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The United States Navy Memorial

Navy Memorial Honoring the Men & Women of the Sea Services

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Monssen

Ship Designation: 
DD-436
Date Lost: 
Friday, November 13, 1942
Naval Battle of Guadalcanal
In what would later be called the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal the heavily outnumbered US forces sighted the Japanese fleet headed toward Henderson Field to bombard it and cripple Allied air operations long enough to sneak in 11 of their transports to relieve their beleaguered comrades fighting on the island. The battle commenced at 0150 and within 30 minutes Monssen, which had been spotlighted in the darkness and hit by some 37 shells was reduced to a burning hulk. Twenty minutes later, completely immobilized in all departments, the ship was ordered abandoned. ... After daybreak Monssen was still a floating incinerator. Survivors whoo had previously abandoned ship reboarded the hulk and rescued eight men still aboard and alive, five of whom lived after reaching land. The survivors, 40 percent of the crew, were picked up and taken to Guadalcanal. The ship continued to blaze until early afternoon, when the waters of Ironbottom Sound closed over her.

Lost At Sea Log

Number of sailors in this log: 145

Name Service Branchsort descending
WT 1c James Macintosh USN
Sea 2c Ernest Dungan USN
SOM 3c Erwin Heine USN
F 2c Clifton Baker USN
Sea 1c John Bender USN
EM 2c Daniel Clinefelter USN
MM 1c William Ratcliffe USN
F 2c Wilfred Ouellette USN
Lt Hilerd Jenkins USN
Lt Andrew Frosch USN
Sea 1c Vernon Dunn USN
CM 1c Donald Henrichon USN
Sea 1c Remely Baker USN
Sea 2c Johnnie Bennett USN
RM 3c Max Cole USN
FC 3c Clayton Smith USN
CRM Charles Orsie USN
CTM Theodore Jensen USN
F 1c William Foster USN
Sea 2c Claude Drury USN

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Prepared by CAPT R. O. Strange USN (Ret.)