menu-header-menu

Follow Us

Follow us   

The United States Navy Memorial

Navy Memorial Honoring the Men & Women of the Sea Services

Donate

HUDSON-EDGAR

EDGAR  WALKER HUDSON

Rate/Rank
CMOMM (SS)
Service Branch
USN 00/0000 - 8/1944
Speciality
SUBMARINE SERVICE
Born 06/11/1916
DICKSON, TN
KILLED IN ACTION - USS FLIER SS-250, SUNK BY MINE, BALABAC STRAIT, SOUTH OF PALAWAN 08/13/1944
SIGNIFICANT DUTY STATIONS
USS FLIER SS-250
SIGNIFICANT AWARDS
PURPLE HEART
AMERICAN DEFENSE SERVICE MEDAL
AMERICAN CAMPAIGN MEDAL
ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN MEDAL - PHILIPPINE LIBERATION MEDAL
SUBMARINE COMBAT PATROL INSIGNIA
SERVICE MEMORIES

ON  ETERNAL  PATROL

 

Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz, after World War II said, “We salute those gallant officers and men of our submarines who lost their lives in that long struggle.  We shall never forget our submariners that held the lines against the enemy while our fleets replaced losses and repaired wounds.”  The U.S. submarine force remained intact following the attack on Pearl Harbor and clearly took the fight to the enemy.  By the war’s end submarines had supported all major fleet operations and made more than 1,600 war patrols.  Success was costly as fifty-two submarines were lost during the war and nearly 3,600 submariners remain on “Eternal Patrol.”

 

USS FLIER was one of the U.S. submarines lost during World War II and unfortunately Chief Motor Machinist Mate Edgar Walker Hudson was one of the crew members who died in the sinking of the submarine.  FLIER, a Gato-Class submarine, was commissioned on October 18, 1943.  Her first war patrol in May-June 1944 was in the area west of Luzon, Philippines, and resulted in her sinking an estimated 10,380 tons of Japanese shipping.  While surfaced on her second war patrol, FLIER was bound for the South China Sea.  As she passed through the Philippines Balabac Strait at about 2200 on August 12, 1944, she unfortunately struck a naval mine.  The devastating explosion caused such extensive damage that FLIER sank in less than a minute.  Shouting out names in a weird muster as they struggled to stay afloat, 15 men who had survived to this point, including CMoMM Hudson, gathered together in the moonless, starless night.  After gathering, the group agreed it would be useless to start swimming in the dark night without a reference point so it was decided to tread water until the moon rose.  When it became light enough to see small islands several miles away, the group commenced swimming in that direction.  The seas became choppy, it required great effort just to stay afloat and it was impossible to keep everyone closely together so each man swam toward the beach as best he could.  After being adrift on the open seas for about 15 hours or more, eight very weary men struggled ashore on the uninhabited Philippine island of Mantagule and were later rescued by Philippine guerilla and American forces.  The eight men who lived to tell the story of the FLIER sinking became the first Americans of the Pacific war to escape from a sunken submarine and return safely to the United States. 

 

Unfortunately, CMoMM Hudson was one of the seven men who survived the FLIER sinking but drowned as they struggled toward shore.  Survivors reported that several men who never made it to land simply swam silently to one side of the group, never to be seen again. 

 

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