US Navy WORLD WAR II
Seaman 1st Class Harold M. Helgeson MIA/KIA
Hometown: Montana
Official Date of death: 25-Nov-44
Service # 3687167
Awards: Purple Heart
Captain: Master Lawrence J. Gallagher
Mission: Transport
ship: American Steam merchant Melville E. Stone
Loss Date: 24-Nov-43
Cargo: 10538 tons of copper, coffee, balsa, antimony, vanadium and 294 bags of mail
Location: 10° 36'N, 80° 19'W - Grid EB 8899 100 miles northwest of Cristobal.
Fate: Sunk by U-516 (Hans-Rutger Tillessen)
Complement: 88 (15 dead and 73 survivors)
Notes on event
At 06.14 hours on 24 Nov, 1943, the unescorted Melville E. Stone was hit by two torpedoes from U-516 about 100 miles northwest of Cristobal. The ship was less than seven hours in sea when the torpedoes were spotted by a lookout. The first torpedo struck on the port side in the settling tank and the second hit ten seconds later near #4 hold. The explosions opened large holes in the side and extensively damaged the main and auxiliary engines. As the ship settled rapidly on an even keel, the ten officers, 32 crewmen, 23 armed guards (the ship was armed with one 4in, one 3in and eight 20mm guns) and 23 passengers (military personnel) abandoned ship immediately in rough seas. Two of the lifeboats capsized from the suction created by the ship, which sank within eight minutes and several men drowned, including the master. Three boats got away and later picked up men from rafts and debris. The survivors were later spotted by an aircraft, which dropped flares so that the American submarine chasers USS SC-1023 and USS SC-662 could pick them up. Five officers, seven crewmen, two armed guards and one passenger were lost.
USN Crew KIA
Harold M. Helgeson
Byron M. Logsdon
Herbert L. Malone
US Navy WORLD WAR II
Seaman 1st Class Harold M. Helgeson MIA/KIA
Hometown: Montana
Official Date of death: 25-Nov-44
Service # 3687167
Awards: Purple Heart
Captain: Master Lawrence J. Gallagher
Mission: Transport
ship: American Steam merchant Melville E. Stone
Loss Date: 24-Nov-43
Cargo: 10538 tons of copper, coffee, balsa, antimony, vanadium and 294 bags of mail
Location: 10° 36'N, 80° 19'W - Grid EB 8899 100 miles northwest of Cristobal.
Fate: Sunk by U-516 (Hans-Rutger Tillessen)
Complement: 88 (15 dead and 73 survivors)
Notes on event
At 06.14 hours on 24 Nov, 1943, the unescorted Melville E. Stone was hit by two torpedoes from U-516 about 100 miles northwest of Cristobal. The ship was less than seven hours in sea when the torpedoes were spotted by a lookout. The first torpedo struck on the port side in the settling tank and the second hit ten seconds later near #4 hold. The explosions opened large holes in the side and extensively damaged the main and auxiliary engines. As the ship settled rapidly on an even keel, the ten officers, 32 crewmen, 23 armed guards (the ship was armed with one 4in, one 3in and eight 20mm guns) and 23 passengers (military personnel) abandoned ship immediately in rough seas. Two of the lifeboats capsized from the suction created by the ship, which sank within eight minutes and several men drowned, including the master. Three boats got away and later picked up men from rafts and debris. The survivors were later spotted by an aircraft, which dropped flares so that the American submarine chasers USS SC-1023 and USS SC-662 could pick them up. Five officers, seven crewmen, two armed guards and one passenger were lost.
USN Crew KIA
Harold M. Helgeson
Byron M. Logsdon
Herbert L. Malone
Gravesite Details
Entered the service from Montana.
Family Members
Other Records
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