Return to Home Page 
Return to Memorial Menu Page

Memorial dedicated at Battery Park
Charleston, South Carolina ~ April 22, 1990

Shipmates who died as a result of enemy action
PACIFIC OCEAN AREAS  1943 - 1945

  
This information was supplied by Cal Jackson.  His father, Roy Andrew Jackson was one of 
11 seamen killed in action on Dec 30, 1944 in the Mindoro Kamikaze attack on the Pringle. 

Click here to view a photo of the Memorial, added on July 4th, 2003

USS PRINGLE  (DD-477)
 
Launched at Charleston, S.C. on May 2, 1942
Lost to Enemy Action off Okinawa on April 16, 1945

IN MEMORIAM

Vella Lavella - August 21, 1943
John Villani    Ernest F. Whitehead

Mindoro - December 30, 1944
James F. Bennett    Thomas F. Fugazzi    Roy A. Jackson
Dee C. Clark    Jerry Holubicka    John Kowalick
Michael Corriero    Theophil F. Hudy    Clifton R. Liiewald
Frank Ponistowski    Edward L. Wilcox

Okinawa - April 16, 1945
Rex W. Allen    Arville B. Clarke    Joseph J. Hoffer    Harold F. Riemke
Thomas M. Anderson    Gerald E. Cone    William V. Hutson    Nevil Rodgers
Russell Atkinson, Jr.    Garvin J. Crook    Michael J. Jozovich    Douglas N. Rogers
William A. Baker    Joseph DiSantis    John P. Keeley    Roy R. Rossine
Kenneth E. Barth    William J. Egerer    Warren R. Keister    Homer Sherrill
Marvin A. Beduhn    Ronald B. Ely    Robert C. Kirsch    Paul W. Smith
Delbert E. Benson    Ray A. England    Samuael E. Knox    Tillman N. Smith, Jr.
Wilbert M. Benson    Wendell H. Fidele    Hugh W. Kyle    Vincent T. Sosnowski
Flavel W. Bowen    Charles A. Floyd    Charles L. Latham    Pete M. Spraitzar
Robert B. Brookover    Blas A. Gil    Sam Loiacono    Vernon W. Tauer             
Edward R. Burton    Gerald F. Gorges    Charles E. Lucker    James W. Thomas    
Wallace H. Cable    Gordon S. Graham    Charles W. Lutz    Homer D. Thomason
Arthur  A. Cappuccio    Charles E. Grose    Walter D. Martin    Edward F. Wallen
John M. Cavallaro    Bennie G. Hancock     Aaron Nisenbaum    Joe E. Wampler
Warren, H. Chapple    Nels M. Hansen, Jr.    Leonard W. Odom    Albert D. Webb
Thaddeus J. Chrusciel    Thomas R. Haugen    James W. Paylor    Alfred C. Wolf
Winston L. Churchill    Ernest E. Hawkins    Joseph Piccolo    Robert D. Woods
Frederick M. Hicks    Cecil J. Riddell

 The ship was named for Vice-Admiral J. R. Poinsett Pringle, USN who was born at Georgetown, S.C. in 1873, a  
 direct lineal descendant of Judge Robert Pringle, whose law offices on nearby Tradd Street were established in
 1742.  Vice-Admiral Pringle had been selected by President Roosevelt to become Chief of Naval Operations
 before his sudden death on September 25, 1932.