World War II Veterans Connect Via Online Database
World War II Veterans Connect Via Online Database
(ARA) - They
call it six degrees of separation, but in this case, it was only
two degrees. Jim O'Donnell came to work at the United States Navy
Memorial in Washington, D.C., as he had for more than 10 years. As
usual, he expected to help visitors with their various questions
about the Navy Memorial and The Navy Log, the National Registry of
Sea Service. The gentleman who approached him that day did not
appear to be any different; Henry K. Bowers wanted help in finding
the record of his Navy service in The Navy Log. What was curious to
O'Donnell is that a portfolio Bowers carried with him contained a
reference to the Liberty Ship SS Charles Morgan.
O'Donnell's father-in-law, James R. Conners, Sr., served as the
Assistant Engineering Officer aboard the SS Morgan and survived the
sinking of the ship. In the wake of the Normandy invasion, the SS
Morgan was struck by a 500-pound bomb and a fatal fire ensued. The
crew was forced to abandon the ship and her stern settled on the
bottom of the ocean in 10 minutes. Then-Electrician's Mate 2nd
Class Bowers was part of the boarding party from LCT (5) 474 that
volunteered to come aboard and attempt to extinguish the fire and
evacuate the crew.
"When I asked Henry [Bowers] for more details, he showed me photos
he took -- with a Brownie camera -- of the Charles Morgan as she
sank," O'Donnell recounts. "Further, the man he saw in the SS
Morgan's engine room was an Assistant Engineering Officer of the
build and appearance of my father-in-law." Conners had been a fire
captain in his hometown of Everett, Mass., so his firefighting
skills came in handy that day.
News of the sinking of the SS Morgan reached Navy Ensign O'Donnell,
who at the time was the Officer-in-Charge of LCT (6) 1111 in the
Marianas Islands' vicinity of the Pacific Ocean. The tragedy
prompted him to write to his high school sweetheart, Captain
Conners' daughter Jeanne -- to find out if her father had survived.
He had. She wrote back to O'Donnell and their teenage romance
blossomed into a marriage proposal. Jim and Jeanne O'Donnell just
celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary, they just attended their
first reunion of WWII LCT Flotillas in Baton Rouge, La., on April
19, 2007, and they will be celebrating Father's Day with their
family. O'Donnell is still amazed at the small-world stories he
encounters in his work at the Navy Memorial and The Navy Log.
As our nation continues to lose the aging World War II generation
of veterans and as our Vietnam-era veterans start to retire and
age, their stories of service and sacrifice are timeless. The
impact their military service had on their personal lives, just
like O'Donnell's and Bowers', is immeasurable. As Father's Day fast
approaches, don't forget to give the veterans in your life -- your
father, grandfather, brother, uncle, son, grandson or boyfriend --
a gift that lasts in perpetuity. Preserve their record of service
for posterity by logging into www.navymemorial.org. The United
States Navy Memorial offers Sea Service veterans (Navy, Marine
Corps, Coast Guard and the Merchant Marine) the opportunity to
register themselves or their family and friends in this free
database -- which is then available to the general public
forever.
Courtesy of ARAcontent
