- USS Barr (DE-576)
USS "Barr" (DE-576/APD-39), originally a sclass|Buckley|destroyer escort, and later a sclass|Charles Lawrence|transport of the
United States Navy named for Pvt.Woodrow Wilson Barr ofKeyser, West Virginia ."Barr" was laid down on
5 November 1943 atHingham, Massachusetts , by theBethlehem Shipbuilding Co.; launched on28 December 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Cora Dell Barr, Pfc. Barr's mother; and commissioned on16 February 1944 ,Lieutenant Commander Henry H. Love in command.Following shakedown off
Bermuda and escort training atCasco Bay, Maine , the destroyer escort reported to Norfolk for antisubmarine duty in the Atlantic off the Cape Verde Islands. She operated as part of a hunter-killer group built around USS|Block Island|CVE-21|2 and also composed of USS|Ahrens|DE-575|2, USS|Eugene E. Elmore|DE-686)|2, and USS|Buckley|DE-51|2. Throughout May, this task group followed up submarine reports, chasing down sonar contacts that usually proved to be fish or debris. On6 May , "Buckley" rammed and sank an enemy submarine, verifying that the waters of the South Atlantic did hide enemy submarines.On
29 May , while closing a reported submarine, "Block Island" suffered a torpedo hit. "Barr" pursued theU-boat , later identified asU-549 , until around 2030 when a torpedo struck her too. The explosion wrecked the ship aft of the No. 2 engine room, killing four of her crew, injuring 14, and leaving 12 missing. Throughout the night, "Barr" stayed dead in the water while USS|Robert I. Paine|DE-578|2 patrolled around her. "Eugene E. Elmore" took "Barr"s injured and about half of her crew on board, hooked up a towline to the damaged escort and began the journey toCasablanca, Morocco . USS|Wilhoite|DE-397|2 relieved "Eugene E. Elmore"; and the Dutch tug, "Antic" took over and finally towed "Barr" into port six days later."Barr" stayed in drydock at Casablanca until
2 July while the wreckage of her damaged stern was burned off, spaces cleared of oil and debris, and stern plates welded on for the trip home. On3 July , USS|Cherokee|ATF-66|2 began the long voyage to Boston with "Barr" in tow. After a brief stop in Bermuda to avoid a major tropical storm, the ships arrived at theBoston Navy Yard on25 July .The destroyer escort spent the next three months in drydock being refurbished and converted to a high speed transport. Redesignated APD-39, "Barr" sailed for Norfolk on
3 November for boat training, and departed that port on the 15th as escort for USS|Teton|AGC-14|2. After transiting thePanama Canal and stopping in San Francisco to load more cargo, she and USS|Cecil|APA-96|2 sailed westward and arrived at Pearl Harbor on9 December .In Hawaii, "Barr" shuttled between Pearl Harbor and Maui, where she trained with Underwater Demolition Teams (UDTs) for night and day demolitions and shore bombardment. On
10 January 1945 , "Barr" set sail forUlithi , the main staging area for the invasion ofIwo Jima . From late January to early February, the fast transport loaded supplies, made repairs, and took part in demolition and reconnaissance training on reefs east of Ulithi. On10 February , "Barr" and the other APDs stood out of the lagoon at Ulithi with the Iwo Jima invasion force. The transports rehearsed D day movements at Tinian on the 12th and 13th. Then, the advance group headed for Iwo Jima on the 14th. "Barr" arrived off the southern end of the island on16 February ; and, that afternoon, her embarked UDT 13 successfully completed its first mission. The team placed a navigational light on the hazardous Higashi Rocks despite coming under enemy fire. "Barr", however, solved the problem, silencing that gunfire with some of her own.The next morning, following intense shelling by fire support ships and aircraft, the fast transports approached the eastern beaches for reconnaissance by the UDTs. During the afternoon, they made a reconnaissance of the western beaches in the same manner. On 18 February, "Barr" received orders to land her UDT on the Higashi Rocks again to reposition the light before retiring for the night. As she and USS|Blessman|APD-48|2 pulled away from the island, a Japanese bomber flew over "Barr", crashed "Blessman", and caused many casualties.
"Barr" spent D day,
19 February , in transport areas about convert|6000|yd|m|-3 off the eastern beaches. Her boats, manned by UDT frogmen, assisted in guiding marines to the landing beaches. Then, until3 March , the high speed transport took screening station at night and anchored during the day while UDTs worked with the beachmasters to remove underwater obstacles. On4 March , "Barr" departed Iwo Jima and steamed via Saipan and Guam to Ulithi where she anchored on12 March .For the next week, the fast transport prepared for the invasion of Okinawa. On the 21st, she stood out of Ulithi as part of the Gun Fire and Covering Force under
Rear Admiral Morton L. Deyo . The warships arrived off Okinawa on25 March and approached Kerama Retto to reconnoiter the southwestern tip of Tokashiki. During the next four days, "Barr" put UDT 13 ashore on Keise Shima, a group of small sand and coral islands between Kerama Retto and Okinawa, to gather information and blast passages through the reef for the LSTs.The Japanese maintained an almost constant aerial onslaught in the early days of the invasion. Barr did not close Okinawa on D day,
1 April , but remained in the transport area as a part of the antisubmarine screen. She transferred UDT 13 to USS|Wayne|APA-54|2 on 6 and7 April and continued screening until9 April , when she sailed to Saipan for a week of repairs."Barr" got underway again on
23 April to escort a convoy of LSTs and LSMs back to Okinawa. The fast transport remained off the Hagushi anchorage providing antiair and antisubmarine defense until27 May , when she headed for Saipan as aconvoy escort. Leaving the convoy at Saipan, "Barr" continued on to the Philippines, visiting Leyte and Manila before joining the screen of an Okinawa-bound convoy at Lingayen Gulf. The fast transport resumed screening duties at Okinawa after her return late in June.After Japan capitulated on
15 August , "Barr" rendezvoused with HMS|King George V|41|6 and HMS|Gambia|48|6 east of Tokyo, embarked Royal Marines from the two British warships and landed them at Yokosuka. After this mission, she proceeded to the north end of the bay to evacuate Allied prisoners of war from central Honshu. During several trips, the fast transport received on board 1,135 formerPOW s. After the evacuation was completed, "Barr" made one mail run to Iwo Jima between 24 and28 September and then remained in port at Tokyo until12 October , when she was ordered to Nagasaki for duty with the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey. She served there as a base of operations and as a barracks ship until 1 December when she began the voyage to the United States.The transport arrived at San Diego on
19 December and, after voyage repairs, continued on to the east coast where she was placed out of commission, in reserve, at Green Cove Springs, Florida, on12 July 1946 . "Barr" remained in the Atlantic Reserve Fleet until the early 1960s. Her name was struck from the Navy List on1 June 1960, and she was sunk as a target off Vieques Island on26 March 1963 ."Barr" received three
battle star s for her World War II service.References
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/b2/barr-i.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Barr"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/04039.htm navsource.org: USS "Barr"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/escorts/de576.htm hazegray.org: USS "Barr"]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.