Alfred Naifeh (January 5, 1915 – October 16, 1942) was a law clerk, United States Navy hero during World War II, and the namesake of the USS Naifeh (DE-352).[1][2][3]
Alfred Naifeh was born on January 5, 1915, in Covington, Tennessee, to a Lebanese immigrant family from Jdeidet Marjeyoun, Lebanon.[1][3] He was raised in Norman, Oklahoma.
He graduated from the University of Oklahoma in 1937 with a BA and a LL.B. in 1940.[1] Naifeh was awarded a Cook Fellowship at the University of Michigan Law School and received a LLM degree in 1941.[4] He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Order of the Coif, a legal honor society.
Following graduation, was admitted to the of the Oklahoma Bar Association and became a member of the American Bar Association. He served as a law clerk in Oklahoma City for Alfred P. Murrah, judge of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals of the 10th Judicial District.[5][4]
Naifeh was posthumously awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Medal and the Purple Heart.[1][5][6] At the ceremony for the former, the citation read:
The President of the United States of America takes pride in presenting the Navy and Marine Corps Medal (Posthumously) to Lieutenant, Junior Grade Alfred Naifeh (NSN: 0-111192), United States Navy, for heroic conduct on 15 October 1942. After the sinking of the U.S.S. MEREDITH (DD-434), Lieutenant, Junior Grade Naifeh persisted in swimming back and forth among the life rafts on which the survivors were clinging, rendering invaluable aid to the men who were wounded or exhausted. He finally was overcome by exhaustion, which resulted in his death.[7]
In 1944, The United States Navy named a John C. Butler-class destroyer escort ship the USS Naifeh (DE-352) after him.[1][2] His mother, Rathia Naifeh, christened the ship at Orange, Texas on February 29, 1944.[3][6] The ship was commissioned on July 4, 1944.[1] On June 27, 1946, the ship was decommissioned and became part of the Pacific Reserve Fleet in San Diego.[3] In January 1951, the USS Naifeh was reinstated to assist in the Korean War and was used in the Pacific until her final decommissioning on June 17, 1960.[3]