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| Bill 'Radar' Hagendorn |
Bill
Hagendorn departed on Eternal Patrol on November 8,
2009.
A submarine veteran of two wars, World
War II and Korea, Bill Hagendorn was born in 1923.
Following in his father's footsteps, Bill joined the
U.S. Navy in 1940 at the age of 17 years old (his
dad's "kid cruise" was in 1909). He received
basic recruit training in Newport, and went to new
construction (first and only opportunity), reporting
aboard the USS LONG ISLAND (CVE-1) as part of
Squadron VS-201. He broke in on "neutrality
patrol" until December 7, 1941, at which time they
left for the west coast. He never had an
opportunity to leave the ship until September of
1942, when he put in for submarines. Bill
flashed through Spritz's Navy, Submarine School and
Torpedo School, and by Christmas of 1942, reported
aboard the USS DOLPHIN (SS-169). This ship was
originally built as the V-7 (SC-3) and was
redesignated the DOLPHIN (SS-169). He served aboard
the DOLPHIN until the old "D" was declared unsafe at
any speed and was ordered to New London,
Connecticut. Bill stayed on at Pearl Harbor
where he found that the submarine USS GROWLER
(SS-215) was in need of a good lookout. Luckily, he
was hired, and even luckier, got off in time as the
GROWLER was lost with all hands. In 1946, he
was discharged from the Navy, but was recalled in
1949 (Korea) and was again discharged in 1951.
Bill married Rosa Fonseca in 1959 and in 1985
retired from the jewelry business. He was an
active member of the Los Angeles Area "Diesel
Boaters" Chapter of U.S. Submarine Veterans of World
War II and a member of Trieste Base in Murrieta,
California. |
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