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RM3C Malcolm Holman Shive

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RM3C Malcolm Holman Shive

Birth
Laguna Beach, Orange County, California, USA
Death
7 Dec 1941 (aged 19)
Pearl Harbor, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA
Burial
La Mirada, Los Angeles County, California, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Navy radioman Malcolm Holman Shive asked to serve on the U.S.S. Arizona because his brother, Gordon Eshom Shive, a Marine gunner, was already aboard.

Malcolm joined the Arizona on Oct. 27, 1941.

Both were killed that Dec. 7 in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

Their younger brother, Robert Pendleton Shive, recalled years later that his mother's hair turned from brown to white overnight from the shock and grief of their deaths.

Gordon, the oldest of the brothers, was born Jan. 10, 1921, in Irvine, California. He graduated from high school in Laguna Beach in 1939, then attended Fullerton Junior college. He joined the National Guard in 1939 and the Marines in April 1940. He had been an athlete in high school, and on the Arizona he was on the whale boat rowing team. He was a gunnery private first class.

Malcolm was born Oct. 31, 1922, in Compton, California. He graduated from high school in Laguna Beach in 1941. He, too, had been an athlete. He joined the Naval Reserve in November 1940 and active service in June 1941. He was a radioman third class.

A cousin, Marian Schooler, recalled years later that the boys were industrious. "At that time there was a bowling alley on the old boardwalk along the beach. The boys set pins to make money," she told Don Chapman of the Laguna Beach News. "When Malcolm was 8 or 9, he was selling newspapers. Gordon would help the man in the milk truck."

Their father, Grover, a carpenter, died in April 1935 of a brain tumor. Their mother, Lois, remarried to a man the boys disliked for good reason. The 1940 Census listed her as the owner of a hand laundry.

A memorial service for the Shive brothers was held in February 1942 at Community Presbyterian Church in Laguna Beach. Gordon's body was one of the few recovered among the Arizona crew and is buried at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu.

Brother Robert, then 11, tried to enlist when his brothers died. Their mother took the insurance money she received from her other sons' deaths and used it to send Robert to a military school. She did not want him to join the Navy, but he did in April 1947 and served until he retired in 1967.

The Orange County Register published a story, written by Andy Alison and Amy Wilson, in May 2001 that included an interview with Robert Shive.

He told about growing up and about his brothers. That Christmas, he shared the article with his two daughters. Until that day, they did not know their father had brothers. Robert had never before spoken of the tragedy that shadowed his life for 60 years.

Robert Shive died in 2017 at the age of 87.

Sources: The Orange County Register; Laguna Beach News; The St. Augustine (Florida) Record; Santa Ana (California) Register; military internment control form; California birth and death indexes; Census; Navy muster rolls. Navy and Marine photographs. This profile was researched and written on behalf of the U.S.S. Arizona Mall Memorial at the University of Arizona.
Contributor: USS Arizona Mall Memorial at University of Arizona (50022871)
Navy radioman Malcolm Holman Shive asked to serve on the U.S.S. Arizona because his brother, Gordon Eshom Shive, a Marine gunner, was already aboard.

Malcolm joined the Arizona on Oct. 27, 1941.

Both were killed that Dec. 7 in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

Their younger brother, Robert Pendleton Shive, recalled years later that his mother's hair turned from brown to white overnight from the shock and grief of their deaths.

Gordon, the oldest of the brothers, was born Jan. 10, 1921, in Irvine, California. He graduated from high school in Laguna Beach in 1939, then attended Fullerton Junior college. He joined the National Guard in 1939 and the Marines in April 1940. He had been an athlete in high school, and on the Arizona he was on the whale boat rowing team. He was a gunnery private first class.

Malcolm was born Oct. 31, 1922, in Compton, California. He graduated from high school in Laguna Beach in 1941. He, too, had been an athlete. He joined the Naval Reserve in November 1940 and active service in June 1941. He was a radioman third class.

A cousin, Marian Schooler, recalled years later that the boys were industrious. "At that time there was a bowling alley on the old boardwalk along the beach. The boys set pins to make money," she told Don Chapman of the Laguna Beach News. "When Malcolm was 8 or 9, he was selling newspapers. Gordon would help the man in the milk truck."

Their father, Grover, a carpenter, died in April 1935 of a brain tumor. Their mother, Lois, remarried to a man the boys disliked for good reason. The 1940 Census listed her as the owner of a hand laundry.

A memorial service for the Shive brothers was held in February 1942 at Community Presbyterian Church in Laguna Beach. Gordon's body was one of the few recovered among the Arizona crew and is buried at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu.

Brother Robert, then 11, tried to enlist when his brothers died. Their mother took the insurance money she received from her other sons' deaths and used it to send Robert to a military school. She did not want him to join the Navy, but he did in April 1947 and served until he retired in 1967.

The Orange County Register published a story, written by Andy Alison and Amy Wilson, in May 2001 that included an interview with Robert Shive.

He told about growing up and about his brothers. That Christmas, he shared the article with his two daughters. Until that day, they did not know their father had brothers. Robert had never before spoken of the tragedy that shadowed his life for 60 years.

Robert Shive died in 2017 at the age of 87.

Sources: The Orange County Register; Laguna Beach News; The St. Augustine (Florida) Record; Santa Ana (California) Register; military internment control form; California birth and death indexes; Census; Navy muster rolls. Navy and Marine photographs. This profile was researched and written on behalf of the U.S.S. Arizona Mall Memorial at the University of Arizona.
Contributor: USS Arizona Mall Memorial at University of Arizona (50022871)

Inscription

RM3C USNR USS Arizona



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