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Jack F. Lee

NAME
Jack Fredrick Lee
NICKNAME
SERVICE NUMBER
287653
UNIT
Marine Detachment
USS Houston
Field Music
HOME OF RECORD
4533 Avondale Road
Houston, TX
NEXT OF KIN
Parents, Joe & Mabel Lee
DATE OF BIRTH
February 6, 1922
at Dallas, TX
ENTERED SERVICE
July 9, 1940
at Dallas, TX
DATE OF LOSS
March 1, 1942
alt. February 28, 1942
REGION
Java Sea
CAMPAIGN / AREA
Sunda Strait
CASUALTY TYPE
Missing In Action
Declared Dead December 15, 1945
CIRCUMSTANCES OF LOSS
Field Music First Class Jack F. Lee served as a member of the Marine detachment aboard the cruiser USS Houston.

Lee would have the sad duty of playing the Houston’s swan song. On the night of 28 February 1942, with the cruiser on fire and sinking, Captain Albert H. Rooks summoned Lee to the bridge to sound the call to abandon ship – which he did without missing a note. Nobody ever saw Jack Lee alive again; the Houston sank beneath the waves just after midnight on 1 March 1942.

Lee’s body was never found, and he was officially declared dead on 15 December 1945.

INDIVIDUAL DECORATIONS
Purple Heart
LAST KNOWN RANK
Field Music First Class
STATUS OF REMAINS
Lost at sea
MEMORIALS
AS MANY LINKS AS NECESSARY

Biography:
Contact the webmaster for more information about this Marine.

When we went topside after the first order to abandon ship I was stunned…. From the looks of things on deck, it appeared every part of [the Houston] had taken a shell. When the second order to abandon ship came, the bugler sounded the call without any falter in note. He did not survive.
– James Gee, “Prisoner of the Samurai: Surviving the Sinking of the USS Houston and the Death Railway.”

 

He never missed one beat on that bugle. It would have been absolutely beautiful if it had been anywhere else but at that time.
– Lloyd Willey, USMC, quoted in James Hornfischer, “Ship Of Ghosts.”

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