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Torpedoes split the night, the power dies, and panic sweeps a crowded deck in the Labrador Sea. Amid the fire and freezing water, four chaplains—Methodist, Catholic, Jewish, and Dutch Reformed—move toward the need, not away from it. They organize lifeboats, hand out life jackets, steady wounded men, and pray in four tongues as the SS Dorchester sinks. 

When the last vests run out, they remove their own, give them away, and link arms to face the water together. What sounded like a footnote in a history book turns out to be a masterclass in courage, leadership, and interfaith solidarity.

We retrace the roots of American military chaplaincy back to 1776 and George Washington’s insistence on spiritual care in the ranks. From Harvard Divinity’s wartime training to the realities of a U‑boat attack, we follow the human details that make this story unforgettable: a rabbi’s “extra” gloves that weren’t extra at all, the final hymns over the roar of a dying ship, and the calm that saved lives when steel and orders could not. 

Along the way, we unpack how Congress tried to award the Medal of Honor, why the Four Chaplains received a unique special medal, and where to find memorials and primary sources that keep their memory alive.

If you care about leadership under pressure, interfaith cooperation, or the ethics of service, this story will stay with you. Hear the names—Lt. John Washington, Lt. Alexander Goode, Lt. Clark Poling, and Lt. George Fox—and the legacy that still challenges us to love our neighbor at a cost. 

If it moves you, share the episode with a friend, subscribe for more Mercer Moments in American History, and leave a review to help others find these stories we cannot afford to forget.

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