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Pearl Harbor Submariner Good Conduct Medal


Kaigun Shosa
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A recent acquisition to my Navy Good Conduct Collection. This medal came with a ton of photos and original paperwork. I did not write for his service record details yet, but was able to piece together his career from what I gathered from all the documents. we have the following:

 

Chief Machinist (WO1) William Carl Pohlman

Born in Queravaca Mexico 6 September 1900 to German parents that emigrated to Mexico. He spoke both fluent German and English.

 

Entered the Navy on 18 Apr 1919

 

Tours of duty include the following:

From 1919 to 1924 served at Charleston S.C.; Sub Base New London, and served onboard USS (S-7). Also sometime during this period he attended Machinist mate school and Submarine School.

 

- Mar 1924 to Jan 1930 USS S-38 (Homeport, Cavite, P.I.) Awarded First Good Conduct medal.

 

- Jan 1930 to Jun 1934 USS Nautilus

 

- Jun 1934 to Sept 1934 USS Dobbin (AD-3)

 

- Sept 1934 to Dec 1937 Performed Recruiting duty in Quincy Illinois

 

- Dec 1937 to Sept 1942 USS Narwhal (At Pearl Harbor on the morning of 7 Dec 1941) During his time on the Narwhal he received a second (1938) and third (1941) bars for his good conduct medal.

 

Completed First three War patrols with USS Narwhal under the command of LCDR Chester W "Weary" Wilkins

 

Commissioned as Chief Machinist in 1942 and transferred off the boat to Sub Base Pearl Harbor as officer in charge of repair work on Submarines returning from war patrol.

 

- Jun 1943 to Jan 1945 Transferred to Officer in Charge, Salvage Officer, Sub Sup Center, Submarine Base Pearl Harbor.

 

Chief Machinist Pohlman was denied permanent appointment in the Navy. Disqualified due to Arterial Hypertension and eventually retired from active duty in 1946.

 

Moved to the Concord Calif. area sometime in 1947

 

15 May 1950 completed 30 years of Naval service with both active and inactive duty.

 

died 21 April 1965 at the Martinez, CA VA hospital and is buried at Golden Gate National Cemetery.

 

The only medal I have of his is the good conduct medal. However, from what I gather he is also entitled to the following:

 

- American defense Service Medal with "Fleet" Bar

- Asiatic Pacific Campaign with 2 stars (probably entitled to at least one more, however, only two were documented in the paperwork I have of him.

- American Theater Campaign

- WWII Victory

 

Since I do not have a copy of his service file, I am not sure why there is a 10 year time period from his first good conduct to his second award. He could be missing a bar? Did not qualify? did not put in for one? So unless I get his records, I don't know.

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Interesting group with the research, paper and photos. Never saw "Mexico" or any foreign country on a VA-issue headstone before.

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Indeed it is, Kurt. Very desirable. I'm glad you're online since I've got a question on another post I'm going to ask now that I'm pretty sure you would have the answer to.

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