< Drexler DD- 741

Drexler DD- 741

 

Drexler

Henry Clay Drexler, born 7 August 1901 in Braddock Pa. was a member of the Naval Academy class of 1922: In 1924 he joined Trenton (CA-11), and on 20 October was in a forward mount when a powder charge ignited. Attempting to save his shipmates, Ensign Drexler tried to reach a second powder charge and immerse it in water before it could catch fire, but the flames were too quick for him, and he was killed in the resulting explosion. He was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross and Medal of Honor for his heroic effort to save the lives of his men.

(DD-741: dp. 2,200, 1. 376'6", b. 41'1"; dr. 15'8"; s 34 k.; cpl. 336; a. 6 6", 10 21" tt., 6 dcp., 2 dct.; cl. Allen' Sumner)

Drexler (DD-741 ) was launched 3 September 1944 , Bath Iron Works Corp., Bath, Maine; sponsored by Mrs. L. A. Drexler, mother of Ensign Drexler; and commissioned 14 November 1944, Commander R. L Wilson in command.

Sailing from Norfolk 23 January 1945 to escort Bon Homme Richard (CV 31) to Trinidad, Drexler then sailed on to reach San Diego 10 February. Three days later she got underway for Pearl Harbor for anti air craft and shore bombardment exercises until the 23d when she sailed on escort duty to Guadalcanal and Ulithi, the staging area for the Okinawa invasion.

Drexler departed Ulithi 27 March 1945 bound for Okinawa and dangerous duty on a radar picket station On 28 May at 0700 two suicide planes attacked Drexler and Lowry (DD-770). The first was downed by the combined fire of the two destroyers and planes from the combat air patrol. The second tried to crash Lowry and failing, stumbled into Drexler, cutting off all power and starting large gasoline fires. Despite the heavy damage she kept firing, joining in splashing three planes which attacked immediately after the crash. At 0703 yet another suicider crashed in flames into Drexler' superstructure. A tremendous explosion followed and the destroyer rolled on her starboard side and sank stern first in 27°06' N., 127°38' E., less than a minute after the second hit. Because of the speed with which she sank, casualties were heavy: 168 dead and 52 wounded, including the commanding officer.

Drexler received one battle star for World War II service