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"The Subway Sailors Who Saved New York", 1944
16
The "Subway
Sailors"
Who Saved
New York
By NORTH CLAREY
Not even the citizens of Man-
hattan and Jersey City know how
close they came to disaster the
day a burning ammunition ship
almost blew up in their faces.
BATCH of those land-based Coast Guardsmen
A
sometimes jeeringly referred to as "subway
sailors" were dawdling in their Jersey City bar-
racks at 5:30 'clock on the afternoon of April 24, 1943.
They were waiting for supper and, afterward, the pleas-
ures of liberty. It was payday and the day before
Easter, and New York, in a holiday mood. was just
across the harbor.
These Coast Guardsmen were members of the muni-
tions detail, which meant that they fought the war by
supervising the loading of ammunition at New York
harbor. The ammunition went to battle, but these
Coast Guardsmen stayed home. Other Coast Guards-
men distinguished themselves landing marines and
soldiers under fire at Tulagi, Guadalcanal, Bougain-
ville, Africa, Sicily, Salerno. But the voyaging and
In saving this flaming tanker, graduates of the Navy Fire Fighters School
adventures of the munitions detail so far consisted
used the same technique that prevented a giant explosion on the El Estero.
mainly of riding the subways to visit girls in Brook-
lyn, Queens, the Bronx and the dark nooks in Central
Rear Admiral Parker decorates John Stanley and Arthur Pfister, lieutenant
Park suitable for pitching woo. That's why their tra-
commanders in Coast Guard, for bravery aboard blazing ammunition ship.
ditional sparring partners, longshoremen and ship
workers, dubbed them "subway sailors."
The term seemed particularly applicable on this pre-
Easter afternoon, as the boys prepared for romantic
forays. They had donned their pea jackets and care-
fully pressed dress blues. Some were rubbing shoes al-
ready gleaming like onyx and some were doing their
nails when the door was flung open and a voice yelled,
"Hey, ammo ship on fire! They want thirty volun-
teers!'
A burning ammunition ship is a Gargantuan bomb.
It is perhaps the most dangerous thing in the world.
These youngsters knew that. Yet, of the nearly sixty
slicked and dressed-up Guardsmen in the barracks, not
one hesitated. They dived for the door like kids re-
leased from school and headed for the circus. They
scrambled for places on one truck until they were
dripping from the fenders, clinging to the top of the
driver's cab, dangling over the tail gate. About twenty
others piled into a small pickup truck designed to hold
ten, and the two trucks went racing the eight miles
through Jersey City with horns blowing, the red USCG
lights blinking, fenders rubbing on tires, white sailor
caps blowing off and the boys whooping as if on a roller
coaster. They passed Jersey City fire engines as if they
were in low gear.
Startled traffic cops and auxiliary policemen at the
pier tried to flag them down, only to be forced to
jump for their lives. These subway sailors weren't go-
ing to lose their first chance for action. They thumbed
their noses and jeered raucously at white-faced carpen-
ters and longshoremen fleeing the scene; then, as the
100D,D. 251
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"The Subway Sailors Who Saved New York", 1944
Newspaper clipping, "The Subway Sailors Who Saved New York", Saturday Evening Post 13 May 1944, about John Stanley being decorated for bravery aboard blazing ammunition ship. (3 pages)
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