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LCDR William Stanley Farrel
Cenotaph

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LCDR William Stanley Farrel Veteran

Birth
Emeryville, Alameda County, California, USA
Death
9 Apr 1945 (aged 27)
At Sea
Cenotaph
San Diego, San Diego County, California, USA Add to Map
Plot
SECTION MAA SITE 41
Memorial ID
View Source
US Navy WORLD WAR II
Lieutenant Commander, William S. Farrel MIA/KIA SS
Hometown: Chula Vista, California
Ship: USS Snook (SS-279)
Service # 0-100401
Awards: Silver Star, Purple Heart, Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal, Submarine Combat Patrol Insignia
Captain: Commander John Franklin Walling MIA/KIA

Mission: 9th War Patrol
Mission Date: 9-Apr-45
Location: Near 18° 40' N x 110° 40' E
Cause: Unknown
Crew: of 6 officers, 54 enlisted MIA/KIA

Final patrol
Snook was lost while conducting her ninth war patrol, in the South China Sea and Luzon Strait. On 8 April, she reported her position to submarine Tigrone (SS-419) and when she did not acknowledge messages sent from Tigrone the next day, it was presumed that she had headed toward Luzon Strait. On 12 April, she was ordered to take lifeguard station in the vicinity of Sakishima Gunto in support of British carrier air strikes. On 20 April, the commander of the British carrier task force reported that he had a plane down in Snook's assigned area, and that he could not contact the submarine by radio. Snook was ordered to search the area and to acknowledge the order. Snook was never heard from again and the circumstances of her loss were never determined. When she failed to make a transmission, submarine Bang (SS-385) was sent to make the search and rendezvous with Snook. Although Bang arrived and rescued the downed aviators, she saw no sign of the missing submarine; on 16 May, Snook was presumed lost due to unknown causes. It is believed that she was sunk by kaibokans Okinawa, CD-8, CD-32 and CD-52. It has also been suggested that Snook may have been lost in combat with one of five Japanese submarines were which also lost in April–May 1945.[6] One candidate is Japanese submarine I-56.
Japanese records of anti-submarine attacks do not account for her sinking and she had been fully informed of the location of minefields in the Sakeshima Gunto area. It is possible that she was the victim of a Japanese submarine. Five Japanese submarines were lost in waters of the Nansei Shoto during April and May of 1945; one of these may have sunk Snook before its own sinking by United States warship
Snook was credited with sinking 17 enemy vessels in her two and one-half years of active service. She earned seven battle stars for World War II service.

Lieutenant Commander Farrel appears Tablets of the Missing Manila American Cemetery Manila, Philippines he was lost Apr. 9th 1945 officially declared killed May 6th 1946. His memorial Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery San Diego California, is a cenotaph his body was never recovered.

Visit the virtual cemetery of USS Snook Crew " Click Here "
US Navy WORLD WAR II
Lieutenant Commander, William S. Farrel MIA/KIA SS
Hometown: Chula Vista, California
Ship: USS Snook (SS-279)
Service # 0-100401
Awards: Silver Star, Purple Heart, Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal, Submarine Combat Patrol Insignia
Captain: Commander John Franklin Walling MIA/KIA

Mission: 9th War Patrol
Mission Date: 9-Apr-45
Location: Near 18° 40' N x 110° 40' E
Cause: Unknown
Crew: of 6 officers, 54 enlisted MIA/KIA

Final patrol
Snook was lost while conducting her ninth war patrol, in the South China Sea and Luzon Strait. On 8 April, she reported her position to submarine Tigrone (SS-419) and when she did not acknowledge messages sent from Tigrone the next day, it was presumed that she had headed toward Luzon Strait. On 12 April, she was ordered to take lifeguard station in the vicinity of Sakishima Gunto in support of British carrier air strikes. On 20 April, the commander of the British carrier task force reported that he had a plane down in Snook's assigned area, and that he could not contact the submarine by radio. Snook was ordered to search the area and to acknowledge the order. Snook was never heard from again and the circumstances of her loss were never determined. When she failed to make a transmission, submarine Bang (SS-385) was sent to make the search and rendezvous with Snook. Although Bang arrived and rescued the downed aviators, she saw no sign of the missing submarine; on 16 May, Snook was presumed lost due to unknown causes. It is believed that she was sunk by kaibokans Okinawa, CD-8, CD-32 and CD-52. It has also been suggested that Snook may have been lost in combat with one of five Japanese submarines were which also lost in April–May 1945.[6] One candidate is Japanese submarine I-56.
Japanese records of anti-submarine attacks do not account for her sinking and she had been fully informed of the location of minefields in the Sakeshima Gunto area. It is possible that she was the victim of a Japanese submarine. Five Japanese submarines were lost in waters of the Nansei Shoto during April and May of 1945; one of these may have sunk Snook before its own sinking by United States warship
Snook was credited with sinking 17 enemy vessels in her two and one-half years of active service. She earned seven battle stars for World War II service.

Lieutenant Commander Farrel appears Tablets of the Missing Manila American Cemetery Manila, Philippines he was lost Apr. 9th 1945 officially declared killed May 6th 1946. His memorial Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery San Diego California, is a cenotaph his body was never recovered.

Visit the virtual cemetery of USS Snook Crew " Click Here "

Inscription

LCDR, US NAVY WORLD WAR II


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