- USS Lovelace (DE-198)
USS "Lovelace" (DE-198) was a "Buckley" class
destroyer escort in theUnited States Navy . She was named for Donald Alexander Lovelace."Lovelace" was laid down on
22 May 1943 ; launched on4 July 1943 byNorfolk Navy Yard , Portsmouth,Virginia ; sponsored by Mrs. Donald A. Lovelace,widow ; and commissioned on7 November 1943 , withLt. Comdr. R. D. de Kay, Jr., in command.After shakedown, Lovelace departed Norfolk on
2 January 1944 never to return to the east coast of the United States. Thisflagship ofDestroyer Escort Division 37 picked up convoys at Guantanamo, thePanama Canal Zone , and theSociety Islands as she steamed across the southernPacific toNoumea ,New Caledonia , arriving on8 February .Escort and screening duties in the
Solomon Islands preceded her departure on19 April for theNew Guinea battle zone. Arriving offHollandia (nowJayapura ,Indonesia ) without incident on24 April , she screened the debarking of the second wave of relief troops. Later "Lovelace" interrupted her New Guinea coastal patrol and escort missions on8 July to bombard beach targets atToem and on22 July entered a floatingdrydock atMilne Bay . A more important cessation from an almost continuous sailing schedule occurred a month later at New Caledonia, where new 20 mm guns were installed."Lovelace" left the
Melanesian groups on15 October sailing northwest to theKossol Straits ,Palau Islands , and then westward toLeyte Gulf . She arrived on25 October just as a major naval battle was beginning some sixty miles away. While protecting7th Fleet replenishment units, she splashed her first enemy plane on26 October . Six days later en route to Kossol Straits the screen was heavily attacked by suicide planes, but the convoy fought through. On21 November "Lovelace" was credited with an assist in downing an enemy bomber attacking its Hollandia‑bound convoy.After a period of refresher antisubmarine training off
Sansapoor ,New Guinea , the destroyer escort joinedTF 78 en route to thePhilippines . "Lovelace" continued to operate primarily as an intra‑Philippine escort vessel from8 January 1945 until mid‑July. However, during this period herantiaircraft capabilities were increased by the installation of air‑searchradar at Manus in theAdmiralties . In July her zone of operations expanded to includeUlithi , and on9 August , in the lull between air attacks, she first closedOkinawa . When she returned in September, it was the weather rather than the Japanese that posed the threat. Only slightly damaged herself on19 September , she went to the assistance of the "USS Coulter", anattack transport loaded with liberated U.S.war prisoners , after the ship had hit a drifting mine. After seeing the troopship safely back toBuckner Bay , "Lovelace" returned to the Philippines; and on1 October the ship departedSubic Bay for theUnited States in company with the ships of Escort Division 37.Arriving in
San Diego ,California on23 October , "Lovelace" reached the end of twenty-one active months of naval service.Decommissioned on22 May 1946 , she was berthed atBremerton ,Washington , and struck on1 July 1967 . "Lovelace" performed her last duty for the Navy by acting as a target for destruction on25 April 1968 .Lovelace was awarded three
battle stars forWorld War II service.External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/l8/lovelace.htm USS Lovelace entry] at
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships See also
*
List of patrol vessels of the United States Navy References
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/06/198.htm USS Lovelace entry] at [http://www.navsource.org/ NavSource Naval History]
*DANFS
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