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F1 Frank Howard Bowers
Monument

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F1 Frank Howard Bowers Veteran

Birth
Death
10 Jan 1943 (aged 20)
At Sea
Monument
Manila, Capital District, National Capital Region, Philippines Add to Map
Plot
Tablets of the Missing
Memorial ID
View Source
US NAVY WORLD WAR II
Fireman 1st Class, Frank H. Bowers MIA/KIA
Hometown: Flemington, Missouri
Ship: USS Argonaut (APS-1), (SS-166)
Service # 3377139
Awards: Purple Heart
Captain: Lieutenant Commander John R. Pierce MIA/KIA

Mission: Patrol Duty
Mission Date: 10-Jan-43
Location: Near Rabaul
Cause: Sunk by surface attack and depth charges
Crew: of 102 MIA/KIA

Fireman Bowers appears tablets of the missing Manila American Cemetery and Memorial. He has a cenotaph memorial in Cemetary, Flemington Cemetery Polk County, Missouri his body was never recovered.

The ship and crew lost January 10 1943 the crew declared officially KIA on January 11 1944.

Argonaut arrived back in Pearl Harbor from the Makin Island raid on 26 August 1942. Her hull classification symbol was changed from SM-1 to APS-1 (transport submarine) on 22 September. She was never formally designated SS-166, but that hull number was reserved for her.[2] Her base of operations was transferred to Brisbane, Queensland, later in the year. In December, she departed Brisbane under Lieutenant Commander John R. Pierce to patrol the hazardous area between New Britain and Bougainville Island, south of Bismarck Archipelago. On 2 January 1943, Argonaut sank the Japanese gunboat Ebon Maru in the Bismarck Sea.[14] On 10 January, Argonaut spotted a convoy of five freighters and their escorting destroyers—Maikaze, Isokaze, and Hamakaze—returning to Rabaul from Lae. By chance, an army aircraft—which was out of bombs—was flying overhead and witnessed Argonaut′s attack. A crewman on board the plane saw one destroyer hit by a torpedo, and the destroyers promptly counterattacking. Argonaut′s bow suddenly broke the water at an unusual angle. It was apparent that a depth charge had severely damaged the submarine. The destroyers continued circling Argonaut, pumping shells into her; she slipped below the waves and was never heard from again. 102 officers and men went down with her, the worst loss of life for a wartime submarine.

Visit the virtual cemetery of " USS Argonaut Crew"
US NAVY WORLD WAR II
Fireman 1st Class, Frank H. Bowers MIA/KIA
Hometown: Flemington, Missouri
Ship: USS Argonaut (APS-1), (SS-166)
Service # 3377139
Awards: Purple Heart
Captain: Lieutenant Commander John R. Pierce MIA/KIA

Mission: Patrol Duty
Mission Date: 10-Jan-43
Location: Near Rabaul
Cause: Sunk by surface attack and depth charges
Crew: of 102 MIA/KIA

Fireman Bowers appears tablets of the missing Manila American Cemetery and Memorial. He has a cenotaph memorial in Cemetary, Flemington Cemetery Polk County, Missouri his body was never recovered.

The ship and crew lost January 10 1943 the crew declared officially KIA on January 11 1944.

Argonaut arrived back in Pearl Harbor from the Makin Island raid on 26 August 1942. Her hull classification symbol was changed from SM-1 to APS-1 (transport submarine) on 22 September. She was never formally designated SS-166, but that hull number was reserved for her.[2] Her base of operations was transferred to Brisbane, Queensland, later in the year. In December, she departed Brisbane under Lieutenant Commander John R. Pierce to patrol the hazardous area between New Britain and Bougainville Island, south of Bismarck Archipelago. On 2 January 1943, Argonaut sank the Japanese gunboat Ebon Maru in the Bismarck Sea.[14] On 10 January, Argonaut spotted a convoy of five freighters and their escorting destroyers—Maikaze, Isokaze, and Hamakaze—returning to Rabaul from Lae. By chance, an army aircraft—which was out of bombs—was flying overhead and witnessed Argonaut′s attack. A crewman on board the plane saw one destroyer hit by a torpedo, and the destroyers promptly counterattacking. Argonaut′s bow suddenly broke the water at an unusual angle. It was apparent that a depth charge had severely damaged the submarine. The destroyers continued circling Argonaut, pumping shells into her; she slipped below the waves and was never heard from again. 102 officers and men went down with her, the worst loss of life for a wartime submarine.

Visit the virtual cemetery of " USS Argonaut Crew"

Gravesite Details

Entered the service from Missouri.


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  • Maintained by: John Dowdy
  • Originally Created by: War Graves
  • Added: Aug 8, 2010
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56778613/frank_howard-bowers: accessed ), memorial page for F1 Frank Howard Bowers (26 Jan 1922–10 Jan 1943), Find a Grave Memorial ID 56778613, citing Manila American Cemetery and Memorial, Manila, Capital District, National Capital Region, Philippines; Maintained by John Dowdy (contributor 47791572).