We thank you for all your years of service to America and for your years of service
while aboard the USS Forrestal. You will be missed and may you rest in peace.

Commander
Mervin Rowland 91 of Sumner Maine died peacefully at the Maine Veterans Home on July 31st, 2009. Mervin
was born June 21st, 1918 in Marble, N.C.. He attended area schools and graduated from Marble N.C, High school.
Mervin enlisted in the Navy in 1939 and served in: American Theater
– Japanese Occupation – Asiatic Pacfic (3 stars) , Europian African Middle Eastern (3 Stars) . Medals include:
World War II Victory, Bronze Star Medal, American Defense (1star), Vietnam Service Medal, National Defense
Service Medal, Good Conduct (3 stars), China Service and Navy Unit Commendation, In 1952, he
was commissioned an Ensign and rose through the rank to retire as a Commander in 1969. He served
on many ships but the one he was proudest of was the USS Forrestal and its crew. Aboard this ship while
in the Gulf of Tonkin Vietnam, on July 29th, 1967 a disastrous fire broke out on the flight deck. Fire,
exploding 1000 lb and 500 lb bombs took the lives of 134 young sailors and came near sinking the ship. As
Chief Engineer, Commander Rowland was in charge of damage control and the fire fighting response, making
him the one individual most responsible for saving the ship. His actions that day earned him the Bronze Star Medal. While in the hospital this last time, he asked his grandson to e-mail members of the Forrestal Association.
He dictated the following: “ No sailors have ever been better than the Forrestal men who served for and with me,
I love them all. They demonstrated the kind of men every Commander would like to stand by him. So Long to all of you."
He was a “Sailor
to the End”