- USS Waldron (DD-699)
USS "Waldron" (DD-699), an "Allen M. Sumner"-class
destroyer , was named forJohn C. Waldron , was aU.S. Naval aviator who led a squadron of torpedo bombers inWorld War II .Initial operations
The "Waldron" was laid down on
16 November 1943 at Kearny, N.J., by the Federal Shipbuilding & Drydock Co.; launched on26 March 1944 ; sponsored by Miss Nancy Waldron; and commissioned at the New York Navy Yard on7 June 1944 , Comdr. George E. Peckham in command."Waldron" conducted shakedown in the vicinity of Bermuda during the early summer of 1944. She conducted post-shakedown availability at New York from
22 July until6 August and then headed back to the Bermuda area for further training. The destroyer returned to New York in mid-September but got underway again on the 26th. Steaming via the Delaware capes, the warship arrived at the Panama Canal on1 October . She transited the canal that same day and reported for duty with the Pacific Fleet. She departed Balboa on4 October , stopped at San Pedro, Calif., from 12 to14 October , and arrived in Pearl Harbor on20 October . She remained in the Hawaiian Islands until17 December , at which time she got underway for the western Pacific. She arrived in Ulithi lagoon on28 December and reported for duty in the screen of the Fast Carrier Task Force (TF-38/58).1945
"Waldron" spent her entire World War II service with the fast carriers. She departed Ulithi with TF 38 on
30 December and protected the carriers while they launched their planes against enemy installations on 3 and4 January 1945 . On the 6th and 7th, her charges' aircraft pummeled targets on the island ofLuzon . Both raids were part of the preparations for the amphibious assault on Luzon carried out at Lingayen Gulf on9 January . While the troops stormed ashore there, however, "Waldron" and the carriers had returned north to suppress enemy air power on Formosa during the actual assault. That same day, she steamed through Bashi Channel into theSouth China Sea with TF 38 to begin a series of raids on Japan's inner defenses. First on the agenda cameCamranh Bay in Indochina, where Admiral Halsey hoped to find battleships "Ise" and "Hyuga". Unknown to the American Fleet, however, was the fact that the two Japanese warships had moved south to safer waters atSingapore . The raids went forward anyhow on12 January , and the naval aviators still managed to rack up a stupendous score: 44 ships sunk, 15 of which were Japanese combatants and the remainder being merchant ships. After fueling on the 13th, TF 38, with "Waldron" still in the screen, carried out air attacks onHainan Island and onHong Kong . The following day, the planes of TF 38 returned to Formosa for antishipping sweeps and attacks on the Formosa airfields.On
16 January , the carriers launched their planes against Hainan and Hong Kong once more. Late on the 20th, "Waldron" the antimine and antisubmarine patrol—led TF 38 out of the South China Sea through Balintang Channel and into the Philippine Sea. The destroyer and her charges returned to their base at Ulithi on the 26th after conducting strikes on Formosa and on Okinawa."Waldron" remained at Ulithi until
10 February at which time she got underway again with TF 58, this time to support the assault onIwo Jima scheduled for the 19th. As a part of that support, the carriers planned to carry out the first carrier-based air strikes on Japan since theDoolittle Raid of 1942. On 16 and17 February , the carriers of TF 58 sent their aircraft aloft for raids on the Tokyo area of Honshu. The task force then began its retirement to Iwo Jima, there to provide air support for the following day's invasion.On the night of 17 and
18 February , "Waldron's" task group encountered several small Japanese patrol craft. One of the craft attacked "Dortch" (DD-670) with her 3-inch guns, killing three of the destroyer's crewmen. Due to darkness and the proximity of "Dortch" and "Charles S. Sperry" (DD-697), "Waldron" could not bring her battery to bear. Instead, she laid on a course for the enemy craft and charged her at 21 knots. At about 0509 on the 18th, "Waldron" rammed the Japanese picket boat amidships and cut her neatly in two. About four hours later, the destroyer received orders detaching her from TF 58 to head for Saipan and repairs to her bow.The warship arrived at Saipan on
20 February , completed repairs quickly, and departed Saipan in the afternoon of the 23rd. Upon arrival off Iwo Jima on the 25th, "Waldron" reported to TF 51 for temporary duty with the transport screen. During that assignment, she also provided naval gunfire support for the troops operating ashore on the 26th and 27th. On27 February , the destroyer rejoined the screen of TG 58.3. After an air strike on Okinawa on1 March , she headed back to Ulithi with the carriers, arriving there on4 March .Ten days later, "Waldron" exited the lagoon once again on her way back to the Japanese home islands with the fast carriers. She arrived in Japanese home waters on
18 March , and the carriers began launching strikes on Kyushu airfields that same day. Later that day, the enemy counterattacked withkamikaze s and succeeded in crashing "Franklin" (CV-13). "Waldron" was one of the ships assigned to cover the severely damaged carrier during the initial stage of her retirement from action. Antiaircraft action continued throughout the three days "Waldron" provided escort for "Franklin"; and, on the night of 20 and21 March , the destroyer scored a kill of her own when her radar-directed main battery brought down a Japanese "Judy." She took another intruder under fire briefly that night, but technical problems prevented a second kill. On22 March , she rejoined the main carrier force and resumed her screening duties while the planes struck at Okinawa and Kyushu in preparation for the invasion of Okinawa.For the next three months, "Waldron" continued to screen the carriers during their support missions for the Okinawa campaign. During that time, she was engaged in a number of antiaircraft actions and participated in two shore bombardments of air installations on Minami Daito Shima. The one antiaircraft action which resulted in a definite kill for the destroyer occurred on
14 May , although she claimed four sure assists in addition during that period. On26 May , she cleared the Ryukyus with her task group and, on1 June , arrived at San Pedro Bay, Leyte, for a much-needed availability. The destroyer remained at San Pedro Bay until1 July at which time she returned to sea with TF 38.For the remainder of World War II, she steamed with the fast carriers during the final strikes on the Japanese home islands. The
15 August cessation of hostilities found her still off the Japanese coast in company with TF 38. She screened the carriers while their aircraft covered the initial occupation of Japan. That duty lasted until10 September , at which time she finally entered Tokyo Bay.Post WWII
During the immediate postwar period, "Waldron" remained in the Far East in support of American occupation forces. In addition to Japan, she visited Saipan, Eniwetok, and Okinawa during the repatriation of Japanese—both military and civilian—back to Japan. On
4 November , she departed Okinawa, bound for home. After stops at Eniwetok and Pearl Harbor, the warship arrived at San Francisco on20 January 1946 . From there, she moved to Portland, Oreg., whence she departed on4 February . The destroyer transited the Panama Canal on14 February and arrived in Norfolk on the 19th."Waldron" operated along the east coast of the United States for about three months. Early in May, she began an extended repair period at the Boston Naval Shipyard and did not return to active service until the end of the year. During the first few months of 1947, the destroyer operated out of Charleston, S.C.; but, by June, she had been reassigned to New Orleans. For the next two years, she cruised the waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the West Indies as a training platform for reservists of the 8th Naval District. In August 1949, she made a visit to Norfolk, Va., before getting underway for a deployment to European waters on
6 September . During the first part of that deployment, "Waldron" cruised northern European waters visiting British and western European ports. Midway through November, however, she transited the Straits of Gibraltar and entered the Mediterranean Sea. She cruised the length and breadth of the Mediterranean, making a number of port visits, until28 January 1950 when she retransmitted theStraits of Gibraltar . She arrived back in Norfolk on7 February but remained only until the 16th on which day she made the brief voyage to Charleston, S.C. Following pre-inactivation overhaul, "Waldron" was decommissioned on17 May 1950 and was berthed with the Charleston Group, Atlantic Reserve Fleet.Korea
Less than six weeks later, however, events in the Far East transpired which brought her back into active service before the end of the year. On
25 June , the forces of communistNorth Korea invaded theRepublic of Korea to the south. The compelling need to send most available active combat ships to the Far East to support the United States andUnited Nations commitment to help the South Koreans meant that many others in reserve had to be reactivated to take their places. Accordingly, the decision to reactivate "Waldron" came on17 August , just three months after her decommissioning.On
20 November 1950 , "Waldron" was recommissioned at Charleston, Comdr.James C. Shaw in command. She conducted shakedown training out of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, from December 1950 to March 1951. After post-shakedown availability at Charleston, she moved to her new home port, Norfolk, in August. In September, she departed Norfolk for a 10-week cruise to northern European waters before entering the Mediterranean for duty with the 6th Fleet. Early in February 1952, the destroyer returned to Norfolk and resumed 2nd Fleet operations from that base.During the summer of 1952, "Waldron" voyaged to Europe once more with Naval Academy midshipmen embarked for their summer training cruise. She completed that voyage in September and returned to Atlantic Fleet duty out of Norfolk. In March 1953, the warship began an overhaul at the Charleston Naval Shipyard. She completed repairs in June and conducted refresher training in the Guantanamo Bay operating area before resuming normal operations out of Norfolk at the end of the month.
On
2 November , the destroyer departed Norfolk for a tour of duty in the Far East. She transited the Panama Canal on the 9th and continued her voyage west. She stopped at Pearl Harbor along the way and arrived in Yokosuka, Japan, on9 December . Her duty in the Orient took her to Japanese and Korean ports, and she served as a unit of the United Nations security forces on patrol in the wake of the cessation of hostilities in Korea the previous summer. That assignment lasted until7 April 1954 , at which time she departed Sasebo for home. Steaming via Hong Kong, Singapore, Ceylon, the Suez Canal, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Atlantic Ocean, "Waldron" completed a circumnavigation of the globe at Norfolk on4 June .In July, the ship resumed normal operations along the east coast and in the West Indies. That duty continued until the spring of 1956. On
1 April , she stood out of Chesapeake Bay on her way to the Mediterranean for her second tour of duty with the 6th Fleet.Over the next decade, "Waldron" alternated operations out of Norfolk with a series of deployments to the 6th Fleet in the "middle sea." In June of 1962, the destroyer began a fleet rehabilitation and modernization (FRAM) overhaul at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard to update her antisubmarine capabilities. At the conclusion of those alterations, the warship returned to normal operations and completed her decade of deployments and duty in home waters.
Vietnam
The summer of 1967, however, brought a different, though by no means new, type of assignment—duty in the Far East. On
5 July 1967 , she stood out of Norfolk, bound for the Panama Canal. The destroyer transited the canal on10 July . After stops at San Diego and Pearl Harbor, she arrived in Yokosuka on10 August . She departed Yokosuka on13 August and, after stops at Okinawa and Subic Bay, arrived inVietnam ese waters on the 24th. Patrolling near the 17th parallel, she provided gunfire support for the III Marine Amphibious Force (MAF) during operations ashore against communist forces. That first line period lasted until17 September when she got underway for a port visit to Kaohsiung, Taiwan. She stopped at Kaohsiung from20 September to1 October and then moved on to Hong Kong, which port she visited between 2 and6 October .On the 9th, she resumed naval gunfire support duties in Vietnamese waters, this time off the coast of the II Corps tactical zone. During her second tour on the gunline, "Waldron's" main battery supported troops of the Army's 1st Air Cavalry Division and of the South Vietnamese 40th Division. On
20 October , she concluded her assignments on the gunline and headed for Yankee Station to join the fast carriers of TF 77. Two days later, she rendezvoused with Task Group (TG) 77.8 for two weeks of planeguard duty with the carriers. She departed the war zone again on3 November and, after a stop at Okinawa, arrived in Yokosuka on the 8th.A week later, she headed back to Yankee Station with TG 77.8 but parted company with the group on the 18th for a stop at Subic Bay. Waldron returned to Vietnamese waters on
24 November and took up naval gunfire support duties once again off the coast of the II Corps zone. That assignment endured until10 December when she cleared the war zone for the last time. She made a stop at Subic Bay and then arrived in Yokosuka on22 December .Four days later, the destroyer set out for the United States. After stops at Midway and Pearl Harbor, she arrived in San Francisco on
9 January 1968 . From there, she headed via San Diego to the Panama Canal which she transited on the 25th. "Waldron" reentered Norfolk on30 January .Over the next two years, the destroyer resumed her schedule of Atlantic coast operations alternated with two more deployments to the Mediterranean. On
1 April 1970 , "Waldron" was reassigned to Naval Reserve training under the control of the Commandant, 6th Naval District. Her new home port was Mayport, Fla. She arrived there on7 May 1970 and began cruises along the Florida coast and in the West Indies training reservists. That duty lasted until the fall of 1973. On30 October 1973 , "Waldron" was decommissioned at Mayport. She was simultaneously transferred, by sale, to theColombian Navy , in which she was commissioned as ARC "Santander" (DD-03). Her name was struck from the US Navy list on31 October 1973 . As of the beginning of 1980, "Santander" was still active with the Colombian Navy."Waldron" earned four
battle stars during World War II and one battle star for service during the Vietnam conflictReferences
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/w2/waldron.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Waldron"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/699.htm navsource.org: USS "Waldron"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd699txt.htm hazegray.org: USS "Waldron"]
* [http://www.usswaldron.org usswaldron.org: USS "Waldron" Alumni Association]
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