Eugene E. Lindsey was an officer and aviator in the United States Navy. He is the namesake of the destroyer.
Naval career
Lindsey was born in Sprague, Washington, on 2 July 1905 and graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1927. After duty on and, he completed flight training in 1929 and served with a bombing squadron on and an observation squadron in. From 3 June 1940 he commanded Torpedo Squadron Six, which flew Douglas TBD-1 "Devastator" torpedo bombers, in. On 7 December 1941, Lindsey was aboard Enterprise when he received word along of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. That evening, Enterprise received a report of an enemy carrier south of Oahu. With most of the ship's dive bombers having either flown into Pearl that morning or been deployed on search, Lindsey was ordered to lead his 19 TBDs against the target. However, the contact report proved to be false, and the strike found nothing. On their return around 20.00, Enterprise ordered the strike to proceed to Ford Island. However, Lindsey, who knew his men were low on fuel, refused, and convinced his ship to take them in. The VT-6 pilots, landing with live torpedoes and no night landing experience, all got aboard safely. Lindsey's first real combat occurred on 1 February 1942, when he led VT-6's first division in two strikes against Japanese targets in the Marshall Islands. In the first, he led nine bomb-carrying TBDs as part of a full-scale dawn strike against Roi and Kwajalein. For the second, he took off as part of a follow-up strike of 8 SBDs and nine TBDs to hit shipping and facilities at Wotje. In both cases, Lindsey's division returned without loss. His performance and leadership on these strikes would earn him the Distinguished Flying Cross. On 24 February 1942, Lindsey again led nine bomb-equipped TBDs as part of Enterprise's strike against Wake Island. Again, VT-6 returned without loss. On 4 March, Enterprise continued the campaign by hitting Marcus Island. However, Lindsey's men missed out as they were being held in reserve in case any important shipping targets turned up. On 28 May 1942, as Enterprise departed Pearl Harbor in preparation for the Battle of Midway, Lindsey made a bad landing while leading his squadron aboard. As his plane neared touchdown, it suddenly stalled, struck the deck hard, and careened over the port side. The destroyer rescued Lindsey and his crew. According to the Enterprise log, Lindsey suffered "several cracked ribs, punctured lung, multiple cuts, and other lacerations." With such severe injuries, his shipmates expected him to be sidelined for the coming battle. Lindsey, however, refused to let his injuries prevent him from leading his squadron. On 4 June, the day of the battle, he surprised Air Group CommanderWade McClusky by joining him at breakfast. After almost a week of recuperation, Lindsey was still so bruised about the face that he could not put on his flight goggles. However, when McClusky asked if he could fly, Lindsey answered, “This is what I’ve been trained to do”. Lindsey died in action on 4 June 1942 with his rear-seat gunner, Charles T. Grenat, ACRM, in the Battle of Midway, when their Douglas TBD Devastator was shot down by Japanese A6M2 Zero fighters, while attacking the aircraft carrierKaga. VT-6 lost 10 out of 14 planes. He was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross for his contribution to the battle.
Namesake
In 1944, the destroyer was named in his honor.
Portrayal in film
Eugene E. Lindsey was portrayed by Darren Criss in the 2019 film Midway, directed by Roland Emmerich. He was portrayed by Robert S. Woods in the TV Mini Series, War & Remembrance, Parts 2 & 3.