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American Catholic History

Fr. Joseph T. O’Callahan, Savior of the USS Franklin

American Catholic History

Noelle & Tom Crowe

History, Christianity, Religion & Spirituality, Education

5724 Ratings

🗓️ 11 July 2024

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Father Joseph T. O’Callahan, SJ, was head of the mathematics department at Holy Cross College in Worcester, Massachusetts, and a professor of mathematics, physics, and philosophy. But when war broke out in 1939, he signed up to be a Navy Chaplain — the first Jesuit to do so. In March of 1945 he was assigned to the USS Franklin, which steamed out of Pearl Harbor on March 3. Just 16 days later, while preparing to launch bombing runs on the Japanese mainland, the Franklin was struck by two armor-piercing bombs. The bombs penetrated to the hangar bay. The chain reactions of explosions and fires which ensued killed hundreds almost immediately, and hundreds more over the next eleven hours. But Father O’Callahan kept his wits about him, and organized the men into firefighting squads. He personally led some men into gun turrets and ammunition magazines to remove hot rounds and toss them overboard, and to hose down some with fire hoses to keep them cool. If any of these had exploded the ship would have been torn to bits, and all the men would have died. Thanks to his actions — and those of a few others — the Franklin was saved, and made it back to Brooklyn, New York for major repairs. Father O’Callahan initially refused the Navy Cross approved for him, but eventually President Truman convinced him to accept the Congressional Medal of Honor — the award his actions truly merited. Father O’Callahan eventually went back to teaching at Holy Cross. He died in 1964.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to American Catholic History, brought to you by the support of listeners like you.

0:10.5

If you value this content, please become a supporter at Americancatholichistory.org slash support.

0:17.2

I'm Noelle Heister Crow.

0:18.4

And I'm Tom Crow.

0:19.6

We say it every episode because we really mean it.

0:23.7

Thank you to our supporters.

0:25.4

We really couldn't keep doing this without you.

0:28.4

Yes.

0:28.9

Thank you sincerely.

0:30.6

And those of you who have considered becoming supporters, well, consider it harder.

0:35.4

We'd love to make these episodes on a more consistent basis, but we need more support to make that happen.

0:40.4

Yes, if you're not yet a supporter, look us up on locals or Patreon to see our support levels and the perks offered.

0:47.1

You can get details about becoming a supporter at American Catholic history.org slash support.

0:52.4

Also, thank you for the reviews you leave on Apple and especially

0:55.7

those five-star ratings. They really help others to find us. Yes. So all that said, on with the show.

1:02.7

Today, Memorial Day, we're continuing what's become a tradition for us talking about a war

1:09.2

chaplain. In this case, we're talking about Father Joseph T. O'Callaghan S.J.

1:14.4

Father O'Callaghan was the first Jesuit to serve as a military chaplain, and he was the first

1:19.3

Catholic priest to be awarded the Medal of Honor.

1:22.2

And after receiving his Medal of Honor, he went back to the classroom to teach mathematics

1:26.7

and philosophy.

1:28.2

I mean, talk about commanding respect from your students.

...

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