Moran, Edward J., RADM

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Rear Admiral Upper Half
Last Primary NEC
111X-Unrestricted Line Officer - Surface Warfare
Last Rating/NEC Group
Line Officer
Primary Unit
1944-1945, 00X, Commander South Pacific Area and South Pacific Force (COMSOPAC)
Service Years
1917 - 1947
Rear Admiral Upper Half Rear Admiral Upper Half

 Last Photo   Personal Details 



Home State
Illinois
Illinois
Year of Birth
1893
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Michael D. Withers (Mike), OSCS to remember Moran, Edward J. (NAVY CROSS)(WWII), RADM.

If you knew or served with this Sailor and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Contact Info
Home Town
Chicago
Last Address
San Francisco, Ca.
Date of Passing
Apr 20, 1957
 

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 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Battle of Cape Esperance, 12 October 1942

It was a dark night, with long swells running. The U.S.S. Boise, knifing along at 25 knots, was part of a cruiser column, screened by destroyers, sent to head off a Jap landing force in the Solomons. Suddenly there were enemy ships to starboard. Over the Boise's telephone jut-jawed Captain Edward J. ("Mike") Moron spoke to the spotter in No. 1 position: "How many ships have you spotted?"
"I have five in sight, sir."
"Pick out the biggest one and fire."
    As the battered Boise came home for repairs last week, the U.S. people could add Mike Moran's seven words to the small and oft-repeated catalogue of their heroes' laconic battle phrases. They were better words, perhaps, than John Paul Jones's "I have not yet begun to fight," better, certainly, than Commodore George Dewey's pale and measured, "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley." They mirrored the tempo of 1942's savage fighting; they caught the spirit of a confident U.S.: the bigger they are the harder they fall.
    One-Ship Fleet. The Boise was a tired ship as she nosed up the Delaware River to the Philadelphia Navy Yard. Patchwork covered a gaping hole in her hull, her tall mast was scorched by flame, great blisters of paint bulged from her stanchions. Hundreds of shell fragments had scarred and pocketed her. But she moved proud and unfaltering through the early-morning haze. In the Solomons that terrible night in October, she had slugged it out with six Jap warships, had taken everything they threw at her, had lost 107 of her men and all of her beauty—but every one of the Jap ships is now at the bottom of the sea.
    No human hero of World War II ever received a more rousing welcome. River boats tooted their greetings, sailors swarmed over the decks of adjoining ships to wave and yell at her, thousands of workmen set up a cheer. A bosun piped lean Admiral Ernest J. King, COMINCH, aboard; he grimly surveyed the damage, examined the six Japanese flags painted beneath her bridge. Said he: "Well done." Said grinning Captain Mike Moran: "She's a grand ship."
    Twenty-seven Minutes of Hell. Mike Moran had always gone on the theory that a light cruiser like the Boise, when caught in heavy action, was expendable. Try to stay afloat for 15 minutes and do all the damage you can. The Navy's communiqué told how the Boise had done its damage:
    "The Boise made out six enemy ships [the first spotter had missed one]. . . . Captain Moran laid his main batteries on the leading heavy ship . . . then he gave the order to fire. In a matter of seconds the first target was lit up. ... The Boise's guns hit her again & again for four minutes and she sank, going down by the bow with her screws still turning.
    "In the meantime splashes from the Boise's lighter guns were observed on either side of a smaller ship. Shortly this ship could no longer be seen, although the shell splashes were still visible. . . . One minute later the Boise had her main batteries trained on another destroyer. This ship exploded and disappeared after one minute of the Boise's murderous fire.
"Sixty seconds later the shifty Boise was concentrating everything her guns would throw on a fourth target. . . . This contact lasted four minutes and the Boise took a hit from an eight inch shell and several hits from five inch shells. The captain's cabin was demolished. A direct hit put one of her five-inch guns out of action. But in short order the enemy, which had been burning very brightly, exploded violently several times and was not seen again. . . . For two minutes the Boise had no target. Then fires were observed burning on an enemy destroyer. For two minutes Captain Moran's guns hit her and she disappeared." Finally a Jap destroyer opened up with deadly fire, but the Boise disposed of her with the help of other U.S. ships.
    In 27 minutes of the deadliest close-range fighting, the Boise had fired more than 1,000 rounds of five-and six-inch shells. Her sister ships had given her up for lost, but two hours later—her exploded magazine flooded, her bulkhead shored up, her shell holes stuffed with bedding—she ghosted into her regular station in column. "She was down by the head, but on an even keel."
 
The U.S. people had a new hero—made of steel—and an immortal phrase.

   

  1913-1917, US Naval Academy Annapolis (Faculty Staff)

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Last Updated: May 6, 2009
   
   
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67 Members Also There at Same Time
US Naval Academy Annapolis (Faculty Staff)

Stickney, Herman Osman, RADM, (1888-1921) Commander
Bulmer, Roscoe C, CAPT, (1894-1919) Lieutenant Commander
Halsey Jr., William Frederick, FADM, (1900-1947) Lieutenant Commander
Jackson, Richard Harrison, ADM, (1887-1930) Lieutenant Commander
Bagley, David Worth, ADM, (1904-1947) Lieutenant
Castle, Guy Wilkinson Stuart, CDR, (1901-1919) Lieutenant
Ellyson, Theodore Gordon, CDR, (1905-1928) Lieutenant
Ghormley, Robert Lee, VADM, (1906-1946) Lieutenant
GILL, Charles, CAPT, (1903-1939) Lieutenant
Kidd, Isaac Campbell, RADM, (1906-1941) Lieutenant
ROCKWELL, Francis, VADM, (1908-1948) Lieutenant
Chevalier, Godfrey DeCourcelles, LCDR, (1910-1922) Ensign
Smith, Robert Holmes, CAPT, (1919-1943) Ensign
CALNAN, George C., LT, (1920-1933) Midshipman
Clark, Joseph James, ADM, (1917-1953) Midshipman
Davis, Noel, LCDR, (1914-1927) Midshipman
DAVIS, Noel, LCDR, (1914-1927) Midshipman
Denebrink, Francis Compton, VADM, (1917-1956) Midshipman
Duncan, Donald B., ADM, (1917-1957) Midshipman
GLOVER, Cato, ADM, (1916-1957) Midshipman
Goggins, William Bernard, RADM, (1919-1949) Midshipman
Hardison, Osborne Bennett, VADM, (1915-1954) Midshipman
Low, Francis Stuart, ADM, (1915-1956) Midshipman
MOEN, Arthur, RADM, (1917-1948) Midshipman
Moon, Don Pardee, RADM, (1916-1944) Midshipman
Murray, Stuart Shadrick, VADM, (1919-1956) Midshipman
Phillips, William Kearney, ADM, (1917-1955) Midshipman
Rosendahl, Charles Emery, VADM, (1914-1946) Midshipman
Simpson, Rodger, RDML, (1917-1951) Midshipman
SNARE, Elmer, LCDR, (1921-1945) Midshipman
Soucek, Apollo, VADM, (1921-1955) Midshipman
Thebaud, Leo Hewlett, VADM, (1913-1952) Midshipman
Wallin, Homer Norman, VADM, (1917-1955) Midshipman
Wead, Frank, CDR, (1916-1944) Midshipman
Wilson, George Barry, RADM, (1914-1946) Midshipman
Evans, Sydney Key, CAPT, (1907-1935) OFF 410X Captain
Christy, Harley Hannibal, VADM, (1891-1934) OFF 00X Commander
Halligan, John, RADM, (1894-1934) OFF Commander
Burrage, Guy, VADM, (1887-1931) OFF 00X Lieutenant Commander
Dutton, Jr., Benjamin, CAPT, (1905-1937) OFF 111X Lieutenant Commander
Dutton, Benjamin, CAPT, (1901-1937) OFF 111X Lieutenant
Dutton, Jr., Benjamin, CAPT, (1905-1937) OFF 111X Lieutenant
Friedell, Wilhelm Lee, RADM, (1905-1946) OFF Lieutenant
Hewitt, Henry Kent, ADM, (1906-1949) OFF Lieutenant
Hewitt, Henry Kent, ADM, (1906-1949) OFF Lieutenant
Ingram, Jonas Howard, ADM, (1907-1947) OFF 110X Lieutenant
Spore, James Sutherland T., CDR, (1904-1935) OFF Lieutenant
Dutton, Benjamin, CAPT, (1901-1937) OFF 111X Lieutenant Junior Grade
Fitch, Aubrey Wray, ADM, (1906-1947) OFF Lieutenant Junior Grade
Lind, Wallace Ludwig, CAPT, (1911-1940) OFF Lieutenant Junior Grade
Pendleton, Perley Earl, RADM, (1916-1950) OFF 111X Ensign
Stump, Felix Budwell, ADM, (1917-1958) OFF 00X Ensign
Webb, John Crawford, CAPT, (1918-1953) OFF Ensign
McCollum, Arthur Howard, RDML, (1917-1953) 00 00E Other Service Rank
Stevens, Leslie Clark, VADM, (1915-1951) 00 Other Service Rank
Steele, James Mortimer, CAPT, (1916-1946) OFF 110X Midshipman
Struble, Arthur Dewey, ADM, (1915-1956) OFF 110X Midshipman
Eberle, Edward Walter, ADM, (1885-1928) Rear Admiral Upper Half
Standley, William Harrison, ADM, (1895-1945) Captain

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