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Albert David

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Albert Leroy David
Born(1902-07-18)July 18, 1902
Maryville, Missouri
DiedSeptember 17, 1945(1945-09-17)(aged 43)
Norfolk, Virginia
Place of burial
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1919–1945
RankLieutenant
UnitUSSPillsbury
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsMedal of Honor
Navy Cross(2)

Albert Leroy David(July 18, 1902 – September 17, 1945) was an officer in theUnited States NavyduringWorld War IIand a recipient of twoNavy Crossesas well as theMedal of Honor.He was awarded the Medal of Honor for his role in helping to capture theGerman submarineU-505,off the coast of French West Africa in June 1944.

Early life and career

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Born inMaryville,Missouri,David enlisted in the Navy atKansas City, Missouri,on September 30, 1919. After undergoing his training at the Naval Training Station, San Francisco, he served on the battleshipUSSArkansas(BB-33)for the rest of his first enlistment.

Reenlisting atOmaha, Nebraska,on July 19, 1921, David served his second enlistment in a succession of ships:USSNew York(ACR-2),USSPreston(DD-327),USSDelaware(BB-28),USSUtah(BB-31),andUSSTexas(BB-35),reenlisting on boardTexason May 12, 1925. He then served inUSSTrenton(CL-11),USSCincinnati(CL-6),andUSSSalt Lake City(CA-25),reenlisting atPhiladelphia,Pennsylvania,on June 15, 1931. He reported on boardUSSDobbin(AD-3)on July 3, 1931, and served in that destroyer tender until his transfer to the Fleet Reserve on August 10, 1939.

World War II

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David was recalled to active duty, though, on September 27, 1939, less than a month after World War II broke out inEuropewithNazi Germany's invasion ofPoland.

Appointed machinist on May 13, 1942, David was assigned to theSubmarineRepair Unit, San Diego on May 28, and served in that unit for five months. While there, he received his promotion to ensign on June 15. Reporting thence to the Naval Training School for diesel engineers at the Madison campus of the University of Wisconsin, for instruction, David ultimately reported for duty at the Naval Training Station, Naval Operating Base,Norfolk,before he traveled to Orange, Texas, to assist in fitting out the destroyer escortUSSPillsbury(DE-133),which was commissioned at theConsolidated Steel Corporationyard on June 7, 1943.

Promoted to lieutenant (jg.) whilePillsburywas fitting out, David served in that ship as she operated in the Atlantic, escorting convoys intoCasablancaandGibraltar,and serving with a "hunter-killer" unit formed aroundUSSGuadalcanal(CVE-60).He was serving asPillsbury's assistant engineering and electrical officer whenGuadalcanal's task group located aGerman submarineoff Cape Blanco, French West Africa, on June 4, 1944, and forced it to the surface.

Pillsburylowered a boat and sent a party of nine men, led by David, to board the U-boat, soon identified asU-505,which was still underway and running in a circle on the surface. Although he "had every reason to believe" that Germans were still below decks setting demolition charges and scuttling the ship, David ledPillsbury's men on board and down the conning tower hatch, and took possession of the boat. Although he found the sea flooding into the U-boat, David remained below directing the initial salvage operations—aware that at any moment the submersible could blow up or sink. Men fromGuadalcanalarrived soon thereafter to aid in the battle to keepU-505afloat, and David remained on board directing the salvage operations. As a result of his vigorous and heroic efforts, the valuable prize was eventually taken to Bermuda.

Promoted to lieutenant soon thereafter, David received the Medal of Honor for his part in the "first successful boarding and capture of an enemyman-of-waron the high seas by the United States Navy since 1815. "His was the only Medal of Honor awarded to a member of the Navy in the Atlantic theater of World War II.

He died of a heart attack at Norfolk, Virginia, however, before the medal could be presented to him; it was presented byPresidentHarry S. Trumanto David's widow, Lynda Mae David, on October 5, 1945, in a ceremony at theWhite House.

Awards

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Medal of Honor citation

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His Medal of Honor citation reads:

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while attached to the U.S.S. Pillsbury during the capture of an enemy German submarine off FrenchWest Africa,June 4, 1944. Taking a vigorous part in the skillfully coordinated attack on the U-505 at the end of a prolonged search by the Task Group, Lt. (then Lt. j.g.) David boldly led a party from the Pillsbury in boarding the hostile submarine as it circled erratically at 5 or 6 knots on the surface. Fully aware that the U-boat might at any moment sink or be blown up by exploding demolition and scuttling charges, he braved the added danger of enemy gunfire to plunge through the conning tower hatch and, with his small party, exerted every effort to keep the ship afloat and to assist the succeeding and more fully equipped salvage parties in making the U-505 seaworthy for the long tow across the Atlantic to a U.S. port. By his valiant service during the first successful boarding and capture of an enemy man-of-war on the high seas by the United States Navy since 1815, Lt. David contributed materially to the effectiveness of theBattle of the Atlanticand upheld the highest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.

See also

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Public DomainThis article incorporates text from thepublic domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.The entry can be foundhere.
  • Rogers, J. David."Capture of the U-505"(PDF).Missouri University of Science and Technology.Retrieved2010-09-24.
  • "Congressional Medal of Honor Submarine Heroes".worldwariihistory.info.Retrieved2010-09-24.
  • "Albert David".Claim to Fame: Medal of Honor recipients.Find a Grave.Retrieved2007-11-13.