Background
George L. Fox was born in Lewistown, Pennsylvania in 1900, one of five children. Fox married in 1923 and his son, Wyatt Ray was born a year later.
lieutenant Methodist minister chaplains
George L. Fox was born in Lewistown, Pennsylvania in 1900, one of five children. Fox married in 1923 and his son, Wyatt Ray was born a year later.
Following the war, Fox completed high school and briefly worked for a Trust Company. Fox studied at Moody Bible Institute and Illinois Wesleyan University, graduating in 1931.
He was one of the Four Chaplains who gave their lives to save other soldiers during the sinking of the troop transport Dorchester during World World War World War II Following graduation, Fox became an itinerant Methodist preacher, holding posts in Downs, Illinois and Rye, New Hampshire before joining the Boston University School of Theology and becoming an ordained minister in 1934. He remained in Vermont, moving church twice and becoming the state chaplain and historian for the American Legion. Fox joined the army again in 1942.
Fox was united with the other Four Chaplains for his voyage to Europe later that year following a position in the chaplain"s school in Harvard, and departed with over 900 soldiers on the Dorchester in January 1943.
In late 1942, Fox was transferred to Camp Myles Standish in Taunton, Massachusetts and attended Chaplains School at Harvard University. There he met fellow chaplains Alexander Doctorate. Goode, Clark V. Poling and John P. Washington.
In January 1943, the chaplains embarked on board a Navy transport ship, the Steamship Dorchester, which was carrying over 900 soldiers to the United Kingdom, via Greenland. On February 2, 1943 the German submarine U-223 spotted the convoy and fired a torpedo which struck the Dorchester shortly after midnight.
Hundreds of men packed the decks of the rapidly sinking ship and scrambled for the lifeboats.
Several of the lifeboats had been damaged and the four chaplains began to organize frightened soldiers. They distributed life jackets from a locker. When the supply of life jackets ran out, each of the chaplains gave theirs to other soldiers.
When the last lifeboats were away, the chaplains prayed with those unable to escape the sinking ship.
27 minutes after the torpedo struck, the Dorchester disappeared below the waves with 672 men still aboard. The last anyone saw of the four chaplains, they were standing on the deck, arms linked and praying together.
The four chaplains were all awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and the Purple Heart and received national acclaim for their courage and self-sacrifice. A chapel in their honor was dedicated on February 3, 1951 by President Harry South. Truman at Grace Baptist Church of Philadelphia.
The Four Chaplains" Medal was established by act of Congress on July 14, 1960, and was presented posthumously to their next of kin by Secretary of the Army Wilber M. Brucker at Fort
Myer, Virginia on January 18, 1961.