Hull Number: DE-319
Launch Date: 06/12/1943
Commissioned Date: 10/18/1943
Class: EDSALL
EDSALL Class
Namesake: ROBERT LAWRENCE LEOPOLD
ROBERT LAWRENCE LEOPOLD
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, July 2019
Robert Lawrence Leopold was born in Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, on 11 November 1916 to Lawrence S. and Irma (Schwabacher) Leopold. He came from a Jewish family and his parents were active in Democratic politics in the area. He attended Louisville Male High School, and graduated from that institution in 1934, then went on to attend college at the University of Louisville where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1938 and a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) in 1940. As an undergraduate, Leopold played football his freshman year and served in several student organizations, that included being President of the Student Council of the College of Liberal Arts, Research Supervisor of the law school’s Briefing Service, and membership in the Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity, an honor council for the university’s law school. He also became a member of the Kentucky State Bar Association and the American Bar Association (Jr. Conference).
On 10 July 1940, just a few months after completing his LLB, Leopold enlisted at Louisville in the U.S. Navy Reserve (USNR) as an apprentice seaman. From 19 August to 13 September, he participated in active duty training on board the demilitarized training battleship Wyoming (BB-32), operating primarily off the Atlantic seaboard. On 15 September, his enlistment was terminated under honorable conditions and the following day he was appointed midshipman, USNR. He then attended training at the U.S. Naval Reserve Midshipman’s School, Abbott Hall, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois; he received promotion to the rank of ensign D-V (G) (officer of the Volunteer Reserve to the line for general service in deck duties) on 12 December 1940.
Just a few weeks later, on 28 December 1940, Ens. Leopold reported for active duty on board the battleship Arizona (BB-39) serving as a communications watch officer. When Leopold reported on board the battleship she was undergoing modernization at the Puget Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, Wash. On 3 February 1941, Arizona voyaged to Pearl Harbor, T.H., where she had been stationed prior to her overhaul. In company with fellow battleships Nevada (BB-36) and Oklahoma (BB-37), Arizona conducted training exercises in Hawaiian waters throughout much of the year.
On 5 December 1941, Arizona, Nevada and Oklahoma moored alongside Ford Island, T.H., after having concluded exercises at sea. The following morning, Arizona took the repair ship Vestal (AR-1) alongside to port to receive a scheduled tender availability. Just before 0800, on 7 December 1941, aircraft from a Japanese fleet carrier group executed a devastating attack against the U.S. Pacific Fleet and naval and military bases in their proximity. During the attack the battleship took two direct bomb hits, one of which penetrated the deck and exploded in the black powder magazine which, in turn, set off adjacent magazines. The forward part of the ship experienced a devastating explosion that spawned fires so fierce that they burned for nearly two days afterwards. Ens. Leopold, Adm. Isaac C. Kidd (Commander Battleship Division 1), Capt. Franklin van Valkenburgh (Arizona’s Commanding Officer) and 1,177 officers and men lost their lives during the attack.
Ens. Leopold lies buried with his shipmates at Honolulu Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, Pearl Harbor, Honolulu County, Hawaii; the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial. For his sacrifice, he was posthumously awarded a Purple Heart and is entitled to the American Defense Service Medal and the World War II Victory Medal.
Disposition:
At 1959, as Leopold’s gun crews fired into the darkness, the whole ship suddenly and violently convulsed as an acoustic torpedo, fired from U-255 (Oberleutnant zur See Erich Harms in command), exploded near “frame 8,” of the ship. As one of the ship’s crew, S1c Troy S. Cowers, USCG, later recalled, “when the fish exploded, I was blown right out of my shoes and into a life net a dozen feet away.” The explosion destroyed Leopold’s underwater structure below the main deck, leaving her dead in the water. In the succeeding minutes, she broke in two and her bow section eventually capsized, with her stern remaining afloat. Leopold sank in 1,300 fathoms of water, some 522 miles from Iceland at the approximate location of 58°36'N, 25°57'W. Leopold was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 25 March 1944.