Category Archives: WWII

Milton Hartman, MoMM2c(t) – 1943-1946

Miton Hartman, from Mercersburg, PA, enlisted in the US Navy on October 26th, 1942. On August 17th, 1943 he reported to the USS Calvert, received from the Little Creek, Virginia, Amphibious Base, for duty as a F.1c. (fireman). He left the Calvert in San Francisco on December 17th, 1945 rated as MoMM2c(t) (machinist mate) and was officially released from service in 1946. Milton died in May of 2014, and his obituary can be found here.

Appreciation to Milton’s son, John, for sharing the following photographs:

 

Appreciation John for providing the following photographs of the USS Calvert, never before published on this site.

 

John also has possession of a wooden souvenir, presumably driftwood, that his father brought back from the Tarawa invasion (when a number of Calvert’s crew were temporarily assigned to help clear the Tarawa beaches) following their successful landing at Makin (to the North West of Tarawa, Gilbert Islands). The photographs of John holding the wooden souvenir are from the 2015 Reunion and the two gentlemen he is talking with are John Regan (’42-’43) and William Habrat (’41-’45) (wearing blue hat).

 

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Lt. Donald Fetterman – WWII & Korea

Lt. Donald Lehman Fetterman served aboard the USS Calvert during both WWII and Korea. During WWII he earned the Bronze Star as a result of his leadership as a landing wave boat group commander:

From page 11, History of the USS Calvert (APA32):

“In the name of the President of the United States, the Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet, presented the Bronze Star Medal:

To: Lieutenant (jg) Donald Lehman Fetterman, USNR – 241 W. Oley St., Reading, Penna.

“Citation”: “For exceptionally meritorious service as a Wave Commander in the Landing Boat Group of an Assault Transport during the amphibious assaults upon Sicily; Makin Island; Kwajalein Atoll; Marshall Islands; and Saipan. Acting as Wave Commander in each of the assaults, he devoted himself untiringly and unselfishly to his duties in a manner which bore direct results in the consequent success of all operations. During the invasion of Makin Island, he led in the initial wave of LTVs with a skill and courage that accounted in a large measure for the satisfactory performance of the (at that time) new and relatively untried craft. Cool and resourceful when under fire, his outstanding service and conduct throughout were in keeping with the highest traditions of the Naval Service.”

Lt. Fetterman died in 1964.

Appreciation to Mark Fetterman, Lt. Fetterman’s grandson, for identifying Lt. Fetterman in the following photographs:

 

 

Virgil Nelson’s (BM, 1946) Model of the USS Calvert

Virgil Nelson, 90, Shreve, Ohio, served aboard the USS Calvert as a Boats’n Mate during Operation Magic Carpet in 1946. Prior to joining the Calvert, Virgil served aboard an LST (landing ship tank) and “Island Hopped” along with the Calvert in the Pacific. He was one of the last men aboard the Calvert after she returned to Norfolk following the War.

As a long-time model ship builder, Virgil kept meticulous notes during his time aboard the Calvert. Beginning in the mid-1950s he began work to build a model of the Calvert so that he could better explain what type of ship the Calvert was to his family and friends. His work on the Calvert model took over five years and on-thousand hours, with most of the work taking place during the wintertime.

Virgil spent his post-year wars working in newspaper production in Wooster, Ohio, building countless ship and boat models, and spending summers with his family on the water and vacationing at his cabin in Canada.

Virgil, with the help of his grandson, was generous in sending a selection of the many photographs that he took while he spent his time building the Calvert model. Also included are a few articles and notes written by Virgil.

The model is nearly 47 inches in length, and is displayed under a glass case in Virgil’s home, among the many other ship and boat models that he has hand-crafted over the years.

Updates to WWII Medical Crew Photos

Two new officers identified in the photos further below:

Dr. Dwight A. Callagan (1917-1992)  … “who was probable a LTJG at the time. He said he was a beachhead doctor on several landings and got the Bronze Star for action on Saipan (He is also mentioned in the History of the Calvert on your website on page 12 of Citations when he received the Bronze Star) and other landings (additional information on page 12, Citations).  I saw a film clip on your site a few years ago with him named as Dr. Callahan shot by a think a Chaplin on the ship.

He retired as a Capt. from the medical corp in 1971 after a remarkable career as a surgeon, researcher and hospital administrator’  He is still in Who is Who in medicine all these years later for his research and invention of the ultrasonic dopler. He retired in 1971 but a google search for him still brings up medical research articles written by him in AMA Journals in the 1960s.”  – Wayne Callagan

Dr. John R. Palmer Jr. “…He served for 19 months as a medical officer aboard the Calvert. He was a 1942 graduate of the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, where he returned after discharge from the Navy in 1946. He was in private practice in Augusta from 1947 until he returned to active duty in the Navy in 1952. He remained on active duty until 1967, serving at Navy hospitals in Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Michigan, California and Alaska. He passed away April 17, 1985, at age 69 at his home in Waynesboro, Georgia.” – Ben Palmer