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Home >> EDWARDS-HOUSTON

EDWARDS-HOUSTON

HOUSTON  ERNEST  EDWARDS

Rate/Rank
CEM (SS)
Service Branch
USN 00/1926 - 7/1944
Speciality
SUBMARINE SERVICE
Born 10/08/1901
SPEEDWELL, TN
SIGNIFICANT DUTY STATIONS
USS PERCH SS-176 SCUTTLED AFTER DEPTH CHARGE ATTACK 6/24/1942
POW CAMP, MAKASSAR, INDONESIA
USS DOLPHIN SS-169
USS CACHELOT SS-170
SIGNIFICANT AWARDS
PURPLE HEART
PRISONER OF WAR MEDAL
NAVY GOOD CONDUCT MEDAL
AMERICAN DEFENSE SERVICE MEDAL
ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN MEDAL W/STAR
WORLD WAR II VICTORY MEDAL
SERVICE MEMORIES

DIED  IN  CAPTIVITY  AS  POW

On the evening of March 1, 1942, the submarine USS Perch surfaced and began preparations for an attack on a Japanese convoy landing troops west of Surabaya, Java.  Two Japanese destroyers detected the submarine’s presence and attacked her which drove her to the bottom at 135 feet.  While on the bottom additional depth charges caused extensive damage, putting the starboard motors out of commission and causing extensive flooding throughout the boat.  The loss of oil and air from damaged ballast tanks convinced the Japanese the submarine was mortally wounded and departed the area.

Diligent repair efforts by the crew and expert handling permitted Perch to surface at 2AM on March 2 but she was again driven down by a destroyer.  Perch was able to later again rise to the surface.  During the early morning of March 3, after additional repairs, a test dive was made with almost fatal results, but expert handing again permitted her to resurface.  As more repairs were being made two Japanese cruisers and three destroyers came into view and began shelling the seriously wounded boat.  As shells straddled the submarine the commanding officer ordered, “Abandon ship, scuttle the boat.”  With all hull openings open, Perch made her last dive to the bottom.

The entire crew of fifty-four men and five officers was taken into custody by the Japanese destroyer Ushio and became POWs.  Six of the men died during the war while in Japanese POW camps.  The other fifty-three crewmembers were POWs until released at the end of World War II.

Historical records report Chief Electrician Houston Ernest Edwards was one of the USS Perch crewmembers to die while in custody as a POW.  He was born October 8, 1901, in Speedwell, Tennessee.  Readily available public historical records contain little information concerning him but do report he had served aboard Perch since its commissioning in November 1936, and was held at the POW Camp in Makassar, Indonesia, where he died July 10, 1944, due to cerebral malaria, beriberi, and dysentery.  He has been laid to eternal rest at Knoxville National Cemetery in Knoxville, Tennessee.  He was survived by his wife and seven-year-old daughter residing in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

          

                Crew of USS Perch seated on the deck of IJNS USHIO – 3/3/1942

Submitted by CDR Roy A. Mosteller, USNR (Ret)