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PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy

PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy is a non-fiction book by best-selling author William Doyle released by Harper-Collins in 2015 that describes the ramming and sinking of future President John F. Kennedy's Patrol Torpedo Boat 109 by the Japanese destroyer Amagiri off the coast of Kolombangara Island in the Solomon Island Chain on August 2, 1943. The book also chronicles the crew's difficult three mile swim to Plum Pudding Island and the subsequent week of living there and on adjacent Olasana Island until Patrol Torpedo Boat PT-157 rescued them on August 8. The novel also discusses the considerable impact the experience had in helping to launch Kennedy's political career, beginning with his election to the House of Representatives in 1946. JFK's aid David Powers has written, "without PT 109, there never would have been a President John F. Kennedy".[1]

PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy
First edition cover
AuthorWilliam Doyle
IllustratorPhotos courtesy of the US Navy, and the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
Cover artistJacket Design by Adam Johnson
CountryNew York, USA
LanguageEnglish
SubjectJohn Kennedy's shipwreck on PT-109 and its effect on his political career
GenreNonfiction
PublisherWilliam Morrow, imprint of Harper-Collins
Publication date
2015
Media typePrint (hardback)
Pages330 (With index)

Crew on PT-109's last mission

The following men were aboard on PT-109's last mission:

 
Top L to R, Ensign Al Webb, Leon Drawdy, Edger Mauer, Edmund Drewitch, John Maguire, Kennedy. Bottom L to R, Charles Harris, Maurice Kowal, Andrew Kirksey, Ensign Lenny Thom. (Webb, Drewitch, Drawdy, and Kowal not aboard during collision, Barney Ross not in photo), 1943
  • John F. Kennedy, Lieutenant, Junior Grade (LTJG), commanding officer (Boston, Massachusetts).
  • Leonard J. Thom, ensign (ENS), Ohio State football athlete, and excellent swimmer, executive officer (Sandusky, Ohio).
  • George H. R. "Barney" Ross, Ensign (ENS) On board as an observer after losing his own boat. Attempted to operate the 37 mm gun but suffered from night blindness. (Highland Park, Illinois).
  • Raymond Albert, Seaman 2/c, gunner. Killed in action 8 October 1943 (Akron, Ohio).[2][3]
  • Charles A. "Bucky" Harris, gunner's mate 3/c (GM3) (Watertown, Massachusetts).
  • William Johnston, Motor Machinist's Mate 2/c (MM2) (Dorchester, Massachusetts).
  • Andrew Jackson Kirksey, Torpedoman's Mate 2/c (TM2) Killed in collision. (Reynolds, Georgia).
  • John E. Maguire, Radioman 2/c (RM2) (Dobbs Ferry, New York).
  • Harold William Marney, Motor Machinist's Mate 2/c (MM2). Killed in collision, manning turret closest to impact point. (Springfield, Massachusetts)
  • Edman Edgar Mauer, Quartermaster, cook, 3/c (QM3) (St. Louis, Missouri).
  • Patrick H. "Pappy" McMahon, Motor Machinist's Mate 1/c (MM1) (Wyanet, Illinois). Only man in engine room during collision, was badly burned, but recovered from his wounds. Only member of the crew besides Kennedy mentioned by name in the popular 1960's PT-109 song.
  • Ray L. Starkey, Torpedoman's Mate 2/c (TM2) (Garden Grove, California).
  • Gerard E. Zinser, Motor Machinist's Mate 1/c (MM1) (Belleville, Illinois). Erroneously called "Gerald" in many publications, Zinser remained in the Navy for a career following the end of World War II, eventually retiring as a Chief Petty Officer. The last living survivor of PT-109, he died in Florida in 2001.[4]

Content

Shipwrecked August 2

Off the coast of the round volcanic island, Kolombangara in the Solomons in the early morning hours of August 2, 1943, the Japanese destroyer Amagiri cut through John F. Kennedy's Motor Torpedo Boat 109, creating a 100 foot high ball of flame, and instantly killing two deckhands, nineteen year old William Marney, and twenty-five-year-old father, Andrew Kirksey.[5]

Swims to Ferguson Passage, Olasana and Naru Islands

 
Plum Pudding, Olasana, and Naru Islands

After the collision, Kennedy and Ensign Thom gathered the crew by the sinking bow of PT-109 and later completed a 3.5 mile swim to Plum Pudding Island with Kennedy towing badly burned crewman Patrick McMahon. After resting, Kennedy swam 2 miles (3.2 km) on August 2, to Ferguson Passage to attempt to hail a passing American PT boat, though none appeared that night. On 4 August, he and Ensign Lenny Thom assisted his injured and hungry crew on a demanding swim 3.75 miles (6.04 km) south to Olasana Island which was visible to all from Plum Pudding Island. They swam against a strong current, and once again, Kennedy towed McMahon by his life vest. They were pleased to discover Olasana had ripe coconuts, though there was still no fresh water.[6]

On the following day, 5 August, Kennedy and George Ross swam for one hour to Naru Island, visible at an additional distance of about .5 miles (0.80 km) southeast from Olasana, in search of help and food and because it was closer to Ferguson Passage where Kennedy might see or swim to a passing PT boat on patrol. Kennedy and Ross discovered a small canoe, packages of crackers and candy, and a fifty-gallon drum of potable water left by the Japanese, and Kennedy paddled both back to Olasana in the acquired canoe to provide his crew. It was then that Kennedy first spoke to native Melanesian coastwatchers Biuku Gasa and Eroni Kumana on Olasana Island.

Fearing the castaways were Japanese, but finally realizing they were with Americans, the coastwatchers brought a few yams, vegetables, and cigarettes from their dugout canoe and vowed to help the starving crew.[7][8] But it would take two more days for a full rescue.[9][1]

Messages received by Coastwatchers Kevu and Evans

 
Kennedy at helm of PT-109

On 6 August, native coastwatchers Biaku Gasa and Eroni Kumana left Olasana and headed east, carrying a penciled note written by Ensign Lenny Thom describing the approximate location and number of the shipwrecked crew, and Kennedy's message written on a coconut with the same content, ten nautical miles (12 mi; 19 km) to Wana Wana Island, south of Kolombangara and 1/4 of the way to Kennedy's PT Naval base on Rendova Island. There they took little time to rest but linked up with Senior Scout Benjamin Kevu who they told they had found the crew of the 109. Ben Kevu sent another scout to inform Australian officer and Coastwatcher Reginald Evans, north on Kolombangara Island, of the discovery. Gasa and Kumana departed Wana Wana with scout John Kari in a better canoe given them by Kevu, carrying both Thom's and Kennedy's messages to a military outpost on Roviana Island, close to the PT Rendova base in a total of fifteen hours by paddling their canoe all night through 38 mi (61 km) of rough seas, and hostile waters patrolled by the Japanese. From the content of the messages, it is clear both Thom and Kennedy trusted the coastwatchers with their lives, as neither message contained the exact coordinates of their location, nor the name of Olasana Island. Traveling in an arranged boat, Gasa and Kumana were at last sent south to the PT base at Rendova from Roviana Island, a distance of only 3 miles (4.8 km) from the Rendova PT base, with Gasa still clutching the coconut.

Around 6 August, after speaking to Kevu about the eleven found on Olasana, Evans sent a canoe with fresh fish, yams, potatoes, corned beef hash, and rice to Kennedy and his crew with a message to return to him on Kolumbangara's Gomu Island in the canoe immediately. Kennedy was instructed to lie underneath palm fronds in the canoe so he would not be spotted by Japanese planes.[10] In total, Kennedy swam an impressive total distance of around 8 miles and paddled a canoe around 2, searching for food, or water for his crew, or hoping to hail a passing PT boat. It was not until the morning of 7 August, that Evans was able to radio Rendova to confirm the news that Kennedy and his crew had been discovered.[11]

Rescue

Finally on August 8, Commander Thomas Warfield at the PT Base on Rendova Island sent Bud Liebenow's PT-157 to rescue the stranded crew of the PT-109 from Olasana Island, and return them to the PT Base. The rescue party included the full crew of the PT-157 including her skipper Bud Libenow, two additional PT officers, three coastwatchers, including natives Eroni and Gasa, two Pharmacist's mates to provide medical care, and two reporters.[12]

Critical reviews

The online website Bookreporter gives an excellent rating to the book and considers it "a thrilling and definitive account of the sinking of PT 109 and its shipwrecked crew's heroics". The review attributes the book's value and authenticity to best selling author William Doyle's "original interviews with the last living links to the events, previously untapped Japanese wartime archives, and a wealth of archival documents from the Kennedy Library, including a lost first-hand account by JFK himself".[13] The novel's real strength is its exceptional readability, which is enhanced and never hampered by its level of detail. Previous authors attempting to portray the PT-109 adventure lacked a comparable level of detail, and historical accuracy, and were unable to plumb the depth of emotions of the central characters as accurately as Doyle.

Incorporating an interview with Doyle, Randy Dotinga's review in the Christian Science Monitor described the importance the PT-109 saga had on Kennedy's future career. Dotinga noted that "The heroic saga of PT 109 – which was immortalized in a classic 1944 New Yorker article by John Hersey... relentlessly distributed by the Kennedy campaigns – perfectly insulated Kennedy from charges of being an undistinguished playboy politician by transfiguring him into a mythic action-war-hero." Dotinga also described the important role the PT-109 story played in Kennedy's Presidential primary victories further noting that "in the May 1960 Democratic presidential primary in West Virginia when it looked like Hubert Humphrey might force JFK out of the race, the Kennedy campaign "Swift Boated" Humphrey by falsely implying he was a draft dodger, using the PT 109 story as the coup de grace that forced Humphrey to quit the race in disgust and despair. That cleared the way for Kennedy to seize the Democratic nomination."[14]

James Endrst of the USA Today Journal News, noted that JFK's father was largely responsible for launching JFK into political prominence using the PT-109 saga. He wrote "For Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., it was the break he had been looking for and the story became the vessel that would launch JFK into political prominence (after the death of eldest son Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. on a flying mission in 1944). It would empower the family dynasty, and eventually lead to the oval office." Joseph Kennedy used his knowledge of public relations, and his contacts in the media to get William Hershey's story of the PT-109 saga into American media including the widely read Reader's Digest.[15][16]

Author David Resins wrote a positive review, emphasizing the added detail and new research in the new novel. He noted, "The hallmark of a terrific history is when you think you know the story and discover that there's so much more. William Doyle's PT 109 infuses an iconic tale with new information and insights, and in the telling deepens our understanding of the young John F. Kennedy's courageous 'origin' story".[17]

Author Douglas Brinkley also praises the new insights into Kennedy provided by the book's original research when he writes "William Doyle's PT-109 is a masterfully written book on John F. Kennedy's World War II service. Every page sparkles with keen insight and fresh research. Highly recommended."[1]

Further reading

  • Donovan, Robert J. (2001) [1961]. PT-109: John F. Kennedy in WW II (40th Anniversary ed.), McGraw Hill, ISBN 978-0-07-137643-3.
  • Hersey, John, "Survival", in The New Yorker, 17 June 1944.

Book notes and references

  1. ^ a b c Doyle, William, PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy, (2015), New York, William Morrow, an imprint of Harper-Collins, jacket cover blurb
  2. ^ MaritimeQuest – Raymond Albert.
  3. ^ Raymond Albert Find a grave memorial
  4. ^ Maritime Quest Webpage, Final Crew List of USS PT-109.
  5. ^ Marney and Kirksey were killed in Doyle, William, PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy, (2015), New York, William Morrow, an imprint of Harper-Collins, pgs. 96–97
  6. ^ "JFK's epic Solomons swim" BBC News 30 July 2003.
  7. ^ Doyle, William, PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy, (2015), New York, Harper Collins, pgs 72–176
  8. ^ Thom convinced the natives they were Americans in Doyle, William, PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy, (2015), New York, Harper Collins, p 146
  9. ^ Hamilton, Nigel, JFK, Reckless Youth, (1992) Random House, New York, NY, pg. 141, ISBN 0-679-41216-6
  10. ^ Tregaskis, Richard, "John F Kennedy and PT-109", 2016, Open Road Media, New York, NY, Chapter 10
  11. ^ Doyle, William, PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy, (2015), New York, Harper Collins, pgs. 153, 173, 156, 134–176
  12. ^ Doyle, William, PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy, (2015), New York, Harper Collins, Chapter 10, The Rescue, pg. 165
  13. ^ "PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy By William Doyle". The Book Report Network. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
  14. ^ "PT 109: Inside JFK's heroic origin story". The Christian Science Monitor. 8 February 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
  15. ^ Endrst, James, USA Today Journal News, "How JFK's Destiny Rode on PT-109", White Plains, New York, pg. U6, 25 October 2015
  16. ^ PT-109 story was featured in the Reader's Digest in Doyle, William, PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy, (2015) New York, Harper-Collins, pgs. 201-2
  17. ^ Doyle, William, PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy, (2015), New York, William Morrow, an imprint of Harper-Collins, back of book jacket

american, epic, survival, destiny, john, kennedy, fiction, book, best, selling, author, william, doyle, released, harper, collins, 2015, that, describes, ramming, sinking, future, president, john, kennedy, patrol, torpedo, boat, japanese, destroyer, amagiri, c. PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy is a non fiction book by best selling author William Doyle released by Harper Collins in 2015 that describes the ramming and sinking of future President John F Kennedy s Patrol Torpedo Boat 109 by the Japanese destroyer Amagiri off the coast of Kolombangara Island in the Solomon Island Chain on August 2 1943 The book also chronicles the crew s difficult three mile swim to Plum Pudding Island and the subsequent week of living there and on adjacent Olasana Island until Patrol Torpedo Boat PT 157 rescued them on August 8 The novel also discusses the considerable impact the experience had in helping to launch Kennedy s political career beginning with his election to the House of Representatives in 1946 JFK s aid David Powers has written without PT 109 there never would have been a President John F Kennedy 1 PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F KennedyFirst edition coverAuthorWilliam DoyleIllustratorPhotos courtesy of the US Navy and the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and MuseumCover artistJacket Design by Adam JohnsonCountryNew York USALanguageEnglishSubjectJohn Kennedy s shipwreck on PT 109 and its effect on his political careerGenreNonfictionPublisherWilliam Morrow imprint of Harper CollinsPublication date2015Media typePrint hardback Pages330 With index Contents 1 Crew on PT 109 s last mission 2 Content 2 1 Shipwrecked August 2 2 2 Swims to Ferguson Passage Olasana and Naru Islands 2 3 Messages received by Coastwatchers Kevu and Evans 2 4 Rescue 3 Critical reviews 4 Further reading 5 Book notes and referencesCrew on PT 109 s last mission EditThe following men were aboard on PT 109 s last mission Top L to R Ensign Al Webb Leon Drawdy Edger Mauer Edmund Drewitch John Maguire Kennedy Bottom L to R Charles Harris Maurice Kowal Andrew Kirksey Ensign Lenny Thom Webb Drewitch Drawdy and Kowal not aboard during collision Barney Ross not in photo 1943 John F Kennedy Lieutenant Junior Grade LTJG commanding officer Boston Massachusetts Leonard J Thom ensign ENS Ohio State football athlete and excellent swimmer executive officer Sandusky Ohio George H R Barney Ross Ensign ENS On board as an observer after losing his own boat Attempted to operate the 37 mm gun but suffered from night blindness Highland Park Illinois Raymond Albert Seaman 2 c gunner Killed in action 8 October 1943 Akron Ohio 2 3 Charles A Bucky Harris gunner s mate 3 c GM3 Watertown Massachusetts William Johnston Motor Machinist s Mate 2 c MM2 Dorchester Massachusetts Andrew Jackson Kirksey Torpedoman s Mate 2 c TM2 Killed in collision Reynolds Georgia John E Maguire Radioman 2 c RM2 Dobbs Ferry New York Harold William Marney Motor Machinist s Mate 2 c MM2 Killed in collision manning turret closest to impact point Springfield Massachusetts Edman Edgar Mauer Quartermaster cook 3 c QM3 St Louis Missouri Patrick H Pappy McMahon Motor Machinist s Mate 1 c MM1 Wyanet Illinois Only man in engine room during collision was badly burned but recovered from his wounds Only member of the crew besides Kennedy mentioned by name in the popular 1960 s PT 109 song Ray L Starkey Torpedoman s Mate 2 c TM2 Garden Grove California Gerard E Zinser Motor Machinist s Mate 1 c MM1 Belleville Illinois Erroneously called Gerald in many publications Zinser remained in the Navy for a career following the end of World War II eventually retiring as a Chief Petty Officer The last living survivor of PT 109 he died in Florida in 2001 4 Content EditShipwrecked August 2 Edit Off the coast of the round volcanic island Kolombangara in the Solomons in the early morning hours of August 2 1943 the Japanese destroyer Amagiri cut through John F Kennedy s Motor Torpedo Boat 109 creating a 100 foot high ball of flame and instantly killing two deckhands nineteen year old William Marney and twenty five year old father Andrew Kirksey 5 Swims to Ferguson Passage Olasana and Naru Islands Edit Plum Pudding Olasana and Naru Islands After the collision Kennedy and Ensign Thom gathered the crew by the sinking bow of PT 109 and later completed a 3 5 mile swim to Plum Pudding Island with Kennedy towing badly burned crewman Patrick McMahon After resting Kennedy swam 2 miles 3 2 km on August 2 to Ferguson Passage to attempt to hail a passing American PT boat though none appeared that night On 4 August he and Ensign Lenny Thom assisted his injured and hungry crew on a demanding swim 3 75 miles 6 04 km south to Olasana Island which was visible to all from Plum Pudding Island They swam against a strong current and once again Kennedy towed McMahon by his life vest They were pleased to discover Olasana had ripe coconuts though there was still no fresh water 6 On the following day 5 August Kennedy and George Ross swam for one hour to Naru Island visible at an additional distance of about 5 miles 0 80 km southeast from Olasana in search of help and food and because it was closer to Ferguson Passage where Kennedy might see or swim to a passing PT boat on patrol Kennedy and Ross discovered a small canoe packages of crackers and candy and a fifty gallon drum of potable water left by the Japanese and Kennedy paddled both back to Olasana in the acquired canoe to provide his crew It was then that Kennedy first spoke to native Melanesian coastwatchers Biuku Gasa and Eroni Kumana on Olasana Island Fearing the castaways were Japanese but finally realizing they were with Americans the coastwatchers brought a few yams vegetables and cigarettes from their dugout canoe and vowed to help the starving crew 7 8 But it would take two more days for a full rescue 9 1 Messages received by Coastwatchers Kevu and Evans Edit Kennedy at helm of PT 109 On 6 August native coastwatchers Biaku Gasa and Eroni Kumana left Olasana and headed east carrying a penciled note written by Ensign Lenny Thom describing the approximate location and number of the shipwrecked crew and Kennedy s message written on a coconut with the same content ten nautical miles 12 mi 19 km to Wana Wana Island south of Kolombangara and 1 4 of the way to Kennedy s PT Naval base on Rendova Island There they took little time to rest but linked up with Senior Scout Benjamin Kevu who they told they had found the crew of the 109 Ben Kevu sent another scout to inform Australian officer and Coastwatcher Reginald Evans north on Kolombangara Island of the discovery Gasa and Kumana departed Wana Wana with scout John Kari in a better canoe given them by Kevu carrying both Thom s and Kennedy s messages to a military outpost on Roviana Island close to the PT Rendova base in a total of fifteen hours by paddling their canoe all night through 38 mi 61 km of rough seas and hostile waters patrolled by the Japanese From the content of the messages it is clear both Thom and Kennedy trusted the coastwatchers with their lives as neither message contained the exact coordinates of their location nor the name of Olasana Island Traveling in an arranged boat Gasa and Kumana were at last sent south to the PT base at Rendova from Roviana Island a distance of only 3 miles 4 8 km from the Rendova PT base with Gasa still clutching the coconut Around 6 August after speaking to Kevu about the eleven found on Olasana Evans sent a canoe with fresh fish yams potatoes corned beef hash and rice to Kennedy and his crew with a message to return to him on Kolumbangara s Gomu Island in the canoe immediately Kennedy was instructed to lie underneath palm fronds in the canoe so he would not be spotted by Japanese planes 10 In total Kennedy swam an impressive total distance of around 8 miles and paddled a canoe around 2 searching for food or water for his crew or hoping to hail a passing PT boat It was not until the morning of 7 August that Evans was able to radio Rendova to confirm the news that Kennedy and his crew had been discovered 11 Rescue Edit Finally on August 8 Commander Thomas Warfield at the PT Base on Rendova Island sent Bud Liebenow s PT 157 to rescue the stranded crew of the PT 109 from Olasana Island and return them to the PT Base The rescue party included the full crew of the PT 157 including her skipper Bud Libenow two additional PT officers three coastwatchers including natives Eroni and Gasa two Pharmacist s mates to provide medical care and two reporters 12 Critical reviews EditThe online website Bookreporter gives an excellent rating to the book and considers it a thrilling and definitive account of the sinking of PT 109 and its shipwrecked crew s heroics The review attributes the book s value and authenticity to best selling author William Doyle s original interviews with the last living links to the events previously untapped Japanese wartime archives and a wealth of archival documents from the Kennedy Library including a lost first hand account by JFK himself 13 The novel s real strength is its exceptional readability which is enhanced and never hampered by its level of detail Previous authors attempting to portray the PT 109 adventure lacked a comparable level of detail and historical accuracy and were unable to plumb the depth of emotions of the central characters as accurately as Doyle Incorporating an interview with Doyle Randy Dotinga s review in the Christian Science Monitor described the importance the PT 109 saga had on Kennedy s future career Dotinga noted that The heroic saga of PT 109 which was immortalized in a classic 1944 New Yorker article by John Hersey relentlessly distributed by the Kennedy campaigns perfectly insulated Kennedy from charges of being an undistinguished playboy politician by transfiguring him into a mythic action war hero Dotinga also described the important role the PT 109 story played in Kennedy s Presidential primary victories further noting that in the May 1960 Democratic presidential primary in West Virginia when it looked like Hubert Humphrey might force JFK out of the race the Kennedy campaign Swift Boated Humphrey by falsely implying he was a draft dodger using the PT 109 story as the coup de grace that forced Humphrey to quit the race in disgust and despair That cleared the way for Kennedy to seize the Democratic nomination 14 James Endrst of the USA Today Journal News noted that JFK s father was largely responsible for launching JFK into political prominence using the PT 109 saga He wrote For Joseph P Kennedy Sr it was the break he had been looking for and the story became the vessel that would launch JFK into political prominence after the death of eldest son Joseph P Kennedy Jr on a flying mission in 1944 It would empower the family dynasty and eventually lead to the oval office Joseph Kennedy used his knowledge of public relations and his contacts in the media to get William Hershey s story of the PT 109 saga into American media including the widely read Reader s Digest 15 16 Author David Resins wrote a positive review emphasizing the added detail and new research in the new novel He noted The hallmark of a terrific history is when you think you know the story and discover that there s so much more William Doyle s PT 109 infuses an iconic tale with new information and insights and in the telling deepens our understanding of the young John F Kennedy s courageous origin story 17 Author Douglas Brinkley also praises the new insights into Kennedy provided by the book s original research when he writes William Doyle s PT 109 is a masterfully written book on John F Kennedy s World War II service Every page sparkles with keen insight and fresh research Highly recommended 1 Further reading EditDonovan Robert J 2001 1961 PT 109 John F Kennedy in WW II 40th Anniversary ed McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 137643 3 Hersey John Survival in The New Yorker 17 June 1944 Book notes and references Edit a b c Doyle William PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy 2015 New York William Morrow an imprint of Harper Collins jacket cover blurb MaritimeQuest Raymond Albert Raymond Albert Find a grave memorial Maritime Quest Webpage Final Crew List of USS PT 109 Marney and Kirksey were killed in Doyle William PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy 2015 New York William Morrow an imprint of Harper Collins pgs 96 97 JFK s epic Solomons swim BBC News 30 July 2003 Doyle William PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy 2015 New York Harper Collins pgs 72 176 Thom convinced the natives they were Americans in Doyle William PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy 2015 New York Harper Collins p 146 Hamilton Nigel JFK Reckless Youth 1992 Random House New York NY pg 141 ISBN 0 679 41216 6 Tregaskis Richard John F Kennedy and PT 109 2016 Open Road Media New York NY Chapter 10 Doyle William PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy 2015 New York Harper Collins pgs 153 173 156 134 176 Doyle William PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy 2015 New York Harper Collins Chapter 10 The Rescue pg 165 PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy By William Doyle The Book Report Network Retrieved 4 March 2021 PT 109 Inside JFK s heroic origin story The Christian Science Monitor 8 February 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2021 Endrst James USA Today Journal News How JFK s Destiny Rode on PT 109 White Plains New York pg U6 25 October 2015 PT 109 story was featured in the Reader s Digest in Doyle William PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy 2015 New York Harper Collins pgs 201 2 Doyle William PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy 2015 New York William Morrow an imprint of Harper Collins back of book jacket Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title PT 109 An American Epic of War Survival and the Destiny of John F Kennedy amp oldid 1142827924, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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