US Navy WORLD WAR II
Lieutenant Junior Grade, Lawrence M. Amburgey MIA/KIA
Hometown: Athens Tennessee
Ship: USS Bonefish (SS-223)
Service # 0-282821
Awards: Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Navy Unit Commendation, American Campaign Medal, Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal, Combat Patrol Insignia
Captain: Commander Lawrence Lott Edge MIA/KIA
Mission: Daylight submerged patrol
Mission Date: 18-Jun-45
Location: Toyama Bay, Japan
Cause: Sunk by depth charge attack
Crew: of 85 MIA/KIA
The crew of Bonefish were lost approximately on June 18 1945 and were officially declared KIA Jul 15 & 16 1946
In a rendezvous June 18 she requested and received permission to conduct a daylight submerged patrol of Toyama Wan, a bay farther up the Honshū coast. The attack group was to depart the Sea of Japan via La Perouse Strait on the night of 24 June. Bonefish did not make the scheduled pre-transit rendezvous. Still, Tunny waited in vain off Hokkaidō for three days. On 30 July, Bonefish was presumed lost.
Japanese records reveal that the 5,488 ton cargo ship Konzan Maru was torpedoed and sunk in Toyama Wan on 19 June and that an ensuing severe counterattack by Japanese escorts, the Okinawa, CD-63, CD-75, CD-158 and CD-207, brought debris and a major oil slick to the water's surface. There can be little doubt that Bonefish was sunk in this action.
USS Bonefish Crew
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US Navy WORLD WAR II
Lieutenant Junior Grade, Lawrence M. Amburgey MIA/KIA
Hometown: Athens Tennessee
Ship: USS Bonefish (SS-223)
Service # 0-282821
Awards: Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Navy Unit Commendation, American Campaign Medal, Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal, Combat Patrol Insignia
Captain: Commander Lawrence Lott Edge MIA/KIA
Mission: Daylight submerged patrol
Mission Date: 18-Jun-45
Location: Toyama Bay, Japan
Cause: Sunk by depth charge attack
Crew: of 85 MIA/KIA
The crew of Bonefish were lost approximately on June 18 1945 and were officially declared KIA Jul 15 & 16 1946
In a rendezvous June 18 she requested and received permission to conduct a daylight submerged patrol of Toyama Wan, a bay farther up the Honshū coast. The attack group was to depart the Sea of Japan via La Perouse Strait on the night of 24 June. Bonefish did not make the scheduled pre-transit rendezvous. Still, Tunny waited in vain off Hokkaidō for three days. On 30 July, Bonefish was presumed lost.
Japanese records reveal that the 5,488 ton cargo ship Konzan Maru was torpedoed and sunk in Toyama Wan on 19 June and that an ensuing severe counterattack by Japanese escorts, the Okinawa, CD-63, CD-75, CD-158 and CD-207, brought debris and a major oil slick to the water's surface. There can be little doubt that Bonefish was sunk in this action.
USS Bonefish Crew
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Gravesite Details
Entered the service from Tennessee.
Flowers
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Records on Ancestry
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LtJg Lawrence Maxon Amburgey
U.S., Newspapers.com™ Marriage Index, 1800s-2020
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LtJg Lawrence Maxon Amburgey
Florida, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1823-1982
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LtJg Lawrence Maxon Amburgey
U.S., Select Military Registers, 1862-1985
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LtJg Lawrence Maxon Amburgey
Florida, U.S., Marriage Indexes, 1822-1875 and 1927-2001
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LtJg Lawrence Maxon Amburgey
Tennessee, U.S., Newspapers.com™ Stories and Events Index
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