Chaplain Thomas M. Conway, (USS Indianpolis - Navy Cross Awarded)
July 31, 2022 will mark the 77th anniversary of the sinking of the USS Indianapolis. In 2001, Doug Stanton’s In Harm's Way, an account of the events surrounding the sinking of the cruiser in the final days of World War II, was published. At the time, reviewers characterized the book as the latest entry in what has become a race against time for those who would preserve the events of the war through the memories of the people who fought it. The author, responding to several reviewers’ comments on the lack of information on Fr. Thomas M. Conway, the ship chaplain, stated that there was little extant information readily available on the chaplain. Since reading that comment it has been my personal quest to compile the research and documentation of Fr. Conway’s life. The quest became a remarkable example of how easily the stories and events, though preserved in the minds and hearts of family and friends, are lost to the historical consciousness of our communities. But, it is also an extraordinary example of how being inspired by the compassion, selflessness and sacrifice of individuals like Fr. Conway, can promote collaborative efforts to preserve and promote awareness of those who serve our families, communities and our nation.
Over the years there have been many books and articles published about the greatest naval disaster after Pearl Harbor. Among the survivors several men were awarded commendations for their heroic actions. Among those lost at sea, a few tales of heroism remain to be told. For three nights Fr. Conway, a Catholic priest, swam to the aid of his shipmates, reassuring the increasingly dehydrated and delirious men with prayers until he himself expired, the last Catholic chaplain to die in WWII. Like many stories of heroism, Fr. Conway was commemorated in simple ways among his friends and shipmates. As time moves on, and generations pass away, many stories of history are lost, and sometimes they are rediscovered.
Fr. Conway parish priest Diocese of Buffalo |
On Sept.17, 1942, Fr. Conway enlisted in U.S. Navy, commissioned a chaplain. A few days before leaving on active duty, Fr. Conway recorded a voice message on a 78 rpm recorder to Mary Noe. The Noe’s had become both family and home to Fr. Conway. Mary had eight children, one of whom was also a Buffalo priest, and in the recording he referred to her as ‘Ma.’ The recording, though scratched and distorted, preserves most of his farewell message prefaced with a song, “Well, Ma, your Sailor Boy is going to dedicate a very special number to you, a very, very special mom. I’d like you to excuse the singing. It’s not so hot. Remember, it is always the thought behind it that counts!” Fr. Conway sings two verses of the song I Threw a Kiss into the Ocean, by Irving Berlin for the U.S. Navy Relief: “I spoke last night to the ocean spoke last night to the sea And from the ocean a voice came back ‘Twas my Blue Jacket answering me Ship Ahoy, ship ahoy I can hear you, Sailor Boy I spoke last night to the ocean I spoke last night to the sea And from the ocean a voice came back ‘Twas my true love answering me” “Well Ma, how’d you like it?” asks Fr. Conway, “I’ve wrote I’ve missed you when I’m gone and now I’m going to miss you again. So, don’t miss me. I’ll be back. Remember me in your prayers and I’ll remember you in mine. So goodbye mom.” Fr. Conway served at naval stations along the East Coast and in 1943 was transferred to the Pacific. For several months he served on the USS Medusa, and on Aug. 25, 1944, Fr. Conway was assigned to the USS Indianapolis.
Fr. Conway leading ecumenical prayer service |
They carried his him into a small boat alongside. The Marine firing squad fired three volleys and the ship’s bugler sounded taps. We buried him in the American Cemetery on one of the small islands of the Pacific. The flag which draped his coffin is being sent to you and you should receive it soon. Your son was one of the most well liked and respected men aboard this ship. Everyone from the Commanding Officer down to the men in his division thought and spoke very highly of him. He was always cheerful and willing and devoted to his duties and we will all miss him very much. Our loss however will be small compared to the loss you will feel a losing such a wonderful boy. His country is proud of him and shall never forget what he contributed to her. The memory of his courageous sacrifice will never fade and to and to us who knew him it shall ever be an inspiration and an encouragement to carry on the work that still needs to be done. I hope you will find some consolation in the thought that when this war shall end and peace and happiness will once more come to the world, you will remember that you before all other have paid the greatest price anyone could pay, for you have given your son and no one can do more than this. I pray and hope that Almighty God in His Goodness will give you the strength to bear up under this severe loss and I know He will be most generous with you who have been so generous with others. May He help and bless you and your family.”
Melvin W. Modisher, a survivor and Jr. Medical Officer onboard the USS Indianapolis, recalling the kamikaze attacked and Fr. Conway’s chaplaincy at the time stated, “The day before D-Day on Okinawa, the Indianapolis was hit by a kamikaze killing 9 of the crew and injuring a couple of dozen others. The ship cold not be repaired on site and had to return to California for major repairs. Fr. Conway spent the entire repair period traveling across the country visiting the families of all 9 who had been killed telling how they had been buried at Sea, etc. He did this on his own time and at his expense rather than spend time with his own family and friends. This is a small example of the kind of Love and Devotion he displayed for others.”
On April 26, a week sailing from Mare Island, Fr. Conway wrote a sailor’s ditty for the ship’s newsletter, the Wigwam. The simple verses expressed the unspoken love, valor and sacrifice of the crew. Fr. Conway prefaced the ditty, “We are now under way for Mare Island, Valley Joe and points east. We expect to go under the bridge on the morning of the 2nd, next Wednesday at 0800. Stand by to man the golden gate And swing it open too For standing in the bay today Is the cruiser Indy Maru. Steaming along on two screws and a prayer With half her boilers cold The Indy Maru’s been thru the wars And looks a little old. She’s hit the nip north and south The mighty cruiser Indy Maru At Tokio and Iwo And Okinawa too. Thru freezing cold and tropic heat And kamikazes too And Nippon’s shells and bombs and fish Has comes the Indy Maru. So break out your blues and shine your shoes The Indy Maru-is here - They'll double the shore patrol And raise the price of beer, For months your wives have waited For the cruiser Indy Maru So take along your dog tag To prove that you are you. Frisco's seen some great ships But the greatest it ever knew Is that tootin’ shootin’ cruiser The fighting Indy Maru.
March 24, 1945 Burial at sea |
Courtesy Nickie S. Lancaster Photo Archives |
When repairs were complete, the ship was ordered to carry to Tinian Island the trigger and radioactive core of the atom bomb destined to be dropped on Hiroshima. Under Captain Charles Butler McVay III, it sailed from Farallon Light at San Francisco to Diamond Head on the Hawaiian island of Oahu in a record 74.5 hours. Stopping briefly for fuel at Pearl Harbor, the USS Indianapolis proceeded to Tinian, reaching it on 26 July. After discharging its top-secret cargo, the ship, with a crew of 1,196, left for Guam and then Leyte in the Philippines, which had been liberated only a few weeks before. It was to join the American invasion fleet bound for Japan. July 30, 1945, was a typical Sunday for Fr. Conway. He celebrated the Catholic Mass and later conducted a Protestant service. It was known that Fr. Conway could usually be found in the ship’s library or his room for confession or just someone to talk to. A few minutes past midnight Fr. Conway was bobbing among the burning oil, debris, chaos and voices of the 900 survivors. Fr. Conway's actions are vividly recalled by several of the survivors.
Frank J. Centazzo recently wrote, “Father Conway was in every way a messenger of our Lord. He loved his work no matter what the challenge. He was respected and loved by all his shipmates. I was in the group with Father Conway. ... I saw him go from one small group to another. Getting the shipmates to join in prayer and asking them not to give up hope of being rescued. He kept working until he was exhausted. I remember on the third day late in the afternoon when he approached me and Paul McGiness. He was thrashing the water and Paul and I held him so he could rest a few hours. Later, he managed to get away from us and we never saw him again. Father Conway was successful in his mission to provide spiritual strength to all of us. He made us believe that we would be rescued. He gave us hope and the will to endure. His work was exhausting and he finally succumbed in the evening of the third day. He will be remembered by all of the survivors for all of his work while on board the ‘Indy’ and especially three days in the ocean.”
Lewis L. Haynes, Captain, Medical Corps, USN, recalled in an article for the Saturday Evening Post (Aug. 6, 1955), “All thoughts of rescue are gone, and our twisted reasoning has come to accept this as our life until the end is reached. A life with nothing but the sky, a shimmering horizon and endless wastes of water. Beyond this we dare not imagine…But we have not lost everything. To the contrary, we have found one comfort - a strong belief to which we cling. God seems very close. Much of our feeling is strengthened by the chaplain, who moves from one group to another to pray with the men. The chaplain, a priest, is not a strong man physically, yet his courage and goodness seem to have no limit. I wonder about him, for the night is particularly difficult and most of us suffer from chills, fever and delirium. The moon has been up for some time when I hear a cry for help. It is Mac, the sailor who has given so much to so many. When I swim to him, Mac is supporting the chaplain, who is delirious. "Doctor - you'll just have to relieve me for awhile!" Mac gasps. "I - I can't hold him any longer!" I take the chaplain from him; thrust my arm through the chaplain's life jacket so that I may hold him securely through his wild thrashing. Then I look around for Mac, for I know he needs help. He is completely exhausted, his head forward, his nose in the water. Mac! Mac! I call. There is no answer - and the last I see of Mac is his head sinking lower and lower as he drifts away in the moonlight. The chaplain’s delirium mounts; his struggles almost too much for me. He cries a strange gibberish – some of the words are Latin – but in a little while he sinks into a coma. The only sound is the slap of water against us as I wait for the end. When it comes, the moon is high, golden overhead. I say a prayer and let him drift away, along the path to follow Mac.”
Fr. William F. Frawley, was a chaplain at Base Hospital #20, Peleliu Island where the majority of survivors were taken for medical attention. Though there was a government news blackout about the incident, Fr. Frawley wrote a letter to Archdiocese of Military Services, dated August 5, one day after the rescue. He wrote, “The true facts concerning the death of Fr. Thomas Conway…He along with about eight hundred others, got off the ship into the water when the explosions occurred. On the evening of the third day in the water, completely exhausted, he drowned. All the survivors who were brought to our Base Hospital have the highest praise for him. They report that he had been aboard the cruiser for the past year; that he had done much to improve the ship’s facilities; that he treated the personnel indiscriminately, devoting as much attention as possible to the non-Catholics; that on the Sunday preceding the disaster two mess halls were needed to take care of the overflow crowd at general services; that he spoke on the parable of the Pharisee and publican, likening them to two sailors appearing before the captain of the ship; that, while in the water he went about from group to group organizing prayer groups ... Fr. Conway spent his leave flying to the homes of nine boys who had been killed by a suicide plane which struck the ship near Okinawa (that is the reason the ship was on its way from the States. It had been reconditioned and left the States on 16 July and was hit somewhere between Guam and Leyte on 30 July at 0010.) ...”
Several books about the sinking of the USS Indianapolis have referenced Fr. Conway. In his book, In Harm’s Way (2001), author Doug Stanton wrote, “The boys usually confided in Father Conway. During the battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa, most of them had been scared out of their wits. ... As the kamikazes dove at the ships, the boys cried out from their battle stations for the kind priest. ... Fr. Conway, in his early thirties, was relentless and fearless in his duty. Once, while saying Mass, battle stations had been called suddenly, and the astute Father shouted out, ‘Bless us all, boys! And give them hell!’ The boys loved him for this. He was a priest, it was true, but he was a priest with grit. ... (Conway) spent the bleak early morning hours swimming back and forth among these terrified crew members, sometimes dragging loners back to the growing mass ... the priest also never stopped swimming among the boys, hearing their confessions and administering Last Rites.”
Thomas Helms, in his book, Ordeal by Sea, wrote, “Father Thomas Michael Conway swam from group to group, never stopping to rest, praying with the men, encouraging those who were frightened, trying to reason with the maddened. His faith and his prayers gave solace to many ... Father Conway, like Ensign Park, Seaman Rich and many others, burned himself out keeping up a constant patrol among the men, ministering to the dying, talking reason into others who had become momentarily deranged and calming the frightened with prayers until all at once he reached the limit of his endurance, and his life drained away.” On August 2, 1945, Fr. M. Thomas Conway was the last chaplain to die in combat in WWII. Fr. Conway was awarded Purple Heart posthumously.
Frank J. Centazzo, a survivor wrote, “I'm sure that Father Conway was recommended for a medal. In fact, if my memory serves me well, I believe Dr. Haynes (Lt.Cmdr.) was the one who put forth Father Conway's name. However, more than half of the recommendations were set aside by the brass at Guam. I suspect that they didn't want to bring too much attention to the disaster by awarding too many medals. I believe my name along with many others were also put forth for consideration but got lost in the shuffle. But the real loss was not awarding any medal to Chaplain Conway. After the war, the city of Buffalo, NY was, and remains the location of veteran and citizen attempts to preserve the memory of the heroic, compassionate and selfless ministry of Fr. Conway.
On March 4, 1946, the Fr. Thomas Conway VFW #5800 was mustered (organized) in South Buffalo by returning WWII veterans. Unfortunately, the post was declared defunct on May 27, 1952. A direct result of the migration of young veterans moving out from the city to the surrounding suburbs. On May 11, 1954 the Fr. Conway Park was dedicated by the City Council. At the time the area was then known as “Scummy Basin." The basin was a part of the canal, and an area utilized as a ‘turn-around’ for barges and ships. Sadly, it also was a dangerous area for children who frequently played in the vicinity of the basin. After a few children drowned in this area neighborhood residents demanded the basin filled-in. The neighborhood was successful and the 14.5 acre filled-in basin area became known as Fr. Conway Playfield. Many residents at the time, remembering the manner of Fr. Conway’s death, believed that even after death Fr. Conway reaches out to victims and family survivors of those who drowned. A local reporter wrote on the dedication of the park, “The Ohio Basin yesterday was dedicated as the Father Conway Playfield in tribute to a Buffalo priest who gave his life as a Navy Chaplain in World War II. About 5,000 persons witnessed the ceremony…”We dedicate here this field to the activities of the youth today as a means to strengthen them in their battle against the subversive enemies of our times…The children who play here, we hope and pray, will be guided by the spirit of Father Tom Conway, a truly great priest, a true and honest sportsman, a brave and loyal soldier-sailor of God to the very end.”
The migration of young families that began in earnest after WWII, did not end in the early 1950’s but continued well into the 1990’s. During this era, the families moving into these neighborhoods, for the most part, were ethnically different and in particular, largely Hispanic. As the years passed the collective historical memory of the former neighborhoods was increasingly relegated to the older generation. At the same time, the younger, newer residents were creating their own futures and histories, mostly unaware of the men and women whose names appeared on memorial plaques and monuments. In fact, the Fr. Conway Park became simple known as Conway Park, and only a handful of older residents and veterans associated the name with Fr. Conway. In the fall of 1997, the Buffalo Zoo announced plans to relocate from its 125 year-old home in Delaware Park, to a site in a mixed residential/industrial area along the Buffalo River, including Conway Park. This announcement provoked a firestorm of opposition, beginning in the Parkside neighborhood, where the existing zoo was located, and in the Old First Ward, site of the proposed new zoo. The opposition eventually coalesced into two new organizations, Save the Old First Ward and the Committee to Keep the Zoo in Delaware Park. Leaders from Save the Old First Ward joined the Committee worked collaboratively with the Committee to Keep the Zoo in Delaware Park. Finally, on September 2, 1999, the Buffalo Zoological Society announced its abandonment of a plan to relocate the Zoo to the proposed site. If the move had been successful, there was a chance the name of Conway’s Park would have been at risk. In fact, at the time there was no signage identifying the park as Conway Park. The only sign in the park at the time identified the area as the “Old First District Park.”
August 2, 2001. Henry J. Mansell, D.D., bishop of Buffalo, presided at an anniversary memorial for Mass for Fr. Conway at St. Joseph’s Cathedral. August 26, 2001. Fr. Conway was inducted into the Waterbury, CT, Silas Bronson Library “Hall of Fame.” Recipients of the award are comprised of Waterbury natives and residents who have made a significant impact on the history of Waterbury or who have achieved recognition for their accomplishments throughout the city, state, country or world. September 23, 2001. The rededication of the Fr. Conway Park and erection of new signage throughout the park, authorized by Anthony M. Masiello, Mayor of Buffalo, took place.
May 20, 2006. Bishop Edward U. Kmiec, bishop of Buffalo, dedicated the Father Thomas Conway Memorial at the Buffalo and Erie County Naval and Military Park. Artist Brian Porter created the bust of Father Conway clutching a fistful of dog tags in his left hand and flotation vests in his right hand. Father Conway re-moved the sailors’ dog tags as they died. “There is an emphatic connection as humans that this is what Father Conway and the other men went through in the water. There is the spiritual connection of Father Conway to these men. Not only did he provide physical comfort, but gave comfort to their souls as well."
July 2007. Fr. Conway was inducted into the Inaugural Class of the Niagara University Legacy-Alumni of Distinction. Recipients of Niagara's prestigious Legacy Awards have demonstrated outstanding accomplishments and excellence in their field of endeavor, have lived lives both personally and professionally that mirror the Vincentian ideals of Niagara University., and have affected a positive and lasting impact to the betterment of society.
A Sonnet to Fr. Thomas M. Conway: Ms. Stacey Bowers, October 20, 2009
Stars shining in the dark morning of July 30, 1945.
Indianapolis
found the crushing fate of the plunder of war.
Youth, courage and fortitude float in blackened bloody sea.
The loss of God’s good life beyond our worst vivid dreams.
Fighting for their lives and country good men born
and good men perish living for the virtue of endless conflict.
In times of terror and fear an enemy recluse
as heroes emerge among the countless dead and dying confident.
Giving care, confession and the rites to all impossible
yet with all strength, blessing pain, fear and death’s sweet and drenched call.
I suspect for Msgr. Conway, Though war should rise against me,
Even then will I be confident – a Psalm of hope and inner peace.
Survivors, those who perished and now many more
find strength and hope shines today hence this hero Man of God and war.
Youth, courage and fortitude float in blackened bloody sea.
The loss of God’s good life beyond our worst vivid dreams.
Fighting for their lives and country good men born
and good men perish living for the virtue of endless conflict.
In times of terror and fear an enemy recluse
as heroes emerge among the countless dead and dying confident.
Giving care, confession and the rites to all impossible
yet with all strength, blessing pain, fear and death’s sweet and drenched call.
I suspect for Msgr. Conway, Though war should rise against me,
Even then will I be confident – a Psalm of hope and inner peace.
Survivors, those who perished and now many more
find strength and hope shines today hence this hero Man of God and war.
On April 16, 2013 the Waterbury (CT) Veterans Memorial Committee wrote a letter to Senator Christopher Murphy asking him to sponsor a resolution to posthumously award Fr. Conway the Navy Cross.
On July 16, Robert Dorr (Waterbury (CT) Secretary, Veterans Memorial Committee) informed supporters, "US Senator Christopher Murphy will hold a Press
Conference at the Waterbury Veterans Hall, Waterbury City Hall, 235 Grand
Street. Sen. Murphy will announce that he is sponsoring and submitting a Senate
Resolution to Honor the Service and Sacrifice of Lt. (Rev.) Thomas M. Conway,
Chaplain, USS Indianapolis, which was lost July 30, 1945. The actions of
Chaplain Lt. Conway resulted in over 300 survivors rescued from the water. The
Waterbury Veterans Memorial Committee is requesting that the sacrifice of
Waterburian Lt. Conway be recognized with the Navy Cross for his heroic actions
after the sinking of his ship."
On July 19, 2013 Robert Dorr sent: Friends,
US Senator
Christopher Murphy and US Senator Richard Blumenthal said that they have
co-sponsored a US Senate resolution to award posthumously the Navy Cross to the
Chaplain of the USS Indianapolis (CA-35). Both Senators attended an event at
Waterbury (Connecticut) City Hall where the text of the resolution was released
to the press. Initially sponsored by Senator Murphy, Sen. Blumenthal
joined with him and co-sponsored the resolution. Surrounded by posters
describing the ordeal of the men of the USS Indianapolis, both spoke eloquently
about the USS Indianapolis and its critical role in bringing an end to World
War II. Sen. Blumenthal is a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee and
intends to meet with US Navy officials next week to discuss this matter.
Photo: L-R - Waterbury Mayor Neil O'Leary;
Col. John G. Chiarella, Chairman, Waterbury Veterans Memorial Committee; US
Senator Christopher Murphy; US Senator Richard Blumenthal.
The Waterbury Veterans Memorial Committee began
a campaign in April 2013 to recognize the service and sacrifice of Waterbury
native Lt. (Rev.) Thomas M. Conway. Two men from Waterbury died on its final
sailing - Chaplain Lt. Conway, and S2c Fred E. Harrison, 23 Roland Street,
Waterbury. S2c Harrison left behind his wife, Mrs. Ruth Elizabeth Harrison
and 2 children. Frederick Elliott Harrison was age 32.
July 3, 2014 Announcement: A
Public Hearing on Sen. Res. 197 will take place on Saturday, July 26,
2014 at 11 AM at the USS Indianapolis Survivors Meeting. The hearing
will take testimony to award the Navy Cross to the Chaplain of the USS
Indianapolis, Lt. (Rev.) Thomas M. Conway.
Conway Homestead 220 Cooke Street, Waterbury, CT |
MURPHY LAUNCHES EFFORT TO GATHER EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS OF WATERBURY VETERAN’S WWII HEROISM
Father Conway was among the roughly 900 sailors left in the water facing shark attacks, dehydration, and exposure. For three straight days, Father Conway swam back and forth among crew members, helping individual sailors who drifted away to rejoin their comrades, organizing prayer groups, and urging the increasingly dehydrated and delirious men not to give up hope of rescue. He died on the third night, August 2, 1945, shortly before Navy pilots spotted the survivors. Just 316 men survived, making the sinking of the USS Indianapolis the single greatest loss of life at sea in the history of the United States Navy.
The living survivors of the USS Indianapolis have made it their mission to make sure Father Conway is recognized by the U.S. Navy for his acts of heroism, saving many of their comrades’ lives at sea. Murphy is joining local efforts and sending requests to veterans organizations across the country to gather eyewitness accounts of Father Conway’s actions to help make the case for this recognition to the Navy. Murphy also plans to meet with this group of WWII veterans to help them achieve their goal. Last year, Murphy introduced a Senate resolution to award Father Conway with the Navy Cross.
“Father Conway’s story of heroism and selflessness inspires me and the people of Waterbury every single day. His bravery is the stuff of legends,” said Murphy. “The veterans aboard the USS Indianapolis who are still with us today have incredible eyewitness accounts of Father Conway’s rescue efforts – saving countless sailors aboard the ship. They have made it their mission to make sure their hero gets the recognition he deserves, and I strongly support their efforts. I’m looking forward to bringing the details of Father Conway’s story to the U.S Navy’s attention so they can share in the inspiration we all feel from Father Conway’s story.”
http://www.murphy.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases/murphy-launches-effort-to-gather-eyewitness-accounts-of-waterbury-veterans-wwii-heroism
DENIED
Veterans want Navy Cross for chaplain
By Oriana Pawlyk, Staff Writer 2:14 p.m. EST January 20,
2015
Over two dozen veterans can recount how chaplain Lt. Thomas
Conway kept their hope alive as sharks swarmed the remains of the USS
Indianapolis on July 30, 1945. But a letter written in 1948 stating Conway went
down with the sinking ship could be the reason behind the denial of a Navy
Cross — a decision one Connecticut veterans organization wants to reverse. "A
journey of a thousand miles starts with one step, so we started," said
committee secretary Robert Dorr.
The Navy denied last month the
request from the Waterbury Veterans Memorial Committee to award Conway the
Navy Cross, the second highest military decoration for valor for extraordinary
heroism in combat. Conway was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart. A bench
erected by the committee in a city park commemorates two fallen chaplains from
Waterbury — Conway, and Lt. Neil Doyle, who died on New Georgia Island in 1943
and, for his service, received the Distinguished Service Cross.
Father John Bevins, a retired Naval chaplain at the Basilica
of the Immaculate Conception — the same parish where Conway was baptized —
approached the 15-member committee in 2013 to have the same honor administered
for his fallen parishioner.
Because the request was beyond the three-year limit in which
a nomination may be submitted through appropriate channels, the committee went
through Connecticut Sens. Chris Murphy and Richard Blumenthal to pass along the
nomination to Navy Secretary Ray Mabus. "We gathered together every
recorded story, every magazine article, every newsletter ... and when you're
looking through these newsletters, when they're talking about heroism, they're
talking about Father Conway," Dorr told Military Times on Jan. 19. It went
beyond keeping the men together, Dorr said. The Indianapolis (CA-35), midway
between Guam and Leyte Gulf, was hit by two torpedoes fired by the I-58
Japanese submarine. Conway floated from group to group of about 67 men called
"the swimmers," praying, and reeling in sailors who began to drift
away. "We put together a compelling case," Dorr said of the
nomination the committee submitted in September. The stepping stone, Dorr said,
was looking at past chaplains who received such high honors, one being Cmdr.
George Rentz.
"There are considerable similarities," said Vietnam
veteran Doug Sterner, a military historian and Military Times contributing
editor. During the sinking of the USS Houston on Feb. 28, 1942, after a
Japanese attack in the Pacific, Rentz sacrificed himself so sailors could climb
aboard a pontoon, according to his Navy Cross citation provided by Sterner. "We
believe that [Conway's] service was equal to or greater than Cmdr. George
Rentz," Dorr said. However, Conway's heroic actions "never
happened," Dorr said, because "the captain believed that Father Conway
went down with the ship on July 30, and his letter was written
in the official 1948 history of the Navy chaplains corps." Dorr said
evidence and testimony from survivors shows Conway died Aug. 2. The letter was
written by Indianapolis' commander, then-Capt. Charles McVay, who nominated a
number of his officers and crew for personal decorations. McVay later went on
to be court-martialed for putting his ship in harm's way for "failure to
zigzag." But even after the widely publicized trial, McVay nominated
others for awards — just not Conway. "Your letter asserts that Captain
McVay did not know of Lieutenant Conway's actions, and if he had known, he
would have nominated his chaplain for the Navy Cross," R. Claussen,
writing on behalf of Mabus, states in the denied request sent to Sen. Murphy's
office. Claussen's title is not provided in the document.
"Based on our review of official records, it was not
possible to establish whether Captain McVay knew any details of Chaplain
Conway's actions," Claussen writes. "What is known is that Captain
McVay did not personally witness all of the actions of every officer and Sailor
he nominated for awards. Regulations only required that he know of the action,
and had eyewitness testimony of others to substantiate them.
"We could find no evidence of any such claim having
been made via official Navy channels, or recorded in official Navy documents.
There appears to have been ample opportunity for those survivors to convey this
information to Captain McVay." "I find the lack of awards to Father
Conway ... rather inequitable," Sterner said in an email to Military Times.
"I think in Conway's case, he probably was as much a victim to the
embarrassment the Navy had with the debacle surrounding the Indianapolis
sinking, and subsequent sadly handled inquiry, as he was to the sea."
"We've asked the Navy to revisit McVay's letter,"
Dorr said. "And in the response no one addressed that. They didn't say,
'Oh my God, you're right — there is an error in the official 1948
history.'"
All they cared about, Dorr said, was 10 U.S. Code 1130,
"Consideration of proposals for decorations not previously submitted in
timely fashion" regulations to submit the award, which are: the submission
must be originated by a Chief Warrant Officer 2 or above; the commissioned
officer was in the intended recipient's chain of command or had firsthand knowledge
of the heroic act; and that the officer was senior to the intended recipient in
either grade or position at the time of the act, according to the documents
Murphy's office received from Claussen.
Because of the passage of time, this would preclude any
enlisted men from making a recommendation for an award for Father Conway, Dorr
said.And whoever's left to tell Conway's story might not cut it, he said. There
are 37 survivors from the Indianapolis today, Dorr said. "They would like
to see this — they're getting together for their last and final reunion July 23
in Indianapolis for the 70th anniversary of the sinking," he said. The
committee recently submitted a request to the Congressional Research Service
through Murphy's office to look into any award recommendations that fall
outside the scope of that regulation, Dorr said. "We're delighted that
Father Conway's story is being told," Dorr said, "and that the
sacrifice of the men of the Indianapolis is again recognized."
"But if they're going to do it for somebody, why not
Father Conway?"
Celebrating Mass on board USS Indianapolis |
Hartford Courant July 30, 2015 -- WATERBURY
— Seventy years ago Thursday, 900 sailors plunged into the
shark-infested Pacific with nothing but life jackets, debris and each
other to cling to. Among them were the Rev. Thomas M. Conway and Seaman
2nd Class Frederick E. Harrison, both with strong Waterbury ties. The
men were part of the 1,196-member crew aboard the USS Indianapolis on
July 30, 1945, when two Japanese torpedoes ripped through the Portland
class heavy cruiser's bow and midsection. The ship sunk in 12 minutes.
Nearly 300 men died immediately. More than 500 more would perish before
rescue came.
On Sunday, in observance of the 70th anniversary of the ship sinking, Waterbury unveiled a memorial statue of Conway, eventually to be placed outside the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception near the green. Harrison will also be honored at the ceremony, at 11 a.m. at Waterbury City Hall.
Neither Conway nor Harrison made it home. Conway, a city native, was the ship's chaplain. He is remembered as a hero for his positive attitude and display of leadership while he and his fellow shipmates were stranded. Harrison, also from Waterbury, was a sailor who managed to survive long enough for the Navy to discover the stranded men. He died two days after being rescued. "It's important to honor Father Conway because he obviously was a heroic priest, born and raised in Waterbury," said Bob Dorr, secretary of the Waterbury Veterans Memorial Committee. "Every book published [about the Indianapolis] told the story of Father Conway, and now he will never be forgotten because of the statue — a permanent public display in Waterbury."
The statue was the idea of the Waterbury Veterans Memorial Committee. The committee hired American sculptor Andrew Chernak to create the memorial, which depicts Conway comforting a shipmate in the water. The bust of Conway was dedicated in 2006 at Buffalo and Erie County Naval and Military Park. Conway was a priest in the Buffalo area in the early 1940s, shortly before he enlisted in the Navy.
In his book "In Harm's Way," Doug Stanton details the story of the Indianapolis. One section chronicles Conway's final moments in the water, as told through the eyes of Dr. Lewis Haynes, the ship's chief medical officer. As Haynes holds a dying Conway in his arms, he reflects on how the chaplain selflessly prayed with men as they were dying and how he refused to quit swimming between groups of men to offer them his words of encouragement.
In a phone interview Wednesday, Stanton said: "You have to imagine floating in an ocean that is crystal clear and is sparkling … and yet at the same time, it's trying to kill you." He described the sharks as "boiling masses" waiting to attack. "For Father Conway's job to be swimming around, offering hope, offering any kind of comfort, is a moment of resiliency and courage. That is why Conway is being honored by these citizens [of Waterbury]."
Conway died the morning of Aug. 2, 1945, just hours before a Navy pilot flying overhead spotted the men in the water and came to their rescue. In the end, only 317 men survived. "We know that 67 men survived in the group that [Conway] helped supervise," Dorr said. "Only God knows how many souls he saved."
Announcement !!!!! "We are so very pleased to share that the Secretary of the Navy, RADM Kenneth Braithwaite II will be visiting Waterbury, January 8th (2021) for a medal ceremony at 2PM EST.He will be joined by Brent W. Scott, Chief of Naval Chaplains. The Medal Ceremony will be to honor Lt. (Rev.) Thomas M. Conway, Chaplain, USS Indianapolis (CA-35). The SECNAV will be presenting the Navy Cross to honor the service and sacrifice of Father Conway.
We want to acknowledge Robert Dorr for the many years of hard work and perseverance he put into championing this effort, s well to Captain William Toti (Ret.) who helped bring awareness to the story and heroism of Father Conway that helped make this honor possible.
BILL MILHOMME ... this is a remarkable, grace blessing end to the research of Fr. Thomas Conway. It was a work of love and learning experience for me.
** USS Indianapolis: Men of Courage is an upcoming American epic action-adventure war film directed by Mario Van Peebles and written by Cam Cannon and Richard Rionda Del Castro. The film stars Nicolas Cage, Tom Sizemore, Thomas Jane, Matt Lanter, Brian Presley, and Cody Walker. Principal photography began on June 19, 2015 in Mobile, Alabama. The film's release date is November 2016. View movie trailer http://www.indystar.com/story/entertainment/2016/05/09/watch-trailer-uss-indianapolis-men-courage/84149478/ --> Cut & paste links