ECU Libraries Catalog

Louis Poisson Davis, Sr. oral history interview, July 15, 1976 and May 26, 1976.

Author/creator Davis, Louis Poisson, 1883-1978 creator, interviewee.
Other author/creatorLennon, Donald R., interviewer.
Format Archival & Manuscript Material
Production Info 1976.
Descriptionsound recording 3 audiocassettes (1.5 hours)
Descriptiontranscript 55 pages
Supplemental Content Finding aid
Subject(s)
Scope and content Captain Davis discusses his career from graduation at the U.S. Naval Academy in 1905 through retirement in 1946. His first sea duty was aboard the USS KEARSARGE in the Caribbean where he describes gunnery practice and a misfire (pp. 2-3) and ship repairs (p. 4). Joining the China Fleet in 1908, Davis discusses the Japanese presence in Manchuria (p. 6), U.S. presence in Hong Kong, duty on the USS GALVESTON, money values, servants, and Chinese executions (pp. 9-12). Aboard the USS DELAWARE in 1910, Davis was involved with engineering and maintenance duties (pp. 17-20). He joined the USS PANTHER, a repair ship, in 1913 and the USS MINNESOTA in 1914 as engineering officer. Davis describes a trip to Veracruz in 1916 and some of the activities of Carranza's presidency (pp. 23-24). Aboard the destroyer USS JARVIS during World War I, he discusses refueling from a tanker at sea (p. 26), patrolling for submarines, and convoying British ships (pp. 28-31). Promoted to Commander after World War I, Davis joined the 33rd Division and describes an accident where seven ships ran aground at Point Pedarnales, California, in 1922. He then spent 2 1/2 years withthe 11th Naval District in Panama devoting most of his time to field maneuvers (pp. 38-40). Promoted to Captain and given command of the USS CAYANA, Davis discusses President Franklin D. Roosevelt's attitude toward the Navy, keeping the fleet in Pearl Harbor during the Sino-Japanese War (pp. 42-43). During World War II, Davis was at the naval ammunition depot in Hingham, Massachusetts, where he developed palletized and stacked ammunition (pp. 44-45). Davis spent the remainder of the war with the Bureau of Ordnance as inspector of ammunition depots. The interview concludes with comments on Josephus Daniels' handling of social diseases in the Navy (p. 47), Admiral A. T. Mahan as a naval strategist (pp. 48-49), ordnance (pp. 50-52), and Chester Nimitz (pp. 51-52).
General noteInterviewer: Donald R. Lennon. Interview date: July 15, 1976 and May 26, 1976.
Access restrictionNo access restrictions.
Cite as Louis Poisson Davis, Sr., Oral History Interview (#OH0034), East Carolina Manuscript Collection, J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA.
Terms of useRepository does not own copyright to the oral history collection. Permission to cite, reproduce, or broadcast must be obtained from both the repository and the participants in the oral history, or their heirs.
Acquisitions source Joyner- Gift of Louis Poisson Davis, Sr.
Biographical noteCaptain Louis Poisson Davis (1883-1978), a native of Wilmington, N.C., was the son of attorney Junius Davis and grandson of eminent Confederate statesman George Davis. A 1905 graduate of the Naval Academy, he participated in the around the world cruise of "Great White Fleet" in 1907. During World War I he commanded the destroyer JARVIS and earned the Navy Cross for his troop and convoy service. As Ordinance Inspector at the U.S. Naval Ammunition Depot during World War II, Davis implemented a system of palletized ammunition loading, an immense logistical advantage to the U.S. war effort.

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner Manuscript Collection #OH0034 - DOES NOT CIRCULATE ✔ Available Request Material