West Virginia and Regional History Center
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This item is on semi-permanent display in the WVRHC Conference Room. When not on display it is offsite, and a surrogate image is hung in its place. Please contact the Center prior to visiting to determine if the original is onsite.
[Description and date of item], U.S.S. West Virginia Life Preserver, A&M 4640, West Virginia and Regional History Center, West Virginia University Libraries, Morgantown, West Virginia.
Gift from Earl G. "Ken" Kendrick, 2023.
This original World War II ring life preserver, from Colorado-class battleship the U.S.S. West Virginia, was retreived from the water by sixteen-year-old Charles House Morgan Jr., son of Charles House Morgan Sr., the U.S. Commander of Harbor Defence at Pearl Harbor. Morgan Jr. was walking to headquarters at Diamond Head on December, 7 1941, when he saw the Japanese planes attack just 200 feet away.
This life preserver, constructed of treated canvas over foam, was salvaged from the wreckage of the U.S.S. West Virginia (BB-48) after the surprise December 7, 1941 Japanese air attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The life preserver measures 25 inches in diameter and includes the phrase, "U.S.S. W. Va. 1st Fire and Rescue Div" painted in red.