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Hugh David Black
Monument

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Hugh David Black Veteran

Birth
Death
28 Feb 1942 (aged 38)
At Sea
Monument
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA Add to Map
Plot
Tablets of the Missing
Memorial ID
View Source
Suggested edit from FAG Contributor (49288431)
Hugh D. Black, Lieutenant-Commander, U.S. Navy, and one time associate professor of Naval Science and Tactics at the University, went down with his ship yesterday when the destroyer Jacob Jones, DD-130, was torpedoed off Cape May by an enemy submarine.
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US Navy WORLD WAR II
Lt/Cdr. Hugh D. Black MIA/KIA
Hometown: Oradell New Jersey
Service # 0-060311
Awards: Purple Heart, American Campaign Medal W/STAR, Navy Good Conduct Medal
USS Black DD-666 Named in his Honor
U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis Md. - CLASS OF 1922

Significant Duty Stations
USS RIZAL D NO. 174
XO, USS BENSON DD-421
CO, USS LARK AM-21
CO, USS JACOB JONES - SUNK BY GERMAN U-578, OFF NEW JERSEY

Mission: Anti Sub Patrol
Ship: USS Jacob Jones (DD 130)
Loss Date: 28-Feb-42
Location: 38.37N, 74.32W - Grid CA 5458 Off the coast of Delaware
Fate: Sunk by U-578 (Ernst-August Rehwinkel)
Complement: 149 officers and men (138 dead and 11 survivors).

On the morning of 27 Feb, 1942, USS Jacob Jones (DD 130) (LtCdr Hugh D. Black) departed New York alone to patrol and search the area between Barnegat Light and Five Fathoms Bank. She then received orders to concentrate her patrol activity in waters off Cape May and the Delaware Capes. In the afternoon, the destroyer spotted the burning wreckage of the R.P. Resor, which had been torpedoed by U-578 the same day. The destroyer circled the tanker for two hours, searching for survivors before resuming her southward course.

At 10.57 hours on 28 February, USS Jacob Jones was hit by two torpedoes from U-578, while proceeding completely blacked out at 15 knots. The first torpedo struck on the port side just aft of the bridge and ignited the ship´s magazine. The explosion completely destroyed the bridge, the chart room and the officer´s and petty officer´s quarters. As the ship stopped, the second torpedo struck on the port side about 40 feet forward of the fantail and carried away the after part of the ship above the keel plates and shafts and destroyed the after crew´s quarters. The ship remained afloat for 45 minutes, allowing about 30 survivors to abandon ship on four or five rafts. But as the stern sank, the unsecured depth charges exploded, killing several survivors on a nearby raft. Some hours later, an US Army observation plane sighted the life rafts and reported their position to USS PE-56 on Inshore Patrol. The patrol craft was forced to abandon her search after three hours, due to strong winds and rising seas. She had picked up twelve survivors, but one of them died en route to Cape May. The search for survivors continued for two days but was fruitless.

Survivors
Richard Dors USN
Louis F. Hollenbeck USN
Rudolph F. Jacobsen USN
John W. Merger JR
Albert E. Oberg USN
George E. Pantall USN
Woodrow A Roussell
Adolph R Strom
John S. Struthers
Joseph Paul Tidwell USN

Personnel MIA/KIA with USS Jacob Jones " Click Here "
Suggested edit from FAG Contributor (49288431)
Hugh D. Black, Lieutenant-Commander, U.S. Navy, and one time associate professor of Naval Science and Tactics at the University, went down with his ship yesterday when the destroyer Jacob Jones, DD-130, was torpedoed off Cape May by an enemy submarine.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
US Navy WORLD WAR II
Lt/Cdr. Hugh D. Black MIA/KIA
Hometown: Oradell New Jersey
Service # 0-060311
Awards: Purple Heart, American Campaign Medal W/STAR, Navy Good Conduct Medal
USS Black DD-666 Named in his Honor
U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis Md. - CLASS OF 1922

Significant Duty Stations
USS RIZAL D NO. 174
XO, USS BENSON DD-421
CO, USS LARK AM-21
CO, USS JACOB JONES - SUNK BY GERMAN U-578, OFF NEW JERSEY

Mission: Anti Sub Patrol
Ship: USS Jacob Jones (DD 130)
Loss Date: 28-Feb-42
Location: 38.37N, 74.32W - Grid CA 5458 Off the coast of Delaware
Fate: Sunk by U-578 (Ernst-August Rehwinkel)
Complement: 149 officers and men (138 dead and 11 survivors).

On the morning of 27 Feb, 1942, USS Jacob Jones (DD 130) (LtCdr Hugh D. Black) departed New York alone to patrol and search the area between Barnegat Light and Five Fathoms Bank. She then received orders to concentrate her patrol activity in waters off Cape May and the Delaware Capes. In the afternoon, the destroyer spotted the burning wreckage of the R.P. Resor, which had been torpedoed by U-578 the same day. The destroyer circled the tanker for two hours, searching for survivors before resuming her southward course.

At 10.57 hours on 28 February, USS Jacob Jones was hit by two torpedoes from U-578, while proceeding completely blacked out at 15 knots. The first torpedo struck on the port side just aft of the bridge and ignited the ship´s magazine. The explosion completely destroyed the bridge, the chart room and the officer´s and petty officer´s quarters. As the ship stopped, the second torpedo struck on the port side about 40 feet forward of the fantail and carried away the after part of the ship above the keel plates and shafts and destroyed the after crew´s quarters. The ship remained afloat for 45 minutes, allowing about 30 survivors to abandon ship on four or five rafts. But as the stern sank, the unsecured depth charges exploded, killing several survivors on a nearby raft. Some hours later, an US Army observation plane sighted the life rafts and reported their position to USS PE-56 on Inshore Patrol. The patrol craft was forced to abandon her search after three hours, due to strong winds and rising seas. She had picked up twelve survivors, but one of them died en route to Cape May. The search for survivors continued for two days but was fruitless.

Survivors
Richard Dors USN
Louis F. Hollenbeck USN
Rudolph F. Jacobsen USN
John W. Merger JR
Albert E. Oberg USN
George E. Pantall USN
Woodrow A Roussell
Adolph R Strom
John S. Struthers
Joseph Paul Tidwell USN

Personnel MIA/KIA with USS Jacob Jones " Click Here "

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