Newcomb as she was just prior to being hit. A great little “man o’ war.”
Looking Back

Being discharged in 1946 did not end my naval experience. Indeed, as all my children and grandchildren know Navy events and shipmates are very important to me to this day. I want to end this section on the Navy with some random facts, figures, and photos.

I made some life-long friends on the Newcomb and I want to introduce you to two of them:

I have mentioned Roy Dockray before; here we are in June 1945, at Kerama Retto, standing by the fire-control director on the flying bridge. Note our score tally: from left to right—1 battleship, 2 submarines, 14 aircraft, 7 major invasions.

We were each other’s best man, and we have kept in close touch for 50+ years and still see each other occasionally. Our mothers became good friends. Doc established a successful office furniture business and now spends most of his time on the golf course in Florida.

Norman Kohl made good use of the GI Bill after the war and was very successful in the dairy products business. Collie and I loved him and his wife Marilou; both now deceased. This photo was taken in Honolulu prior to the Saipan invasion.

Roy Dockray and Nate Cook

Roy Dockray and Nate Cook.

In the summer of 1946 Doc and I decided to take a week’s auto trip to visit Norm at his home in Springfield, Ohio and also to visit Gene Sharpe in Roanoke, VA. In those days we didn’t know much about planning ahead, so we sent a telegram to Norm saying “Stand by for a ram” assuming he would realize that we were about to descend upon him. We arrived at his folks’ home to find his mother in a dither. Norm and Marilou had been married the day before the wire arrived and Norm’s mother didn’t know how to contact him. She had thought that two of his Navy buddies were sending him a real “ram” (sheep or goat) as a joke wedding present! We did find Gene and his very pregnant wife Maggie at home. Our trip, in Doc’s 1931 Model A Ford was great fun.

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From my copy of the ship’s log I have assembled some interesting facts:
  • The Newcomb was underway about 290 days, 37 of which were under tow.
  • We went to General Quarters 531 times (99 for drill, 195 for dawn alert, 237 for enemy action)
  • We fired 10,732 rounds of 5-inch ammunition.
  • We burned 4,365,608 gallons of fuel (about 16,000 tons).
  • We traveled something over 100,000 miles!
For the record, while aboard the Newcomb I earned the following medals:
  • Asiatic-Pacific Medal with 8 Bronze Stars
  • Philippine Liberation Medal with 2 Bronze Stars
  • American Theater Medal Victory Medal
  • Purple Heart Medal
  • Navy Unit Ccommendation Medal
  • Meritorious Mast Commendation.

HEROES

Right after the war there were newspaper articles and other write-ups about the Newcomb. She had survived cruel and unusual punishment and had been brought home. Many of the articles discussed the “heroes” aboard the Newcomb. Perhaps there were some heroes, men who undertook unusual, life-threatening actions. But mostly, if not totally, we were a well trained crew, “just doing our jobs.”

Warfare aboard a WWII destroyer was different from many types of warfare. There was no place to hide. There were no foxholes. There was no armor. There was no place to run to. We all knew very well, having seen other ships sunk and damaged, that our best chance of staying alive was by fighting. And fighting was a joint effort of all aboard. We were well trained and by and large we did our jobs. Of course it was possible for an individual not to do his job and thereby endanger the whole ship. But it was very difficult for anyone to do more than his job—an heroic action.

A number of medals were awarded to members of the crew for their actions—mostly to officers. But in most instances these men were just doing their jobs!

After the war the Newcomb was awarded the coveted Navy Unit Citation by James Forrestal, then Secretary of the Navy. I will reproduce that citation because it speaks to all of us who just did our jobs.

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THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY
WASHINGTON

The President of the United States takes pleasure in commending the

U.S.S. NEWCOMB

for service as follows:

“For outstanding heroism in action against enemy Japanese forces in the Saipan-Tinian operations, May 29 to August 5, 1944; Palau, September 6 to October 1, 1944; the Battle of Surigao Strait, October 24–25, 1944; Iwo Jima, February 10 to March 10, 1945; and Okinawa, March 21 to April 7, 1945. Operating in the face of continued and persistent air attacks throughout five major campaigns, the U.S.S. NEWCOMB blasted Japanese shore emplacements, screened our attacking transports and effectively laid support barrages for amphibious assaults. As the Leader of Destroyer Squadron FIFTY SIX in the historic Battle of Surigao Strait, she spearheaded a three-section night torpedo attack, boldly closing the battleship YAMASHIRO‘s terrific broadsides to aid in sinking the powerful man-o’-war with accurate torpedo salvos. In retiring, she went alongside the stricken A. W. GRANT to evacuate casualties and take the disabled ship in tow. At Iwo Jima, the NEWCOMB covered our minesweepers in the pre-attack sweep of the landing beaches and scored a probable kill on her second submarine. Culminating her brilliant combat service in a furious engagement with seven enemy suicide planes determined to destroy her, the NEWCOMB, staggering from the first suicide crash and slowed by loss of steam, shot down a second plane and was immediately smashed amidships by a third. With top-hamper and machinery spaces blown into a tangled mass of rubble, with smoke and flames billowing 1000 feet above her and the bridge the only structure intact above the water line, she fought on relentlessly with her remaining guns in manual control to blast three more attackers into the sea an damage the last Kamikaze. Superbly handled by valiant officers and men, the NEWCOMB has added new luster to the finest traditions of the United States Naval Service.”



All personnel attached to and serving on board the U.S.S. NEWCOMB in one or more of the above mentioned periods are hereby authorized to wear the NAVY UNIT COMMENDATION Ribbon.

For the President,

/s/ James Forrestal
Secretary of the Navy

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There were a number of truly heroic actions by members of our crew; I will mention two in which men were just doing their jobs, but where they had to make potentially fatal choices:
  • During our torpedo attack in Surigao Strait, Capt. Cook had to make the decision as to just when we would fire our torpedoes. He was well aware of the predicted life of a destroyer when attacking a battleship—almost zero. (Fortunately for me, I was not as aware.) The closer we got the poorer our chances of survival, yet the closer we were able to get, the better our chances of having a torpedo strike home. He kept us going in, closer, closer, and closer; with shells falling all around. And we fired at very close range—with success. To me, his actions were heroic.
  • When we were hit at Okinawa, a number of men, who had escaped from the engine rooms and fire rooms, went back down again to see if they could restore power. They died there. To me this was heroic.
I never faced such decisions, I just did my job.

DOCUMENTS

Just for the record, I thought it worthwhile to include a few pertinent Navy Documents:
  • Navy Discharge
  • Purple Heart
  • Navy Unit Commendation
  • Reunions
For 30 years after the war, I kept in contact with a few shipmates through Christmas cards, an occasional visit, etc. During these years we were all very busy with our families and our careers. Then in 1975, a small group on the West Coast decided to attempt a Newcomb Reunion. This was not easy as there was (and is) no listing of the location of all our shipmates. The word traveled outward through the “Christmas card network” and in October 1975 we had our first reunion, in San Diego, with 64 attendees. I might note that although the ship’s compliment at any one time was about 350, over the course of 2 years we had had 495 people assigned to the ship. Thus 64, including wives, was not a large number. But the reunion was a great success. We gathered for 3 days; we had a “hospitality room” which was well stocked with all types of refreshment where most of the “reuning” took place; Just general conversation that gave our wives a much better appreciation of what life aboard the Newcomb was like. We had various planned activities including a dinner dance and a memorial breakfast. This established a reunion pattern which we follow still. To date we have had 14 reunions, hosted by various shipmates, at various locations across the country. Collie and I hosted the 1984 reunion in Boston. Attendance has ranged from 57 to 108. Collie and I are one of 4 couples that have attended all 14!

Because I was the first shipmate to have a computer, I volunteered to be the keeper of our mailing list and other related information. We have worked to try to find more of our shipmates. Right now we have about 180 names on the mailing list, but 60 of these are widows or children. Each year we find a few more shipmates, but we are all getting older, and each year we loose a few. Whenever we learn of a death we send flowers from “The Shipmates and Wives of the USS Newcomb.”

In addition to maintaining lists, since 1985 I have written the Newcomb Newsletter 2–3 times a year. Shipmates send us information, I write the letter, printout a set of mailing labels, and Collie does most of the rest. She has become a major actor on the Newcomb scene, admired and loved by my shipmates!

The Newsletter and reunion activities take time and effort, but are very, very rewarding for both of us. I just hope that we can keep up our Navy activities for some time to come.