- USS Wood (DD-317)
USS "Wood" (DD-317) was a "Clemson"-class
destroyer in theUnited States Navy followingWorld War I . She was the first Navy ship named for Navy Surgeon-GeneralWilliam M. Wood (1809–1880).History
"Wood" was laid down on
23 January 1919 atSan Francisco, California , by theUnion Iron Works plant of theBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation ; launched on28 May 1919 ; sponsored by Mrs. George Kirkland Smith, the granddaughter of William Maxwell Wood; reclassified DD-317 on17 July 1920 ; and commissioned at theMare Island Navy Yard ,Vallejo, California , on28 January 1921 , Lieutenant Commander Paul M. Bates in command.Following commissioning, "Wood" underwent her trials before mooring at the Santa Fe docks,
San Diego, California , where she remained as part of the "rotating reserve" into the summer of 1921. The new destroyer then spent the ensuing months, into the late spring of 1922, operating off the coast of southernCalifornia on drills and exercises, off the port of San Pedro, and theCoronado Islands .At the end of that period of activity in June 1922, "Wood" shifted northward and reached
Seattle, Washington , on1 July 1922 . She spent4 July there before visitingPort Angeles, Washington , with the fleet, for exercises and maneuvers. She then conducted tactical drills and exercises in the Pacific Northwest, touching at Tacoma, Port Angeles, Bellingham, and Seattle before departing Port Angeles on2 September , bound for Mare Island.After taking on board ammunition at Mare Island on
5 September and6 September , "Wood" put to sea, bound forSan Diego, California , for a machinery overhaul. Upon completion of those repairs, the destroyer rejoined the fleet for rehearsals for short range battle practices. She then operated on various trials into November.Over the next nine and a half years, "Wood" operated with the
Battle Fleet in an active role, while many of her sisters lay in "Red Lead Row" awaiting the call to active service. Breaking her local operations off the west coast, "Wood" participated inFleet Problem s I through IX — the large scale fleet exercises that were held once a year (except in 1924, when three were held) involving most of the Fleet's active units. During the course of those maneuvers, she ranged from theCaribbean to thePanama Canal and fromHawaii to the coast ofCentral America . She also ventured as far north as the coast ofAlaska .A highlight of "Wood"'s service in the autumn of 1925 was the cruise with the fleet to
Australia as part of Destroyer Division 34. The destroyer subsequently took part in the search for the downedPN-9 flying boat. In March 1927, during one of the phases ofFleet Problem VII , "Wood" participated in the search for survivors from the lost Germansteamship "Albatros" and later that same year, from27 June to16 July , "Wood" supported American peace-keeping forces ashore onNicaragua .Decommissioned at San Diego on
31 March 1930 , "Wood" was struck from the Navy list on22 July . Her hulk was then sold for scrap on14 November 1930 .As of 2005, no other ship in the United States Navy has been named "Wood". "Exchequer" was laid down in 1942; renamed "Wood" in October 1942, but renamed USS|Leedstown|AP-56|6 prior to commissioning.
See also
*, another ship named for William Wood
References
*
External links
*http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/317.htm
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