty when the gun boat Plymouth sunk off North Carolina coast.



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