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Thanks you for this article Paul Hinkle!

 

Quiet hero, men who died in secret WWII disaster remembered

November 11, 1995

Web posted at: 8:35 p.m. EST

 

ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) -- John Howard Doyle died a quiet hero, forbidden to talk of how he saved 132 soldiers and sailors from the frigid English Channel in one of the least-known Allied disasters of World War II.

 

The Navy captain -- who refused orders to flee a German attack during a secret D-Day rehearsal -- was publicly remembered at a Veterans Day ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery on Friday.

 

A plaque also was dedicated to the 749 soldiers and sailors Doyle and his men couldn't rescue, those who "suffered and perished on April 28, 1944" in the early morning hours near Slapton Sands, England.

 

"Although Exercise Tiger ended in tragedy, the lessons learned contributed to the success of the D-Day landings and the ultimate triumph of democracy over tyranny in World War II," President Clinton said in a statement read to a gathering of 300 survivors, family and friends.

 

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower threatened to court martial anyone who revealed the training debacle. More members of the Army's 4th Infantry Division died that day -- 551 -- than in the Normandy invasion itself on June 6, 1944; it resulted in the second-highest number of U.S. fatalities in a single day of the war, topped only by Pearl Harbor. Some facts leaked after D-Day, but the whole story wasn't told until recent years.

 

Dr. Eugene Eckstam, a survivor from Monroe, Wis., said Doyle ignored orders to retreat from the torpedo boats that sank Eckstam's ship and disabled two others. Doyle asked the crew of his amphibious ship to rescue their brothers-in-arms.

 

"Those of us in the water did not expect to live," a tearful Eckstam said, his voice breaking. "Our prayers were answered by the brave and courageous decision by Captain John Doyle. He's the reason I'm here today."

 

Doyle died two years ago after a quiet life in Missouri. He married twice, raised a son and ran a small vending machine business, said his sister Peggy Doyle. He never spoke of Exercise Tiger.

 

"I never really knew just how much of a hero he was," said Ms. Doyle, who traveled from Lincoln City, Ore., for the ceremony. "I missed so much of my brother's life. He refused to talk about it. He couldn't."

 

A fir tree was planted during the ceremony, and a wreath laid at the Tomb of the Unknowns. The bodies of many who died weren't recovered from the channel, and some 400 were buried in England.

 

Retired Navy Lt. Clarence Gonnerman of Columbia, Mo., remembered calling the orders from his ship to flee the attack.

 

"There was no reason to shoot. We just had to run," he said. "But Doyle stayed. There's a hero ... The ironic thing is no one knows it. We all never got any medals or stars. It was kept quiet too long."

 

In 1987, an Exercise Tiger memorial was dedicated at Slapton Sands.


There is a great book about the incident at Slapton Sands. Hundreds lost their lives when their beach assault training exercise was attacked by German E-boats. The casualties were secretly buried in the local area and their families were not notified until after D-Day. Then they were told that their loved ones died on D-Day, 6 June. It wasn't until 1970s(?) that the truth was discovered and released.

 

Steve