- USS Herbert (DD-160)
USS "Herbert" (DD-160) was a "Wickes"-class
destroyer . She was named forHilary A. Herbert (1834-1919),Secretary of the Navy from 1893 to 1897.History
"Herbert" was laid down by the
New York Shipbuilding Corporation at Camden inNew Jersey on9 April 1918 , launched on8 May 1919 by Mrs. Benjamin Micou, daughter of the late Hilary A. Herbert and commissioned on21 November 1919 , Lt. Comdr. E. A. Logan in command.After shakedown in
South Atlantic waters, "Herbert" trained in theCaribbean until1 May 1920 , returning there20 July with theU.S. Atlantic Fleet destroyer squadron. "Herbert" participated in torpedo practices, antiaircraft drills, and short range battle practice along the east coast. She decommissioned at Philadelphia27 June 1922 ."Herbert" recommissioned
1 May 1930 and joined theScouting Fleet atNewport, Rhode Island . For the next 4 years she operated in both East and West Coast waters, playing important roles in annual fleet problems and battle practice. From16 January 1935 until August 1939, "Herbert" served as a training ship fornaval reserves andmidshipmen . As war swept acrossEurope , she sailed toPortugal via theAzores 2 October 1939 and remained there until July 1940.Returning to the States, the destroyer underwent overhaul and
10 October reported to New London for sound school training. "Herbert's" training kept pace with the steadily intensifying war in Europe as she spent most of 1941 in battle practice, torpedo drills, and antisubmarine work.With America's entry into the war, "Herbert" operated as a convoy escort along the American coast from Key West north to Halifax and
Iceland . Guiding virtually defenseless merchant ships through coastal andCaribbean waters patrolled byU-boat s, "Herbert" carried out frequent depth-charge attacks on maraudingsubmarine s. From April through June 1943 she visitedGibraltar andNorth Africa , as the build-up for the invasion ofSicily intensified. A hunter-killer patrol followed. After a second patrol, "Herbert" escorted a convoy fromBermuda toCasablanca , returning to Charleston22 November 1943 for conversion to a high-speed transport."Herbert" now APD-22 sailed for the Pacific, reaching San Diego for amphibious training and continuing on to
Cape Sudest ,New Guinea , viaPearl Harbor 23 March 1944 . She disembarked troops for the initial invasion at Humboldt Bay, New Guinea,22 April and then spent a month on convoy escort duty before landing troops for the invasion ofBiak Island 27 May . Landings atWarsai in theCape Sansapor area30 July followed further patrol and escort duty, and15 September found "Herbert" offMorotai . Troops landed under naval cover to secure the airfield, which was within easy striking distance of thePhilippines , next major step in the island-hopping war across the Pacific. On17 October , 2 days before the initial landings atLeyte Gulf , "Herbert" landed Rangers onHomonhon Island which controlled the entrance to the Gulf. The destroyer remained in the Philippines, under almost constant Japanese air attack, throughout the rest of 1944; and, in January 1945, landed support troops atLingayen Gulf .From the Philippines "Herbert" moved north for escort duty to
Iwo Jima , returning to Leyte18 March 1945 to prepare for the invasion ofOkinawa , the largest amphibious operation of the Pacific war. Arriving Okinawa31 March , the day before the initial landings, "Herbert" took up patrol and escort duties. Suicidalkamikaze attacks wounded ships all around her, but "Herbert" remained untouched. After two runs escorting convoys from back staging areas up to Okinawa, the destroyer headed home, reaching San Diego19 June . USS "Herbert" was decommissioned atSan Diego on25 September 1945 , stricken from theNaval Vessel Register on24 October 1945 and sold for scrap to theBoston Metal Company ofBaltimore inMaryland on23 May 1946 .She received six
battle star s for World War II service.ee also
*
List of United States Navy destroyers References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/h5/herbert.htm
External links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/160.htm NavSource.org DD-160]
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