Fluckey, Eugene Bennett, RADM

Deceased
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
30 kb
View Shadow Box View Printable Shadow Box View Time Line
Last Rank
Rear Admiral Upper Half
Last Primary NEC
112X-Unrestricted Line Officer - Submarine Warfare
Last Rating/NEC Group
Line Officer
Primary Unit
1968-1972, 112X, Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG)
Service Years
1935 - 1972
Rear Admiral Upper Half Rear Admiral Upper Half

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

93 kb


Home State
District Of Columbia
Year of Birth
1913
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Robert Cox, YNCS to remember Fluckey, Eugene Bennett, RADM 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
Washington, DC
Last Address
7101 Bay Front Dr #313
Annapolis, MD 21403
Date of Passing
Jun 28, 2007
 
Location of Interment
U.S. Naval Academy Cemetery and Columbarium (VLM) - Annapolis, Maryland
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Unknown

 Official Badges 




 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Dept of Dist of Col.National Cemetery Administration (NCA)WWII Memorial National RegistryUnited States Navy Memorial
  1945, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW), Dept of Dist of Col. (Member) (Temple Hills, Maryland) - Chap. Page
  2007, National Cemetery Administration (NCA)
  2020, WWII Memorial National Registry - Assoc. Page
  2020, United States Navy Memorial - Assoc. Page


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:


After he retired from the Navy in 1972, Eugene Fluckey and his wife, Marjorie, started running an orphanage in Portugal in 1974. Marjorie died in 1979, after 42 years of marriage. He married his second wife, Margaret, in 1980 and they continued to run the orphanage together until it closed in 1982. He has one daughter, Barbara.

His book, Thunder Below! published in 1992, depicts the exploits of his beloved Barb. "Though the tally shows more shells, bombs, and depth charges fired at Barb, no one received the Purple Heart and Barb came back alive, eager, and ready to fight again."

Fluckey was awarded Eagle Scout in 1948. He is one of only eleven known Eagle Scouts who also received the Medal of Honor. He was an honorary companion of the Maryland Commandery of the Military Order of Foreign Wars. His book Thunder Below! was winner of the 1993 Samuel Eliot Morison Award for Naval Literature.

   
Other Comments:


Medal of Honor
Awarded for Actions During World War II
Service: Navy
Division: U.S.S. Barb (SS-220)
General Orders: Submarine Board of Awards, Serial 0175 (
February 28, 1945)
Citation: The President of the United States of America, in the name of Congress, takes pleasure in presenting the Medal of Honor to Commander Eugene Bennett Fluckey, United States Navy, for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty as commanding officer of the U.S.S. BARB (SS-220) during her ELEVENTH War Patrol along the east coast of China from 19 December 1944 to 15 February 1945. After sinking a large enemy ammunition ship and damaging additional tonnage during a running two-hour night battle on 8 January, Commander Fluckey, in an exceptional feat of brilliant deduction and bold tracking on 25 January, located a concentration of more than 30 enemy ships in the lower reaches of Nankuan Chiang (Mamkwan Harbor). Fully aware that a safe retirement would necessitate an hour's run at full speed through the uncharted, mined, and rock-obstructed waters, he bravely ordered, "
Battle station--torpedoes!" In a daring penetration of the heavy enemy screen, and riding in five fathoms of water, he launched the BARB's last forward torpedoes at 3,000-yard range. Quickly bringing the ship's stern tubes to bear, he turned loose four more torpedoes into the enemy, obtaining eight direct hits on six of the main targets to explode a large ammunition ship and cause inestimable damage by the resultant flying shells and other pyrotechnics. Clearing the treacherous area at high speed, he brought the BARB through to safety and four days later sank a large Japanese freighter to complete a record of heroic combat achievement, reflecting the highest credit upon Commander Fluckey, his gallant officers and men, and the United States Naval Service.

   

  Eugene B. Fluckey, 93; renowned WWII submarine commander
   
Date
Jul 3, 2007

Last Updated:
Jul 12, 2007
   
Comments

Eugene B. Fluckey, 93; renowned WWII submarine commander
By Dennis McLellan, Times Staff Writer
July 3, 2007


Retired Rear Adm. Eugene B. Fluckey, a renowned World War II submarine commander whose daring attacks on Japanese ships earned him a Medal of Honor, has died. He was 93.

Fluckey, who shared the nickname "the Galloping Ghost of the China Coast" with his submarine, died Thursday of complications of Alzheimer's disease at a hospital in Annapolis, Md., said his daughter, Barbara Bove.

As the innovative and courageous skipper of the USS Barb in the Pacific from April 1944 to August 1945, Fluckey was awarded the Medal of Honor and four Navy Crosses, among other decorations.

"He revolutionized submarine warfare," Carl LaVO, author of "The Galloping Ghost: The Extraordinary Life of Submarine Legend Eugene Fluckey," which was published in May by the Naval Institute Press, told The Times on Monday.

"He was the first submarine skipper in history to employ a submarine to launch guided missiles at an enemy target," said LaVO, referring to missiles fired from a number of tubes arranged in a rack anchored to the Barb's deck that destroyed factories in two coastal Japanese cities.

"The Japanese thought this had to be an aerial bombardment, but they could not find any airplanes," LaVO said. "By that time, the submarine was long gone."

Fluckey, he said, "also thought submarines could be used for landing saboteurs on shore, and they blew up a 16-car train on a northern island off the Japanese mainland.

"He also is credited for creating havoc by hit-and-run tactics, so that the Japanese never knew where the attack was coming from, and that's how he got this moniker, 'the Galloping Ghost.' "

The nickname was coined the night of Jan. 25, 1945, when the Barb was lying in wait in shallow waters between two promontories off the coast of China. After hours of nervous waiting, the expected Japanese convoy failed to materialize, and Fluckey decided to move back out to sea.

"No joy at this [position]. Let's gallop," he said to his executive officer.

To which his executive officer responded: "Captain, where is the Galloping Ghost of the China coast going to gallop tonight?"

It was just a short time later, LaVO said, that Fluckey "theorized there must be a secret harbor somewhere where the Japanese ships were anchoring at night, and they could only get to it by going up this inland sea, where it was really shallow, to find it."

Traveling on the surface of the waterway, it took the Barb about an hour to reach Nam Kwam Harbor.

They expected to find a convoy of six or seven ships, said LaVO. "What they found was 27."

He said the Barb fired eight torpedoes, keeping four in reserve in case they had to shoot at any destroyers that counterattacked.

"The idea was the element of surprise and get the hell out of there," LaVO said. "It was very risky because they could not dive. He had to go 20 miles out to sea before he could dive, and in getting out of there, they reached a record speed for submarines of 23 knots."

Up until that attack, LaVO said, "the Japanese navy felt it could send convoys safely from ports in Japan to the Philippine islands using the coastal waters of China, which were too shallow for submarines to hide in. They never expected it to come in on the surface."

Although the Navy officially credited the Barb with the explosion of an ammunition ship, LaVO said, Fluckey and his crew believed more than just the one ship had been sunk.

Feeling that the Barb was not given adequate credit for the attack, Fluckey returned to Nam Kwam Harbor in 1991. "He spoke to two elderly men who were teenagers the night of the attack," said LaVO, "and they said four ships were sunk and three damaged" during the Barb's surprise attack.

The daring mission was the highlight of the Barb's war patrol along the east coast of China from Dec. 19, 1944, to Feb. 15, 1945, which earned Fluckey the Medal of Honor for "conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty as commanding officer of the USS Barb."

During the war, Fluckey took the greatest pride in one thing. "No one who ever served under my command was awarded the Purple Heart for being wounded or killed, and all of us brought our Barb back safe and sound," he wrote in "Thunder Below!," his 1992 book published by the University of Illinois Press.

At the end of the war, LaVO said, the Navy credited Fluckey in his five war patrols in command of the Barb with sinking 25 ships, totaling 179,700 tons. But after reviewing Japanese records about a year and a half later, LaVO said, the Navy credited him with sinking 16.3 ships, totaling 95,360 tons.

"That put him at No. 4 in the list of ships sunk by American submarines, but No. 1 in terms of tonnage," said LaVO, noting that that among the sunken ships were an aircraft carrier, a cruiser and numerous cargo ships.

Fluckey was born in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 5, 1913, and graduated from high school at 15. A 1935 graduate of the Naval Academy, he served on the submarine Bonita during the early part of the war.

After the war ended, he became personal aide to the chief of naval operations, Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz. Promoted to rear admiral in 1960, he later served as commander of the submarine force in the Pacific, director of naval intelligence and chief of the Military Assistance Advisory Group in Portugal.

He retired from active duty in 1972.

Fluckey's first wife, Marjorie, died in 1979. In addition to his daughter, he is survived by his wife, Margaret; four grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.

   
My Photos From This Event
No Available Photos

Copyright Togetherweserved.com Inc 2003-2011