The Terrible Story Of U.S. Navy Lieutenant Richard Miles McCool, Jr. of Tishomingo, Honoring Him For His Heroic Actions During WWII.

 


U.S. Navy Lieutenant Richard Miles McCool, Jr. of Tishomingo, Oklahoma, was awarded the Medal of Honor for his extraordinary actions on June 10-11, 1945, off the coast of Okinawa.


After the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, McCool was accepted into a new Navy ROTC program and later appointed to the Naval Academy. 

He graduated in 1944 (his class of 1945 graduated a year early) and by June 1945 was serving as a lieutenant on the USS LCS(L)(3)-122 and Landing Craft Support ship. 


On June 10, 1945, off the coast of Okinawa Island, McCool helped rescue the survivors of the sinking destroyer USS William D. Porter. 


The next day, his ship was hit by a Japanese kamikaze. Although he suffered severe burns and shrapnel wounds in the explosion, he continued to lead his crew in the firefighting and rescue efforts until relief arrived. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions on June 10-11, 1945.


McCool also served in the Korean War and the Vietnam War. He retired at the rank of Captain in 1974 after a 30-year career. He died of natural causes on March 5, 2008, in Bremerton, Washington.

Related Topic:

Nile Clarke Kinnick Jr. (July 9, 1918 – June 2, 1943) was an American naval aviator, law student, and college football player at the University of Iowa. 


He won the 1939 Heisman Trophy and was a consensus All-American. He died during a training flight while serving as a United States Navy aviator in World War II.


 Kinnick was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1951, and the University of Iowa renamed its football stadium Kinnick Stadium in his honor in 1972.


On June 2, 1943, Ensign Kinnick was on a routine training flight from the aircraft carrier USS Lexington off the coast of Venezuela in the Gulf of Paria. 


He had been flying for over an hour when his Grumman F4F Wildcat developed an oil leak so severe that he could neither reach land nor the Lexington, whose flight deck was already crowded with planes preparing for launch anyway.


 He followed standard military procedure and executed an emergency landing in the water but died in the process.


 Rescue boats arrived on the scene eight minutes later but found only an oil slick. His body was never recovered. 

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He was one month and seven days away from his 25th birthday and was the first Heisman Trophy winner to die.

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