Talk:USS PC-598
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USS PC-598: Documenting my father’s experience in WWII
editMy father, Scott W. Emerson, spoke only occasionally about his service in the Navy during WWII.
I remember watching an episode of the documentary Victory at Sea with him on a Saturday morning when I was about 12. It was Episode XXV - Suicide for Glory about the 1945 battle for Okinawa. We watched remarkable footage of kamikazes attacking the US fleet supporting the invasion. My father was totally lost in the grainy black and white images of planes being shot out of the sky and crashing into ships. I knew he had been a gunner’s mate aboard his ship and I asked, “Did you ever shoot down a kamikaze?” His response, “I sure tried.”
Only years later did I realize that we had been watching scenes from a battle in which he had actually fought.
Although I knew my father had served aboard a ship in the Pacific during WWII, he had not shared much of this with me while I was growing up. It was only after his death from cancer in 1983, at age 56, that I became seriously interested in his experience during the war. I began to research his ship, the submarine chaser USS PC-598, and over the years gathered a great deal of information, including photographs of the crew and official records, such as the ship’s log books and war diaries. I was also fortunate to make contact with many of his surviving shipmates through the Patrol Craft Sailors Association. They shared their stories of the ship and the war with me. One shipmate, Harry Thomas who still lives in Florida, recalled my father as “a big kid who liked to eat.” This observation convinced me he had known my father.
Using these resources and the internet, I developed a pretty good understanding of the ship and it’s war-time role. Following the sub chaser’s travels from March 1943 through August 1945, I learned about the places it went and the battles it fought. This led me to understand the immense scale and cost of the war, measured particularly in lives disrupted and lives lost.
PC-598 was one small ship among thousands fighting in the Pacific. Its history helped me put the war in perspective, but it also helped me see my father and his life in a new light. As a “big kid” he was able to lie about his age to enlist. He first boarded the ship while only 15 years old. He turned 16, 17 and 18 on board PC-598 while serving in the Pacific and participated in four major invasions: Peleliu, Luzon, Leyte Gulf and Okinawa. He was discharged a combat veteran at 18, an age when his children and grandchildren would still be in high school preparing for their proms. Clearly this early experience shaped his life.
In the end, I wanted to summarize what I had learned about PC-598 and make it available to my family. I decided to create a Wikipedia article. The Wiki article is about the ship, not my father. However, where the ship went, so went my father. And, if you look closely, you will find him there.