From Army.mil:
https://www.army.mil/article/34090/chaplain_corps_history_the_four_chaplains
The Four Chaplains
76 Years ago today (February 3,
1943) the U.S. Army Transport Dorchester was one of three ships in a convoy,
moving across the Atlantic from Newfoundland to an American base in Greenland.
A converted luxury liner, the Dorchester was crowded to capacity, carrying 902
servicemen, merchant seamen and civilian workers.
It was only 150 miles from its
destination when shortly after midnight, an officer aboard the German submarine
U223 spotted it. After identifying and targeting the ship, he gave orders to
fire. The hit was decisive, striking the ship, far below the water line. The
initial blast killed scores of men and seriously wounded many more. Others, stunned by the explosion were groping
in the darkness. Panic and chaos quickly set in! Men were screaming, others
crying or franticly trying to get lifeboats off the ship.
Through the pandemonium, four men
spread out among the Soldiers, calming the frightened, tending the wounded and
guiding the disoriented toward safety. They were four Army chaplains, Lt.
George Fox (42 years old), a Methodist; Lt. Alexander Goode (31 years old), a Jewish Rabbi; Lt. John
Washington (34 years old), a Roman Catholic Priest; and Lt. Clark Poling (32 years old), a Dutch Reformed
minister.
Quickly and quietly the four
chaplains worked to bring calm to the men. As soldiers began to find their way
to the deck of the ship, many were still in their underwear, where they were
confronted by the cold winds blowing down from the arctic.
Petty Officer John J. Mahoney,
reeling from the cold, headed back towards his cabin. "Where are you
going'" a voice of calm in the sea of distressed asked' "To get my
gloves," Mahoney replied. "Here, take these," said Rabbi Goode
as he handed a pair of gloves to the young officer. "I can't take those
gloves," Mahoney replied. "Never mind," the Rabbi responded.
"I have two pairs." It was only long after that Mahoney realized that
the chaplain never intended to leave the ship.
Once topside, the chaplains
opened a storage locker and began distributing life jackets. It was then that
Engineer Grady Clark witnessed an astonishing sight. When there were no more
lifejackets in the storage room, the chaplains simultaneously removed theirs
and gave them to four frightened young men. When giving their life jackets,
Rabbi Goode did not call out for a Jew; Father Washington did not call out for
a Catholic; nor did Fox or Poling call out for a Protestant. They simply gave
their life jackets to the next man in line. One survivor would later call it
"It was the finest thing I have seen or hope to see this side of
heaven."
As the ship went down, survivors
in nearby rafts could see the four chaplains -- arms linked and braced against
the slanting deck. Their voices could also be heard offering prayers and
singing hymns.
Of the 902 men aboard the
U.S.A.T. Dorchester, only 230 survived. Before boarding the Dorchester back in
January, Chaplain Poling had asked his father to pray for him, "Not for my
safe return, that wouldn't be fair. Just pray that I shall do my duty...never
be a coward...and have the strength, courage and understanding of men. Just
pray that I shall be adequate."
Although the Distinguished
Service Cross and Purple Heart were later awarded posthumously Congress wished
to confer the Medal of Honor but was blocked by the stringent requirements
which required heroism performed under fire. So a posthumous Special Medal for
Heroism, The Four Chaplains' Medal, was authorized by Congress and awarded by
the President on January 18, 1961.
It was never given before and
will never be given again.
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