Advertisement

Norris Robert Ferguson

Advertisement

Norris Robert Ferguson Veteran

Birth
Seekonk, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
19 Jul 2000 (aged 76)
Branford, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA
Burial
Niantic, New London County, Connecticut, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Storekeeper Second Class (SK2/C) Ferguson enlisted in the US Navy on 9 December 1942 and served during WWII. He was assigned to the Battleship USS South Dakota BB57 on 10 February 1943 and served in the S Division. The USS South Dakota is the most decorated battleship of WWII, earning 13 Battle Stars and a Navy Unit Citation. She sailed 250,000 miles and crossed the equator 30 times and the Arctic Circle once. She is accredited with downing 64 Japanese planes, 9 shore bombardments, and unofficially sinking 3 enemy cruisers. She set a record during the Battle of Santa Cruz, shooting down 23 planes in a single engagement. She and the USS Washington fought a slugging match with the Japanese battleship Kirishima during the Second Naval Battle of Guadalcanal. One of only two battleship vs. battleship engagements of the entire Pacific Theater. She was there for the Japanese surrender and led the fleet back to San Francisco.
Storekeeper Second Class (SK2/C) Ferguson enlisted in the US Navy on 9 December 1942 and served during WWII. He was assigned to the Battleship USS South Dakota BB57 on 10 February 1943 and served in the S Division. The USS South Dakota is the most decorated battleship of WWII, earning 13 Battle Stars and a Navy Unit Citation. She sailed 250,000 miles and crossed the equator 30 times and the Arctic Circle once. She is accredited with downing 64 Japanese planes, 9 shore bombardments, and unofficially sinking 3 enemy cruisers. She set a record during the Battle of Santa Cruz, shooting down 23 planes in a single engagement. She and the USS Washington fought a slugging match with the Japanese battleship Kirishima during the Second Naval Battle of Guadalcanal. One of only two battleship vs. battleship engagements of the entire Pacific Theater. She was there for the Japanese surrender and led the fleet back to San Francisco.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement