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News / Nation & World

Navy to name carrier for Pearl Harbor hero

Miller manned gun, returned fire against Japanese planes

By Associated Press
Published: January 21, 2020, 6:58pm

HONOLULU — The U.S. Navy is honoring a World War II hero by naming a new aircraft carrier for Mess Attendant 2nd Class Doris “Dorie” Miller.

The announcement was made at Pearl Harbor on Monday, Popular Mechanics reported on its website Tuesday.

Miller was the first African American to receive the Navy Cross for valor.

Miller was recognized for manning a machine gun on the USS West Virginia and returning fire against Japanese planes during the Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor.

USS Miller, a destroyer escort, was previously named in his honor.

“I think that Doris Miller is an American hero simply because of what he represents as a young man going beyond the call of what’s expected,” said Doreen Ravenscroft, a team leader for the Doris Miller Memorial.

Local Angle

Navy hero Doris “Dorie” Miller died on one of the Kaiser carriers built in Vancouver, the USS Liscome Bay, which was sunk in the Pacific in 1943 by a Japanese submarine during the invasion of Makin island.

An African American was not allowed to man a gun in the Navy in 1941, Ravenscroft said.

“Without him really knowing, he actually was a part of the civil rights movement because he changed the thinking in the Navy,” Ravenscroft said.

Two of Miller’s nieces were expected to be at Pearl Harbor for the announcement on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

Miller, then 22, was collecting laundry when the attack alarm sounded. His normal battle station in an antiaircraft battery magazine was destroyed by a torpedo. He went on deck and carried wounded soldiers to safety before receiving orders to aid the mortally wounded captain on the bridge.

“He subsequently manned a 50-cal. Browning anti-aircraft machine gun until he ran out of ammunition and was ordered to abandon ship,” the Navy said, noting Miller was not trained to operate the gun.

Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, the commander in chief of the Pacific Fleet, presented the Navy Cross to Miller in Pearl Harbor in May 1942.

Miller died while serving on a ship that was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine in November 1943.

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