A snow encrusted USS Walter S. Brown sails the north Atlantic Ocean. “At a reunion,” according to Paul, “a shipmate asked how I coped with the heat of the engine room. I retorted, “How did you cope with the post on gun in all sorts of weather, especially the cold?’ ‘What cold,’ he asked, having forgotten the north Atlantic winters. It took this and another picture to convince him!”
Because they were stationed on ships far away from support, World War II sailors were particularly vulnerable to the weather resulting from the changing seasons. During an oral history interview, David M. Graybeal, who served on board the Destroyer Escort USS Snowden, remembered the instability brought on by the north Atlantic:
…those destroyer escorts in the north Atlantic were heavy sea rollers like everything and so we were always dealing with some sea sickness and about equally bad was getting bruised. Sometimes we rolled more than 45 degrees from vertical, which would mean that the bulkhead was more level than the deck and we had a passage way. I’ve seen men’s feet patterns on the balk head where they would put their foot up there to keep from falling over. You’d be walking along and …all of a sudden the ship would throw you into one of those iron stations or something. I was always bruised in some way or another by being thrown around and sometimes it would scare you to death too. You’d think “boy this things going to roll all the way over and it would come back but after a while after a year or two I got to the place where I thought it’s not going to roll over so I just got a kick out of when it would keel over like that.1
Despite the hazards of sea, Paul believes that, “basically, compared to friends of mine who served as combat infantry, man, I had a walk in the park. But we…survived a really bad storm, for Pete’s sake. The Atlantic Hurricane of 1944.” Five vessels and 344 lives were lost in the storm.
1David M. Graybeal Interview, Conducted November 18, 2002 For the Naval History Foundation in collection Destroyer Escort Sailors Association Oral History Project at Monmouth University. Guggenheim Memorial Library, Archives and Special Collections. http://asp6new.alexanderstreet.com/firp/firp.result.documents.aspx?collectioncode=OHC0002907& sortorder=Narrator. Retrieved November 20, 2009.
In addition to accepting the contingencies of the weather, space was at a premium on a destroyer escort. The sailors on board needed to share small amounts of space. Paul offers this picture as evidence of “the congested nature of crews’ quarters with all sorts of pipes, cables and ducts passing through.”
Martin Davis also served on a destroyer escort during the war. Like Paul Slater, Martin remembers vividly just how tight these spaces were:
A typical day was such that you were crowded with 218 people aboard a ship that was fourteen hundred tons, three hundred and six feet long, and thirty-six feet wide. And you were crowded, the bunks were three high with three lockers underneath, and the ship was rolling, jumping all over the place…. when I first got aboard the ship they didn’t have bunks for all of us, and so the three of us that came out of Boot Camp slept on hammocks, so I slept in a hammock for at least a month and a half until I got my own place. It was horrible because I was bouncing up against the overhead, I had to carry a pillow on my face, and I was short,…so I couldn’t even put my own hammock up, I had to have this big Texan, about six feet six, put me there. It got to the point whereby I walked around with what looked like a dance card, and I asked the fellows, when are they going on duty. And I’d sign their names up because I’d use their bunks while they were on duty and they’d come back after four hours, and I’d move over to someone else. So I did that until I finally ended up with my location. Life aboard the ship was such that you were meeting people now not only from all over the country, but you were seeing them in a very, very different way…2
2Martin Davis Interview, Conducted November 14, 2002 For the Naval History Foundation in collection Destroyer Escort Sailors Association Oral History Project at Monmouth University. Guggenheim Memorial Library, Archives and Special Collections. http://asp6new.alexanderstreet.com/firp/firp.result.documents.aspx?collectioncode=OHC0002907&sortorder=Narrator. Retrieved November 20, 2009.
“I was catching a few Zs outside the machine shop when someone took this picture,” according to Paul. When asked what kind of information sailors received about the progress of the war, Paul responded that “while we were at sea, you didn’t get too much.” The one piece of information that apparently did reach everyone right away on board a Destroyer Escort was the news that President Roosevelt had died. David Graybeal who was on board the USS Snowden recalls, “when the word came we were at sea, actually we were on our way to Hawaii and the word came that he had died and it was like a member of my family had died. Like my father had died and we just thought ‘what’s going to happen now?’ Then the word came that some guy named Truman was going to run the country. I said ‘What does he know?’ (Laughs) Everybody was down on Truman.”3
John Lampe who was a Radio Man Third Class remembers, “When he died I was in Halifax, Nova Scotia. We had gone to a restaurant in Halifax and when he died there was an announcement over the speaker. It affected us a little bit, but we were young. It affected the Canadians, the older Canadians. They were the ones who kept staring at us; they were the ones who were tearing up. Roosevelt was the only president I knew. Roosevelt took office in 1932 and I was born in 1926. I was six when he took office and I remember my father was a big Roosevelt man because Roosevelt was king around our house. He ran in 1936 and then he ran in 1940, and then he died April 13, 1945.”4 Third Class Petty Officer Alfred Marker remembers, “It was a very solemn time for everybody aboard ship because the leader who was our president had died. We knew nothing about Mr. Truman. But when he died, you’d swear you lost a member of your family. Nobody talked; they just went about doing what they had to do. It was a very sad time because it was something we didn’t expect.”5
3David M. Graybeal Interview, Conducted November 18, 2002 For the Naval History Foundation in collection Destroyer Escort Sailors Association Oral History Project at Monmouth University. Guggenheim Memorial Library, Archives and Special Collections. Retrieved November 20, 2009.
4John Lampe Interview, Conducted November 16, 2002 For the Naval History Foundation in collection Destroyer Escort Sailors Association Oral History Project at Monmouth University. Guggenheim Memorial Library, Archives and Special Collections.http://asp6new.alexanderstreet.com/firp/firp.result.documents.aspx?collectioncode=OHC0002907&sortorder=Narrator. Retrieved November 20, 2009.
5Alfred Marker Interview, Conducted December 2, 2002 For the Naval History Foundation in collection Destroyer Escort Sailors Association Oral History Project at Monmouth University. Guggenheim Memorial Library, Archives and Special Collections. http://asp6new.alexanderstreet.com/firp/firp.result.documents.aspx?collectioncode=OHC0002907&sortorder=Narrator. Retrieved November 20, 2009.