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1LT Courtney Rogers Draper

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1LT Courtney Rogers Draper Veteran

Birth
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA
Death
9 Jan 1945 (aged 31)
Taiwan
Burial
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Courtney Rogers Draper, the first son of Delbert Morley Draper and Frances Mary Rogers Draper, was born on 5 April 1913 in Salt Lake City. A former student reporter for The Salt Lake Tribune, Draper attended Stewart training and East high school and was graduated from the University of Utah and George Washington University, Washington, D. C., where he received his LLB degree.

An auditor for the U. S. accounting department while attending George Washington University, he was secretary to Gen. Hugh S. Johnson during N R A days.

A member of the Utah bar and junior bar, he practiced law in Washington, D. C. and Utah. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity and Salt Lake City Junior Chamber of Commerce. A reserve officer in the U. S. army, he was called to active service July 1, 1941. Transferred to the Philippine Islands Aug. 1, 1941, he was stationed at Fort Stotsenberg and Clark field, and was present during the first bombing of the latter field. Transferred to Mindanao before the fall of Corregidor, he served there until ordered to surrender.

As a prisoner of the Japanese he was interned until June, 1944 and was then transferred to Cabanatuan, Bilibid. He was being transferred again aboard the Enoura Maru, one of the infamous Hell Ships, when the transport was severely damaged in Takao Harbor, Formosa (now Taiwan) by U.S. Navy aircraft from the USS Hornet. At the time, military officials were unaware that POW's were packed like sardines in these unmarked ships, and thousands lost their lives.

At the time of his death he had three sisters and a brother, as well as one sister who preceded him in death.

His remains have to date not been identified, but may be interred at the Punch Bowl in Hawaii. There is a memorial plaque honoring him in Memory Grove park, Salt Lake City, Utah.During World War II, he died aboard a Japanese "Hell Ship" transport ship that was sunk in the Pacific on December 15, 1944

NOTE: Another memorial created by "War Graves" exists as well: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56782096/courtney-rogers-draper

NOTE: It was originally believed that Courtney was killed on 15 December 1944 and during that time, this marker was created and placed. However, a few years later, the US Government determined that Courtney was killed on 9 January 1945.
Contributor: 49775284
Courtney Rogers Draper, the first son of Delbert Morley Draper and Frances Mary Rogers Draper, was born on 5 April 1913 in Salt Lake City. A former student reporter for The Salt Lake Tribune, Draper attended Stewart training and East high school and was graduated from the University of Utah and George Washington University, Washington, D. C., where he received his LLB degree.

An auditor for the U. S. accounting department while attending George Washington University, he was secretary to Gen. Hugh S. Johnson during N R A days.

A member of the Utah bar and junior bar, he practiced law in Washington, D. C. and Utah. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity and Salt Lake City Junior Chamber of Commerce. A reserve officer in the U. S. army, he was called to active service July 1, 1941. Transferred to the Philippine Islands Aug. 1, 1941, he was stationed at Fort Stotsenberg and Clark field, and was present during the first bombing of the latter field. Transferred to Mindanao before the fall of Corregidor, he served there until ordered to surrender.

As a prisoner of the Japanese he was interned until June, 1944 and was then transferred to Cabanatuan, Bilibid. He was being transferred again aboard the Enoura Maru, one of the infamous Hell Ships, when the transport was severely damaged in Takao Harbor, Formosa (now Taiwan) by U.S. Navy aircraft from the USS Hornet. At the time, military officials were unaware that POW's were packed like sardines in these unmarked ships, and thousands lost their lives.

At the time of his death he had three sisters and a brother, as well as one sister who preceded him in death.

His remains have to date not been identified, but may be interred at the Punch Bowl in Hawaii. There is a memorial plaque honoring him in Memory Grove park, Salt Lake City, Utah.During World War II, he died aboard a Japanese "Hell Ship" transport ship that was sunk in the Pacific on December 15, 1944

NOTE: Another memorial created by "War Graves" exists as well: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56782096/courtney-rogers-draper

NOTE: It was originally believed that Courtney was killed on 15 December 1944 and during that time, this marker was created and placed. However, a few years later, the US Government determined that Courtney was killed on 9 January 1945.
Contributor: 49775284



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