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Medal of Honor Monday: Navy Machinist Charles Willey

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Navy Machinist Charles H. Willey never expected to have to save the lives of his crewmates during a peacetime mission, but that's exactly what he did during an unexpected tsunami that happened while his ship was anchored near the Dominican Republic in 1916. He paid a physical price for his actions, but they also earned him the Medal of Honor.  

A man in a uniform wears a medal around his neck.
Navy Machinist Charles H. Willey
Navy Machinist Charles H. Willey earned the Medal of Honor in 1916 when a freak tsunami smashed into his ship, the USS Memphis, while it was anchored off the shore of the Dominican Republic.
Credit: Congressional Medal of Honor Society
VIRIN: 220824-D-D0439-001

Willey was born on March 31, 1889, in Boston. Not much is known about his life until August 1908, when he enlisted in the Navy. Six years later, on Dec. 28, 1914, he was appointed to the warrant officer rank of machinist, according to Congressional records. That same year, he married a woman named Grace. 

By August 1916, Willey was serving aboard the armored cruiser USS Memphis, which had changed its name from the USS Tennessee earlier in the year. The ship had been in the Caribbean and was sent to Santo Domingo — the modern-day Dominican Republic — in late July for a peacekeeping patrol off the rebellion-torn republic's shores.  

A Freak Incident  

The area was known for dangerous weather, so the crew was prepared to move to deeper waters if there were any weather threats. But on Aug. 29, bad weather came without a warning.  

At about 3:45 p.m., the ship's commanding officer thought the swell appeared to be increasing, according to an account from Navy Lt. Cmdr. Thomas Withers Jr., who was on the ship at the time. So, sailors in the engine room, including Willey, readied the ship's boilers and engines to get underway. But before the ship was able to move further out to sea, waves reported to be up to 75 feet high — unaccompanied by wind — started smashing into the ship without warning. 

A large ship is pummeled by waves.
Damaged Ship
The USS Memphis was driven ashore during a tropical disturbance at Santo Domingo City in what's now the Dominican Republic, Aug. 29, 1916. There was no warning of the weather event, which destroyed the ship and killed 43 men.
Credit: Navy photo
VIRIN: 210803-N-D0439-080

"Wave followed wave at intervals of perhaps 30-40 seconds," Withers recounted in a journal. "These waves were so large, and their faces became so steep that they simply flowed over the ship." 

The ship was being dragged toward the beach, and anyone who was below deck was trapped in a precarious position. In the engine room, boilers and steam pipes burst open. Willey was scalded by steam as thousands of tons of water came down on him. However, he remained in the room in near darkness as long as the engines would turn. He left his post only when he was ordered to. 

When the boilers exploded, Willey and two other men rushed into the rooms where the boilers were kept. Despite their injuries, they were able to drag and carry the men trapped there into rooms where the air was breathable. 

People along a shoreline stare at a large ship leaning to one side.
Damaged Ship
The USS Memphis the day after it was wrecked during a tropical disturbance as it sat anchored off the coast of Santo Domingo City in the Dominican Republic. The lines coming from the ship to the shore were used during the rescue of the crew.
Credit: Navy photo
VIRIN: 210803-N-D0439-081

Throughout the evening, lifelines from Memphis to the shore were set up to get many of the men to safety. However, 43 men died during the incident, and many more were seriously injured, including Willey. 

A 1932 Boston Globe article said Willey was unconscious in a Washington, D.C., hospital for nearly three months after the tragedy. It took him 18 months to fully recover, the Globe said. 

Willey had hoped to return to the seas, but that wasn't in the cards. He was medically retired on July 30, 1917, according to a Congressional report. By then, he lived in East Concord, New Hampshire. He and his wife, Grace, went on to have three children: Richard, Doris and Walter. 

A Ship's Demise, a Sailor's Honor 

After the incident, the USS Memphis didn't appear to be damaged above the waterline, but below deck was a different story. The hull was crushed by rocks and coral, and the lower decks were flooded, leaving the ship stranded in shallow water. That's where the wreck remained until 1937, when ship-breaking capabilities became available to salvage it. 

An investigation later revealed that a tropical disturbance had passed south of the area the night before in the incident, but it didn't cause any other markers of severe weather except the heavy swells that caused the tragedy. 

A man clasps a medal around another man’s neck.
Medal Presentation
Navy Machinist Charles H. Willey is presented the Medal of Honor in 1932 at the Navy Yard in Portsmouth, N.H. Willey earned the medal in 1916 when a freak tsunami smashed into his ship, the USS Memphis, while it was anchored off the shore of the Dominican Republic.
Credit: Congressional Medal of Honor Society 
VIRIN: 220823-O-D0439-073

Sixteen years later, Willey received the Medal of Honor for his bravery that day. The medal was presented to him on Aug. 19, 1932, by Rear Adm. Clarence S. Kempff at the Navy Yard in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Two of his shipmates also received the honor; then-Lt. Claud A. Jones and Chief Machinist's Mate George William Rud, who died during the incident. The three men were some of the last to receive the medal for peacetime actions.  

At the time of the medal ceremony, Willey worked at a poultry farm in the Concord area, the Boston Globe said. He also did some technical and mechanical writing for periodicals.  

Willey died on Sept. 11, 1977, in Manchester, New Hampshire. He was buried at Maple Grove Cemetery in Concord. 

This article is part of a weekly series called "Medal of Honor Monday," in which we highlight one of the more than 3,500 Medal of Honor recipients who have earned the U.S. military's highest medal for valor.

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