Clarence L. Riney






AMERICAN BATTLE
MONUMENTS COMMISSION
Clarence L. Riney
Machinist's Mate,
Third Class,
U. S. Navy
03567882
United States Navy
Entered the Service
from: Texas
Died: July 11, 1944
Missing in Action or Buried at Sea
Tablets of the Missing at Sicily-Rome
American Cemetery
Nettumo, Italy
Awards: Purple
Heart

USS Maddox - DD622
Contributed by
Dorothy Williams
USS
Maddox (DD-622) sunk after being bombed by German aircraft off Gela,
Sicily, 10 July 1943. Only 74 survivors. Sank in two minutes.
(July
10, 1943)
During Operation 'Husky' (the invasion of Sicily) the American destroyer
Maddox was singled out by a lone Stuka dive-bomber when near Gela. Two
bombs were dropped, the second struck the No.5 gun turret. The blast
triggered off an explosion in the magazine, demolishing the rear end of
the ship. She then started to sink below the waves stern first. It was
all over in two minutes after the bomb hit the ship. Those men in the
bowels of the ship had no chance, 210 of them going down with the
vessel. There were 74 survivors who were rescued by a tug nearby.
http://members.iinet.net.au/~gduncan/maritime-2a.html
Gela; USS Maddox Sunk
Edison was not at Gela so this is pieced together from comments made at
the time (scuttlebutt) and accounts from other historical narratives.
This narrative is not going to be comprehensive in covering the landings
at Gela, nor will it cover in any detail the combat phase of the
landings at Scoglitti, or the British assault on the southeast coast
targeted toward the cities of Syracuse and Augusta. Suffice it to note
that grudging progress was made by British forces up their coast toward
Messina while encountering heavy resistance. This did have a bearing on
the Allied hope to "seal off" the Strait of Messina and therefore on
Edison's deployment as the Seventh Army "front" to the west moved toward
the Straits of Messina.
Licata had been forecast to be the toughest assignment of the three
landing areas for the U.S. forces. Using an all-landing craft assault
force meant not only that those forces would be deployed from the
nearest debarkation ports in North Africa but also reflected a desire to
rapidly deploy and engage the enemy at the point where we expected
defenses to be the strongest. As it developed at Licata, the enemy did
not present the strongest resistance there and our landing strategy at
Licata was pointedly successful.
Gela yielded stubbornly. German air chose to concentrate on the sea
forces at Gela, both warships and transports. In the melee, a German
divebomber got in on the stern of the destroyer USS Maddox with a very
near miss, then a hit. These explosions did quite a bit of below-decks
damage aft. Events proceeded unfavorably for Maddox, a Benson/Livermore
1630 ton destroyer like Edison. The stern went under, and a series of
catastrophic explosions occurred under her hull, opening up so much
space that she sank very fast, in about two minutes. The enemy bomb may
not have set off "sympathetic" explosions of Maddox' ordnance but one
observation, that depth charges physically separated from their deck
hold down restraints rolled off or fell off, is plausible. Then, quickly
reaching depth at which set, these were the killing blow for Maddox. In
this two minutes of eternity, 202 were lost, another indication that
Maddox had no control of her fate after the near miss. One who lost his
life was Ensign Eugene J. Canty, an Academy classmate who had joined
Maddox about the same time I joined Edison.
http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/Barracks/1041/seawar7.html
From:
Joining The War At Sea 1939-1945 -
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I put the bold in this piece. Also just took portions that applied to
Clarence's ship. DW
"With confirmed information to the contrary, a War Department
Administrative Review Board established the official date of death of
those commemorated on the Tablets of the Missing as one year and a day
from the date on which the individual was placed in Missing in Action
status." (Dianne sent this)