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CDR Samuel Earle Johnson
Cenotaph

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CDR Samuel Earle Johnson Veteran

Birth
Chilton County, Alabama, USA
Death
7 Dec 1941 (aged 52)
Pearl Harbor, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA
Cenotaph
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.4874014, Longitude: -86.8445099
Plot
block 23
Memorial ID
View Source
He was lost aboard the USS Arizona, no remains ever recovered; this marker is a cenotaph placed in the family lot next to his wife. They had no children, as best as can be determined.

Enlisted in the Navy. Entered via Regular Military. Served during World War II. Johnson had the rank of Commander.

Occupation or specialty was Doctor. Service number was 14934. Served with USS Arizona.

Two cenotaph memorials exist in Hawaii:

Samuel E. Johnson at the USS Arizona memorial

Samuel E. Johnson at the Honolulu Memorial

Commander Samuel Earle Johnson was the senior medical officer on the U.S.S. Arizona when he was killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941.

Dr. Johnson joined the Navy in May 1917, shortly after the United States entered World War I.

He was born June 11, 1889, in Clanton, a town of about 1,400 in central Alabama. His father, Joseph Johnson, also a doctor, was in poor health when he died of an accidental overdose of morphine when Samuel was 10. His mother, Sarah Strock Johnson, a homemaker, died after a lingering illness when Samuel was 17.

The son studied medicine at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee from 1907 to 1911 -- the same school where his brother Arthur, older by a year, earned his medical degree in 1909. Both sons returned to Clanton to practice.

Samuel Johnson married a local woman, Matalie Harper, in 1911.

Death visited the family again when Arthur died in 1935. He had served in the Army during World War I. A third brother, Napoleon, also a doctor and also a veteran of the Army medical corps, died in 1940 at the age of 57.

After Samuel's death at Pearl Harbor, the Clanton newspaper, The Union-Banner, said, "It is customary to speak kindly of people after they have passed, but it is common knowledge by hundreds of people of Clanton and Chilton county that Dr. Sam Johnson was one of the finest men known. … He must have come as near having no enemies as any person that could be mentioned."

Sources: The Union-Banner; The Birmingham (Alabama) News; Alabama marriage license; Navy military register for 1918; grave markers. Navy photo. This profile was researched and written on behalf of the U.S.S. Arizona Mall Memorial at the University of Arizona.
He was lost aboard the USS Arizona, no remains ever recovered; this marker is a cenotaph placed in the family lot next to his wife. They had no children, as best as can be determined.

Enlisted in the Navy. Entered via Regular Military. Served during World War II. Johnson had the rank of Commander.

Occupation or specialty was Doctor. Service number was 14934. Served with USS Arizona.

Two cenotaph memorials exist in Hawaii:

Samuel E. Johnson at the USS Arizona memorial

Samuel E. Johnson at the Honolulu Memorial

Commander Samuel Earle Johnson was the senior medical officer on the U.S.S. Arizona when he was killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941.

Dr. Johnson joined the Navy in May 1917, shortly after the United States entered World War I.

He was born June 11, 1889, in Clanton, a town of about 1,400 in central Alabama. His father, Joseph Johnson, also a doctor, was in poor health when he died of an accidental overdose of morphine when Samuel was 10. His mother, Sarah Strock Johnson, a homemaker, died after a lingering illness when Samuel was 17.

The son studied medicine at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee from 1907 to 1911 -- the same school where his brother Arthur, older by a year, earned his medical degree in 1909. Both sons returned to Clanton to practice.

Samuel Johnson married a local woman, Matalie Harper, in 1911.

Death visited the family again when Arthur died in 1935. He had served in the Army during World War I. A third brother, Napoleon, also a doctor and also a veteran of the Army medical corps, died in 1940 at the age of 57.

After Samuel's death at Pearl Harbor, the Clanton newspaper, The Union-Banner, said, "It is customary to speak kindly of people after they have passed, but it is common knowledge by hundreds of people of Clanton and Chilton county that Dr. Sam Johnson was one of the finest men known. … He must have come as near having no enemies as any person that could be mentioned."

Sources: The Union-Banner; The Birmingham (Alabama) News; Alabama marriage license; Navy military register for 1918; grave markers. Navy photo. This profile was researched and written on behalf of the U.S.S. Arizona Mall Memorial at the University of Arizona.


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