Burns, Roy Wallace, FN

Fallen
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Last Rank
Fireman
Last Primary Rate
FN-Fireman
Last Rate Group
Fireman
Primary Unit
1918-1918, FN, USCGC Tampa
Service Years
1918 - 1918

 Last Photo   Personal Details 



Home State
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
Year of Birth
1895
 
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Casualty Info
Home Town
Brockton, Massachusetts
Last Address
USS Tampa

Casualty Date
Sep 26, 1918
 
Cause
KIA-Killed in Action
Reason
Other Explosive Device
Location
North Atlantic Ocean
Conflict
World War I
Location of Interment
Buried at Sea, North Atlantic Ocean
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Body lost at sea.

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World War I Fallen
  1918, World War I Fallen


  1918-1918, FN, USCGC Tampa

From Month/Year
- / 1918
To Month/Year
- / 1918
Unit
USCGC Tampa Unit Page
Rank
Fireman
Rate
FN-Fireman
Base, Station or City
Not Specified
State/Country
North Atlantic Ocean
 
 
 Patch
 USCGC Tampa Details

USCGC Tampa

File:USCGC Tampa (ex Miami).jpg

US Revenue Cutter Service:  Miami, a cutter built for the Revenue Cutter Service by the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation, was authorized 21 April 1910; launched on 10 February 1912; and placed in commission by the Revenue Cutter Service at its depot at Arundel Cove, Maryland on 19 August 1912.

During the following five years, Miami performed duties typical for cutters. She served several times on the winter ice patrol, operating out of New York and Halifax, Nova Scotia, to locate icebergs which might be hazardous to navigation. Her first patrol began on 13 May 1913 out of Halifax, and her last ended on 11 June 1915 when she was relieved by cutter Seneca.

On other occasions, she operated out of various stations along the eastern seaboard enforcing navigation and fishing laws. Her most frequent bases of operation during that period were Key West and Tampa, Florida; Arundel Cove, Maryland; and New York City.

US Coast Guard:  On 28 January 1915, the Revenue Cutter Service and the Lifesaving Service were merged and named the U. S. Coast Guard. A year later, on 1 February 1916, Miami was renamed Tampa.

 US Navy in World War I:  On 6 April 1917, when the United States entered World War I, Tampa was transferred to Navy jurisdiction for the duration of hostilities. During the next four months, she received heavier armament by trading her three six-pounders for two three-inch (76 mm) and two four-inch (102 mm) guns, a pair of machine guns and depth charge throwers and racks. After preparations at the Boston Navy Yard, Tampa moved to the New York Navy Yard on 16 September and reported for duty to the commanding officer of Paducah. Ordered to duty overseas, the warship departed New York on 29 September in company with Paducah, Sterling, Hubbard, and five French-manned, American-made submarine chasers in tow. After stops at Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Ponta Delgada in the Azores, Tampa and her sailing mates reached Gibraltar on 27 October 1917.

 Her war service lasted just eleven months. During that time, she was assigned ocean escort duty protecting convoys from German submarines on the route between Gibraltar and the southern coast of England. On the average, she spent more than half of her time at sea and steamed more than 3,500 nautical miles (6,500 km) per month. Between 27 October 1917 and 31 July 1918, she escorted eighteen convoys between Gibraltar and Great Britain, losing only two ships out of all those escorted. Though she brought her 4-inch (100 mm) guns into action several times against suspected U-boat positions, the only verifiable run-in with a German undersea raider proved fatal.

 During the late afternoon of 26 September 1918, Tampa parted company with convoy HG-107, which she had just escorted into the Irish Sea from Gibraltar. Ordered to put into Milford Haven, Wales, she proceeded independently toward her destination. At 7:30 that evening, as she transited the Bristol Channel, the warship was spotted by UB-91. According to the submarine war diary entry, the U-boat dived and maneuvered into an attack position, firing one torpedo out of the stern tube at 8:15 from a range of about 550 meters. Minutes later, the torpedo hit Tampa and exploded portside amidships, throwing up a huge, luminous column of water. The water was shocked by a second detonation two minutes later, most likely caused by Tampa's depth charges reaching pressure fuse depth, as the cutter sank with all hands, 115 officers and men as well as 16 passengers at roughly 50  40' N and 6  19' W.

Alerted by the convoy flagship, whose radio operator reported having felt the shock of an underwater explosion at about 2045, search and rescue efforts over the succeeding three days turned up only some wreckage, clearly identified as coming from Tampa, and a single unidentified body. Three bodies were later recovered, two from a beach near Lamphey, Wales, and the other at sea by a British patrol boat.

 Tampa was struck from the Navy list as of the date of her sinking.

 Legacy:  The loss of the Tampa is commemorated by the United States Coast Guard Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery and in the chapel at the Brookwood American Cemetery and Memorial in Surrey, England.  In 1999, the crewmen of the Tampa were posthumously presented with the Purple Heart.


Type
Surface Vessels
 
Parent Unit
CG Vessels
Strength
Ice Breaker
Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: May 23, 2013
   
   
Yearbook
 
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No Available Photos
105 Members Also There at Same Time
USCGC Tampa

Agee, Robert Leake, FN, (1918-1918) FN FN Fireman
Bevins, Arthur Lee, FN, (1918-1918) FN FN Fireman
Garrett, Frank Charles, OS, (1917-1918) FN FN Fireman
Scott, Francis Richard, FN FN FN Fireman
Talley, John Edgar, FN FN FN Fireman
Vallon, Julius Maxim, FN FN FN Fireman
Williams, William James, FN, (1918-1918) FN FN Fireman
Bozeman, William Richard, PO1, (1918-1918) MM MM Petty Officer First Class
Clements, William Benson, PO1 EM EM Petty Officer First Class
Cooke, Stanley Shields, CPO, (1901-1918) BM BM Petty Officer First Class
Cygan, Joseph, PO1 ME ME Petty Officer First Class
Daniels, Benjamin Nash, PO1 MM MM Petty Officer First Class
Deasy, Arthur Joseph, PO1 QM QM Petty Officer First Class
Galvin, Charles Emmitt, PO1, (1916-1918) GM GM Petty Officer First Class
Harris, Arthur Thomas, PO1 BM BM Petty Officer First Class
Johanson, Hans Ivar, PO1 MM MM Petty Officer First Class
Kelly (Kelleher), Edward William, PO1 MK MK Petty Officer First Class
Kosinski, John Cieslw, PO1 BM BM Petty Officer First Class
Larsen, Ludvig Andrew, PO1 ME ME Petty Officer First Class
Lawrence, Clement Miner, PO1 QM QM Petty Officer First Class
Mehalatos, Gerassemos, PO1 MM MM Petty Officer First Class
Smith, John, PO1, (1910-1918) BM BM Petty Officer First Class
Taylor, Frank Joseph, PO1 EM EM Petty Officer First Class
Wiley, Justin Plummer, PO1 QM QM Petty Officer First Class
Bell, Earle Clarke, PO2, (1918-1918) ME ME Petty Officer Second Class
Griffiths, George Henry, PO2 EM EM Petty Officer Second Class
Healy, John Francis, PO2 QM QM Petty Officer Second Class
Miller, John Fred, PO2 BM BM Petty Officer Second Class
Poulsen, Anders, PO2 ME ME Petty Officer Second Class
Quigley, Frank Hugh, PO2, (1917-1918) DC DC Petty Officer Second Class
Saldarini, Alexander Louis, PO2 QM QM Petty Officer Second Class
Vaughan, Louis Franklin, PO2 QM QM Petty Officer Second Class
Walpole, Norman, PO2 QM QM Petty Officer Second Class
Hahn, Albert Hans, PO3, (1917-1918) BM BM Petty Officer Third Class
Holstein, Hubert, PO3 EM EM Petty Officer Third Class
Newell, William Foster, PO3 EM EM Petty Officer Third Class
Shanahan, Edward Francis, PO3, (1917-1918) HS HS Petty Officer Third Class
Adams, James Jenkins, SN, (1918-1918) SN SN Seaman
Bouzekis, John, SN, (1918-1918) SN SN Seaman
Bozeman, Leonard Richardson, SN, (1918-1918) SN SN Seaman
Britton, John R., SN, (1916-1918) SN SN Seaman
Busho, Alfonso Joseph, SN, (1918-1918) SN SN Seaman
Campbell, Arthur Robert, SN, (1918-1918) SN SN Seaman
Carmichael, Herman A., OS, (1918-1918) SN SN Seaman
Connell, Walter Randolph, SN SN SN Seaman
Cordova, Richard Edward, SN SN SN Seaman
Creamer, Frank William, SN SN SN Seaman
Greenwald, Charles Edward, SN FS FS Seaman
Hansen, Hans, SN QM QM Seaman
Myers, Harold, SN SN SN Seaman
Nobles, Wesley James, OS, (1917-1918) SN SN Seaman
Norwood, Robert, S2c, (1917-1918) SN SN Seaman
Parkin, Charles Walter, SN SN SN Seaman
Poppell, Felix George, SN SN SN Seaman
Reynolds, William Henry, SN SN SN Seaman
Richards, John Riving, SN SN SN Seaman
Roberts, Perry, SN FS FS Seaman
Robertson, Robert Green, SN SN SN Seaman
Ross, Jimmie, OS, (1918-1918) SN SN Seaman

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