- USS Niblack (DD-424)
USS "Niblack" (DD-424), a "Gleaves"-class
destroyer , is the only ship of theUnited States Navy to be named forAlbert Parker Niblack . Niblack would become theDirector of Naval Intelligence 1 March 1919 , and Naval Attache in London6 August 1920 . AsVice Admiral , he commanded U.S. Naval Forces in European waters15 January 1921 to17 June 1922 ."Niblack" was laid down
8 August 1938 by theBath Iron Works Corp.Bath, Maine ; launched18 May 1940 ; sponsored by Mrs. Albert P. Niblack, widow of Vice Admiral Niblack; and commissioned1 August 1940 ,Lieutenant Commander E. R. Durgin in command.Service in the Atlantic, 1940–43
After shakedown and training in the
Caribbean , "Niblack" made her first convoy trip to NS Argentia, Newfoundland. In July 1941 she escorted the task force which landed the American occupation troops inIceland . However, before the actual landings, "Niblack" made preliminary reconnaissance. On10 April 1941 , as she was nearing the coast, the ship picked up three boatloads of survivors from a torpedoed merchantman. When asubmarine was detected preparing to attack, the division commander, Denis L. Ryan, ordered adepth charge attack which drove off theU-boat . This bloodless battle apparently was the first action between American and German forces in World War II. On1 July 1941 , "Niblack" sailed from Argentia with the occupation force, arriving on7 July .The destroyer continued escort duty and, with four other destroyers, was escorting a fast convoy across the Atlantic when, on
31 October 1941 , a German U-boat's torpedo struck "Reuben James" (DD-245) blowing her in half — the first United States naval vessel to be lost in World War II. Only 45 survivors were picked up.After Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor pushed America officially into the war
7 December 1941 , the "Niblack" continued to escort North Atlantic convoys toReykjavík ,Iceland ,Derry ,Northern Ireland , andGreenock ,Scotland . In July 1942 she was transferred to the Caribbean for temporary duty at the height of the U-boat campaign there, resuming northern duty in August. In November 1942, she escorted the first support convoy toCasablanca after the Allied landings on the Moroccan Coast. The ship then performed coastal convoy escort duty until departing early in May 1943 forMers-el-Kébir ,Algeria .Service in the Mediterranean, 1943–44
During the invasion of Sicily she performed escort duties and screened the minelaying operation near
Gela . She escorted troop ships into Syracuse harbor the day after British troops captured the city. During this operation Germantorpedo boat s attacked "Niblack" and "PC-556" under cover of a dense smoke screen. The American ships drove off theE-boat s by gunfire after the enemy craft had fired three torpedoes which missed and exploded near the harbor breakwater.The destroyer supported the advance of the Allied ground forces across
Sicily and enteredPalermo Harbor following its capture. Shortly after the rout of the Germans across theStrait of Messina , "Niblack", with "Boise" (CL-47), "Philadelphia" (CL-41), "Gleaves" (DD-423), "Plunkett" (DD-431), and "Benson" (DD-421) sortied from Palermo on the night of 17–18 August 1943, and proceeded at high speed to the Italian coast for the first bombardment of the Italian mainland by U.S. Naval Forces.The ship took part in the landings at Salerno on
9 September 1943 . She served at first in the screen, but when the situation ashore became desperate, she joined the fire-support destroyers. On 16–17 September she conducted eleven call-fire support missions. American forces advancing after the bombardment sent back reports of the complete destruction of enemy men and material in "Niblack"’s target areas.Later in the Salerno campaign the ship screened cruiser "Philadelphia" during the radio-controlled bomb attacks which damaged "Philadelphia" and "Savannah" (CL-42). On
27 October the "Niblack" and "Brooklyn" (CL-40) bombarded enemy coastal guns far behind the front lines in theGulf of Gaeta , Italy, to pave the way for Allied ground forces.On
11 December 1943 , "Niblack" joined the HMS "Holcombe" in a search for a German U-boat whose torpedoes had sunk several freighters off Bizerte the day before. "U-593" struck first however, and blew up "Holcombe" with an acoustic torpedo. "Niblack" rescued 90 survivors and transferred them to an Army hospital ship that night. During the transfer, she spotted antiaircraft fire from the submarine against a British patrol plane and directed "Wainwright" (DD-419) and HMS "Calpe" to the scene, where they sank "U-593".Four days later, when a
Liberty ship was torpedoed near the harbor entrance at Oran, "Niblack" and "Mayo" (DD-422) searched for the submarine. They had narrowed down the search to a small area when they were relieved by the "Woolsey" (DD-437), "Edison" (DD-439), and "Trippe" (DD-403), who subsequently sank "U-73".After a month in Task Force 86, the ship was ordered to support the landings at Anzio. During this invasion the ship commanded the beachhead screen, and fought off simultaneous attacks by dive and torpedo bombers, E-boats, and human torpedoes. From 22 to
29 January 1944 , the ship repulsed repeated attacks by enemy aircraft and received credit for destroying one plane and probably splashing two others. During one attack, two ships of her division, DesDiv 13 were put out of action, "Plunkett" by a 550-pound bomb and "Mayo" by a mine.In February, "Niblack" returned to New York for a brief overhaul, but was back on duty in the Mediterranean in May. The enemy driven from Sicily, North Africa, and Southern Italy intensified his submarine and air attacks on Allied shipping along the African Coast.
One of the audacious U-boats made the mistake of firing at a
hunter-killer group which had just finished off another enemy U-boat. These American ships had begun the work of rooting the sub out, but were soon relieved by "Woolsey", "Madison" (DD-425), "Benson", "Ludlow" (DD-438), and "Niblack". "Niblack" and "Ludlow" worked together in the hunt, which began18 May 1944 .British planes picked up the sub by
radar at 02:40 the next morning and "Niblack" and "Ludlow" raced to investigate. Establishing sonar contact, the two destroyers dropped eleven depth charges, forcing the sub to the surface. As she started down again both ships opened fire, while the planes dropped bombs close aboard. When the target had gone under again, "Niblack" rushed in to hit her again with ten more ash cans. Coming up once more, "U-960" turned nose down and made her final dive, leaving 20 survivors who were promptly captured.The summer months of 1944 were spent in fighter-director training. "Gleaves" and "Niblack" qualified as the only two fighter director destroyers in the 8th Fleet, and directed French and British planes in repelling the intense German torpedo plane attacks against Allied convoys during the invasion of Southern France.
The initial landings on
15 August 1944 met little resistance, and for several days the ship controlled the routing and dispatching of all outbound convoys, taking her place in the outer screen at night. On20 August she joined the inshore screen for "Quincy" (CA-71), "Nevada" (BB-36) and "Omaha" (CL-4) during the siege ofToulon . She was frequently taken under fire by the large coast defense batteries ofSt. Mandrier andSt. Elmo and escaped damage from several near misses.Following the capture of
Marseille and Toulon, she was assigned to Task Force 86 and later to "Flank Force," the Allied Naval forces which provided fire support for the 1st Airborne Task Force on the Franco–Italian frontier. During the periods 4 to17 October and 11 to25 December 1944 , the ship completed numerous fire support missions, operating under the constant threat of explosive boats, human torpedoes, and floating mines. The ship also sank 43 mines, destroyed one GermanMAS boat , and damaged four others in the harbor of San Remo, Italy.Service in the Pacific, 1945
"Niblack" next returned to
Oran to serve asflagship for Commander, Destroyer Squadron 7, (Commander Destroyer 8th Fleet), returning to theBoston Navy Yard in February 1945. After serving in various antisubmarine groups and as an escort for one convoy from England in April. She transited thePanama Canal on3 July 1945 and proceeded toPearl Harbor via San Diego. Following a training program, during which hostilities withJapan ended, the ship escorted the occupation group which landed at Sasebo, Japan,22 September 1945 . She then escortedlanding forces to Matsuyama, remaining in the Western Pacific for further duties during the occupation period.By a directive of June 1946, the ship decommissioned; and entered the
Atlantic Reserve Fleet atCharleston, South Carolina . She was subsequently transferred to Philadelphia where she remained until struck31 July 1968 ."Niblack" earned five
battle star s for service in the European, African–Middle Eastern Areas.References
ee also
*
First American shots fired in World War II External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/n5/niblack.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Niblack"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/424.htm navsource.org: USS "Niblack"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd424txt.htm hazegray.org: USS "Niblack"]
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