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Gerard Domnick Cucci

Private Gerard D. “Jerry” Cucci served the Marine detachment aboard the cruiser USS Vincennes (CA-44).
He was lost at sea in the battle of Savo Island, off Guadalcanal, on 9 August 1942.

Created by potrace 1.16, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2019

Branch

Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 319654

Created by potrace 1.16, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2019

Current Status

Lost At Sea

Pursuit Category

Based on circumstances of loss, this individual is considered permanently non-recoverable.

Capsule History

Pre-War Life

Birth

August 16, 1921
at Jersey City, NJ

Parents

Stefano “Stephen” Cucci (d. 1932)
Mary Anna (Vidluch) Cucci

Education

Dickinson High School

Occupation & Employer

Details unknown

Service Life

Entered Service

August 18, 1941
at New York, NY

Home Of Record

7 Whitman Avenue
Jersey City, NJ

Next Of Kin

Mother, Mrs. Anna Cucci

Military Specialty

Marine Detachment
Five-inch gunner

Primary Unit

USS Vincennes

Campaigns Served

Midway
Guadalcanal / Savo Island

Individual Decorations

Purple Heart

Additional Service Details

Loss And Burial

Circumstances Of Loss

Private Gerard Cucci was assigned to the Marine detachment aboard the cruiser USS Vincennes in the early months of 1942. As a crewman on a five-inch gun, “Jerry” participated in the Doolittle Raid, and saw action in the battle of Midway before sailing for the Solomon Islands in the summer of 1942.

At 0155 on 9 August 1942, bright searchlights stabbed out of the darkness and illuminated Vincennes. The cruiser let loose a salvo, but was almost immediately bracketed by Japanese shells. In just fifteen minutes, she suffered at least 85 hits from large and medium caliber shells, and at least one torpedo strike. Without power, aflame from stem to stern, Vincennes drifted to a stop and began to list.

Gunfire damage report for USS Vincennes, 1942.

According to PFC Donald Gilman, another Jersey City Marine, “Jerry was…. first at our gun station. As the others snapped into their positions, he was ready at his. ‘Let’s give it to those yellow devils,’ he shouted in the din….” Their port-side gun was directly under the glare of the searchlights, and was quickly put out of action by shellfire. Cucci was hit in the chest by shrapnel; Gilman, bleeding from his own wounds, dragged Cucci behind an ammunition hoist. Seaman Charles R. Coombs, also from Jersey City, saw Cucci lying motionless on the deck.

As the stricken cruiser slipped into the water, Corporal Theodore Kornowski felt his way along the deck towards the gun position. “The only light was that of the flaring Jap guns and the guns of the other American warships and the shooting beam of a huge American searchlight on the shore,” he said. He found Jerry Cucci on the deck, bleeding from the chest and legs. As seawater lapped over the deck, Kornowski put a tourniquet on Cucci’s leg, then lifted his friend over his shoulder. “Come on, Jerry. Let’s get the hell out of here.” It was too late; Cucci was already dead. Kornowski left the body on the deck and made his escape to safety.

Captain Frederick Riefkohl passed the word to abandon ship at 0230; ten minutes later, Vincennes slipped beneath the waves. Of nearly 900 crew, 332 men – among them Jerry Cucci – died in the battle for Savo Island.

Burial Information or Disposition

Remains lost at sea; ship considered to be final resting place.

Memorials

Manila American Cemetery and Memorial

The wreck of the Vincennes was discovered by RV Petrel in 2015.

Next Of Kin Address

Address of mother, Mrs. Anna Cucci.

Location Of Loss

The Vincennes sank in Iron Bottom Sound at approximately 0240 hours.

Related Profiles

USS Vincennes Marines lost at Savo Island
Officers Temporarily Attached for Flight Duty
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