Fireman 1st Class, Donald W. Johnson MIA/KIA
Official Date of Death January 8th 1946
Hometown: Boulder, Colorado
Service #3723594
Awards: Purple Heart, Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, Submarine Combat Patrol Insignia
Captain: Commander James W. Coe MIA/KIA
Ship: USS Cisco (SS-290)
Mission: 1st war patrol
Mission Date: 28-Sep-43
Location: In the Sulu Sea west of Mindanao, Philippine Islands
Cause: Probably sunk by air and surface attack
Crew: of
The crew of USS Cisco were lost approximately on September 28 1943 and were officially declared KIA Jan 8 1946
Cisco sailed from Panama 7 August 1943 for Brisbane, Australia, arriving 1 September to assume local patrol duties, until 18 September, when she docked at Darwin. She put out on her first war patrol 20 September, but never returned. Japanese records tell of sighting a submarine leaking oil on 28 September in an area where Cisco is known to have been the only submarine then operating. Japanese records state this submarine was sunk by bombs and depth charges. Cisco is thus presumed to have been lost in action 28 September 1943. The only survivor from the crew was Chief Radioman Howell B. Rice (USN ret.), who was taken sick in Darwin and sent ashore to the Navy hospital prior to Cisco's final voyage.
Japanese records state that the submarine was attacked by Type 97 "Kate" attack bombers of the 954 Naval Air Squadron and the riverboat Karatsu (originally a U.S. Navy gunboat, USS Luzon (PR-7), captured by Japanese forces and put to work against her former owners).
Visit the virtual cemetery of USS Cisco (SS-290)
Fireman 1st Class, Donald W. Johnson MIA/KIA
Official Date of Death January 8th 1946
Hometown: Boulder, Colorado
Service #3723594
Awards: Purple Heart, Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, Submarine Combat Patrol Insignia
Captain: Commander James W. Coe MIA/KIA
Ship: USS Cisco (SS-290)
Mission: 1st war patrol
Mission Date: 28-Sep-43
Location: In the Sulu Sea west of Mindanao, Philippine Islands
Cause: Probably sunk by air and surface attack
Crew: of
The crew of USS Cisco were lost approximately on September 28 1943 and were officially declared KIA Jan 8 1946
Cisco sailed from Panama 7 August 1943 for Brisbane, Australia, arriving 1 September to assume local patrol duties, until 18 September, when she docked at Darwin. She put out on her first war patrol 20 September, but never returned. Japanese records tell of sighting a submarine leaking oil on 28 September in an area where Cisco is known to have been the only submarine then operating. Japanese records state this submarine was sunk by bombs and depth charges. Cisco is thus presumed to have been lost in action 28 September 1943. The only survivor from the crew was Chief Radioman Howell B. Rice (USN ret.), who was taken sick in Darwin and sent ashore to the Navy hospital prior to Cisco's final voyage.
Japanese records state that the submarine was attacked by Type 97 "Kate" attack bombers of the 954 Naval Air Squadron and the riverboat Karatsu (originally a U.S. Navy gunboat, USS Luzon (PR-7), captured by Japanese forces and put to work against her former owners).
Visit the virtual cemetery of USS Cisco (SS-290)
Bio by: John Dowdy
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Records on Ancestry
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement