Harlan Larsen
| Date and Place of Birth: | 1926 Milwaukee, WI | 
| Date and Place of Death: | July 30, 1945 Philippine Sea, Pacific Ocean | 
| Baseball Experience: | Minor League | 
| Position: | Catcher | 
| Rank: | Private First-Class | 
| Military Unit: | POW & MP Detachment, HQ USMC, Marine detachment aboard USS Indianpolis US Marine Corps | 
| Area Served: | Pacific Theater of Operations | 
Harlan D. Larsen was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and signed in 1944 
		with the Lockport Cubs, a Chicago Cubs’ farm club of the Class D PONY 
		League. However, before he could play for the team, the 18-year-old 
		entered military service with the Marine Corps.
		
		At the beginning of 1945, Larsen joined the 39-man Marine Corps 
		detachment aboard the cruiser USS Indianapolis (CA-35) at Mare Island 
		Naval Shipyard in California. The Marines, who slept in their own 
		compartment away from the ship’s crew, operated the onboard jail, fired 
		the guns during battle and provided security for the ship. The 
		Indianapolis set sail for the Pacific and supported the landings at Iwo 
		Jima during February, then contributed to the pre-invasion bombardment 
		of Okinawa in March, pouring eight-inch shells into the beach defenses.
		
		On March 31, 1945, a Japanese fighter plane crashed near the port stern 
		of the ship and its bomb passed through the deck and through the keel, 
		exploding in the water below. The explosion blew two large holes in the 
		keel and killed nine crewmen, and the crippled ship made the long trip 
		across the Pacific back to Mare Island for repairs.
		
		After a complete overhaul at Mare Island the Indianapolis docked at 
		Hunter’s Point Naval Shipyard at San Francisco, where it took onboard 
		parts and the uranium projectile for the atomic bomb, “Little Boy,” 
		which would later be dropped on Hiroshima. The Indianapolis departed 
		from San Francisco on July 16, and proceeded to Tinian where it 
		delivered the top secret cargo, before proceeding to Guam. On July 28, 
		she was directed to join the battleship USS Idaho at Leyte Gulf in the 
		Philippines to prepare for the invasion of Japan. On the way to Leyte, 
		during the night of July 29, 1945, the crew of the Indianapolis had no 
		idea that they were being stalked by the Japanese submarine I-58, under 
		the command of Lieutenant Commander Mochitsura Hashimoto.
		
		Private First Class Larsen, who was in line to be advanced to corporal, 
		was on duty until midnight on July 29, at which time he probably 
		returned to the Marine compartment. At 14 minutes after midnight, two 
		large explosions on the vessel’s starboard side, caused by torpedoes 
		from I-58, blew away the bow, and split the ship to the keel. At least 
		10 Marines were incinerated in their sleeping area, and 12 minutes after 
		the torpedoes hit, the Indianapolis sank. Of the 1,196 aboard, about 300 
		went down with the ship. It is not known whether Harlan Larsen got off 
		the ship at this time. He was never seen again.
		
		Around 900 men were cast into the Pacific Ocean with no lifeboats and 
		little food or water. A series of blunders resulted in four days 
		elapsing before it was realized the ship was missing and by the time the 
		survivors were found only 321 men were still alive; nearly 600 had died 
		from shark attacks, starvation, thirst, exposure and wounds. With 
		sunrise on the first day came the shark attacks. The sharks would stalk 
		for hours, then attack, pulling men out of the water and tearing off 
		limbs. An estimated 200 died from shark attacks, and it was the worst 
		single loss of life at sea in the history of the U.S. Navy.
Harlan Larsen is remembered on the Tablet of the Missing at the 
		Manila American Cemetery and Memorial in The Philippines.
		
		On August 2, 1995, the USS Indianapolis National Memorial was opened. It 
		is located on the Canal Walk in Indianapolis. Engraved on the south face 
		of the monument are the names of the ship’s company, including Private 
		First Class Harlan Larsen.
| 
				Team | 
				League | 
				Class | 
				G | 
				AB | 
				R | 
				H | 
				2B | 
				3B | 
				HR | 
				RBI | 
				AVG | |
| 1944 | Lockport | PONY | D | Signed but did not play | ||||||||
		
The USS Indianapolis (CA-35)
		
The USS Indianapolis National Memorial on Canal Walk in Indianapolis
Thanks to Astrid van Erp for help with photos for this biography
Date Added February 1, 2012 Updated August 2, 2017
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