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Leff Yale was born on December 7th,
1923 and grew up on the family farm in Calvert Maryland, which then had a
Nottingham, PA mailing address. His parents were James Vincent
Yale and Gussie Joines. Leff was the third of 9 children: Paul and Eula
were older, Ima, Vera, William, James Jr., Franklin, and Mildred were
younger. Leff attended school in Calvert, as well as the family church
– Rosebank Methodist.
Leff enlisted in the Navy in 1940 with his parent’s permission. He
received basic training at Great Lakes, and was assigned to USS Quincy CA-
39, a heavy cruiser of the New Orleans Class (sometimes referred to as the
Astoria Class.) Three other Chester Countians were also on the ship: John
Horshock and Charles Foy from Coatesville, and Tommy Vadine from Downingtown.
In such a large ship and such a short time they never met Leff.

After leaving New York Harbor, USS Quincy transited through the Panama
Canal to San Diego in June, then to the South Pacific as flagship of the
cruiser force. Quincy destroyed several Japanese installations
during a bombardment, and then provided close fire support during the Marine
Corps landing at Guadalcanal on August 7th 1942.
The Japanese Navy reacted to our landing on Guadalcanal and Tulagi, on
August 8th, and sailed down “The Slot” (passage through the
middle of the Solomon Islands). Though forewarned, our cruiser –
destroyer covering force was unprepared. The two opposing forces were
virtually equal and this was the first major naval surface action against the
Japanese Navy. The result was the Battle of Savo Island, which began
shortly after midnight on August 9th and which became one of the
worst defeats for our Navy. USS Quincy and the cruisers USS Astoria,
USS Vincennes as well as the Australian cruiser HMAS Canberra were sunk, with
no losses to the Japanese. The Quincy took the worst beating, “but in
the opinion of the Japanese put up the best fight of any allied ship that
night.” Because of these losses and many more to come, the sound between
Guadalcanal and Savo Island became referred to as “Iron Bottom Sound.”
Our Navy learned hard lessons and made changes, but at the high cost of lives.
Leff and John were
killed, Charles and Tommy survived the ship’s
sinking. (See Survivor Notes
for more information.)
Leff was officially listed as Missing in Action October 3, 1942
and later the designation was changed to “Killed in Action.” Leff’s
body was not recovered. A memorial marker was placed in a military
cemetery in Manila, Philippines.
Seaman First Class Leff Yale was awarded the Purple
Heart, WW II, Asiatic
Pacific Campaign, Fleet American Defense, and American Campaign Medals.
Survivor Notes:
- Charles Foy passed away on July 23rd, 2002.
- Tommy Vadine married Antoinette Duca, whose
brother Tony, and nephews James and
Dominick Marinelli are also on our Hall of
Heroes Memorial.
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