Allen, William Clayborn, EM1c

Fallen
 
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Last Rate
Electrician's Mate 1st Class
Last Primary NEC
EM-0000-Electrician's Mate
Last Rating/NEC Group
Electrician's Mate
Primary Unit
1941-1941, EM-0000, USS Arizona (BB-39)
Service Years
1935 - 1941
EM-Electrician's Mate
One Hash Mark

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

102 kb


Home State
Iowa
Iowa
Year of Birth
1911
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Felix Cervantes, III (Admiral Ese), BM2 to remember Allen, William Clayborn, EM1c.

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Casualty Info
Home Town
Onslow, IA
Last Address
1240 Magnolia
Long Beach, CA
(Wife~Margret Frances Allen)

Casualty Date
Dec 07, 1941
 
Cause
KIA-Killed in Action
Reason
Other Explosive Device
Location
Hawaii
Conflict
World War II
Location of Interment
USS ARIZONA (BB-39) - Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Entombed in the Hull with his shipmates
Military Service Number
3 811 983

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 Tributes from Members  
INSURANCE ON SON KILLED IN HAWAII BUYS B... posted by Burgdorf, Tommy (Birddog), FC2 439

  INSURANCE ON SON KILLED IN HAWAII BUYS BONDS : Sep 27, 2016  
   

Think You’re Doing Your Part?
Meet the McCartys of Onslow!

Janet A. Brandtsubmitted this article from the April 5, 1942Cedar Rapids Gazette.William Clayborn Allen's mother, Mallie McCarty, had the distinction of being the first Jones County Gold Star Mother of World War II

 

  INSURANCE ON SON KILLED IN HAWAII BUYS BONDS 
spaceBy Bernadine Smith 
spaceOnslow—And now comes a story to shatter the complacency of every person who bought a $100 defense bond, assumed he had done his bit and sat back to let the war fight and finance itself. 
The heroine of the story is Mrs. Sam McCarty of Onslow. Mrs. McCarty is 52. She is also Jones county’s first Gold Star mother of World War II. 
First there was the news of Pearl Harbor. Then it was learned that the battleship Arizona was sunk, and Mrs. McCarty’s heart stood still. Her eldest son, William Allen, was on the Arizona. 
“And he’d be on board, too; not on shore carousing around. Billy wasn’t that kind of boy,” she said at the time. She was right. On Christmas morning the telegraph wires ticked off three tragic words, “Missing in action.” 
William was Mrs. McCarty’s son by a former marriage. But that didn’t dull the edge of his stepfather’s feelings. The morning after Pearl Harbor, Sam and Mallie McCarty, fighting mad, went to the bank, withdrew every cent of their savings, and put it all in war bonds. 
Mother Is Beneficiary
Onslow is a small town. Small towns are prone to gossip. “Wonder if he left his insurance to his wife or his mother?” Then the word spread that Mrs.
 
Allen, at the time of the marriage, had waived rights to the money, that Mrs. McCarty was the beneficiary. 
All Onslow knows Mallie McCarty works hard, as hard as any woman in town. Everybody figured that although money couldn’t replace a son, it would ease the burdens of the years. 
But from the first Mr. and Mrs. McCarty knew what they were going to do with the money. Every cent went into bonds to repay the debt of Pearl Harbor. Said Mrs. McCarty; 
“I figured we’d been getting along and we would continue to, so we’d just give the government back its money. If it will help shorten the war so other mothers wouldn’t have to go through what I’ve been through, that’s all I want.” 
How do the McCarty’s get along? Nightly Mallie helps her son, Keith McCarty, deliver The Cedar Rapids Gazette. When that task is finished they start delivering milk from the
  Hunwardsen dairy all over town in a coaster wagon. 
Mrs. McCarty is the janitor at the Onslow Presbyterian church. Every Sunday she builds the fires, rings the bells and dusts the seats until they shine like worn blue surge. In the spring she scrubs the church thoroughly and in the summer she mows the church lawn—also every other lawn she can get to mow.Sam McCarty may be 67 years old, but he’s one of the busiest men in Onslow. He works daily in the Onslow Lumber Company, shoveling coal, loading lumber and doing odd jobs. He’s village marshal, and he takes care of the town water supply and the electrical fuse box. 
Keith is a junior in high school. After-school jobs keep him busy until 7 p.m., and supper is laid at the McCarty’s.
After supper, so she can’t be accused of wasting time, Mrs. McCarty crochets baskets for sale. 
Honor Man In Class
Her oldest son enlisted in the navy June 18, 1935. An electrician’s mate, first class, Allen was serving his second enlistment and had taken the examination which would have made him a chief electrician. When he graduated from technical school at the San Diego naval training station, he was honor man in his class. 
At the rally to boost sales of bonds to be held in Onslow Tuesday night, the McCarty family won’t make speeches or sing “Remember Pearl Harbor.” But when the roll is called of people who do more than their bit, the McCartys will be there.
 

 

 

 
       

 

  Sam McCarty is 67, but he works as hard as the rest of the family. He's the village marshal. Above he is stacking shingles at an Onslow lumberyard where he is employed.   Supper is over but work is not. After the evening meal Mrs. McCarty sits down to crochet baskets for sale. When she invested her son's insurance in war bonds, Mrs. McCarty _____ that the family had been getting along and she guessed they still could.   Part of Mrs. Sam McCarty's daily routine is delivering The Cedar Rapids Gazette to Onslow subscribers with her son, Keith. When Mrs. McCarty's older son, William Allen, was killed at Pearl Harbor (he was a member of the crew of the Arizona), she not only invested all her savings in war bonds, but bought more bonds with William's insurance money.
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Last updated on Monday, 14-Apr-2014 14:19:13 MST

   
Writer:
Burgdorf, Tommy (Birddog), FC2 439
   
Last Updated:
Sep 27, 2016
   
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