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list of seabees killed in action

US Navy. 8 June 2001. USS Scorpion (SSN-589) lost with all hands 400 miles southwest of Azores, in over 10,000 feet of water. Fireman 1 class George Trugillo killed. Lt. Terri Sue Fussner, Lt. Wayne Francis Roberts, and Aviation Warfare Systems Operator 2nd Class Jason Edward Lawson in a SH-60B"Seahawk" from Helicopter Squadron Light (HSL) 46, died in crash in central Mediterranean. 1953], Pt. 15 March 1918. 125 lost. William W. White of 3rd Amphibious Assault Battalion, 1st Marine Division, was killed in a vehicle accident in Iraq. SH-60F "Seahawk" made an emergency landing near Naval Air Station Fallon, Nevada. 28 October 1907. 11 September 1810. USS S-51 (SS-162) sank off Block Island, N. Y. after collision with SS City of Rome. Three crew members were lost at sea. 30 May 2006. 27 July 2002. 22 December 1967. 28 March 2002. Aviation Pilot 1 class Charles Edward Walwork killed, and Lt. (jg) Frank M. Nichols injured, in crash of O2U-4 seaplane in 40 fathoms of water off Makapuu Point, Oahu, Hawaii. 24 August 1918. In 1911, 253 sailors were killed in accidents or died from diseases. 325,000 Seabees served 267 Seabees killed in action of which 7 were Prisoners of War Topics. Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Marcques J. Nettles, Corporal Andres Aguilar Jr., Corporal David A. Bass, Lance Corporal Patrick J. Gallagher, Lance Corporal Eric A. Palmisano, Lance Corporal Felipe D. Sandoval-Flores, Corporal Brian R. St. Germain, and Staff Sergeant Abraham G. Twitchell, died when the seven-ton truck they were riding in rolled over in a flash flood near Al Asad, Iraq. Stern wheel gunboat USS Cincinnati Fireman 1 class Martin McLano killed in ordnance accident. A Petty Officer 1st Class died while participating in command departmental physical training in Norfolk, Virginia. 29 August 1916. 42 drowned. 47 USS Aylwin explosion (probably the port drum of #1 boiler) in forward fireroom. During a storm in the Atlantic, one officer is swept off the bridge of submarine USS Cutlass (SS-478) and drowned. 24 May 1951. Recollections of Lieutenant Commander William Leide, Recollections of Lieutenant Wilton Wenker and Lieutenant Elby Concerning the Crossing of the Rhine River in 1945, Recollections of USS Pampanito's rescue of prison ship survivors by Lieutenant Commander Landon Davis, Recollections of Vice Admiral Alan G. Kirk Concerning the Crossing of the Rhine River in 1945, Register of Patients at Naval Hospital Washington DC 1814, Register of USN & USMC Officer Personnel 1801-1807 [pdf], Regulations for the Information of Officers On Neutrality Duty in Connection With the Visits of Belligerent Vessels of War [1916], Regulations For Powder Magazines and Shell Houses 1874, Regulations Governing the Uniform of Commissioned Officers 1897, Reincarnation of John Paul Jones The Navy Discovers Its Professional Roots, Remarks on Protection of a Convoy by Extended Patrols, Remarks on Submarine Tactics Against Convoys, Reminiscences of Seattle Washington Territory and the U. S. Sloop-of-War Decatur, Reminiscences of Seattle Washington Territory and the US Sloop-of-War Decatur During the Indian War of 1855-56, Report by the Special Subcommittee on Disciplinary Problems in the US Navy, Reports of Arica, Peru Earthquake from USS Powhatan and USS Wateree, Resolution of the Continental Congress, 11 December 1775, Resolution of the Continental Congress, 25 November 1775, Hyman G. Rickover's Promotion to Admiral [H.A.S.C. Coxswain Peat Vitus Walter shot and killed during gun practice. 24 May 1849. 11 October 1864. 13 January 1918. 9 July 1917. 20 September 1800. 9 Feb 2010. Six F9F-4s from VMF-115 crashed into a South Korean mountain following lead aircraft navigational instrument failure. Armored Cruiser No. Russell Eugene Ward (and perhaps others) died. Marine sustained fatal injuries in crash while training in a civilian aircraft. CPL. 5 December 1994. A twin-engine P2V Neptune from *** crashed into a mountain near the tip of Cape Newenham, Alaska. 19 December 1960. Transport USS Orizaba suffered accidental explosion of 50-lb depth charge, killing Lt. Cdr. 1820 - 1839 Chartered schooner Quaker sank in a gale with all aboard. Armored cruiser USS New York Seaman Frank Widemark struck and killed by fragment of exploded shell. 30 August 1995. Lockwood, Charles A. and Adamson, Hans Christian. 20 June 1957. Screw gunboat USS Pembina Landsman George Moose killed in ordnance accident. Navy Casualties: Lost and Wrecked Ships, 18011941; Explosions, 18041941; Steam Casualties, 18551941. Brig USS Somers crewmen: Midshipman Philip Spencer, son of the Secretary of War; Boatswain's Mate Samuel Cromwell; and Seaman Elisha Small found guilty of intention to mutiny and executed by hanging. Battleship No. 26 September 1998. Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class David J. Moreno, with the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, was killed in Al Hamishiyah, Iraq, from a non-hostile gunshot wound. 266 killed and 54 injured (sometimes attributed to hostile action). USS Enterprise (CVAN-65) suffers ordnance accident resulting in fire and explosions while operating off Hawaii. 3 USS Salem boiler #1 tube blown. 23 March 2002. Nine survivors were recovered. Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida, crashed into a coastal Alabama field killed LT John Francis Brown. Battleship USS Mississippi (BB-23) Seaman Hubert M. Crowder severely injured when skull caught between bulkhead and powder car while inside #2 turret. HH-60H "Seahawk" of Helicopter Antisubmarine Squadron 15 on board USS Enterprise (CVN-65) crashed in the northern Persian Gulf during a routine training mission. Frigate USS Sabine Seaman John Connelly killed in ordnance accident. F/A-18 of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 134 overshot the runway and crash landed at Naval Air Station Miramar, California. 24 July 1919. Chief Hospital Medical Corpsman Juan Pedro Gonzales, USN, killed. 7 September 1841. Continental sloop Saratoga lost with all hands in a gale off the Bahamas. 18 killed. 14 killed, 2 injured. David Darling, Ships' Boy, USS Constitution, fell from the booms into the hold and was killed by the fall. 20 February 1995. Ironclad monitor USS Winnebago Landsman Samuel Parent killed in ordnance accident. 29 January 1996. 11 November 1864. 13 July 2002. 2 million in damages; aircraft losses totaled over $70 million. Battleship No. Paul C. Alaniz, Lance CPL Jonathan E. Etterling, CAPT Lyle L. Gordon, Lance CPL Brian C. Lance CPL Saeed Jafarkhani-Torshizi Jr., CPL Sean P. Kelly, Staff SGT Dexter S. Kimble, Lance CPL Allan Klein, CPL James L. Moore, Lance CPL Mourad Ragimov, Lance CPL Rhonald D. Rairdan, Lance CPL Hector Ramos, Lance CPL Darrell J. Schumann, 1st LT Dustin M. Shumney, CPL Matthew R. Smith, Lance CPL Joseph B. Spence, and CPL Timothy A. Knight. 541 (1920) Standard Nomemclature for Naval Vessels, General Order No. 16 April 2002. Both crew members killed in S-3 "Viking" of Sea Control Squadron 32 which was lost upon launching from USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67) in the Arabian Gulf. 19 November 1998. Minesweeper USS Curlew Seaman Robert Israel Simpson blown overboard and drowned in the North Sea after a sweep exploded a nearby mine. 16 Mar 1977. 6 January 1956. 55 (1901) Decorations for Philippine Islands and Boxer Rebellion, General Order No. Two crewmembers were recovered by US Coast Guard and taken to local hospital. 13 USS Montana Boatswain's Mate 2 class Charles W. Pauly and Seaman 2d Class Roy L. Putnam killed by accidental discharge of a double-loaded gun. 17 December 1917. Destroyer USS Basilone (DDE-824) runs hard aground at Hampton Roads. Recruit was taken to a battalion aid station, where he became unconscious, lapsed into a coma, and was transferred to a local hospital and subsequently moved to Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston. 3 June 1865. He was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force. 2 July 2003. 25 August 1949. Ship-of-the-Line USS Independence seaman William Oaty accidentally killed by pistol shot. Boatswain's Mate 1 class Emil Hjalmar Olsson. Since the outbreak of World War II, 22 Civil Engineer Corps officers and 353 Seabees have been killed in action during wartime. USS Mississippi (BB-41), during combat operations off Makin, Gilbert Islands, suffers cordite explosion in #2 14-inch gun turret. 25 June 2003. Both crew members killed when T-38A "Talon" of the US Naval Test Pilot School, Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, crashed at the station. Silverstone, Paul H. US Warships Since 1945. Sailor lost at sea during an attempted search and rescue hoist by a HH-60H "Seahawk" from Helicopter Antisubmarine Squadron 14 in the Arabian Sea. 48, USS Canberra CA70 War Damage Report No. RADM James G. Prout, III, Commander, Carrier Group Three, and CDR Joseph Kleefisch, commanding officer of VFA-25 were killed. USS Louisville (CA-28) Gunner's Mate 1 class Rollie Jackson Belcher killed while decapping a saluting charge. Lt. Frederick C. Leary died of burns suffered in a fire in cargo ship USS Charlton Hall. 21 January 1954. Recruit collapsed while marching with his platoon. 22 Dec 2009. Side wheel steamer USS Philadelphia Seaman William Palmer killed in ordnance accident. Steam tug USS Ida Captain of the Top Christopher H. Howard and Ordinary Seaman John Drion killed by a torpedo mine explosion in Mobile Bay. 26 October 1900. Marine drowned while swimming ashore after helicopter cast training (jumping without a parachute from a helicopter). 21 killed. 26 Oct 2009. 19 November 1930. 22 March 1865. 16 September 1813. 30 October 1934. Seaplane accident at Dunkerque, France, killed Ensign Curtis S. Read. CH-53D "Sea Stallion" from Marine Corps Base Hawaii (Oahu) lost its tail boom while landing, causing the helo to roll over. F-5E "Tiger II" from Strike Fighter Squadron 127 crashed in the Clan Alpine mountains 60 miles northeast of Fallon, Nevada. 10 January 2006. Tug USS Cherokee foundered off Fenwick Island Lightship in a heavy gale. 19 Feb 2010. Nicolas M. Hodson from the 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, was killed, and three other injured in a vehicle accident in Kuwait. Nearly 300 Seabees were killed in action, while another 500 died in construction accidents. Flight deck explosion on Ranger (CVA-61) kills two crewmen during training operations off San Francisco. 1 October 1956. LCM-6 from USS Trenton (LPD-14) carrying sailors and marines returning from liberty to USS Trenton and USS Guam (LPH-9), capsized after collision with Spanish merchant ship Urlea off Barcelona, Spain. 18 June 2000. At least 6 killed and 4 injured. One submariner injured. 22 May 1968. Joseph B. Maglione was killed by a non-combat weapon discharge at Camp Coyote, Kuwait. Aircrew members injured when AH-1W "Sea Cobra" from Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron (HMM) 261 impacted the ground during a training flight in Jordan. 9 September 1909. Subchaser 297 gasoline explosion burned Gunners Mate 2 class Edward John Gaynor who died 14 days later, and Machinists Mate 1 class Joseph P. Chadderon who died two days later. 10 July 2004. Afterwards the Seabees went South for Operation Overlord preparations. 24 sailors drowned. DoD news release notes that 82 personnel died in aviation mishaps in fiscal 2002. P2V Neptune from VX-6 crashed during take-off from Wilkes Station, Antarctica. Single-engine Otter cargo aircraft from VX-6 crashed during takeoff at Marble Point, Antarctica. Two SBU-1 planes collided and crashed into the Pacific during flight operations, killing Lt (jg). USS S-26 (SS-131) accidentally rammed and sunk by PC-460. Approx. During an exercise off San Diego, a single-engine Douglas Skyraider AD-5N attack bomber accidentally crashed destroyer USS Hopewell (DD-681). Battleship No. 11 November 1955. An explosion occurred in a trash receptacle adjacent to a Marine berthing compartment aboard USS Saipan (LHA-2) injuring 11 personnel. Two US Navy aircraft collide near Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico, one killed. Fifteen aircraft were destroyed and 17 were damaged. F/A-18 "Hornet" crashed in northwest New Mexico. Destroyer No. At Pearl Harbor, an accidental explosion in the depth charge fuse locker injures five destroyer escort Silverstein (DE-534) crewmen. 21 USS Kansas steam accident in engine room. 8, Notes on Writing Naval (not Navy) English, The Offensive Navy Since World War II: How Big and Why, A Brief Summary, Office of Naval Records and Library 1882-1946, Officers and Key Personnel Attached to the Office of Naval Records and Library 1882-1946, Officers of the Continental Navy and Marine Corps, Officers of Navy Yards, Shore Stations, and Vessels, 1 January 1865, Officers of the Continental and U.S. Navy and Marine Corps 1775-1900, Continental Marine Corps Officers: 1775-1785, Target Ships Sunk During Test Able 1 July 1946, Target Ships Sunk During Test Baker 25 July 1946, Operation NEPTUNE - The Invasion of Normandy, Chapter 1: THE STRATEGIC BACKGROUND OF OVERLORD, Chapter 2: PLANNING AND PREPARATION FOR CROSS-CHANNEL (OVERLORD) OPERATIONS, Chapter 3: THE STRATEGIC BACKGROUND OF OVERLORD, Chapter 5: Naval Preparations for Cross-Channel Operations, Chapter 7: Defensive Measures - NEPTUNE Operation, Chapter 8: Bombardment and Other Defensive Operations Against Enemy Land Forces, Chapter 10: The Build-up for the Battle of France, Operation NEPTUNE Administrative History's Table of Contents, Operations of the Navy and Marine Corps in the Philippine Archipelago, Operations of the Seventh Amphibious Force, OPNAV [Office of the Chief of Naval Operations] Acronyms, Our Vanishing History and Traditions - Knox, Admiral Nimitz's Pacific Fleet Confidential Letter on Lessons of Damage in Typhoon, Personnel Casualties Suffered by Third Fleet, 17-18 December 1944, Compiled from Official Sources, Aircraft Losses Suffered by Third Fleet, 17-18 December 1944, Compiled From Official Sources, Extracts Relating to the Typhoon from Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet Report, Extracts from Commander Carrier Division Six Report, Extract from Report of Task Group Thirty-eight point one, Peacekeeping and Related Stability Operations: Issues of U.S. Military Involvement, The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 1941 - Overview, "Pearl Harbor Revisited: USN Communications Intelligence", USS Arizona - Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS California- Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS Maryland - Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS Oklahoma - Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS Tennessee - Report by Survivor of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS West Virginia - Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, Pearl Harbor: Why, How, Fleet Salvage and Final Appraisal, Personal Identification Tags or "Dog Tags", BUREAU OF NAVIGATION CIRCULAR LETTER NO. 20 October 2000. Dunnigan, James F. and Nofi, Albert A. Gun Boat #159 lost in Chesapeake Bay with all on board. In 1934, 299 sailors died accidentally; 50 in motor vehicles, 28 by drowning. 17 August 1918. Aviation Machinist's Mate 2 class William Heotis killed when his plane became tangled on target tow sleeve of another plane and crashed into the sea. 14 January 2005. He was assigned to Headquarters Battalion, Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms, California. During routine gunnery practice, Battleship No. Aguilar was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, III Marine Expeditionary Force. Popowich, CEC, commanding, deployed to Camp Moscrip, U.S. 23 October 1902. Lieutenant fell out during physical training at Naval Station Great Lakes and later died. In general we index the memorials at the lowest practical unit level. Virginia Mar 9 1862, Fifty Years of Naval District Development 1903-1953, Final Contact: USS Indianapolis (CA-35) passes USS LST-779 29 July 1945, Fixing Wages and Salaries of Navy Civilian Employees, Fleet Post Office, San Francisco, California, "Forward From the Start": The U.S. Navy & Homeland Defense: 1775-2003, From Dam Neck to Okinawa: A Memoir of Antiaircraft Training in World War II, GAF (German Air Force, Luftwaffe] and the Invasion of Normandy, Gearing Up for Victory American Military and Industrial Mobilization in World War II, General Information for Employees - Washington Navy Yard - 1941, General Instructions for Commanding Officers of Naval Armed Guards on Merchant Ships - 1944, General Instructions for Sloops and Torpedo Craft, General Order (18 February 1846) Port and Starboard, General Order (17 December 1850) Furnishing Vessels, General Order (27 September 1851) Contracts of Enlistment Ending, General Order (17 May 1858) Naval Academy Graduates Denied Letter, General Order (22 April 1862) Officers Forbidden to Give Publicity to Any Hydrographical Knowledge, General Order (12 December 1862) Rules for Naval Communication, General Order (23 December 1862) Rules Corresponding with SecNav and Bureaus, General Order No. SH-60B "Seahawk" of Light Helicopter Antisubmarine Squadron 47 crashed during a flight from its home base at Naval Air Station North Island, California. Aviation Machinist's Mate 2 class Ira Ovel Wilson died of injuries after walking into propeller of Boeing F3B carrier fighter on flight deck of USS Langley (CV-1). 19 February 1916. 27 USS Michigan gas explosion in coal bunker no. All 8 personnel were airlifted to a local hospital. 12 April 1862. (12 Aug. 2003) [incident of 9 Aug. 2003]. Armored Cruiser No. He was assigned to the 2nd Combat Engineer Battalion, 2nd Marine Division. Seaman Joseph Hall A. Muir, assigned as a signalman on Kansas City was drowned. Brig USS Somers capsized and foundered in a sudden squall while chasing a blockade runner off Vera Cruz, Mexico. 28 August 2002. 9 August 1919. He was attached to Regimental Combat Team 8, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force. 15 March 1910. Aviation Machinist's Mate 1 class Reynold Leroy MacMillan struck in the head and killed by moving propeller of VTB-3B plane while on deck of USS Langley (CV-1). Three sailors drowned in an unidentified boating accident. Fleet Hospital Three treated 600 patients; 2 died. Blimp J-3 crashed while searching for survivors of USS Akron, fatally injuring Lt. Comdr. F11C-2 from VF-1B on board USS Saratoga (CV-3) crashed three miles west of La Jolla, Calif., killing Lt. (jg) William S. Arthur. 26 February 1918. 4 May 1959. 28 Nov 2009. 27 September 1918. Lance CPL Nicholas R. Anderson died in a non-hostile vehicle accident in Afghanistan. Screw gunboat USS Pinola Landsman Michael McLaughlin killed in ordnance accident. There was another explosion on the following day in a boiler room. 31 January 2000. January 1946. 28 December 2004. [declassified Nov. 1993]. Full-rigged training ship USS Monongahela Apprentice James A. Clayville accidentally shot while at target practice on rifle range. 2 March 1952. 4 December 1996. 36 lost. Since World War II, Seabees have "built and fought" in all of America's wars - in Korea, Vietnam, the Persian Gulf, Afghanistan and Iraq - and their contributions to each were great. 10 killed. While anchored at Cannes, France, a fire in No. Kearsarge - 19 Jun 1864, Selected Sources on the German Battleship Bismarck, The Sinking of the German Battleship Bismarck as Described in the B.d.U. The date provided at the end of each entry is the date of the accident/incident, rather than the date of death of individuals who died subsequent to the event. The Seabees accomplished that task in just three months. Bark USS Restless Ordinary Seaman Edward Deleman killed in ordnance accident. 16 March 1889. Screw steamer USS Iris steam accident. 248 (1880) Correct and General Understanding of Signals, General Order No. 19 USS Sacramento steam launch accident resulted in the drowning of Fireman 1 class Frank Elmer Wright in the Mississippi River at New Orleans. 176 killed. Fireman 2 class James A. Bortell killed. 15 July 2003. 22 October 1911. A VF-84 F-14 from NAS Oceana, VA, crashed in Currituck Sound, NC, after receiving indications of an onboard fire when returning from a routine air combat training mission. 19 March 1918. 5-ton truck participating in a battalion field firing exercise apparently jack-knifed while towing a M198 (155mm howitzer). During a trench clearing live fire operation, a Marine threw a grenade which bounced back and detonated in close proximity to the Marines in Hawaii's Pohakuloa Training Area, Range 10. 9 April 1903. Accidental ignition of hydraulic fluid in catapult system starts a fire in Leyte (CV-32) at the Charlestown Naval Shipyard, Boston. Four Marines killed when MV-22 "Osprey" of Marine Medium Tiltrotor Training Squadron (VMMT) 204 crashed at Marine Corps Air Station New River, North Carolina. 25 April 1898. 28 January 1986. Accident occurred at 2:50 p. m. when two Extra 300L aerobatic planes being used by the school to train test pilots crashed as they attempted a formation takeoff. Petty Officer 1st Class Thomas C. Hull died on board the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz in the Arabian Gulf after being medically evacuated to the carrier for a non-combat related incident. Marine Corporal Travis J. Bradachnall, assigned to Combat Service Support Group 11, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, was killed in an explosion during a mine clearing operation near the city of Karbala, Iraq. 11 January 1934. All 4 crew members ejected approximately 130 miles west of North Island and were recovered after less than an hour in the water by an SH-60F belonging to HS-8, also on board Nimitz. 18 January 1901. 12 July 1994. 16 October 1917. Fireman 1 class Thomas W. Gabbitt and Water Tenders William Oscar Milton, John William McCaffrey and James Charles Dalton killed. 128 (1869) Exercises for Ships with Sails, General Order No. 13 July 2002. 7 February 1973. 14 March 1901. Receiving ship at New York, NY, boiler explosion burned Chief Water Tender Anton Sadar who nine days later died at the Naval Hospital in New York, NY. 9 November 1908. 4 February 1932. Pilot killed when F/A-18C "Hornet" of Fighter Attack Squadron 106 crashed in Florida. In 1916, 335 sailors died in accidents or from disease. 75-inch rockets, and a liquid oxygen cart. While operating off Vietnam, a turret fire and explosion in Newport News (CA-148) kills 20 and injures another 36 sailors. Metal fragments caused many casualties and severe damage to nearby ships and twenty-two small boats and landing craft were sunk, destroyed, or damaged beyond repair. 3 September 2005. Jones died from injuries sustained in a forklift accident in which he was trapped underneath the overturned vehicle. During operations in the Aegean, a fuel oil fire in USS Saratoga (CVA-60) engine room killed seven. USS George Washington (CVN-33) crewman killed during repositioning of an aircraft towing dolly. Korean War U.S. Pacific Fleet Operations. USS Mississippi (BB-41) cordite fire in the #2 14-inch gun turret. Several personnel on the flight deck were injured. The pilot was killed. Command Pilot Captain Matthew W. Bancroft, Co-Pilot Captain Daniel G. McCollum, Flight Engineer Gunnery Sergeant Stephen L. Bryson, Loadmaster Staff Sergeant Scott N. Germosen, Flight Mechanic Sergeant Nathan P. Hays, Flight Navigator Lance Corporal Bryan P. Bertrand, Radio Operator Sergeant Jeannette L. Winters killed. Last seen on 8 May 1839. 15 March 1995. 62+ died. 19 May 2003. 28 April 1919. 2 September 1943. Schooner USS Sylph probably sank in a storm in August 1831. 3 September 1983. 4, USS Pittsburgh, A Forgotten Enemy: PHS's [Public Health Service] Fight Against the 1918 Influenza Pandemic. 5 drowned. 28 November 1918. Turpin was assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 74 deployed in the Republic of Seychelles. 10-16 July 1926. Lt. Robert W. Larson and Aviation Machinist's Mate Sidney L. Harris both killed.

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list of seabees killed in action