- USS Young (DD-580)
USS "Young" (DD-580), a "Fletcher"-class
destroyer , was the second ship of theUnited States Navy of that name. She was the first to be named for Rear AdmiralLucien Young (1852 –1912 )."Young" was laid down on
7 May 1942 at Orange, Tex., by theConsolidated Steel Corp. ; launched on15 October 1942 , sponsored by Mrs. J. M. Schelling; and commissioned on31 July 1943 , Lieutenant Commander George B. Madden in command.1943
Following shakedown in the
Gulf of Mexico and theCaribbean Sea , "Young" briefly operated out of Guantanamo Bay,Cuba . During that assignment, she formed part of the escort for "Iowa" (BB-61) when thatbattleship carried PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt across the Atlantic on the first leg of his journey to theTeheran Conference of November 1943. In the midst of that voyage, the destroyer received orders instructing her to head for the Pacific theater. She transited thePanama Canal on24 November and reported for duty with the Pacific Fleet. She arrived inPearl Harbor early in December and received orders assigning her to the 9th Fleet in the northern Pacific. "Young" remained at Pearl Harbor for several weeks and then headed for theAleutian Islands where she arrived in mid-January1944 .1944
Her arrival in
Alaska n waters, however, came some three months after the Aleutians campaign ended. Her duties for the next eight months, therefore, consisted of escort and patrol missions spiced with an occasional bombardment of Japanese installations in theKuril Islands . She was an element of Rear AdmiralWilder D. Baker 's striking force on2 February 1944 when that unit conducted the first bombardment of Japanese home territory in the Kurils. She twice returned to those islands in June, shellingMatsuwa on the 13th andParamushiro on the 26th. Otherwise, her only enemy during the first eight months of 1944 proved to be the foul Aleutians weather.During September, she returned to the United States for an overhaul. Upon completing repairs, the destroyer departed
San Francisco Bay on6 October , bound for the western Pacific. Reporting in at Manus in theAdmiralty Islands late in the month, she received orders to join the escort of a supply convoy bound for the newly invadedPhilippines . She reached Leyte on18 November in the midst of an enemy air attack on the invasion fleet. She and her colleagues in the convoy screen combined to splash three of the attacking aircraft.On
19 December , "Young" departed Leyte with 10 other destroyers in the screen of the firstMindoro resupply echelon. The unit came under enemy air attack early in the morning of the 21st but encountered no concerted air opposition until near dusk. At about 17:18, a raid of fivekamikaze s broke through thecombat air patrol , and three of the suicide planes succeeded in their missions, hitting "LST-460", "LST-479", andliberty ship SS "Juan de Fuca". Both LSTs had to be abandoned, but SS "Juan de Fuca" carried on and reached Mindoro safely with theconvoy on the 22d. During the return voyage, enemy planes returned to harass the convoy but failed to inflict damage. During the approach to and the retirement from Mindoro, "Young" claimed a total of five unassisted splashes and two assists.1945
"Young"'s first
amphibious assault came during the invasion of Luzon in January1945 . During the main landing on the 9th, she served as a unit of the screen for thelanding craft of Attack Group "Baker" and covered part of the landings atLingayen itself. The assault went off practically unopposed, an example of the new Japanese tactic of fighting an amphibious force inland with conventional infantry tactics rather than trying to smash it at the beach. Since the American troops encountered no real resistance until they had advanced inland well beyond the range of destroyer guns, "Young" and her colleagues had little to do at Lingayen.That pattern repeated itself at
Zambales later in the month when "Young", in reconnoitering the landing area, encountered a small boat embarking a Filippino guerrilla lieutenant who informed the destroyer that the area had already been secured by his forces. The Zambales landing went off without a shot being fired.During operations around Subic and
Manila Bay s, the warship joined "Nicholas" (DD-449) in destroying two Japanese 17-foot suicide boats sent in fromCorregidor to break up theMariveles occupation force on14 February . Two days later, she participated in the reduction and capture of the source of those boats—Corregidor. She bombarded the "Rock" before the assault and then helped silence enemy batteries onCaballo Island when they opened up on the landing craft. Later that morning, she threaded her way through mine-infested waters to provide gunfire support for the troops taking the island fortress.During the following weeks, the destroyer conducted patrols out of Subic Bay. In April, she supported the Army's landing on
Mindanao , but that operation, thanks to strongMoro guerrilla activity, proved to be another walkover. She continued her patrol operations in the Philippines until the end of the third week in May at which time she received orders to return to the United States for repairs. Steaming viaEniwetok and Pearl Harbor, she arrived in San Francisco Bay on12 June and began a 47-day overhaul at theMare Island Navy Yard .Late in July, she completed her post-overhaul trials and, early in August, headed back toward Pearl Harbor. However, by the time of her arrival, hostilities had already ceased. Instead of continuing west, she began operations in the
Hawaii area as escort and plane guard for "Saratoga" (CV-3). On25 September , she departed Hawaii in company with various units of the 3d Fleet en route to the east coast for the 1945Navy Day celebration. On27 October , she arrived in New York where PresidentHarry Truman reviewed the assembled ships."Young" remained in New York until
1 November when she got underway for Charleston, S.C., where she was placed in reserve on31 January 1946 . Finally decommissioned sometime in January1947 , the destroyer remained in reserve until1 May 1968 at which time her name was struck from theNavy list . On6 March 1970 , she was sunk as a target off the midatlantic coast."Young" (DD-580) earned five
battle star s duringWorld War II .See USS "Young" for other ships of the same name.
References
*DANFS|http://history.navy.mil/danfs/y1/young-ii.htm
External links
* [http://history.navy.mil/danfs/y1/young-ii.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Young"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/580.htm navsource.org: USS "Young"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd580txt.htm hazegray.org: USS "Young"]
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