- USS Clarence K. Bronson (DD-668)
USS "Clarence K. Bronson" (DD-668) was a "Fletcher"-class
destroyer of theUnited States Navy , named for navalaviator Lieutenant (junior grade)Clarence K. Bronson (1888–1916)."Clarence K. Bronson" was launched
18 April 1943 by theFederal Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co. , Kearny, N.J., sponsored by Mrs. W. P. Richardson; and commissioned11 June 1943, Commander W. S. Veeder in command.World War II
"Clarence K. Bronson" reached
Pearl Harbor 21 November 1943 for final training, remaining inHawaii an waters aside from a single escort voyage to Tarawa, until January1944 , when she joined theFast Carrier Task Force (then 5th Fleet's TF 58). "Bronson" screened this force for strikes supporting the landings on Kwajalein, and raids onTruk ,Saipan , andGuam through February, and on15 March , sailed fromEspiritu Santo to screenaircraft carrier s covering the landings in theBismarck Archipelago from 19 to25 March . With Task Group 36.1 (TG 36.1) she rejoined TF 58 two days later for strikes onPalau ,Yap , andWoleai .In late April 1944, "Bronson"'s force covered the
New Guinea landings, and returned to raid Truk on 29 and30 April . The destroyer was drydocked atMajuro during May, and sailed again with TF 58 on6 June for the Marianas operation. After screening during preinvasion air strikes on Saipan, Rota,Tinian and Guam, "Bronson" stood off Saipan as the assault on that island began, then guarded her carriers as they launched their planes in the aerialBattle of the Philippine Sea , 19 and20 June , an American victory from which Japanese naval aviation never recovered. "Clarence K. Bronson" was one of the ships which displayed her searchlight aloft as a homing beacon for carrier pilots at the close of the battle as the Fleet audaciously revealed itself to save its aviators. After replenishing atEniwetok early in July, TF 58 covered the invasion of Guam, and launched air strikes on enemy bases in thePalaus andBonins ."Clarence K. Bronson"'s force covered the capture of the Palaus in September 1944 and in October neutralized Formosan bases, hurled raids against the
Philippines andVisayas , and played its part in the epicBattle for Leyte Gulf of 23 to26 October , in theBattle of Cape Engaño ,25 October .In November and December 1944, air strikes covered the
Mindoro landings, and through January1945 , raids on Japanese bases on Formosa,Luzon , theNansei Shoto and Chinese ports made possible the Lingayen assault. February's strikes onTokyo prepared for the assault on Iwo Jima, and "Clarence K. Bronson" left the main body of her task force18 February to escortcruiser s toIwo Jima for preinvasion bombardment and fire support to the forces ashore after the assault on19 February . She offered this aid for 4 days, then rejoined her task force for another round of strikes on Tokyo and the Nansei Shoto. She returned to fire support and antisubmarine patrol duties off Iwo Jima from 3 to29 March , then sailed for a west coast overhaul."Clarence K. Bronson" returned to Pearl Harbor
9 July 1945 for training, and put to sea2 August to bombardWake Island 6 days later. Continuing west, she enteredSagami Wan 27 August , and took part in the occupation by patrollingJapan ese waters until5 December . Homeward bound, she called atSan Diego andNew York , and on 12 April arrived atCharleston, S.C. Here she was decommissioned and placed in reserve16 July 1946 .1951 – 1960
Recommissioned
7 June 1951 , "Clarence K. Bronson" had training along the east coast and in theCaribbean until18 May 1953 , when she sailed from herhome port , Newport, R.I., to join TF 77 inKorea n waters3 July . She operated with TF 77 and TF 99 on blockade, patrol, and escort duty until10 November , when she began the final leg of her round-the-world cruise, calling atHong Kong ,Aden ,Gibraltar ,Bermuda , and many other ports before she stood upNarragansett Bay 15 January 1954 . Through the next 4 years, she alternated training and local operations with exercises in the Caribbean,NATO operations in theNorth Atlantic , assignment as engineering school ship, and twoMediterranean cruises with the 6th Fleet in1955 and1957 .In
1958 "Clarence K. Bronson" was assigned to experimental duty with theUnderwater Sound Laboratory , and in1959 , made naval reserve training cruises along the east coast and in the Caribbean from Charleston, and her new home port, Mayport, Fla. On11 April 1960 , she was placed in commission in reserve at Orange, Tex., and on29 June 1960 was decommissioned.TCG "İstanbul" (D 340)
"Clarence K. Bronson" was transferred to
Turkey 14 January 1967 , served in theTurkish Navy as TCG "İstanbul" (D 340), after the city ofİstanbul .She was stricken and broken up for scrap in
1987 .Awards
"Clarence K. Bronson" received nine
battle star s forWorld War II service, and one battle star forKorean War service.References
*DANFS|http://history.navy.mil/danfs/c9/clarence_k_bronson.htm
*NVR|http://www.nvr.navy.mil/nvrships/details/DD668.htmExternal links
* [http://history.navy.mil/danfs/c9/clarence_k_bronson.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Clarence K. Bronson"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/668.htm navsource.org: USS "Clarence K. Bronson"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd668txt.htm hazegray.org: USS "Clarence K. Bronson"]
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