Advertisement

Robert-Burns Hardy
Cenotaph

Advertisement

Robert-Burns Hardy Veteran

Birth
Saraland, Mobile County, Alabama, USA
Death
31 Aug 1942 (aged 22)
At Sea
Cenotaph
Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida, USA GPS-Latitude: 30.3575044, Longitude: -87.2876769
Plot
SECTION A-12 ROW A SITE 11
Memorial ID
View Source
*Despite the date of 'Aug. 31, 1943' on the grave marker at the Barrancas National Robert Burns was killed on August 30, 1942 in the sinking of the U.S.S. Colhoun APD-2. His body was never recovered. His rate and rank on the ship was a machinist mate, second class. Robert-Burns left behind his wife Phyllis and daughter Joyce Hardy (Brenden). The photograph at right is of Robert Burns's wife Phyllis who never remarried.

This description of the sinking is from the "Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships"

"At 1400 on 30 August 1942, while Colhoun was on patrol off Guadalcanal, she was struck in a Japanese air raid. The first hits wrecked the ship's boats and the after davits, and started a diesel fire from the boat wreckage. In a second attack, a succession of hits on the starboard side brought down the foremast, blew two 20 mm guns and one 4" gun off the ship, and damaged the engineering spaces. Two more direct hits killed all the men in the after deck house. Tank lighters from Guadalcanal rescued the crew, and Colhoun sank in 09‹24ŒS 160‹01ŒE / 9.4‹S 160.017‹E / -9.4; 160.017. Fifty-one men were killed and 18 wounded in this action."

Military Information: MM2, US NAVY
*Despite the date of 'Aug. 31, 1943' on the grave marker at the Barrancas National Robert Burns was killed on August 30, 1942 in the sinking of the U.S.S. Colhoun APD-2. His body was never recovered. His rate and rank on the ship was a machinist mate, second class. Robert-Burns left behind his wife Phyllis and daughter Joyce Hardy (Brenden). The photograph at right is of Robert Burns's wife Phyllis who never remarried.

This description of the sinking is from the "Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships"

"At 1400 on 30 August 1942, while Colhoun was on patrol off Guadalcanal, she was struck in a Japanese air raid. The first hits wrecked the ship's boats and the after davits, and started a diesel fire from the boat wreckage. In a second attack, a succession of hits on the starboard side brought down the foremast, blew two 20 mm guns and one 4" gun off the ship, and damaged the engineering spaces. Two more direct hits killed all the men in the after deck house. Tank lighters from Guadalcanal rescued the crew, and Colhoun sank in 09‹24ŒS 160‹01ŒE / 9.4‹S 160.017‹E / -9.4; 160.017. Fifty-one men were killed and 18 wounded in this action."

Military Information: MM2, US NAVY


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement