Robert G. Bradley


Robert Graham Bradley was a United States Navy Lieutenant during World War II. He was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross for actions during the Battle of Leyte Gulf on. He was the namesake of.

Biography

Robert Graham Bradley was born in Washington, D.C., on 26 September 1921. He was appointed to the United States Naval Academy on 9 June 1939, and graduated on 19 June 1942. He completed instruction at the Atlantic Subordinate Command, Service Force, Norfolk, Va., and on 29 October reported to New York Shipbuilding Corporation, Camden, New Jersey, for the fitting out of small aircraft carrier. He served as a member of the ship's company when was commissioned on 25 February 1943, and while on board received promotions to lieutenant, junior grade and lieutenant, as she took part in operations ranging from the occupation of Baker Island to the Battle of Leyte Gulf.
While steamed with Task Group 38.3 in Leyte Gulf off the east coast of Luzon, Philippines, a Japanese plane, tentatively identified as a Yokosuka D4Y1 Type 2 , attacked the ship. Its bomb penetrated the flight, hangar, and main decks and exploded, igniting an inferno that swept across the hangar deck. Explosions rocked the carrier, but Bradley, the ship's assistant first lieutenant, led a repair party and battled the blaze on the second and third decks. Light cruisers and, and destroyers,, and, also fought the fire.
The intense heat compelled Bradley and his men to abandon their efforts, and after verifying that no wounded men remained behind, he entered the water at 1005, rescued soon thereafter by. Their success in fighting the fire led many of the men to believe that if they could clear the smoke from Princeton's largely undamaged machinery spaces, they could raise steam and save the ship.
Bradley thus valiantly returned to from —which lay alongside Princeton's starboard quarter to play her hoses onto the flames and became temporarily wedged between two of the carrier's overhanging stacks. A submarine and air alert sounded 30 minutes later and and, the two closest ships, pulled away from Princeton to take their antisubmarine stations. The determined firefighting efforts had nearly controlled the fire, but it raged again during the ensuing lull. Following the alert, and closed and attempted to secure a line to. The cruiser succeeded on her third try, but the flames touched off four hundred 100-pound bombs stowed aft in the torpedo magazine. The resulting explosion blew off the upper part of the carrier's stern, killing Bradley and every man in the vicinity.
,,, and all sustained damage by rolling against the stricken carrier or by fragments from the explosion of Princeton's magazines—the detonation devastated, which lay alongside the carrier and lost 229 men killed, four missing, 211 seriously wounded, and 215 with minor wounds. In addition, a jeep fell from Princeton's flight deck, damaging Morrison's bridge. and scuttled.
Bradley had repeatedly risked his life, entering the most dangerous areas below deck to ascertain the extent of the damage and to fight the fires blazing on board. For his "outstanding fortitude, great personal valor, and self-sacrificing devotion to the completion of an extremely perilous task," as well as his "extraordinary heroism," Bradley received the Navy Cross posthumously.
Bradley's name appears on the Tablets of the Missing, Manila American Cemetery, Manila, Philippines.

Navy Cross citation

The Commander In Chief Pacific Fleet awarded Bradley the Navy Cross for actions while serving aboard 24 October 1944 with the following citation:

Attribution