Hull Number: DE-401
Launch Date: 11/27/1943
Commissioned Date: 01/18/1944
Call Sign: NTYD
Class: EDSALL
EDSALL Class
Namesake: RANDOLPH MITCHELL HOLDER
RANDOLPH MITCHELL HOLDER
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, June 2019
Randolph Mitchell Holder was born on 20 September 1918, in Jackson, Miss., to William D. and Annette A. [Limerick] Holder Jr. Following grade school, Randolph attended Mississippi State College [Mississippi State University], where he received a degree in Aeronautical Engineering. On 13 June 1939, in New Orleans, La., he enlisted in the U.S. Naval Reserve as a seaman second class. Two days later he reported for active duty service and set out for preliminary flight training at the Naval Reserve Aviation Base, Miami, Fla., where he accepted an appointment as an aviation cadet on 3 August 1939. Later that month, on 28 August, Aviation Cadet Holder reported for flight training at Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Fla., and following several months of training finally received his aviator wings on 27 February 1940. He was commissioned as an ensign on 10 April of that same year.
After completing flight instruction, Ens. Holder reported for duty with Torpedo Squadron (VT) 6 on board the aircraft carrier Enterprise (CV-6) operating in the Pacific. With tensions heightening in that area, Enterprise, in Task Force 8, got underway for Wake Island on 28 November 1941 “under wartime conditions,” to deliver Grumman F4F-3 Wildcat fighters from Marine Fighting Squadron 211 to Wake Island. That mission, coupled with bad weather that delayed her return to Pearl Harbor, T.H., precluded Enterprise from being present during the Japanese attack on U.S. forces at Oahu.
Enterprise participated in attacks against the Marshall and Gilbert Islands (February 1942), Wake Island (February 1942) and Marcus Island [Minami Tori Shima] (March 1942). Then, on 18 April 1942, Enterprise supported the Halsey-Doolittle Raid, in which 16 USAAF North American B-25B Mitchell medium bombers led by Lt. Col. James H. “Jimmy” Doolittle, USAAF, bombed targets in the Japanese homeland.
Promoted on 28 May 1942, Lt. (j.g.) Holder still served with Torpedo Squadron (VT) 6 on board Enterprise, when U.S. and Japanese forces clashed at Midway (4–6 June 1942). When the battle opened on the morning of 4 June, Holder departed Enterprise in company with the rest of the Enterprise Air Group in order to intercept Japanese forces approaching Midway. Early in the action, Holder’s and the other 14 Douglas TBD-1 Devastators of VT-6, found themselves separated from their fighter escorts and as they approached their objective they found themselves overwhelmed by both enemy fighters and a barrage of anti-aircraft fire. Holder’s Navy Cross citation indicates that despite these forbidding odds he “pressed home his attack with relentless determination,” and “under unprecedented conditions.”
Holder’s plane along with ten others in his squadron were shot down during the attack, with only four making it out intact. His remains were never recovered and he was listed as missing in action on 4 June, and then officially declared deceased the following day. Holder was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross and the Purple Heart, and he is further entitled to the wear of the American Defense Service Medal with Fleet Clasp, the Asiatic-Pacific Area Campaign Medal, and the World War II Victory Medal.
Disposition:
Stricken 23 September 1944. Sold to Mr. John J. Witte on 17 June 1947, and scrapped on 15 March 1948.