• March 1841:
Richard Roberts in command of the
SS President. Famous passengers also lost were actor
Tyrone Power and clergyman
George Grimston Cookman. • September 27, 1854: James F. Luce was in command of the
Collins Line steamer when it
collided with off the coast of Newfoundland. Captain Luce was able to escape the wreck and swim to the surface after initially going down with the ship. He was rescued two days later drifting on wreckage of the same paddle-wheel box that killed his youngest son Willie. • September 12, 1857:
William Lewis Herndon was in command of the commercial mail steamer when it encountered a hurricane. Two ships came to the rescue, but could save only a fraction of the passengers, so Captain Herndon chose to remain with the rest. • September 17, 1894: Captain
Deng Shichang, in command of the
Zhiyuan during the
Battle of the Yalu River, went down with the ship and refused to be rescued, after the ship was struck by a Japanese shell, causing a massive explosion. • March 27, 1904: Commander
Takeo Hirose, in command of the
blockship Fukui Maru at the
Battle of Port Arthur, went down with the ship while searching for survivors, after the ship sustained a direct strike from Russian coastal artillery, causing it to explode. • April 13, 1904: Vice Admiral
Stepan Makarov of the Imperial Russian Navy went down with his ship, , after his ship hit a Japanese
naval mine during the early phase of the
Siege of Port Arthur. • April 15, 1912: Captain
Edward Smith, in command of when it
sank in the North Atlantic after striking an iceberg, was seen returning to the bridge just before the ship began its final plunge. Conflicting accounts of Smith's death followed; initial rumours claimed that Smith shot himself, while others suggest that he died on the bridge when it submerged. Some reliable accounts claim that Smith jumped overboard from the bridge, and subsequently perished in the water, possibly near lifeboat Collapsible B. • August 26, 1914: Captain Zimro Moore was in command of the , a U.S. cargo and passenger steamship, when it was rammed by the steamship,
Princess Victoria, in fog near Seattle, Washington. He refused to leave the ship and with other crew managed to help most passengers to safety on the
Princess Victoria. He went down with the ship.
World War I • December 30, 1917: The troop transport
HMT Aragon was torpedoed outside
Alexandria,
Egypt, after being ordered by the senior naval officer on depot ship
HMS Hannibal to turn around when having just entered the entrance channel. Confusion over mine clearance and communication procedures resulted in the loss of approximately 610 men from
Aragon and
HMS Attack, her escort, which had just rescued approximately 700 men from
Aragon. Captain Francis Bateman had overseen the full evacuation and is reported as shouting his last words demanding an inquiry as to why he was ordered out to sea after reaching safe channel. He then jumped overboard going down with his ship. Both ships were torpedoed by the same German U-boat, , within less than thirty minutes. • May 27, 1918: HMT
Leasowe Castle was torpedoed and sunk carrying ~2900 troops and ship's company out of Alexandria. Captain Edward John Holl went down with his ship with the exhortation to his crew "...they must be saved!" • May 30, 1918: When the Italian
steamer Pietro Maroncelli was torpedoed by the German submarine and started to sink, Italian Rear Admiral Giovanni Viglione, who was on board as the convoy commodore, ordered all the survivors into the lifeboats, then chose to stay aboard and to go down with the ship.
Inter-war period • October 25, 1927. Captain Simone Gulì went down with his ship off the coast of Brazil, five hours after a propeller shaft fractured and damaged the hull; there were 314 fatalities out of the 1,252 passengers and crew on board the ship.
World War II • June 27, 1940. When was forced to surface by British destroyers in the
Mediterranean, her commanding officer, Lieutenant Commander Lorenzo Bezzi, ordered his crew to abandon ship and then scuttled the submarine, going down with it. • October 21, 1940. During the
Action off Harmil Island, Italian destroyer
Francesco Nullo was disabled by and later finished off by
Royal Air Force (RAF)
Blenheim bombers. Her commanding officer, Lieutenant Commander
Costantino Borsini, chose to go down with his ship; seaman Vincenzo Ciaravolo, his attendant, chose to follow him. • May 27, 1941: Captain
Ernst Lindemann of the was said to be with his combat messenger, a leading seaman, and apparently trying to persuade his messenger to save himself. In this account, his messenger took Lindemann's hand and the two walked to the forward flagmast. As the ship turned over, the two stood briefly to attention, then Lindemann and his messenger saluted. As the ship rolled to port, the messenger fell into the water. Lindemann continued his salute while clinging to the flagmast, going under with the ship. • December 10, 1941: Admiral
Sir Tom Phillips and Captain
John Leach went down with after an
attack by Japanese warplanes off the coast of
Pahang,
British Malaya. • February 28, 1942: Rear Admiral
Karel Doorman was killed in action when his flagship was torpedoed in the
Battle of the Java Sea. Part of the crew was rescued before the sinking, but the Dutch admiral chose to go down with the ship. Captain Lieutenant
Eugène Lacomblé also died in the sinking. • June 5, 1942: Rear Admiral
Tamon Yamaguchi, on board the aircraft carrier , insisted on staying with the stricken ship during the
Battle of Midway. The ship's commander, Captain Tomeo Kaku, followed his example. Yamaguchi refused to allow his staff officers to stay with them. Yamaguchi and Kaku were last seen on the bridge waving to the crew who were abandoning ship. In addition, Captain
Ryusaku Yanagimoto chose to remain with his ship when it was scuttled after being destroyed in the same battle. • September 27, 1942: Captain
Paul Buck of , a lightly armed US
liberty ship, went down with his ship after fighting German
commerce raider to a standstill. Captain Buck was posthumously awarded the
Merchant Marine Distinguished Service Medal. • November 24, 1943: Captain
Irving Wiltsie and Rear Admiral
Henry M. Mullinnix were killed in action on board the escort carrier
USS Liscome Bay when it was torpedoed by the while acting as the
flagship of Carrier Division 24, which was supporting
US Marines in the
Battle of Makin. • February 3, 1943: Captain Preston Krecker of the
SS Dorchester went down with the ship after it was struck by a German U-boat. He was last seen on the deck assisting his men into lifeboats. The sinking was made famous by the story of the
Four Chaplains. Captain Krecker's body was never found. • February 7, 1943: Commander
Howard W. Gilmore, captain of the American submarine , gave the order for crew to "clear the bridge" and leave the exposed deck of the submarine, as his crew was being attacked by a Japanese gunboat. Two men had been shot dead; Gilmore and two others were wounded. After all others had entered the sub and Gilmore found that time was critically short, he gave his
last order: "Take her down." The executive officer, hearing his order, closed the hatch and submerged the crippled boat, saving the rest of the crew from the attack of the Japanese convoy escort. Commander Gilmore, who was never seen again, received the
Medal of Honor posthumously for his "distinguished gallantry", making him the second submariner to receive this award. • July 24, 1943: Author Norman Franks writes that
Kapitänleutnant Georg von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff was seen on the bridge of German submarine , saluting his crew before disappearing into the conning tower hatch to complete the
scuttling. He seemingly made no attempt to escape, going down with his boat. • November 19, 1943: Captain
John P. Cromwell went down on the sinking sub . • October 24, 1944: Rear Admiral
Toshihira Inoguchi chose to go down with the , during the
Battle of Leyte Gulf, even though he could have escaped. Over half of the ship's crew, 1,376 of 2,399, were rescued. • November 29, 1944: Captain Toshio Abe went down with the after she was torpedoed by
USS Archerfish. • December 24, 1944: Captain Charles Limbor went down with the
Léopoldville after it was torpedoed and sank by
U-486 5 miles from
Cherbourg. • April 7, 1945: Vice Admiral
Seiichi Itō, the fleet admiral, and Captain
Kosaku Aruga went down with the during
Operation Ten-Go.
Post World War II • December 30, 1950:
Luis González de Ubieta (born 1899),
exiled Admiral of the
Spanish Republican Navy, went down with his ship. He refused to be rescued when
Chiriqui, a merchant vessel under his command, sank in the
Caribbean Sea not far from
Barranquilla. • January 10, 1952: After his ship was struck by a pair of rogue waves, Captain
Kurt Carlsen of the remained aboard his ship once her passengers and crew had been evacuated in order to oversee attempts to tow the crippled vessel into port. He was eventually joined by Ken Dancy, a member of the salvage tug's crew. When the time came to abandon ship, Carlsen said to Dancy that they would jump together; Dancy refused, saying he should go first so that Carlsen could be the last to leave the ship. The
Flying Enterprise sank 48 minutes later. • July 26, 1956:
Piero Calamai, the captain of the Italian liner
Andrea Doria, after satisfying himself that all 1,660 passengers and crew had been safely evacuated following a collision with the had determined to go down with the ship. During his supervision of the rescue operation, one of the largest in maritime history, Calamai turned to one of his officers and said softly, "If you are saved, maybe you can reach
Genoa and see my family. ... Tell them I did everything I could." His officers finally convinced him to reluctantly board a lifeboat by refusing to leave him behind; nevertheless, Calamai made certain he was the last person off his doomed ship. Captain Calamai, who never commanded another vessel, reportedly asked repeatedly on his deathbed in 1972, "Are the passengers safe? Are the passengers off?". • December 9, 1971:
Captain Mahendra Nath Mulla, , the captain of the Indian frigate , went down with the ship after it was attacked by a submarine in the
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971. At least 194 members of the crew died in the sinking, which reportedly took two minutes. • September 28, 1994: Captain Arvo Andresson sank with off the coasts of
Estonia and
Finland. Of the 989 people on board, 137 were rescued and 95 were later found dead in freezing waters or rafts. • July 19, 1996: Commander Parakrama Samaraweera,
WWV,
RSP, the captain of the
Sri Lanka Navy ship
SLNS Ranaviru, went down with the ship after it was attacked by
LTTE during the
first battle of Mullaitivu. Samaraweera was last seen on the bridge firing a rifle; his body was never recovered. • October 29, 2012: Captain Robin Walbridge of the
Bounty, a replica of , stayed on the ship until it
capsized during
Hurricane Sandy. Walbridge and one crew member died, while the fourteen crew members who made it to liferafts survived. . • October 2, 2015: Captain Michael Davidson, master of the cargo ship , was recorded on the voyage data recorder encouraging the ship's helmsman, not moving due to fear and exhaustion, to join him in abandoning the vessel, before the recording ended with both still on the bridge of the sinking ship. ==Counter-examples==