It must be a good is a if two people have it at the same time, and this is the case in relation to this page and the American Merchant Marine Memorial monument in Camden, New Jersey which was dedicated on June 11, 2005. I first put this page on the Internet in late 2002, while Charles Mardigian got the ball rolling on having a physical monument placed on the Camden Waterfront around the same time. Neither of us were aware of the others efforts, and we first met by phone, through Joe Balzano of the South Jersey Port Corporation, in July of 2005. Needless to say, a page will be built on this website about the new monument, which is adjacent to the battleship USS New Jersey, in Camden's Wiggins Park. Click the link below for this page. Phil
Cohen |
Camden NJ Seamen Lost Due To Enemy Action |
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Click on each sailor's name to find out more about him, his ship, and what happened thereafter. |
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Nicholas Hetz | William Henry Merryfield | Harry Jackson Mote |
Neil Jensen | George Joseph Gleason | Harvey Gardner Jr. |
Harry Holmes Bradway | Norman David Louderback | Clifton C. Stevenson |
Thomas Byrnes Jr. | Abraham Price | Carlton Harris Strang Jr. |
Seamen
from other Camden County Towns |
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Click on each sailor's name to find out more about him, his ship, and what happened thereafter. |
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Edward Benfold | Roy F. Brucks | Thomas Byrnes Jr. |
Richard A. Cooper | Hunter Crist | Glenn Robert Curtis |
Raymond Farr | Frank W. Fitzgerald Jr | Richard O. Kelleher |
Frank Mooney | Francis J. Schwarz | Charles A. Wilson |
Alfred Paul Woltjen |
Camden NJ Seamen Lost |
Click on each sailor's name to find out more about him, his ship, and what happened thereafter. |
Adam William Meade had served with the Camden Fire Department for at least 18 years before going to sea in his mid-40s to serve his country in time of war. He died overseas on July 7, 1945 and was buried at the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery in Nettuno Italy. |
The city of Camden, NJ lost
12 of its sons to the sea during World War II, 10 to enemy action.
Twelve others from Camden County died while serving as well. On two
occasions, two of those men went down together while serving
aboard the same ship. Merchant mariners were on the front lines the
moment their ships left U.S. ports, and were subject to attack by
bombers, kamikaze, battleships, submarines, mines, and land-based
artillery, and 663 men and women Mariners became Prisoners of War.
Approximately 8,000 U.S. Merchant Seamen were lost, in addition to
countless foreign nationals serving aboard shipping serving the Allied
cause
Who Were the Mariners? "In 1940 the Merchant Marine numbered about 55,000. A massive recruiting effort brought in retired seafarers who were able to ship out immediately on the newly launched Liberty ships. Among them were 76 year-old James A. Logan who served as cook on the SS Joshua Hendy. Thomas Cavely, former master on the Brooklyn to Staten Island ferry, served as captain of a Liberty ship. Young mariners trained at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, various state Maritime Academies, or the U.S. Maritime Service Training Stations. William Travers, 22, was captain of the SS James Ford Rhodes, while his 21 year old brother was first mate. The U.S. Maritime Service officially took youngsters who were 16 years-old. They took them with one eye, one leg, or heart problems. Many men who were too young or too old for the other services or who were physically unfit for the other services joined the Maritime Service and went in the Merchant Marine. During World War II, some gossip columnists claimed that merchant mariners were getting rich on outrageous salaries. In a 1943 letter to the American Legion, Admiral Telfair Knight of the War Shipping Administration compared salaries for equivalent positions in Navy and Merchant Marine, and found salaries to be equivalent or even higher for Navy personnel. In addition, the Navy offered outstanding benefits, including paid leave, disability and death benefits, free medical care for personnel and dependents, free uniforms, and a generous retirement pension. Mariners signed on for each voyage which lasted until they returned to a U.S. port, which could be one year or more. They had no paid leave,
no vacation and no pension." |
Merchant
Mariners during WWII and took casualties at a rate exceeded only by the
U.S. Marine Corps. |
Mariners' Struggle for Veteran Status |
During World War II President Franklin D. Roosevelt promised mariners of
the U.S. Merchant Marine, and Army Transport Service veteran status and
a Seaman's Bill of Rights. His promises died with him. |
Nicholas
Hetz |
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More
about the sinking of the India Arrow survivor Charles Seerveld writes about the sinking and his Merchant Marine service |
Neil Jensen was employed as a Fireman/Watertender on the tanker SS W. D. Anderson under the command of Captain Albert B. Walters of Upper Darby PA, sailing from Texas to Philadelphia PA when the ship was torpedoed and sunk on February, 22, 1942, 12 miles northeast of Jupiter Inlet, FL by the German Submarine U-504 commanded by Korvettenkapitän Hans-Georg Friedrich Poske. The SS W.D. Anderson carried a crew of 35. Only 1 man survived, Frank L. Terry, a former lifeguard, by swimming to the shore. |
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More About Neil Jensen | More about the sinking of the SS W.D. Anderson |
Harry
Holmes Bradway who signed
on as a Fireman/Watertender
aboard the Esso tanker SS M. F. Elliott out of Wilmington DE, perished when
the ship was torpedoed and sunk, 150 miles northwest of Trinidad on June
3rd, 1942. The M.F. Elliot had been
built in 1921 by the
Moore
& Scott Iron Works, of Oakland, California. The ship was torpedoed by
the German
submarine U-502, captained by Oberleutnant zur See Jürgen von
Rosenstiel. On June 4, The destroyer USS Tarbell DD-142 sighted 10 survivors of the sinking of
SS M. F. Elliott
and brought them aboard, |
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Harry H. Bradway was survived by his sister, Mrs. Mary Guenther who in 1944 resided at 709 Lawrence Street, Camden. |
William Henry Merryfield was an Oiler on the freighter SS Pan Atlantic. This ship was on its way to Russia on the Murmansk run, when it was bombed and sunk by dive-bombers of the German Luftwaffe on July 6, 1942, 180 miles north of Cape Canin. Merryfield's crewmates who survived this attack were picked up by the SS Bellingham which was subsequently torpedoed herself, all hands fortunately survived. The Pan Atlantic carried a crew of 18, and an armed guard of 7. |
William Henry Merryfield was born in Pennsylvania. By 1930 his father had passed on, and his mother had re-married, to a metal-stamper, William J. Smith, who owned a home at 221 Milton Street, in the Poet's Row section of North Camden. At the time of the 1930 census, William Henry was 21, and living with his mother, step-father, brother John E. Merryfield, and step-sisters Margaret, Emma, and Ida at the Camden NJ address. He was working as a repairman in a typewriter shop. He was surived by his wife, mothr, and siblings. |
George Joseph
Gleason and |
George
Gleason was 24 when his ship went down. A June 1935 graduate of Camden
High School, he had resided at 529 North 7th
Street, with his parents Mr. & Mrs. James Gleason. |
COURIER-POST, CAMDEN N.J., MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1943 FIVE
SOUTH JERSEY MEN MISSING IN SINKINGS Two
Camden men and three from South Jersey are among 21 in the state
reported missing and believed lost between November 22 and December 21,
it was announced yesterday by the Merchant Marine. |
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Harry J. Mote Jr. was born in Camden in 1911. He was the son of Harry J and Mary A. Mote of 1102 Lois Avenue in the Cramer Hill section of Camden NJ. His father was a machinist at the Cramp Shipyard in Camden. His father was also a well known baseball player in the Camden area, playing for the 11th Ward Republican Baseball Club, and later for the Westville team. The second of three children, he came between brother Augustus and sister Clara. By 1930 he had left school, and was working in a factory. Eventually he went to sea, and had achieved the rating of 2nd Engineer. By 1940 he had married, and had lived with his wife Lillian at 383 South 27th Street when he was lost at sea. He was 32 at the time of his death. His father passed away shortly thereafter, on August 13, 1943. |
GLENN ROBERT CURTIS was born in Pennsylvania in 1924 to James and Nellie Curtis. The family moved top Oaklyn NJ, where by April of 1930, they were renting a home at 7 Valley Road. The elder Curtis was an electrician. Besides Glenn, there was an older sister, Dorothy, and a brother, Robert Curtis. The family later moved to the Woodcrest section of Delaware Township (Cherry Hill) NJ. Glenn Curtis shipped out as a messman in the Merchant Marine. He was aboard the Liberty Ship SS Meriwether Lewis when it was torpedoed in the North Atlantic. |
Harvey
Gardner Jr., a Wiper
on the tanker SS Sunoil died on April 5, 1943 in the North Atlantic,
when his ship was torpedoed and sunk while en route from Halifax, Nova
Scotia to the Clyde Estuary in Scotland. Carrying a crew of 43; and an
armed guard of 16, she was lost with no survivors. The SS Sunoil was
sunk by the German submarine
U-563, under Oberleutnant. Gustav Borchard. |
THOMAS
BYRNES JR Ordinary
Seaman, and |
Clifton C. Stevenson left a wife and daughter, Kathryn. |
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GUEST BOOK & E-MAIL |
As
of this date, January 7, 2003 I have not erected a guest-book. Please
e-mail all comments to phil552@reagan.com.
If you would like your comment published in the upcoming guest-book,
please let me know.- Phil Cohen, Camden NJ |