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HANCOCK DIVISION, U.S. NAVAL RESERVE
FORCES, FIFTEENTH DIVISION, 1941. Taken on Thursday, March 20th,
1941, the day the Unit shipped out on the Copper Country Limited
(train) for Great Lakes, IL and active duty. Following further
training at Great Lakes, they would ship out for San Francisco,
where many would serve on the USS Mount Vernon (AP-22), a former
cruise ship (the SS Washington) recently taken over by the
Government to serve as a troop transport. She and the Hancock
Reservists would be entering Cape Town, South Africa, when the
Japanese struck Pearl Harbor on Dec. 6, 1941 (it was 3pm in South
Africa), with a load of thousands of British soldiers from Halifax,
Nova Scotia, taken on board four weeks earlier, . The Mount Vernon
would unload the troops on Jan. 12 in Singapore, in an extremely
perilous operation, narrowly missing being sunk or severely damaged
by mines and Japanese bombers, leaving Singapore Jan. 16, just ahead
of advancing Japanese columns. All the thousands of "Tommies" she
left off, would be killed or go into captivity. Many would be slave
labor on the infamous Bridge on the River Kwai. ( From San Francisco
on 2 June, 1941, to San Francisco in April, 1942, the Mount Vernon
would sail around the world in a 64,00 mile voyage, visiting 16
ports of call, in the opening days of the US involvement in WWII ). |
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HANCOCK DIVISION, U.S. NAVAL
RESERVE FORCES, 1924. |
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HANCOCK DIVISION, U.S. NAVAL
RESERVE FORCES, FIFTEENTH
DIVISION, 1937-38. |
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| [Digital
enhancement: Roland Burgan] |
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