JOYCE A. RALPH, CDR, USN
Joyce Ralph '23
Lucky Bag
From the 1923 Lucky Bag:
Joyce Allen Ralph
Bisbee, Arizona
"Axle" "Bill"
NON-REG, that's him all over again. Plebe year he was on probation before Christmas. His trouble was too much courting of Lady Nicotine. However, with a little luck and good tendencies, he finished the year, collecting just a few over a hundred more demerits.
Early in Youngster year he began his quest for the ideal "femme". Since then his range of drags has been wide and varied, but his general average has made his fussing well worth while.
As a charter member of the Radiator Club he reigns supreme. Except on leave, sleep has always been very essential to him. With his ability to sleep at any time, anywhere and in any position, insomnia will never be a menace to him.
Heaving the heavy line has long been a favorite pastime of his. That he is both entertaining and instructive is evidenced by the fact that, after four long years his friends are still glad to sit down and listen for hours at a time. And last but not least are those wonderful inspirations of his.
Log Staff (4, 3).
Joyce Allen Ralph
Bisbee, Arizona
"Axle" "Bill"
NON-REG, that's him all over again. Plebe year he was on probation before Christmas. His trouble was too much courting of Lady Nicotine. However, with a little luck and good tendencies, he finished the year, collecting just a few over a hundred more demerits.
Early in Youngster year he began his quest for the ideal "femme". Since then his range of drags has been wide and varied, but his general average has made his fussing well worth while.
As a charter member of the Radiator Club he reigns supreme. Except on leave, sleep has always been very essential to him. With his ability to sleep at any time, anywhere and in any position, insomnia will never be a menace to him.
Heaving the heavy line has long been a favorite pastime of his. That he is both entertaining and instructive is evidenced by the fact that, after four long years his friends are still glad to sit down and listen for hours at a time. And last but not least are those wonderful inspirations of his.
Log Staff (4, 3).
Loss
Joyce was lost when the transport plane he was aboard crashed near Kodiak, Alaska, on August 16, 1942.
From a now-broken link, this undated passage:
Plane With 14 Missing in Alaska - A U.S. Navy plane with a crew of four and ten passengers enroute from Kodiak to Whitehorse, Alaska was reported overdue by the Navy Department, which notified next of kin of those aboard that the crew and passengers were missing. The flight was a routine one from Kodiak to Seattle, Wash. Three planes started on the trip and were forced to fly by instrument soon after taking off. Two made their way through the bad weather to Whitehorse. Naval aircraft have been making searches for the missing plane and other agencies were asked to assist in the search.
Those aboard the missing plane were Commander Joyce A. Ralph, USN; Lieut. Comdrs. Burton Lee Doggett, USN, Jerome H. Sparbo. USNR and Paul H. Tobelman, USN; Captain Arthur Barrows. USMC; Lieuts. Joseph A. Crook, USN and Thomas E. Johnson. Jr. (ChC), USN; Lieuts. (j.g.) Thomas G. Cherikos, USNR. Charles E. Deterding, USN and Jay A. Noble, Jr.. USN: Ensign Charles L. Mixon, USNR; Charles E. Barber. ACRM. USN; H. A. Scott, ACRM, USN, and C O. Walton, AMM2c. USN.
The aircraft was never located, and all 14 passengers and crew were declared dead a year and a day following their disappearance. The aircraft was a part of Transport Squadron (VR) 2.
Other Information
From researcher Kathy Franz:
In August 1916, Joyce and his classmates spent a ten-day camping trip in the Government Draw to get in good physical condition for the upcoming football season.
Besides football, Joyce played basketball, was a military cadet and editor of the jokes section for the yearbook. He graduated from Bisbee high school in 1918.
From the Bisbee Daily Review, Arizona, March 3, 1918:
Joyce’s senior class presented the Lindsey Barbee play “The Thread of Destiny.” A quarantine caused the production to be postponed just as it was about to be presented.
“Joyce Ralph as Beverly Montgomery, the brother and Confederate scout, had one of the most difficult roles and his acting was nothing short of professional, the man who loved his state better than his life and was prepared to fight for his convictions he had the sympathy of the entire audience when hunted like an animal, the sought refuge from the Union soldiers in his father’s home.”
From the Bisbee Daily Review, May 9, 1918
The senior class presented class day exercises. Joyce and a classmate played two soldiers in a training camp, and the senior girls were guests at a house party. Joyce was part of the quartet that interspersed songs with dialog of class events and tribulations. Joyce then presented the class prophecy as a dream. Something funny and amusing was said about each member.
After graduation, Joyce took the Navy entrance examination in El Paso to be a radio electrician. In January, 1919, he returned to electrician school in Mare Island, California. In March, he transferred to the officers’ material school for a two month course to prepare for Annapolis.
In the summer of 1922, Joyce and others were on the U. S. S. Olympia for their summer cruise. The Olympia was Admiral Dewey’s flagship at the battle of Manila Bay, and she was also the ship which brought the unknown soldier’s body from France to the United States.
On June 7, 1923, Joyce married Lily Edmonston George in Baltimore, Maryland. She died in 1993 in Annapolis. Their daughter Sally Jean was born in 1928 in San Diego.
In 1930, Lily and Sally sailed for Honolulu, and they returned to San Francisco in June, 1932. From 1937 to 1940, the family lived in China. They sailed back to San Francisco in July, 1940.
During the attack on Pearl Harbor, Joyce was on a battleship in the harbor.
In 1920, Joyce’s father Allan L. was a shift boss at the southwest shaft of the Copper Queen mine in Bisbee. Joyce’s mother was Anna, brother John, and sister Marjorie. In 1910, they lived in Tombstone where his father was a manager of a silver mine.
His wife was listed as next of kin.
Photographs
Career
Joyce was the commanding officer of USS Schley (APD 14) following that ship's recommissioning in October 1940. He served aboard Schley until July 1941.
The "Register of Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps" was published annually from 1815 through at least the 1970s; it provided rank, command or station, and occasionally billet until the beginning of World War II when command/station was no longer included. Scanned copies were reviewed and data entered from the mid-1840s through 1922, when more-frequent Navy Directories were available.
The Navy Directory was a publication that provided information on the command, billet, and rank of every active and retired naval officer. Single editions have been found online from January 1915 and March 1918, and then from three to six editions per year from 1923 through 1940; the final edition is from April 1941.
The entries in both series of documents are sometimes cryptic and confusing. They are often inconsistent, even within an edition, with the name of commands; this is especially true for aviation squadrons in the 1920s and early 1930s.
Alumni listed at the same command may or may not have had significant interactions; they could have shared a stateroom or workspace, stood many hours of watch together… or, especially at the larger commands, they might not have known each other at all. The information provides the opportunity to draw connections that are otherwise invisible, though, and gives a fuller view of the professional experiences of these alumni in Memorial Hall.
September 1923
January 1924
March 1924
May 1924
January 1925
March 1925
May 1925
October 1927
January 1928
April 1928
July 1928
October 1928
January 1929
April 1929
July 1929
October 1929
January 1930
April 1930
October 1930
January 1931
April 1931
July 1931
October 1931
January 1932
April 1932
October 1932
January 1933
ENS Charles Hart '30 (Fighting Plane Squadron (VF) 3B)
April 1933
July 1933
October 1933
April 1934
July 1934
October 1934
January 1935
April 1935
October 1935
January 1936
April 1936
July 1936
January 1937
April 1937
September 1937
January 1938
July 1938
January 1939
October 1939
June 1940
November 1940
April 1941
Related Articles
Burton Doggett '24, Paul Tobelman '26, Joseph Crook '36, Charles Deterding, Jr. '40, and Jay Noble, Jr. '40 were also passengers aboard this aircraft.
The "category" links below lead to lists of related Honorees; use them to explore further the service and sacrifice of alumni in Memorial Hall.