- USS William B. Preston (DD-344)
USS "William B. Preston" (DD-344/AVP-20/AVD-7) was a "Clemson"-class
destroyer in theUnited States Navy followingWorld War I . She was named forWilliam B. Preston ."William B. Preston" was laid down on
18 November 1918 at theNorfolk Navy Yard ,Portsmouth, Virginia ; launched on9 August 1919 ; sponsored by Mrs. William Radford Beale, the eldest daughter of William B. Preston; designated DD-344 on17 July 1920 ; and commissioned on23 August 1920 , Lieutenant James B. Ryan in temporary command. On7 September 1920 , Commander William E. Eberle reported on board as commanding officer.1920s
Following commissioning, "William B. Preston" operated with Destroyer Division (DesDiv) 19 and conducted trials and training off the east coast through the end of 1920. She then proceeded south to join the Fleet in Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba , for winter maneuvers. After these exercises, she transited thePanama Canal to participate in the Fleet's visit toCallao ,Peru , and arrived at that port on21 January 1921 .The ship next received orders transferring her to DesDiv 45, Destroyer Squadron (DesRon) 14; and she joined the
Asiatic Fleet in mid-1922. With her home port atCavite , nearManila in thePhilippines , the destroyer cruised with her division on exercises and maneuvers. In the summer months, the ships would base out ofChefoo on the north coast ofShantung province ,China , while moving southward to Philippine waters for the winter exercises. In between, there were visits to China coastal ports such asAmoy ,Foochow , andSwatow and occasional tours on theYangtze River betweenShanghai andHankow .In 1926, civil strife broke out in China which can be loosely characterized as a struggle between north and south for control of the country. To the south, the Nationalist
Kuomingtang party moved north from its base at Canton to extend its controls over warlord-dominated areas. Led byChiang Kaishek , the Nationalists had reached Nanking by March 1927."William B. Preston" arrived in the that port on the Yangtze River on
21 March and dropped anchor off the city, joining sister ship USS|Noa|DD-343|3. Under orders to evacuate Americans, the destroyers took on 175 refugees - 102 on "Noa" and 73 on "William B. Preston".Gunfire, coming closer to the city, alerted the American destroyermen to the danger posed by the approaching Cantonese. Northern Chinese troops meanwhile melted away from the city that they were supposed to defend, leaving many foreigners endangered in the defenseless city. An armed guard from "Noa" stood by on shore while signal parties from "William B. Preston" and "Noa" transmitted the information about the tense conditions in
Nanking to the ships anchored in the muddy river.When the situation had worsened to a point of no return, "Noa" commenced firing with her 4-inch guns; "William B. Preston" joined in with her main battery as well and, in the 10-minute barrage, fired 22 rounds of 4-inch projectiles to scare off the invading soldiers.
Bluejackets on both American ships also provided fire with bolt-actionSpringfield rifle s and drum-fed Lewis guns. Britishcruiser HMS|Emerald|D66|6 and destroyer HMS|Wolsey added to the din with their guns; and the Chinese, faced by this Anglo-American barrage, withdrew.Four days later, with the situation much quieter in Nanking, "William B. Preston" prepared to leave the area in company with refugee-laden SS "Kungwo" on
25 March . Snipers, firing from concealed positions ashore, sent the destroyer's anchor detail scurrying for cover; and ricocheting bullets whined into the pre-dawn darkness. Firing from a Lewis gun on the destroyer soon caused the sniper to cease fire. The ship, with civilians on board, was soon underway heading downriver.Three hours later, while proceeding between Silver Island and Hsing Shan fort, small arms fire again crackled from the shore, first directed at Fungwo and next at "William B. Preston". Bluejackets on the destroyer promptly broke out their Lewis guns and Springfields to reply, but the situation suddenly worsened when a 3-inch gun at the fort opened fire on the ships.
One shell splashed into the muddy river ahead of the destroyer; another fell in the ship's wake; and the third passed through the fire control platform. The destroyer's number one 4-inch gun was quickly trained around and fired three salvos in reply which, in addition to small arms and machine gun fire from the warship, caused the firing from the shore to be silenced.
"William B. Preston" and her charges joined British gunboat "Cricket" and SS "Wen-chow" 52 miles below
Chinkiang . Snipers once again harassed the Anglo-American flotilla, but machine-gun fire from "Cricket" soon forced the Chinese to withdraw.After turning "Kungwo" over to the British gunboat, "William B. Preston" returned to Nanking unhampered by further sniping. On
27 March , with 70 more refugees embarked, the ship cleared Nanking and headed downriver. Lt. Cmdr. G. B. Ashe, the ship's commanding officer, recalled that the Chinese had emplaced a field-piece at a key river bend and, accordingly, ordered general quarters well in advance.Cleared for action with guns trained out and the
Stars and Stripes flying, "William B. Preston" rounded the bend, ready for a showdown. The Chinese, however, allowed the ship to pass without any firing.Receiving the
Yangtze Service Medal for these actions against snipers while convoying American nationals out of the troubled areas, "William B. Preston" returned to routine cruising soon thereafter. She was back in the United States by 1929, homeported atSan Diego, California , and assigned to theBattle Force .1930s
To meet the obligations imposed by the naval treaties of the 1920's and 1930's, "William B. Preston" was part of a group of destroyers laid up in reserve at
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania . She was decommissioned there on15 October 1934 .As America's Navy grew in the first months following the outbreak of
World War II in Europe, the need for auxiliaries to support the Fleet multiplied accordingly. On18 November 1939 , "William B. Preston" was selected for conversion to a smallseaplane tender and redesignated AVP-20. Soon thereafter, the ship entered theNew York Navy Yard for conversion."William B. Preston" was recommissioned on
14 June 1940 , with Lt. Cmdr. Francis J. Bridget in command. On2 August 1940 , the ship was reclassified again, this time to destroyer-seaplane tender, and redesignated AVD-7.She departed the New York area three days later and arrived at
Hampton Roads the following day. On11 August , she headed for theCaribbean and arrived at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, four days later. She then steamed to Panama, transited the canal on24 August , and proceeded on to San Diego, where she arrived on5 September for an eight-day pause en route toHawaii .After mooring to a Submarine Base pier at
Pearl Harbor on19 September , the ship commenced operations with the Fleet. She engaged in such tasks as tending scout planes, towing targets during fleet exercises, and making routine offshore patrols through30 September . She then anchored atPalmyra Island to tendPBY Catalina s through4 October , when she returned to Pearl Harbor.As patrol plane reinforcements flew over the Pacific, bound for the Asiatic Fleet, "William B. Preston" served as a plane guard for three days in October and then resumed her routine duties out of Pearl Harbor. On
6 December 1940 , the seaplane tender set course for the Philippines and her second tour of duty with the Asiatic Fleet.En route, she lay to at plane guard station "George," while
VP-26 passed overhead on course for the Philippine Islands. On13 December , she was fueled from USS|Wright|AV-1|3 and then lay to in the lee ofWake Island before proceeding on toGuam . She arrived atApra Harbor on17 December but soon pressed onward and completed the last leg of her voyage to the Philippines when she anchored inCanacao Bay , off theCavite Navy Yard , on22 December 1940 .After operating in the Manila area through Christmas 1940, the tender took station at
Puerto Princessa Harbor , near the island ofPalawan , where she tended PBY's to mid-January 1941. Moving on toTutu Bay ,Jolo , on15 January , she visitedIgat Bay andCaldera Bay , both offMindanao , before returning to Canacao Bay on8 February .From February to November 1941, the Asiatic Fleet continued its preparations. While some fleet units, including the majority of the destroyers, were sent south, "William B. Preston" was maintained in readiness in the Philippines for any eventuality. She tended PBY's and occasionally acted as target tug for fleet maneuvers in the southern islands in the Philippine archipelago. After an overhaul at the Cavite Navy Yard in November, she departed the Manila area on
1 December , bound for the southeastern coast of Mindanao.Upon her arrival in
Davao Gulf , the ship dropped anchor inMalalag Bay , where she was joined by a group of PBY's which soon commenced patrols. The planes reconnoitered several small bays and inlets, looking out for strange ships or for any signs of suspicious activity.World War II
Shortly after 0300 on
8 December 1941 , "William B. Preston" picked up the following radio message: "Japan has commenced hostilities. Govern yourselves accordingly."Japan had launched a devastating air strike on Pearl Harbor while their invasion fleets moved southward fromIndochina towards the raw-material-rich British and Dutch possessions in Malaya and the East Indies. The Philippines, too, were on the timetable for conquest.Soon after the receipt of the notification of war, all of the planes tended by the destroyer-seaplane tender were readied for operations. Two remained behind while the rest flew off on their first war patrols over the
Celebes Sea . The ship, meanwhile, shifted anchorage away from the two moored Catalinas to lessen the chance of one bomb damaging both ship and planes in one fell swoop. Bluejackets on "William B. Preston" belted ammunition for the ship's antiaircraft defense of four .50-caliber water-cooled Browning machine guns and took down the awnings which had shielded the crew from the tropical sun.Around 0800, the ship's commanding officer, Lt. Comdr. Etheridge Grant, went forward to check the progress of the preparations to slip the anchor chain (should that become necessary). Suddenly a lookout called out, "Aircraft!" Grant sprinted to the bridge while Japanese planes swept around the narrow neck of the land shielding
Malalag Bay from the broadGulf of Davao . The attacking planes comprised of 9 "Claudes" and 13 "Vals" from the Japanese carrier "Ryujo".Going for the seaplanes first, the "Claudes" made short work of the Catalinas riding at their mooring buoys. Within a few short moments, both PBY's had been shot to pieces and sank into the waters of the bay as the survivors, carrying one dead and one wounded comrade with them, swam for shore.
Meanwhile, the ship lowered a boat to pick up survivors while she got underway for the open sea. Slipping her anchor chain, "William B. Preston" zigzagged across the bay as both "Claudes" and "Vals" attacked the fleeing tender. Evading the bombs, the ship managed to emerge from the attack unscathed and returned to the bay to pick up her boat and the survivors from the two lost planes.
Later that day, upon receipt of orders dispatching her to
Moro Gulf , "William B. Preston" got underway to establish another advance base for PBY's at Police Bay. Retiring fromDavao Gulf , the destroyer-seaplane tender slipped past four Japanese destroyers whose attention was probably focused on bigger game elsewhere. One hour later, a snooping Japanese plane picked up the ship's scent and trailed her for three hours, leading those on board "William B. Preston" to suspect that the Japanese were sending out a second strike to finish the job begun earlier. Steering as close to the shoreline as safe navigation would permit, Lt. Cmdr. Grant prepared to beach the ship should that prove necessary, but the plane departed and left the seaplane tender alone.Arriving off the mouth of Moro Bay in the afternoon, the ship lay to until the following morning,
9 December , when she entered the bay. An explosion ahead of the ship sent the American bluejackets to their general quarters stations before it was discovered that the local fishermen were just out dynamiting for their catch.The ship found a PBY awaiting her arrival and commenced tending operations. Three more Catalinas arrived later in the afternoon, as well as two
OS2U Kingfisher s which had been attached to USS|Heron|AVP-2|3 atBalabac . After being informed that Japanese troops had landed north of Gagayan and were marching overland to Police, the ship prepared to get underway and dispatched the PBY's on patrol over the Celebes Sea. Leaving word that the planes were to rendezvous with the ship at Tutu Bay, Jolo, "William B. Preston" got underway on10 December .The ship arrived at Tutu Bay later that day and found the PBY's awaiting her, after having found no trace of enemy activity during their patrol sweeps. At sunset, a veritable procession of masts and funnels moved across the southern horizon; and the men on the "William B. Preston" could only guess to whom they belonged.
The following day, the planes were again sent out on patrols while the ship upped anchor and proceeded for
Tawi Tawi , receiving word en route that the PBY's were to return toLake Lanao in Mindanao and the OS2U's were to rendezvous with the ship at Tawi Tawi. Although she had never hoisted aboard any aircraft before, "William B. Preston's" bluejackets rigged up a crude cradle between the two 50-foot motor-boats aft and provided padding for the Kingfisher's center float with mattresses and life jackets. One OS2U was taken aboard and berthed in this fashion while the other was towed astern. Smooth seas and a 15-knot pace facilitated the towing operation, and the two planes arrived safely at Tarakan,Borneo .Met by two Dutch destroyers, "Kortenaer" and "Witte de With", the seaplane tender made port at
Tarakanbut was soon underway again, this time for Balikpapan, Borneo, joining many ships from the Asiatic Fleet (USS|Marblehead|CL-12|3, USS|Holland|AS-3|3, USS|Langley|AV-3|3, USS|Gold Star|AK-12|3, and "Heron"). Two hours after arrival, the ship received orders to accompany the small fleet toMakassar and got underway on13 December .After arriving at Makassar, "William B. Preston" spent three days provisioning and catching up on news of the progress of the war. The latter looked bleak, as Japanese forces swept southward, sweeping everything before them and forcing Allied naval, air, and ground units southward into the
East Indies . The ship arrived atSourabaya , Java, shortly before Christmas but, after further provisioning and fueling, departed the Dutch naval base there on the 27th.1942
The ship arrived at
Darwin, Australia , on the day after New Year's Day 1942 and soon received orders to provision to capacity and take on large stocks of spare parts, food, and replacement crews for the decimated ranks of personnel in PatWing 10. The ship then proceeded north for Ambon, in theDutch East Indies , crowded with 100 extra men and much topside freight.Upon her arrival at Ambon, the destroyer-seaplane tender found sister ship USS|Childs|AVD-1|3 and passed that ship enough fuel to enable her to reach Darwin. After delivering her embarked men and cargo, "William B. Preston" proceeded to Kendari, where she was camouflaged to blend in with the verdant hillside to which she was moored - in fact, she was so well camouflaged that her PBY's had trouble locating her when they returned to their base.
For the remainder of January and into February, the ship continued her tending operations as the forces combating the Japanese rapidly dwindled. On
12 February 1942 , "William B. Preston" dropped anchor at Darwin to commence tending PBY's from that base in northwestern Australia. In about a week, her fuel began running low, forcing Lt. Comdr. Grant to go ashore to arrange for a delivery of much-needed fuel and gasoline to the ship.At 0955, lookouts called down that "large formations of planes (were) approaching" and the ship went to general quarters. Within minutes, the ship was underway with the executive officer, Lt. Lester O. Wood in command. Zigzagging her way through the crowded harbor, "William B. Preston" made for the open sea.
The first wave of planes attacked the town and its nearby fuel dumps and docks; the second wave went after the ships in the harbor, with transports and cargo ships as the primary objectives. Within minutes of each other, transports "Tulagi" and "Meigs" took hits; and ships alongside the docks were heavily hit as bombs rained indiscriminately on the port area.
Four bombs exploded off "William B. Preston's" bow, breaking bridge windows. The .30- and .50-caliber antiaircraft fire forced some of the attackers to keep their distance, but others pressed the attack with vigor. USS|Peary|DD-226|3, slower in getting underway, was enveloped in bomb splashes as Japanese accuracy marked the ship for destruction. Heavily hit, "Peary" burst into flames and rapidly became an inferno as bomb after bomb tore the ship apart and sank her down by the stern.
The seaplane tender's turn was next, however; and she was hit aft, just forward of the after deckhouse. The ship lost steering control forward; and, in the interim period between regaining control by hand-steering aft, Lt. Wood conned and steered the ship using her engines and, despite a jammed rudder, succeeded in making for an opening in the harbor boom. Negotiating it by "judicious use of engines and slight assistance from the rudder with direct hand steering," "William B. Preston" escaped the inferno that left Darwin shattered and ruined as a base of operations for the Allies.
Heading south down the western coast of Australia, the ship took stock of her damage. Eleven men were killed, two missing, and three wounded by the bomb hit aft. The after living compartment was a mass of wreckage; rivets were popped and seams sprung; the after deck house was riddled with holes; the after 4-inch and machine guns had been put out of action. At about 1445, a Japanese ("Mavis" patrol plane attacked the ship, but her bombs splashed harmlessly into the ship's wake, and the plane discontinued her attack.
Proceeding to
Derby, Western Australia , "William B. Preston" touched briefly on a shoal as she entered the harbor, and reduced the effective speed of the starboard engine down to eight knots. Meanwhile, the single remaining PBY attached to the ship returned from Darwin with the men who had gone ashore and had been caught away from the ship during the attack, including Lt. Cmdr. Grant, who had been blown out of a motorboat while returning to the ship.On
23 February , the damaged "William B. Preston" proceeded for Broome, Australia, and was soon joined by "Childs" and "Heron", who both assisted the damaged seaplane tender in making emergency repairs. As Java fell, to the north, three of "William B. Preston's" planes served in the evacuation of Surabaya andTjilatjap . Meanwhile, the ship received orders to proceed for Fremantle for repairs.Upon arrival, however, there were not sufficient facilities available to effect the needed yard work, so the ship was routed on to Sydney. There, on the east coast of Australia, "William B. Preston" received a much-needed overhaul and repair period. Her old 4-inch guns were replaced by 3-inch antiaircraft guns, while 20-millimeter Oerlikons were added as well to augment her close-in antiaircraft capability. Following her availability, the ship proceeded to Fremantle and reported for duty to Commander, Patrol Wing 10, in June 1942.
Java had fallen, as had the Philippines and Malaya. Thus, the Australian sub-continent stood as the last Allied territory in the southwest Pacific to oppose further Japanese expansion. Operating out of Fremantle, the destroyer-seaplane tender alternated with "Heron" and "Childs" at such advance bases as
Exmouth Gulf and Fremantle through the early summer of 1942.Anchored in the vicinity of Bay of Rest, Exmouth Gulf, Western Australia, "William B. Preston" continued her operations as a seaplane tender through early July, attached to Patrol Wing 10 and servicing two PBY-5 planes. One plane conducted a daily patrol as far as Broome, while the other remained at a buoy near the ship with her crew living on board the tender. The ship's log noted that she was "in all respects ready to slip anchor and get underway instantly—-day or night." The calm waters of the bay and the generally perfect flying weather combined to greatly facilitate flight operations.
Relieved by Heron on
14 July , the ship cleared Exmouth Gulf, bound for Fremantle for general upkeep. Securing alongside USS|Isabel|PY-10|3 at north dock, Fremantle, she commenced a yard period, taking on fuel, gasoline, and provisions over the next eight days, departing on26 July . She steamed back to Exmouth Gulf and relieved "Heron" on the 29th.1943
For the remainder of 1942 and into 1943, "William B. Preston" continued this general routine, exchanging tender duties with "Heron" and "Childs" and undergoing periodic general upkeep at Fremantle. In February 1943, a heavy storm hit Exmouth Gulf, sending two PBY's onto a reef. A third Catalina took off despite the typhoon and made its way through sheets of rain and thick clouds to safely arrive at
Geraldton . Within two days, replacement planes had arrived; and "William B. Preston" recommenced tender operations.On
1 April , the seaplane tender moved toShark's Bay , Western Australia, to serve as an advance base; she subsequently tended PBY's for a time at West Lewis Island, near Enderby Island, Western Australia. Later, following the month of January 1944, in which the ship received full overhaul and upkeep, "William B. Preston" operated out of Fremantle on submarine exercises serving as a target vessel for the submarines operating out of that port. She continued these activities through the spring and summer of 1944.1944
At Darwin, on
18 August , the ship embarked the Deputy Commander, Fleet Air Wing 10, and other men from that unit for transportation to theAdmiralty Islands . After departing Australia, she proceeded to New Guinea, arriving at Milne Bay on22 August . Pushing on to the Admiralties, the ship dropped anchor at Manus on the 24th, disembarking her passengers and fueling preparatory to heading for theEllice Islands . The ship made Funafuti on31 August .Attached to Service Force, Pacific Fleet, and under orders from Commander, Air, Pacific Fleet (ComAir-Pac), "William B. Preston" headed for the United States. Stopping briefly at Palmyra Island and Pearl Harbor en route to the west coast, the seaplane tender arrived at
San Francisco, California on18 September . She then proceeded toSan Pedro, California , and thence to Terminal Island for overhaul.From
1 October to8 November , "William B. Preston" underwent voyage repairs and alterations to her armament. The ship also received a much-needed drydocking for bottom work before getting underway for post-repair trials which concluded on16 November . Putting out to sea on21 November , the newly refitted ship rendezvoused with USS|Ranger|CV-4|3 as the carrier engaged in training operations and carrier qualification flights for new pilots.For the remainder of 1944, the destroyer-seaplane tender operated as plane guard and antisubmarine escort ship out of San Diego. Alternating in company with "Ranger" or USS|Matanikau|CVE-101|3, she kept a lookout for planes forced to "ditch" while in the hands of student pilots learning the nuances of the
Grumman F6F Hellcat fighter.1945
After spending New Year's Day 1945 at San Diego, "William B. Preston" continued plane guarding and screening duties, clearing her home port on
2 January to join Matanikau off the California coast. During flight operations on3 January , a Hellcat crashed while taking off, and the destroyer-seaplane tender sped to the rescue. The ship's whaleboat, soon in the water, rescued the soaked pilot, and "William B. Preston" subsequently returned the aviator to his carrier via highline transfer.For the remainder of January and into February, the ship's duties continued to be much in the same vein, until she returned to the
Bethlehem Steel repair yard atAlameda, California , on14 February , for availability. She remained in dockyard hands until the 21st, after which time she rejoined "Matanikau" during further carrier qualification trials.After returning to port for a hull inspection at the Naval Repair Base, San Diego, "William B. Preston" operated with a succession of carriers engaged in flight training: USS|Takanis Bay|CVE-89|3, USS|Thetis Bay|CVE-90|3, USS|Siboney|CVE-112|3, and "Ranger". On
26 July , a wave caved in the forward port in the ship's office, flooding the radio room and putting it out of commission. Detached from further duty, she returned to San Diego where repairs could be made.Following completion of work, "William B. Preston" returned to further plane guard activities, alternating with "Ranger" and USS|Puget Sound|CVE-113|3. War's end on
15 August 1945 found the venerable destroyer-seaplane tender at anchor in San Diego harbor.As newer AVP's joined the Fleet and the end of the war made further expansion unnecessary, the need for older ships like "William B. Preston" diminished. The ship departed the west coast and arrived at Philadelphia on
9 October 1945 for preparation for disposal.Decommissioning
On
6 December 1945 , "William B. Preston" was decommissioned; and, on3 January 1946 , her name was struck from the Navy list. On6 November 1946 , theNorthern Metals Company , of Philadelphia, purchased the hulk for scrapping."William B. Preston" received one
battle star for herWorld War II service.As of 2005, no other ships have been named "William B. Preston".
References
External links
*http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/344.htm
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