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Seymour Wittek, Dies at 88; World War II Hero at Home

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Matthew Kruk

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Jan 3, 2010, 10:18:05 PM1/3/10
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January 4, 2010
Seymour Wittek, Dies at 88; World War II Hero at Home By RICHARD
GOLDSTEIN

Seymour Wittek, a former Coast Guardsman who helped battle a fire that
threatened to devastate New York Harbor during World War II, and six
decades later gained the recognition he coveted for his unit's heroism,
died Wednesday at a hospital in the Bronx. Mr. Wittek, who lived in
Ossining, N.Y., was 88.

His death was announced by the Coast Guard.

Coast Guardsmen in the New York area during the Second World War were
known derisively to some as subway sailors. They would ride the subway
in their off-duty hours, visiting their dates or heading to Times
Square.

On the evening of April 24, 1943, Seaman Wittek was at his Jersey City
barracks awaiting a pass and a chance to see his fianc�e, Anne
Cooperman, in Brooklyn. The next day was Easter Sunday, when he could
put aside his chores loading ammunition and bombs onto freighters at the
Caven Point pier in Jersey City for shipment to Europe.

Just then, a fire erupted beneath the engine room of an old Panamanian
freighter, El Estero, berthed at Caven Point and laden with explosives.
Two ammunition ships and a line of railroad cars packed with munitions
were nearby. More than 5,000 tons of explosives could go off in a chain
reaction if the Estero blew up, creating an inferno that might engulf
fuel tanks at Bayonne, N.J., and on Staten Island, cripple the nation's
busiest wartime port and bring catastrophic damage and casualties.

A Coast Guard officer asked for volunteers from the Jersey City barracks
to fight the fire, and got 60 of them. "Nobody looked left, nobody
looked right, nobody looked backwards," Mr. Wittek recalled in an
interview with The New York Times on the 2008 Memorial Day weekend. "The
men that volunteered all stepped forward - immediately."

The Guardsmen rushed to the pier aboard trucks and grabbed hoses and
axes while the New York City fireboats Fire Fighter and John J. Harvey
as well as Coast Guard vessels doused the freighter. But the fire raged
on.

A pair of tugboats finally towed the blazing ship into the harbor, with
Mr. Wittek among the Coast Guard volunteers still aboard.

"I was told to leave when we were not too far from shore because they
had too many men, they didn't want to imperil everyone," Mr. Wittek
recalled in an interview in June 2008. "There was a picket boat. I went
down a ladder and one of my friends said to me: 'Seymour, take my
wallet. If anything happens, at least they'll know I was there.' "

Nearly four hours after the fire began, the weight of the water pouring
from fireboats sank the Estero.

"We felt that any minute we might be gone, and thank God we got through
it safely," Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia told New Yorkers in a radio
talk the next day.

Mr. Wittek, a native of the Bronx, married Ms. Cooperman seven weeks
later, and his Coast Guard buddy who tossed him that wallet was a guest
at the wedding. Mr. Wittek, who worked in the fur industry after the
war, is survived by his daughter, Jacqueline Goldstein, of Granite
Springs, N.Y.; his son, Alec, of Tenafly, N.J.; three grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren. His wife died in 2007.

The Coast Guard awarded medals to the senior officers in the Estero
episode. The enlisted men like Mr. Wittek were honored by the city of
Bayonne with a parade and citations, but received no medals from the
Coast Guard at the time. And in the daily rush of war news, the near
disaster was soon forgotten.

Mr. Wittek said that he tried long afterward to persuade New York City
officials to provide a tribute and that a mention of the Estero had been
planned for Veterans Day 2001, but was put aside in light of the World
Trade Center terrorist attack. "All I want is simple recognition of what
the Coast Guard did that day," Mr. Wittek told The Times in spring 2008.

Recognition came on Veterans Day 2008 at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space
Museum in Manhattan when Vice Adm. Robert J. Papp Jr. presented Mr.
Wittek with the Coast Guard Commendation Medal for bravery.

The Coast Guard later presented the commendation to at least two other
members of Mr. Wittek's unit, one posthumously.

"Not every act of courage requires you to face bullets," Mr. Wittek
remarked on the 2008 Memorial Day weekend. "Those men really put their
lives on the line."

Copyright 2010 The New York Times Company


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