- USS Morrison (DD-560)
USS "Morrison" (DD-560), a "Fletcher"-class
destroyer , was a ship of theUnited States Navy , named for CoxswainJohn G. Morrison (1838–1897), who received theMedal of Honor for exceptional bravery during the Civil War."Morrison" was laid down by
Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Corp. ,Seattle, Wash. ,30 June 1942 ; launched4 July 1943, sponsored by Miss Margaret M. Morrison, daughter of Coxswain Morrison; and commissioned18 December 1943, Commander Walter H. Price in command.After shakedown off
San Diego, California , "Morrison" departed Seattle25 February 1944 for the South Pacific, viaPearl Harbor and the Marshalls. In mid-April the destroyer joined TG 50.17 for screening operations offSeeadler Harbor , Manus,Admiralties , during the fueling of carriers then striking Japanese installations in the Carolines.Central Pacific campaigns
"Morrison" returned to Pearl Harbor
9 May to train for the giant amphibious leap into the Marianas. Departing Pearl31 May via Roi, Marshalls, she arrived east ofSaipan 13 June for a busy month. Her accurate gunfire supported the initial landings on Saipan the 15th and provided close fire support thereafter. With little aid the crew fought off night air attacks 17 through19 June . Of 40 enemy planes that approached at dusk the 17th, only 15 got by the attacks of the Navy's carrier interceptor planes; and "Morrison" shot down three of those.On
2 August the destroyer rendezvoused offGuam withTask Group 58.4 (TG 58.4) for flight operations following the landings on Guam21 July . Eight days later "Morrison" departed Guam forEniwetok , Marshalls, where she remained from the 13th until she got underway29 August for thePhilippines , arriving offMindanao the morning of9 September . That same day, the beginning of a 2-day strike on Mindanao, a Japaneseconvoy of 50sampan s and freighters was sighted heading north. "Morrison" led the intercepting force which destroyed the 10 to 15 sampans that survived the strafing by planes. She pushed on for airstrike operations onPeleliu ,Palau ; the Carolines; andLuzon ,Manila , andSamar Island, Philippines, through September.On
2 October "Morrison" sailed with TG 38.3 for picket duty offOkinawa , during the airstrikes there and on other Islands in theRyukyus 10 October . She continued on screen and plane guard operations off Formosa and northern Luzon during a 5-day attack beginning the 12th. On 16 October she screened "Houston" (CL-81) and "Canberra" (CA-70) as they retired toUlithi .Philippines campaign
During the
Battle for Leyte Gulf , 23 to26 October , "Morrison" operated off Luzon. On the 24th, she came to the aid of "Princeton" (CVL-23), badly damaged by a Japanese bomb, and picked up approximately 400 survivors in an hour and a half. The destroyer then pulled alongside "Princeton" to assist in fighting fire; she had just reached her position when the smallaircraft carrier , drifting and rolling, wedged "Morrison"'s mast and forward stack between her uptakes. "Morrison" managed to get clear and "Birmingham" (CL-62) took her place. Ten minutes later the after third of "Princeton" blew off. Not only did "Birmingham" suffer topside damage and heavy casualties, but "Princeton" was then so badly damaged she had to be sunk bytorpedo es."Morrison" debarked the "Princeton" survivors at Ulithi
27 October and got underway for the West Coast, via Pearl Harbor, in company with "Irwin" (DD-794) and "Birmingham", arrivingSan Francisco, California ,17 November . On9 February 1945 the destroyer steamed back to the South Pacific, stopping at Pearl Harbor on the 15th.Battle of Okinawa
After shore bombardment exercises in the
Hawaiian Islands , "Morrison" departed for Ulithi3 March . By21 March she had joined TF 54 underway to support the invasion of Okinawa. The destroyer arrived off the southern shores of Okinawa on the 25th, 7 days before the landings1 April , and joined in the preparations of bombardment.In the early morning of
31 March she sunkJapanese submarine I-8 . After "Stockton" (DD-646) made a positive sound contact off Okinawa and expended herdepth charge s in the attack, "Morrison" arrived on the scene to see thesubmarine surface, then immediately submerge. She dropped a pattern of charges which seconds later forced the sub to the surface where it was sunk by gunfire. At daylight "Morrison"'s small boats rescued the lone survivor.The ship continued shore bombardment, night illumination, and screen operations off
Oshima Beach. On the night of11 April "Morrison" assisted "Anthony" (DD-515) in illuminating and sinking enemylanding craft heading north along the beach.Three days later "Morrison" began
radar picket duty. Her first two stations, southwest of Okinawa, were occasionally raided at night. She replaced "Daly" (DD-519) at the third station 28 April after the other destroyer was hit by akamikaze .On
30 April "Morrison" was shifted to the most critical station on the picket line. After 3 days of bad weather had prevented air raids, the dawn of4 May was bright, clear, and ominous. At 07:15 thecombat air patrol was called on to stop a force of about 25 planes headed toward "Morrison", but some got through.The first attack on "Morrison", a main target as fighter-director ship, was a suicide run by a "Zeke". The plane broke through heavy
flack to drop a bomb which splashed off the starboard beam and exploded harmlessly. Next a "Val" and another "Zeke" followed with unsuccessful suicide runs. About 08:25 a "Zeke" approached through intense antiaircraft fire to crash into a stack and the bridge. The blow inflicted heavy casualties and knocked out most of the electrical equipment. The next three planes, all old twin-floatbiplane s, maneuvered, despite heavy attack, to crash into the damaged ship. With the fourth hit, "Morrison", heavily damaged, began to list sharply to starboard.Few communication circuits remained intact enough to transmit the order to abandon ship. Two explosions occurred almost simultaneously, the bow lifted into the air, and by 08:40 "Morrison" had plunged beneath the surface. The ship sank so quickly that most men below decks were lost, a total of 152.
In July 1957 the sunken hull of "Morrison" was donated, along with those of some 26 other ships sunk in the Ryukyus area to the Government of the Ryukyu Islands for salvage.
"Morrison" received eight
battle star s forWorld War II service.References
*DANFS|http://history.navy.mil/danfs/m14/morrison.htm
External links
* [http://www.destroyerhistory.org/fletcherclass/ussmorrison/index.html USS "Morrison" website]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/560.htm navsource.org: USS "Morrison"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd560txt.htm hazegray.org: USS "Morrison"]
* [http://wgordon.web.wesleyan.edu/kamikaze/stories/morrison/index.htm 2007 USS "Morrison" (DD-560) Reunion]
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