DECK CADET LEROY PINNEO LAWRENCE

DOB/DOD: July 10, 1921 (Providence, RI) – August 30, 1944; 23 years old
MARITAL STATUS: Unmarried
LOCAL ADDRESS: 53 Ansonia Street, Hartford
SERVICE NUMBER: Z-043959

FAMILY: Born to Edward S. Sr. [born in Russia] (1890-1978) and Pauline B. Stober Pinneo Lawrence (1892-1983). Two brothers, Edward S. Jr. (1915-2008) and Donald S. [Navy veteran] (1930-2015). One sister, Edith P. (1917-1999).


Hartford Public High School, Class of 1939


Wesleyan University (Middletown, CT), Class of 1943


U.S. Merchant Marine Academy photo

CIRCUMSTANCES: At 1555 hours on August 30, 1944, U-482 fired two torpedoes at a group of five ships from convoy CU-36 about 50 miles north of Londonderry and hit the last ship of the single column, the Jacksonville (Master Edgar Winter), after 3 minutes 32 seconds. This group had split from the port side of the convoy to proceed to Loch Ewe and was attacked just after completing the turn. The torpedo struck on the starboard side at the #7 tank, igniting the cargo. Flames covered the ship from stem to stern and leapt 300 feet in the air in a matter of seconds. The second torpedo struck the same tanker after 4 minutes and 5 seconds and broke her in two. The complement of nine officers, 40 crewmen, and 31 armed guards (the ship was armed with one 5in, one 3in, and eight 20mm guns) had no chance to launch any of the lifeboats or rafts. A few men jumped overboard with life preservers, but most died in the sea of flames around the ship. One armed guard and a fireman survived and were picked up by the USS Poole (DE 151) after they spent 90 minutes in the water. Both sections of the tanker remained afloat. The after section was sunk by the escort vessels with depth charges and gunfire. The forward section sank 15 hours later.

SS Jacksonville from uboat.net

The fate of U-482

Sunk on November 25, 1944, in the North Atlantic west of the Shetland Islands, in position 60.18N, 04.52W, by depth charges from the British frigate HMS Ascension, after being located by a Norwegian Sunderland aircraft (330 Sqn RAF/G) on 24 November 1944. 48 dead (all hands lost). (Axel Niestlé, April 2005).


Memorial headstone, Northwood Cemetery, 79 Matianuck Avenue, Windsor, Connecticut; plot and grave number unknown.

Photo from FindAGrave.com and contributor MSimonds. The inscription is incorrect. It should read Merchant Marines vs. Marine Corps.

Published by jeffd1121

USAF retiree. Veteran advocate. Committed to telling the stories of those who died while in the service of the country during wartime.

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