Jacob John Ploian
PFC Jacob J. Ploian served with Mike Company, Third Battalion, 21st Marines
He was killed in action on 17 November 1943, when the transport USS McKean (APD-5) was sunk off the coast of Bougainville.
Branch
Marine Corps Reserve
Service Number 429820
Current Status
Remains Lost At Sea
Pursuit Category
No pursuit; considered permanently non-recoverable
Capsule History
Pre-War Life
Birth
21 December 1923
at Bronx, NY
Parents
Emanuel & Rose Ploian
Education
(details unknown)
Occupation / Employer
Unemployed
Nickname
“Jack” Ploian
Service Life
Entered Service
24 July 1942
at New York, NY
Home Of Record
429 East 166th Street
New York, NY
Next Of Kin
Parents, Emanuel & Rose Ploian
Military Specialty
—
Primary Unit
21st Marines (M/3)
Campaigns Served
Bougainville
Individual Decorations
Purple Heart
Additional Service Details
—
Loss And Burial
Circumstances Of Loss
PFC Jack Ploian and his unit were embarked on the USS McKean (APD-5), an old destroyer converted to a high-speed troop transport, en route from their camp at Guadalcanal to the fighting front at Bougainville.
At 0350 hours on 17 November 1943, just a few miles from Bougainville, a lone Japanese “Val” bomber wove through the convoy and launched a torpedo. McKean‘s batteries opened fire, splashing the attacker while the ship tried to maneuver out of danger. The torpedo hit the McKean’s starboard side, detonating a magazine and rupturing oil storage tanks. In less than a minute, “the entire ship aft of #1 stack was a complete mass of flames…. It was impossible to go aft of #1 stack, or for anyone aft of the stack to get forward.”
Troops in the forward part of the ship began leaping overboard. “Every person that jumped early was dragged into the burning oil slick by the motion of the ship,” noted the ship’s action report. “The greater part of the troops that were lost were burned to death in the oil slick.” Lieutenant Commander Ralph Ramey later commented that “Everybody forward of No. 1 stack was saved except 30 or 40 Marines who went over the side too soon and were washed back into the flaming oil which covered the sea.”
The McKean sank at 0418. Nearby destroyers plucked soaked, shocked survivors from the sea. Early reports showed that 64 members of the crew were dead or missing, along with 56 of the embarked Marines. Once all the wounded were tallied, the number of missing Marines stood at 39.
Ploian’s Casualty Card states “It is believed that this man was so badly burned in the resulting oil fire that the body could not be recovered.”
Burial Information or Disposition
Remains lost at sea.
Memorials
Next Of Kin Address
Address of parents, Emanuel & Rose Ploian.
Location Of Loss
Last reported position of the USS McKean.