- Rank: Carpenter's Mate 3rd Class
- Branch: US Navy
- Service No: 272-30-48
- Enlisted: April 17, 1940
- Basic: Norfolk, VA NTS
- Home Town: Houston, AL
- Date Of Birth: February 16, 1919
- Age: 22
- Height: 6'-1"
- Disposition: Unrecovered
- Family DNA on File: OnTheWay
CM3c Charles Andrew Boyd
“The body rests at Pearl Harbor
“His memory is here at home
“And his memory shall not die”
Those are the words on a cenotaph for Charles Andrew Boyd at New Zion Free Will Baptist Church Cemetery in Tumbleton, Alabama.
Mr. Boyd was a carpenter’s mate and petty officer third class on the U.S.S. Arizona when he was killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941.
His parents, Charles H. Boyd, a farmer, and Hattie Miller Boyd, a homemaker, are buried at the same cemetery as the marker for Charles, the oldest of their 10 children. He was born Feb. 16, 1919 at Headland, Alabama.
He ended his schooling after 7th grade at Union grammar school in Blakely, Alabama. He served in the Civilian Conservation Corps, a Depression-era federal jobs program.
The CCC, as it was known, employed single men 18 to 25 to plant trees, build roads and trails and make other improvements to public land, forests and parks. The men lived at camps across the country and were provided a bed and three meals a day. Of their $30 monthly pay, $25 was sent to their families. He served in Co. 3465 at Millen, Georgia, and was discharged in January 1940.
The son was 21 and living at home with his parents, paternal grandparents, and seven siblings when the Census was conducted in the spring of 1940. The father was listed as the only employed member of the household — a sign of the Great Depression’s toll. One younger brother, Stancil, had left home to serve in the CCC. Charles Andrew left southeast Alabama in April 1940 to join the Navy.

In all, six Boyd sons eventually served in the military from World War II through Vietnam. One of them, William, also served in the Navy and as a seaman apprentice made a brief stop at Pearl Harbor, where he helped lower the flag over the Arizona one evening at sunset. He erected the cenotaph in his brother’s memory on what would have been Charles Andrew’s 83rd birthday.