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S2 Harlan Fred Woody
Monument

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S2 Harlan Fred Woody Veteran

Birth
Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Death
7 Dec 1941 (aged 17)
Pearl Harbor, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA
Monument
Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA Add to Map
Plot
Courts of the Missing
Memorial ID
View Source
USS Arizona - 7 Dec. 1941

Harlan Fred Woody was a member of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at Hollywood HIgh School in Los Angeles.

He enlisted in the Navy on March 11, 1941 -- soon after his 17th birthday -- and was a seaman second class on the U.S.S. Arizona when he was killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941.

Mr. Woody was born Feb. 26, 1924, in Los Angeles County to John L. Woody and Helen Doris Alley Woody. Their marriage was brief, and the son lived with his mother until he enlisted.

The elder Mr. Woody was a Navy veteran of World War I.

Mrs. Woody, who had been an office worker and a saleswoman at a dress shop, joined the Eaglet Squadron after her son’s death. She signed up for the communications division of the Los Angeles group, which formed to help the Army and Navy. The idea was to have women pilots ferry military airplanes and do other jobs that would permit men to stick to combat. The government officially agreed to that in the fall of 1942. The national organization became best known as the WACS -- Women Airforce Service Pilots.

Sources: The Los Angeles Times; California birth record; Census; Navy muster roll; Application for Military Headstone or Marker; 1939 Hollywood High School yearbook. Navy photo.

From: Bobbie Jo Carter
USS Arizona - 7 Dec. 1941

Harlan Fred Woody was a member of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at Hollywood HIgh School in Los Angeles.

He enlisted in the Navy on March 11, 1941 -- soon after his 17th birthday -- and was a seaman second class on the U.S.S. Arizona when he was killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941.

Mr. Woody was born Feb. 26, 1924, in Los Angeles County to John L. Woody and Helen Doris Alley Woody. Their marriage was brief, and the son lived with his mother until he enlisted.

The elder Mr. Woody was a Navy veteran of World War I.

Mrs. Woody, who had been an office worker and a saleswoman at a dress shop, joined the Eaglet Squadron after her son’s death. She signed up for the communications division of the Los Angeles group, which formed to help the Army and Navy. The idea was to have women pilots ferry military airplanes and do other jobs that would permit men to stick to combat. The government officially agreed to that in the fall of 1942. The national organization became best known as the WACS -- Women Airforce Service Pilots.

Sources: The Los Angeles Times; California birth record; Census; Navy muster roll; Application for Military Headstone or Marker; 1939 Hollywood High School yearbook. Navy photo.

From: Bobbie Jo Carter

Gravesite Details

Entered the service from California.


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