- USS Stoddert (DD-302)
USS "Stoddert" (DD-302/AG-18) was a "Clemson"-class
destroyer in theUnited States Navy followingWorld War I . She was named forBenjamin Stoddert .History
"Stoddert" was laid down on
4 July 1918 atSan Francisco, California , by theBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation ; launched on8 January 1919 ; sponsored by Mrs. Gavin McNab; and commissioned on30 June 1920 , Lieutenant Commander Norman Scott in command."Stoddert" joined Division 33 of the Reserve Destroyer Squadron, Pacific Fleet, and completed fitting-out at
Mare Island Navy Yard . Between14 August 1920 and7 January 1921 , she operated along the coast ofCalifornia , participating in tactical exercises with Battleship Squadron 5 and thecruiser USS|Birmingham|CL-2|3. She also engaged in antiaircraft practice, target towing, and gun drills offCoronado Island with her own division. On7 January 1921 , she departed San Diego with the Pacific Fleet to join the Atlantic Fleet in thePanama Canal Zone for winter maneuvers farther south. From22 January to15 February , the combined fleets held strategic, tactical, and gunnery exercises on a cruise toValparaíso ,Chile , and back toPanama . Following the inter-fleet championships conducted at Balboa, "Stoddert" headed north and, on5 March , reachedSan Diego, California where she resumed normal operations with Division 33.In July, she steamed farther north to the state of
Washington where she exercised with USS|Kennedy|DD-306|3. After maneuvers off the coasts ofOregon and California, she enteredPuget Sound Navy Yard on15 December ; completed overhaul on7 February 1922 ; and, four days later, joined Destroyer Division (DesDiv) 32. She resumed operations along the west coast. Proceeding to the south on8 February 1923 with theBattle Fleet and Fleet Base Force, "Stoddert" took part in maneuvers en route to the Panama Canal Zone to conduct fleet problems to test the defense of the strategic canal. While in Panama during the month of March, the fleet engaged in combined tactical and strategic maneuvers, held experimental torpedo practice, carried out various experimental firings against and finally sank "Coast Battleship No. 4", the former USS|Iowa|BB-4|2. Upon the completion of the combined maneuvers on30 March , "Stoddert" returned to the Bremerton Navy Yard on22 April .The destroyer cruised the Washington coastline until the end of August, visiting Astoria,
Tacoma ,Seattle , Bellingham,Port Angeles , andPort Townsend . In July, she escorted USS|Henderson|AP-1|3, in which PresidentWarren G. Harding was embarked. In September, she steamed south to San Diego Harbor where the destroyers of her division formed a circle and scattered flowers on the water in commemoration of the men lost in theHonda Point Disaster .From
22 October 1923 until2 January 1924 , "Stoddert" took part in fleet maneuvers and torpedo exercises at San Diego, sailing to the south on16 January . Transiting the Panama Canal with the Battle Fleet from18 January to25 January , she was engaged with theScouting Fleet in maneuvers designed to test the defenses and facilities of the Canal Zone. During the winter, the combined fleets were based atCulebra , and on22 April 1924 , "Stoddert" arrived back at San Diego with the Battle Fleet.Cruising with Battle Fleet destroyer squadrons, "Stoddert" operated along the west coast, principally at San Diego, San Pedro, Port Angeles, Tacoma, Seattle, and San Francisco, until
27 April 1925 , on which date she arrived inHawaii for exercises withUnited States Fleet . En route, the fleet engaged in a joint Army and Navy problem which simulated an attack on the Hawaiian Islands by a large overseas force and was designed to test to the fullest extent the defenses of the Hawaiian Islands.On
1 July 1925 , the destroyer sailed fromPearl Harbor with the Battle Fleet on a good will cruise viaSamoa toAustralia andNew Zealand . The ships visitedMelbourne ,Dunedin , and Lyttelton, and the officers and men were extensively entertained in all these ports. This visit furthered the amicable relations existing between the United States and Australia and New Zealand. "Stoddert" returned to her base at San Diego on26 September .She resumed operations with the Battle Fleet along the west coast, taking time to attend the Navy Day celebration at San Diego from
21 October to27 October 1925 and the Founders Day festivities held atAstoria, Oregon , between20 July and23 July 1926 . After an overhaul at theBremerton Navy Yard , she again sailed south, via San Diego, arriving on22 March 1927 at Balboa where she and USS|Paul Hamilton|DD-307|3 joined the Battle Fleet. Maneuvering with the fleet at Guantanamo Bay,Gonaives , and New York, she went on alone to theBoston Navy Yard for repairs on her way toHampton Roads where she took part in a presidential review and rejoined her fleet. Transiting the canal between11 June and17 June , "Stoddert" arrived back in San Diego on25 June for exercises with Destroyer Squadron 11. For the remainder of 1927 and until the end of April 1928, she operated along the west coast, principally at San Diego, San Pedro, Tacoma, Port Townsend, Bremerton, and Port Angeles.Her one special assignment took her to Honolulu for emergency assistance to the Dole flight, a non-stop airplane race between San Francisco and Honolulu, starting on
16 August 1927 . Upon receipt of reports of planes missing, an extensive search was started under the direction of the Commander in Chief, Battle Fleet; Commandant, 12th Naval District; and Commandant, 14th Naval District. A total of 54 ships of the Battle Fleet took part in this search between17 August and5 September , covering approximately 350,000 square miles.On
28 April 1928 , "Stoddert" arrived at Honolulu, via San Francisco, for Battle Fleet exercises atLahaina , Pearl Harbor, andHilo with Submarine Divisions 9 and 14. Returning to San Diego on23 June 1928 , she cruised and maneuvered between her customary ports along the Pacific Coast, deviating from her exercises on18 November and19 November 1928 to act as part of the honor escort for President-elect Herbert Hoover on board battleship USS|Maryland|BB-46|3 from San Diego to Los Angeles.Under terms of the London Treaty for Reduction of Naval Armament, "Stoddert" was decommissioned on
20 May 1930 and delivered to the Mare Island Navy Yard for retention by conversion to a radio-controlled target ship. This was in accordance with the Navy's decision to fit out a unit of three destroyers as radio-controlled light targets for the purpose of conducting Fleet exercises requiring' the use of high speed targets. "Stoddert", designated Light Target No. 1, received the initial installation. Her experimental radio control apparatus paved the way for later fitting out of remote-controlled USS|Boggs|DE-136|3 and USS|Lamberton|DD-119|3, and pointed the way for the more elaborate equipment of the famous radio-controlled target ship USS|Utah|AG-16|3.She was recommissioned on
6 April 1931 ; reclassified as miscellaneous auxiliary, AG-18, on30 June 1931 and redesignated DD-302 on16 April 1932 . After experimental operations, she became an element of Mobile Target Division 1. From her base at San Diego, "Stoddert" was the target for dive bombing, aerial torpedoes, and fleet gunnery exercises along the coast of California. She spent much of her time as the dive-bombing and torpedo attack target ship for the aircraft of USS|Saratoga|CV-3|3.Fate
The destroyer was decommissioned at San Diego on
10 January 1933 , many of her officers and crew transferring to mobile target ship USS|Lamberton|AG-21|3. Her name was struck from the Navy list on5 June 1935 , and she was sold for scrapping on30 August 1935 .See USS|Benjamin Stoddert|DDG-22 for another ship named for Stoddert.
References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/s19/stoddert.htm
External links
*http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/302.htm
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