Lester
Emery Diemer was born on November 26, 1900 and lived at 464 Penn
Street, Spring City, Pennsylvania. He was the son of Elwood Diemer, Spring
City, and husband of Kathryn (Trexler) Diemer of Norfolk, Virginia. At the
time of his death, he was survived by his wife and seven-year old daughter,
Connie Elaine; his father, Elwood, 464 Penn St, Spring City, five brothers;
Ralph, Yost Avenue, Spring City; Clifford, Penn Street, Spring City; Emmett,
Church Street, Royersford; Staff Sergeant Robert Diemer, Westover, Maryland;
and Sergeant Russell Diemer, Shaw Field, South Carolina; one sister, Mrs.
Evelyn Frederick, 464 Penn Street, Spring City. His wife resided at 8670
Albermarie drive, Merrimack Park, Norfolk, Virginia. Chief Petty Officer
Diemer served 23 years in the U. S. Navy, and was the first Spring City man
reported missing in this WWII. This hero was initially reported missing in a
telegram to his wife, Kathryn, and then relayed to his father. As reported in
a local newspaper on Sept. 21, 1942, it was not known whether he was a
prisoner of the Japanese or a casualty. His last letter home was from
somewhere in the Pacific, on July 31, 1942 and he last visited his father in
June of 1941. His letter stated that he was in good health and that nothing
else mattered until the end of the war.
The War Department declared Chief Petty Officer Diemer officially dead as
of August 10, 1942. He was the Chief Fire Control Officer aboard the cruiser
Vincennes CA-44, which was sunk by the Japanese during the battle of
Savo Island in the
Solomons, on August 10, 1942.
This hero would have observed his 43rd birthday on November 26,
1943. Lester is remembered on the Tablets of the Missing in Action
at the
Manila American Cemetery at Fort Bonaficio, Phillipines.
This is the same battle in which heroes
John Horshock and Leff Yale
perished on board the USS Quincy
CA-39, and hero George Johnson
died a few miles away on Tulagi, saving his patrol.
The Final Battle
Taken from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Vincennes_(CA-44)#The_final_battle
The first Japanese searchlight beams picked
out Vincennes' splotchy camouflage shortly after 01:55, and the
American cruiser opened fire with her main battery turrets to shoot out
the troublesome light. Within a minute, however, Japanese shells bracketed
the ship and Vincennes shuddered under the impact of the hail of
steel screaming in from the ebony sky. Bridge, carpenter shop, "battle
II," and radio antenna trunks all were hit in the first salvo.
Altering course to port, Riefkohl - who had
leapt to the bridge at the alarm - rang down for increased speed; but, in
the deafening din of battle, and with his ship and internal communications
disrupted, it is doubtful that the order was received. Still moving at
19.5 knots, the heavy cruiser reeled under the impact of another group of
direct hits.
Some of the shells in this group set afire
the volatile planes in Vincennes' hangar space, and the resultant
flames defied all attempts to put them out. A direct hit knocked the after
antiaircraft director overboard. At 02:00, Vincennes heeled to
starboard in an attempt to evade the accurate enemy fire, but the probing
Japanese gunners were not about to let the already sorely wounded ship
escape. One or two "Long Lance" torpedoes then ripped into the ship's
number 1 fire room and put it out of action.
Losing steering control five minutes later,
Vincennes was dead in the water within minutes. Rapidly hitting
shells quickly reduced the ship's gun power to a fraction of its original
strength and before long, snuffed it out entirely. Like a pummeled and
reeling challenger in the boxing ring, Vincennes wallowed to a
halt. Hit at least 57 times by 8- and 5-inch shells, the ship gradually
assumed a more alarming list.
As if mercifully, at 02:10, the Japanese
ceased fire and retired, leaving Savo Island and the burning hulks of the
three American cruisers of the northern force in their wakes. As
Vincennes' list increased to port, Riefkohl circulated the command to
abandon ship at 02:30. Serviceable life jackets and rafts were broken out,
and the crew began abandoning ship. At 02:40, the captain went down to the
main deck and joined the last men to leave the sinking cruiser and jumped
into the tepid waters of what would come to be known as Ironbottom Sound.
Riefkohl subsequently wrote a fitting
epitaph: "The magnificent Vincennes, which we were all so proud of,
and which I had the honor to command since 23 April 1941, rolled over and
then sank at about 02:50, 9 August 1942, about 2½ miles east of Savo
Island ... Solomons Group, in some 500 fathoms [910 m] of water."
Struck from the Navy List on 2 November
1942, Vincennes was awarded two battle stars for her participation
in the Battle of Midway and the invasion of Guadalcanal.
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