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US Navy - Guided Missile Destroyer
DDG 139 - USS Telesforo Trinidad
 
sorry, no insignia ddg-139 uss telesforo trinidad arleigh burke class guided missile destroyer aegis navy 02x
07/24
Type, class: Guided Missile Destroyer - DDG; Arleigh Burke class, Flight III
Builder: Huntington Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula, Missisippi, USA
 
STATUS:
Awarded: September 27, 2018
Laid down:
Launched:
Christened:

Commissioned:
I

 

Homeport: -
Namesake: Telesforo Trinidad (1890-1968)
Ships Motto:
Technical Data: see: INFO > Arleigh Burke class Guided Missile Destroyer - DDG
 
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USS Telesforo Trinidad (DDG 139):
 
 
Telesforo de la Cruz Trinidad (November 25, 1890 - May 8, 1968):
 
... was born in New Washington on the Philippine island of Panay to parents Juan Trinidad and Florentina De La Cruz.

In 1901, shortly after Spain ceded the Philippines to the U.S. after the Spanish-American War, President William McKinley established the Insular Force of the U.S. Navy that allowed the enlistment of 500 Filipino sailors.

Trinidad desperately wanted to be one of those sailors. His grandson, Rene Trinidad, told the Associated Press that Trinidad was so eager to join that when he was 20, he stowed away on a lifeboat from Panay to the main island, Luzon, so he could enlist at the Cavite Navy Yard, about an hour south of Manila.

At some point after enlistment, he met and married Eufemia Pagtakhan. The digital magazine Positively Filipino said the couple had 11 children, eight of whom lived to adulthood. Two of their sons followed their father into the Navy, the Associated Press said.

By 1915, Trinidad was working as a fireman on the armored cruiser USS San Diego. On Jan. 15, 1915, the ship was part of a naval patrol near La Paz, Mexico, in the Gulf of California. That day, historians said its captain decided to hold a four-hour endurance trial to make sure the cruiser could still maintain its officially rated flank speed. At the end of the trial, one of the boiler tubes had become blocked, causing an explosion that led to a chain reaction.

Trinidad was driven out of fireroom No. 2 by the blast, but he immediately went back in and picked up an injured fireman, R.E. Daly. As he was carrying Daly through fireroom No. 4, a second explosion in fireroom No. 3 hit Trinidad, severely burning his face.

Trinidad dismissed his own injuries and kept moving until he was able to pass Daly on to someone else. He then went back to fireroom No. 3 to save another man.

Five sailors died and seven others were injured that day, according to the Naval History and Heritage Command. But Trinidad's heroics helped rescue two, and that earned him the Medal of Honor, which was still being awarded for noncombat valor at the time. He received the honor in August 1915 and was also given $100 in gratuity pay for his efforts.

His citation reads:
For extraordinary heroism in the line of his profession at the time of the boiler explosion on board the U.S.S. San Diego, 21 January 1915. Trinidad was driven out of fireroom No. 2 by the explosion, but at once returned and picked up R. E. Daly, fireman, second class, whom he saw to be injured, and proceeded to bring him out. While coming into No. 4 fireroom, Trinidad was just in time to catch the explosion in the No. 3 fireroom, but without consideration for his own safety, passed Daly on and then assisted in rescuing another injured man from No. 3 fireroom. Trinidad was himself burned about the face by the blast from the explosion in No. 3 fireroom.

Nineteen years after the USS San Diego incident, another of Trinidad's shipmates, then-Ensign Robert Cary Jr., also received the Medal of Honor for his bravery that day.

Trinidad remained in the Navy for a long time, serving in both world wars, according to the Associated Press. He retired in 1945 and returned to the Philippines.

Trinidad died on May 8, 1968, at a hospital at the Cavite Navy Yard, where he began his naval career. He was 77.

Decades later, his heroics are still being remembered. In May 2022, the Navy announced it would name a future Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer the USS Telesforo Trinidad.

"Having a ship named after such a significant figure highlights our diverse culture and that our people will always be our strategic advantage against any adversary," said Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro when he made the announcement. "I hope the naming of this ship is a beacon for not only Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders but for all our sailors, Marines and civilians who serve across the Department of the Navy. The service and sacrifice of these men and women have made our military and our nation stronger and better."

Trinidad remains the only Filipino in the Navy to have earned the Medal of Honor.

source: US DoD
 

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