Losey, Freeman, CWO4

Deceased
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Last Rank
Chief Warrant Officer 4
Last Primary NEC
00X-Unknown NOC/Designator
Last Rating/NEC Group
Line Officer
Primary Unit
1956-1956, Navy Exchange Service Command (NEXCOM) (NAVRESSO) (NRSSO), Naval Supply Systems Command (NAVSUP)
Service Years
1936 - 1956
Official/Unofficial US Navy Certificates
Cold War
Icelandic Domain
Order of the Ditch
Order of the Rock
Order of the Magellan
Order of the Golden Shellback
Panama Canal
Safari To Suez
Suez Canal
Chief Warrant Officer 4 Chief Warrant Officer 4

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

40 kb


Home State
Indiana
Indiana
Year of Birth
1916
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Donald Losey (Fallhiker), MM1 to remember Losey, Freeman (George), CWO4 USN(Ret).

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
New Marion, Indiana
Last Address
Jacksonville Florida
Date of Passing
Sep 19, 2000
 
Location of Interment
Arlington National Cemetery (VLM) - Arlington, Virginia
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Section 12, Site 1878

 Official Badges 

WW II Honorable Discharge Pin


 Unofficial Badges 

Order of the Shellback Order of the Golden Shellback


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
American LegionNational Cemetery Administration (NCA)
  1957, American Legion - Assoc. Page
  2000, National Cemetery Administration (NCA)


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:


   
Other Comments:

Buried Arlington National Cemetry 2001

   

  1937-1938, SK-0000, USS Lexington (CV-2)

SK-Storekeeper

From Month/Year
- / 1937

To Month/Year
- / 1938

Unit
USS Lexington (CV-2) Unit Page

Rank
Petty Officer Third Class

NEC
SK-0000-Storekeeper

Base, Station or City
Not Specified

State/Country
Not Specified
 
 
 Patch
 USS Lexington (CV-2) Details

USS Lexington (CV-2)
Hull number CV-2

Type
Surface Vessel
 

Parent Unit
Lexington-class

Strength
Aircraft Carrier

Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: Feb 16, 2016
   
Memories For This Unit

Other Memories
The fourth USS Lexington (CV-2), nicknamed the "Gray Lady" or "Lady Lex", was an early aircraft carrier of the United States Navy. She was the name ship of the Lexington class.

Construction
The Lexington is named after the Battles of Lexington and Concord that took place in Lexington, Massachusetts. She and her sister ship Saratoga were originally authorized in 1916 as battle cruisers of 35,300 tons with seven funnels and boilers disposed on two deck levels. After the war, and as a result of the lessons thereof, plans were to a large extent re-cast in 1919. Designated CC-1 and CC-3, they were laid down as smaller battle cruisers on 8 January 1921 by Fore River Shipbuilding Company, Quincy, Massachusetts.

Following the Washington Naval Conference, they were both redesignated and re-authorized to be completed as aircraft carriers on 1 July 1922. As such, they were reduced in displacement by 8,500 tons, achieved mainly by the elimination of eight 16-inch (406 mm) guns in four twin turrets (including mounts, armor, and so on). The main belt armor was retained, and the deck armor was heavily reinforced. The general lines of the hull remained unaltered, and the special system of underwater protection was adhered to. The flight deck was 880 feet (244m) long and 85 to 90 feet (25.9-27.4m) wide, mounted 60 feet (18.3m) above the waterline. The mean draught was 24 feet 1.5 inches (7.4m). The ships had a complement of 169 officers and 1730 men, including flying personnel. They carried eight 8 inch (203 mm)/55 caliber guns, twelve 5-inch (127 mm)/25 caliber anti-aircraft guns, and four 6-pounder (2.24-inch, 57 mm) saluting guns. These two ships were the last two built with a transverse catapult as part of the original design. The catapult had a travel of 155 feet (47 m), and was strong enough to launch the heaviest naval aircraft then in existence within 60 feet (18.3m). As built, these two ships had cranes for launching and retrieving seaplanes and flying boats, a capability removed during the war and replaced by additional anti-aircraft guns. The ships were designed to carry a maximum of 120 aircraft of various types, including fighters, scouts, and bombers. Each ship cost a total of $45,000,000 with aircraft.

Lexington was launched 3 October 1925, sponsored by Mrs. Theodore Douglas Robinson (wife of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy), and commissioned 14 December 1927, Captain Albert W. Marshall in command.

Lexington and Saratoga had turboelectric drive with 16 Yarrow boilers powering four General Electric steam turbines spinning generators that powered the four slower speed main drive motors. Lexington's engines provided electricity to Tacoma, Washington for thirty days during a power shortage in the winter of 1929/1930.


[edit] 1928-1941
After fitting out and shakedown, Lexington joined the Battle Fleet at San Pedro, California, 7 April 1928. Based there, she operated on the west coast with Aircraft Squadrons, Battle Fleet, in flight training, tactical exercises, and battle problems. Each year she participated in fleet maneuvers in Hawaii, in the Caribbean, off the Panama Canal Zone, and in the eastern Pacific. On trials, Lexington achieved an average speed of 30.7 knots, and maintained a speed of 34.5 knots for one hour.

The Captain of the vessel in 1930 and 1931 was Ernest King, who was later to serve as the Chief of Naval Operations during the Second World War.

In 1931, Robert A. Heinlein, later science fiction writer, worked on radio communications, then in its nascent phase, with the aircraft carrier's planes. [1]


[edit] World War II

[edit] 1941
In the fall of 1941 she sailed with the battle force to the Hawaiians for tactical exercises.

On 7 December 1941 Lexington was at sea with Task Force 12 carrying marine aircraft from Pearl Harbor to reinforce Midway when word of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor was received. She immediately launched search planes to hunt for the Japanese fleet, and at midmorning headed south to rendezvous with Indianapolis and Enterprise task forces to conduct a search southwest of Oahu until returning to Pearl Harbor on 13 December.

Lexington sailed next day to raid Japanese forces on Jaluit to relieve pressure on Wake Island; these orders were canceled 20 December, and she was directed to cover the Saratoga force in reinforcing Wake. When the island fell on 23 December, the two carrier forces were recalled to Pearl Harbor, arriving 27 December.


[edit] 1942
Lexington patrolled to block enemy raids in the Oahu每Johnston每Palmyra triangle until 11 January 1942, when she sailed from Pearl Harbor as flagship for Vice Admiral Wilson Brown commanding Task Force 11. On 16 February, the force headed for an attack on Rabaul, New Britain, scheduled for 21 February; while approaching the day previous, Lexington was attacked by two waves of enemy aircraft, nine planes to a wave. The carrier's own combat air patrol and antiaircraft fire shot down 17 of the attackers. During a single sortie, Lieutenant Edward O'Hare won the Medal of Honor by downing five planes.

Her offensive patrols in the Coral Sea continued until 6 March, when she rendezvoused with Yorktown's Task Force 17 for a thoroughly successful surprise attack flown over the Owen Stanley Mountains of New Guinea to inflict heavy damage on shipping and installations at Salamaua and Lae on 10 March. She then returned to Pearl Harbor, arriving 26 March.

Lexington's task force sortied from Pearl Harbor on 15 April, rejoining TF 17 on 1 May. As Japanese fleet concentrations threatening the Coral Sea were observed, Lexington and Yorktown moved into the sea to search for the enemy's force covering a projected troop movement; the Japanese had to be blocked in their southward expansion or sea communication with Australia and New Zealand would be cut, and the dominions threatened with invasion. The Battle of the Coral Sea was the result.


[edit] Battle of the Coral Sea
On 7 May, search planes reported contact with an enemy carrier task force. Lexington's air group sank the light carrier Sh身h身. Later that day, 12 bombers and 15 torpedo planes from still-unlocated heavy carriers Sh身kaku and Zuikaku were intercepted by fighter groups from Lexington and Yorktown, which shot down nine enemy aircraft.

On the morning of the 8th, a Lexington plane located the Sh身kaku group; a strike was immediately launched from the American carriers, and the Japanese carrier was heavily damaged.


Lexington burning during the Battle of the Coral SeaHowever, enemy planes penetrated the American defenses at 11:00, and 20 minutes later Lexington was struck by a torpedo to port. Seconds later, a second torpedo hit her portside directly abeam the bridge. At the same time, she took three bomb hits from enemy dive bombers, producing a 7 degree list to port and several raging fires. By 13:00, skilled damage control had brought the fires under control and restored her to an even keel; making 25 knots (46 km/h), she was ready to recover her air group. Then suddenly Lexington was shaken by a tremendous explosion, caused by the ignition of gasoline vapors below, and again fire raged out of control. At 15:58, Captain Frederick Carl Sherman, fearing for the safety of men working below, secured salvage operations, and ordered all hands to the flight deck. At 17:01, he ordered "abandon ship" and the orderly disembarkation began. Men going over the side into the warm water were almost immediately picked up by nearby cruisers and destroyers. Admiral Aubrey Wray Fitch and his staff transferred to the cruiser Minneapolis; Captain Sherman and his executive officer, Commander Morton T. Seligman ensured all their men were safe, then were the last to leave.

Lexington blazed on, flames shooting hundreds of feet into the air. Destroyer Phelps closed to 1,500 yards (1,400 m) and fired two torpedoes into her hull; with one last heavy explosion, Lexington sank at 19:56, in 15∼20∩S, 155∼30∩E.


[edit] Honors
Lexington received two battle stars for her World War II service.

In June 1942, five days after the Navy's public acknowledgement of the sinking, workers at the Quincy shipyard where the ship was built twenty-one years earlier cabled Navy Secretary Frank Knox and proposed a change in the name of a carrier currently under construction there to the USS Lexington (from the USS Cabot).[2] Knox agreed to the proposal, and by September 23, 1942 the fifth USS Lexington (CV-16) was launched.

   
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22 Members Also There at Same Time
USS Lexington (CV-2)

HOEFFEL, Kenneth, RADM, (1917-1947) OFF 111X Lieutenant Commander
Stump, Felix Budwell, ADM, (1917-1958) OFF 132X Lieutenant Commander
Best, Richard H., LCDR, (1932-1944) OFF 131X Lieutenant Junior Grade
SWANSON, Leroy, RADM, (1937-1976) OFF 139X Ensign
Norman, Leslie Purnell, PO1, (1935-1956) WT WT-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Waggoner, James Stanley, CPO, (1935-1945) EM EM-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Hedrick, Claude, PO3, (1936-1940) AM AM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Reid, Beverly William, ENS, (1935-1942) AMM AMM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Webster, Raymond Eugene, PO2, (1935-1942) EM EM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Nichols, Russell Bert, CPO, (1938-1957) F1c F1c-0000 Fireman First Class
Fitch, Aubrey Wray, ADM, (1906-1947) OFF Captain
Clark, Joseph James, ADM, (1917-1953) Commander
SMITH, Donald, CAPT, (1921-1951) Lieutenant Commander
Soucek, Apollo, VADM, (1921-1955) Lieutenant Commander
Owens, James Charles, LT, (1935-1942) Lieutenant Junior Grade
Styles, Ralph, CAPT, (1933-1962) Lieutenant Junior Grade
Aurand, Evan Peter, VADM, (1938-1972) OFF Ensign
Winston, Robert Alexander, CAPT, (1935-1954) Ensign
Buckmaster, Elliot, VADM, (1908-1944) Commander
Capehart, Wadleigh, CAPT, (1906-1946) Commander
Ward, Sibley Logan, CDR, (1935-1960) Lieutenant Junior Grade
Whiting, George Harris, CAPT, (1932-1966) Ensign

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