antiquarian wrote:
Rod Steiger was not in the ships on the Doolittle Raid. He joined the Navy the following month (May 11, 1942, to be exact) and after training reported to the USS Taussig (DD-746) on May 20, 1944 as a torpedoman, third class. The sinking of unarmed fishing vessels did occur (and he was always guilty about the possibility of his ship having killed women and kids on the sampans, despite the fact that the sampans could have had radios to warn the mainland of American movements-- and the Japanese often did do things like that) but it was during operations off the coast of Japan late in the war, not during the Doolittle Raid.
Source:
http://tinyurl.com/mfyywhmI'm not sure that book is correct. If he was born on April 25th, 1925 and enlisted in the Navy at age 16 that would be 1941. I did see a reference saying he came into the Navy in 1941. He would have been 17 on May 11th, 1942 according to that book's date. At 17 he would not have needed to lie about his age.....just get someone to sign him in (his mother did). My dad lied about his age to get in the Marines in early 1945. He was 16. Anyway, even if Rod Steiger did join the Navy on May 11th, 1942 as the book states, there is a two year gap in his service if he didn't report to the USS Taussig until May 20th, 1944. I do not think he was training to be a Torpedoman for 2 years during wartime. The Navy page says he was a non-rate on the USS Benham. That would make sense he was on there as a non-rate, got trained, then ended his service on the USS Taussig as a Torpedoman.
Here is part 2 of a 2001 BBC documentary called
H-e-l-l in the Pacific. If you go to 18:05, Rod Steiger talks about his (ships) role in the Doolittle escort and shooting the sampans they came across while heading towards Japan.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bfai4RRY-Ok