
USS SIGSBEE DD-502
United States Navy World War Two
|
This web site is a MEMORIAL to the SIGSBEE crew members who paid the ultimate price in service to our country. It is also dedicated to the officers and men that served with pride and distinction as "Tin Can Sailors" on her decks in World War Two. LET US NOT FORGET! |
|
Please sign our Guest Book (click on the lighthouse). Did you or someone in your family serve on the SIGSBEE? Let us know...............
Read all Guest Book entries:
#174 to #125
#124 to #85
#84 to #45
#44 to #1
This site last updated on April 18, 2008
Hero's flight to Washington. SIGSBEE
vet George Mazzagotte makes the news. Great photo of George along with an
outstanding article about some Florida veterans making a trip to the WW II
Memorial. Click on NEW!
New photos of the SIGSBEE taken from the cruiser
USS MIAMI 4/14/1945. Photos were sent to me by my friend Dave Schroeder. The
photos were found by his friend Joe Lewis, who ran across them at the NARA
(National Archives and Records Administration) in College Park, Md. last
October.
![]()
HullNumber.com's mission is to provide a means for shipmates to keep in touch
with one another.
Register your name at HULLNUMBER.COM and join
other SIGSBEE veterans
![]()
Our thoughts and prayers go out to the relatives of the following.............................................
We just learned of the passing of a Sigsbee
veteran. John Chiquoine, reunion planner for the DD-573 reported, Chief Radio
Man, Moran "Mark" Keith Morris passed away 16 August 2005, in Virginia Beach.
Click on new to link to Billy Roberts obituary site.
New
and improved CREW photos link provided by Webshots
Photos
from Destroyer Squadron 25 Reunion Pittsburgh, Pa Sept. 30 to Oct. 4, 2007
To The Men That Sail Destroyers
There's a roll and a pitch And a heave and a hitch To the nautical gait they take. For they're used to the cant of decks aslant As the white toothed combers break. On the plates that thrum Like a beaten drum To the thrill of he turbines' might And the knife bow leaps Through the mighty deep With the speed of a shell in flight.
Oh! Their scorn is quick, For the crews that stick To the battleship's steady floor. For they love the lurch Of their own frail porch, At thirty five knots or more. They don't get much Of the drill and such That the battleship jockeys do, But they sail the seas in their Dungarees, A grimy destroyer's crew.
They don't climb At their sleeping time To a hammock that sways and Bumps But leap "Kerplunk" to a cozy bunk, That quivers and bucks and jumps. They hear the sound Of the waves that pound On the half inch plates of steel. And they close heir eyes to the lullabies Of the creaking sides and keel.
They're a lusty crowd That's vastly proud Of the slim grey craft they drive. Of the roaring screws And the humming flues That make her a thing alive. They love the lunge Of her surging plunge, And the murk of her smoke screen too. As they sail the seas in their dungarees. A grimy destroyer crew.
Anonymous writer.......................This poem was obtained by this webmaster at the Destroyer Squadron 25 reunion in Pittsburgh, Pa Sept. 30 through Oct 4th, 2007
![]()
There are twenty-four (24) sailors honored on the
Memorial Page on this web site, of these, seven (7) sailors do
not have a photo posted. It is our goal to obtain a photo of each Sigsbee
sailor that made the ultimate sacrifice. During our research my good friend Billy Roberts
and I have been unable to locate any family members of these seven
sailors. If anyone visiting this site can help, please contact us using
the email link on this page. :
Looking for surviving family members of these sailors lost on
the SIGSBEE:
Name & Rate Received onboard Service # Enlisted Family Info ******************************************************************************************
Cox, Carlton C. F1c
Freeman, Joseph W. Jr. BM2c
Heflin, Joseph L. S1c
*****************************************************************************************
Missing (lost overboard)
Note: Information compiled by Billy Roberts using ships muster rolls, with research help from John Chiquoine.
![]()
|
Awarded Feb. 14, 2004 |
Thank You Entre Computer Center of Louisville, Ky. for your support and generosity in making this site possible. |
Email Web Master
|