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LtCdr Hubert Earl Carter
Monument

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LtCdr Hubert Earl Carter Veteran

Birth
Florida, USA
Death
26 Jul 1944 (aged 28)
At Sea
Monument
Manila, Capital District, National Capital Region, Philippines Add to Map
Plot
Tablets of the Missing - United States Navy--Missing In Action
Memorial ID
View Source
Comdr Hubert Earl Carter USN missing in action 18 months in the Pacific has been declared dead his wife learned Wednesday. He was serving on the USS Roba1o when the submarine failed to return from patrol operations. Son of Mr and Mrs Earl P Carter 2209 S W 10th st. He was a native Floridian and a graduate of Miami Senior High school and the U S Naval Academy at Annapolis Md. He also graduated from the submarine school at New London Conn and served as executive officer on the submarine R-2 based in Key West before his assignment as engineering officer on the Rabalo. He also leaves his three-vear-old son Bill and a brother William P Carter.

The Miami Herald, Miami, Florida, Thursday, January 31, 1946, Page 21.
_____
Miss Bessie Cochran Powell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Iredell Powell of Miami, Fla. and Charlotte, whose engagement to Ensign Hubert Earl Carter, United States Navy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl P. Carter of Jacksonville, Fla. is announced by her parents.

The News and Observer Raleigh, North Carolina, Sunday Nov 23, 1941, Page 22.
_____
Hubert E Carter married Bessie C. Powell on Dec 23, 1941 in Florida.

Hubert E Carter in the Florida, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1823-1982
_____
Herbert Earl Carter
Rank/Rate Lieutenant Commander
Service Number 0-082507
Birth Date November 27, 1915
From Miami, Florida
Decorations Purple Heart
Submarine USS Robalo (SS-273)
Loss Date July 26, 1944
Location Probably off the east coast of Balabac Island, PI
Circumstances Sunk by a mine
_____
ROBALO (SS-273)

Compiled by Paul W. Wittmer and Charles R. Hinman, originally from:

U.S. Submarine Losses World War II, NAVPERS 15,784, 1949 ISSUE

ROBALO under Cdr. M. M. Kimmel, departed Fremantle on 22 June 1944 to conduct her third war patrol in the South China Sea in the vicinity of the Natuna Islands. After traversing Makassar and Balabac Straits, she was to arrive on station about 6 July, and stay there until dark on 2 August 1944.
On 2 July a contact report stated ROBALO had sighted a FUSO class battleship with air cover and two destroyers for escort in 3° 29'N, 119° 26'E, just east of Borneo. No other messages were received from ROBALO and when she did not return from patrol, she was reported as presumed lost.
The following information was received via the Philippine guerrillas and a U. S. Navy enlisted man who was a prisoner of war at Puerto Princesa Prison Camp, Palawan, P.I. On 2 August 1944, a note dropped from the window of the prison cell in which survivors from ROBALO were held was picked up by an American soldier who was in a work detail and given to H. D. Hough, Y2c, USN, another prisoner. On 4 August 1944, Hough contacted Mrs. Trinidad Mendosa, wife of guerrilla leader Dr. Mendosa, who furnished further information on the survivors. From these sources, he put together the following facts.
ROBALO was sunk 26 July 1944, two miles off the western coast of Palawan Island as a result of an explosion of her after battery. Four men swam ashore, an officer and three enlisted men: Samuel L. Tucker, Ens.; Floyd G. Laughlin, QM1c; Wallace K. Martin, SM3c, and Mason C. Poston, EM2c. They made their way through the jungles to a small barrio northwest of the Puerto Princesa camp. They were captured there by Japanese Military Police, and confined in the jail. They were held for guerrilla activities rather than as prisoners of war, it is said. On 15 August 1944, they were evacuated by a Japanese destroyer, and no other information is known regarding their destination or whereabouts. It is possible that they were executed by the Japanese or that the destroyer in which they were embarked was sunk. At any rate, they were never recovered, and their note stated that there were no other survivors.
It is doubted that a battery explosion could be sufficiently violent to cause the sinking of the ship and it is expected that the loss of ROBALO was caused by striking an enemy mine.

Note: Information compiled from many sources indicates that Robalo was probably lost off the east coast of Balabac Island, as shown below.

In her first patrol, in the area west of the Philippines, ROBALO damaged a large enemy freighter. Her second patrol was in the South China Sea near Indo-China; here she sank a 7500-ton tanker.
______
Comdr Hubert Earl Carter USN missing in action 18 months in the Pacific has been declared dead his wife learned Wednesday. He was serving on the USS Roba1o when the submarine failed to return from patrol operations. Son of Mr and Mrs Earl P Carter 2209 S W 10th st. He was a native Floridian and a graduate of Miami Senior High school and the U S Naval Academy at Annapolis Md. He also graduated from the submarine school at New London Conn and served as executive officer on the submarine R-2 based in Key West before his assignment as engineering officer on the Rabalo. He also leaves his three-vear-old son Bill and a brother William P Carter.

The Miami Herald, Miami, Florida, Thursday, January 31, 1946, Page 21.
_____
Miss Bessie Cochran Powell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Iredell Powell of Miami, Fla. and Charlotte, whose engagement to Ensign Hubert Earl Carter, United States Navy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl P. Carter of Jacksonville, Fla. is announced by her parents.

The News and Observer Raleigh, North Carolina, Sunday Nov 23, 1941, Page 22.
_____
Hubert E Carter married Bessie C. Powell on Dec 23, 1941 in Florida.

Hubert E Carter in the Florida, U.S., County Marriage Records, 1823-1982
_____
Herbert Earl Carter
Rank/Rate Lieutenant Commander
Service Number 0-082507
Birth Date November 27, 1915
From Miami, Florida
Decorations Purple Heart
Submarine USS Robalo (SS-273)
Loss Date July 26, 1944
Location Probably off the east coast of Balabac Island, PI
Circumstances Sunk by a mine
_____
ROBALO (SS-273)

Compiled by Paul W. Wittmer and Charles R. Hinman, originally from:

U.S. Submarine Losses World War II, NAVPERS 15,784, 1949 ISSUE

ROBALO under Cdr. M. M. Kimmel, departed Fremantle on 22 June 1944 to conduct her third war patrol in the South China Sea in the vicinity of the Natuna Islands. After traversing Makassar and Balabac Straits, she was to arrive on station about 6 July, and stay there until dark on 2 August 1944.
On 2 July a contact report stated ROBALO had sighted a FUSO class battleship with air cover and two destroyers for escort in 3° 29'N, 119° 26'E, just east of Borneo. No other messages were received from ROBALO and when she did not return from patrol, she was reported as presumed lost.
The following information was received via the Philippine guerrillas and a U. S. Navy enlisted man who was a prisoner of war at Puerto Princesa Prison Camp, Palawan, P.I. On 2 August 1944, a note dropped from the window of the prison cell in which survivors from ROBALO were held was picked up by an American soldier who was in a work detail and given to H. D. Hough, Y2c, USN, another prisoner. On 4 August 1944, Hough contacted Mrs. Trinidad Mendosa, wife of guerrilla leader Dr. Mendosa, who furnished further information on the survivors. From these sources, he put together the following facts.
ROBALO was sunk 26 July 1944, two miles off the western coast of Palawan Island as a result of an explosion of her after battery. Four men swam ashore, an officer and three enlisted men: Samuel L. Tucker, Ens.; Floyd G. Laughlin, QM1c; Wallace K. Martin, SM3c, and Mason C. Poston, EM2c. They made their way through the jungles to a small barrio northwest of the Puerto Princesa camp. They were captured there by Japanese Military Police, and confined in the jail. They were held for guerrilla activities rather than as prisoners of war, it is said. On 15 August 1944, they were evacuated by a Japanese destroyer, and no other information is known regarding their destination or whereabouts. It is possible that they were executed by the Japanese or that the destroyer in which they were embarked was sunk. At any rate, they were never recovered, and their note stated that there were no other survivors.
It is doubted that a battery explosion could be sufficiently violent to cause the sinking of the ship and it is expected that the loss of ROBALO was caused by striking an enemy mine.

Note: Information compiled from many sources indicates that Robalo was probably lost off the east coast of Balabac Island, as shown below.

In her first patrol, in the area west of the Philippines, ROBALO damaged a large enemy freighter. Her second patrol was in the South China Sea near Indo-China; here she sank a 7500-ton tanker.
______

Gravesite Details

Entered the service from Florida.



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  • Maintained by: M Carter
  • 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/56775042/hubert_earl-carter: accessed ), memorial page for LtCdr Hubert Earl Carter (27 Nov 1915–26 Jul 1944), Find a Grave Memorial ID 56775042, citing Manila American Cemetery and Memorial, Manila, Capital District, National Capital Region, Philippines; Maintained by M Carter (contributor 47545935).