- USS Hazelwood (DD-531)
USS "Hazelwood" (DD-531) was a
World War II -era "Fletcher"-classdestroyer in the service of theUnited States Navy The ship was the second named for CommodoreJohn Hazelwood ; a naval leader in the AmericanContinental Navy .World War II
"Hazelwood" was laid down
11 April 1942 by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Co.,San Francisco, California ; launched20 November 1942 ; sponsored by Mrs. Harold J. Fosdick; and commissioned18 June 1943 ,Commander Hunter Wood, Jr. , in command.After shakedown, "Hazelwood" departed the West Coast
5 September . ReachingPearl Harbor 9 September , she sailed 2 days later with a fast carrier strike force underRear Admiral C. A. Pownall in "Lexington" (CV-2) to launch carrier-based air strikes against Tarawa,Gilbert Islands . "Hazelwood" next joined a second fast carrier force—6 carriers, 7 cruisers, and 24 destroyers under Rear AdmiralA. E. Montgomery —for strikes againstWake Island 5 October and6 October .Returning to Pearl Harbor
11 October , the destroyer took part in intensive training to prepare for the giant amphibious drive toJapan . She joined Task Force 53 underVice Admiral Raymond A. Spruance atHavannah Harbor ,New Hebrides ,5 November . Departing13 November , she took part in invasion of the Gilbert Islands20 November . In one of the bitterest struggles during the fleet's push across the Pacific, she served on antisubmarine patrol and as standby fighter-director ship. "Hazelwood" returned to Pearl Harbor7 December 1943 to prepare for the next operation.As the war in the Pacific gained momentum, "Hazelwood" sortied from Pearl Harbor
22 January 1944 as part of Task Force 52 under Admiral Spruance for the invasion ofKwajalein andMajuro Atolls in theMarshall Islands . After troops stormed ashore31 January , she anchored in Kwajalein Harbor as primary fighter-director ship and also patrolled against enemy submarines. This objective secured, she departed Kwajalein15 February for several months of patrol and escort duty through the Solomons and Marshalls. She also bombarded Japanese shore positions atUngalabu Harbor and a tank farm on New Ireland."Hazelwood" next participated in the invasion of the Palaus. As the 1st Marine Division landed on
Peleliu , Palau Islands,15 September , she pounded enemy shore positions with gunfire to lessen Japanese opposition. She remained off Peleliu on patrol until3 October , when she sailed toSeeadler Harbor ,Manus Island . There the never-resting veteran joined Vice Admiral Kinkaid's naval forces for the invasion and liberation of thePhilippines . As troops landed under naval cover on Leyte20 October , "Hazelwood" came under heavy Japanese air attacks.The next week brought constant enemy air raids and a succession of far reaching fleet moves as the Imperial Navy made one final but futile effort to drive America out of the Philippines and regain some measure of control over the seas. In this struggle, known to history as the
Battle of Leyte Gulf , the Japanese Navy was all but annihilated. Three enemy battleships, four carriers, six heavy cruisers, four light cruisers, nine destroyers, and a host of planes fell victim to America's naval prowess and determination. "Hazelwood" herself accounted for at least twokamikaze s among many destroyed."Hazelwood" engaged in patrols off
Leyte Gulf and gunnery and training exercises out ofUlithi during December. She then joined Vice Admiral McCain's fast carrier strike force and sailed30 December . Carrying the war home to the enemy, the carriers launched heavy air raids against Japanese positions in theRyukyu Islands ,Taiwan ,Okinawa , and along theChina coast 3–7 January 1945 . These devastating strikes also diverted Japanese attention from the Philippines, where landings were made atLingayen Gulf 9 January . After further strikes on Japanese positions inIndochina , the hard-hitting force returned to Ulithi26 January .Joining another fast and mobile carrier task force "Hazelwood" sortied
11 February to protect carriers as they launched heavy air strikes against the Japanese home islands 16 and17 February . Swiftly shifting positions as only sea based power can, the fleet then sped south to provide support for the landings onIwo Jima , begun19 February . Although under constant attack from kamikazes as well as fighters and dive-bombers, "Hazelwood" came through the invasion untouched and on the night of25 February sank two small enemy freighters with her guns.Returning to Ulithi
1 March , the battle-tried destroyer sailed again for action14 March with a fast carrier force to provide air cover and shore bombardment for the invasion of Okinawa, last step before invasion of the Japanese home islands. After the invasion1 April , "Hazelwood" operated off Okinawa on radar picket and escort patrols through intense Japanese air attacks. On29 April the carrier group she was shepherding was attacked by kamikazes who dove out of low cloud cover."Hazelwood", all guns blazing, maneuvered to avoid two of the Zeros. A third screamed out of the clouds from astern. Although hit by "Hazelwood"’s fire, the enemy plane careened past the superstructure. It hit #2 stack on the port side, smashed into the bridge, and exploded. Flaming gasoline spilled over the decks and bulkheads as the mast toppled and the forward guns were put out of action. Ten officers and 67 men were killed, including the Commanding Officer, Cmdr.
V. P. Douw , and 36 were missing. "Hazelwood"’s engineering officer, Lt. (j.g.)C. M. Locke , took command and directed her crew in fighting the damage and aiding wounded. Proceeding by tow and part way under her own power, the gallant ship reached Ulithi5 May for temporary repairs, thence toMare Island Naval Shipyard via Pearl Harbor14 June for permanent repairs. "Hazelwood" decommissioned18 January 1946 and entered thePacific Reserve Fleet atSan Diego, California .Post War service
"Hazelwood" recommissioned at San Diego
12 September 1951 , Cmdr.R. M. Niles in command, and joined the enlarged fleet necessary to fight Communist aggression inKorea and to bolster the free world's strength everywhere. After shakedown she departed San Diego4 January 1952 , and reachedNewport, Rhode Island ,21 January to join Destroyer Forces, Atlantic Fleet. Operations and exercises along the East Coast and in theCaribbean , as well as hunter-killer training with carrier groups, occupied "Hazelwood" until she departed Newport for the Far East7 December 1953 .She reached
Tokyo 12 January 1954 , via Pearl Harbor and spent the next few months operating with a fast carrier task force and patrolling along the Korean coast to enforce an uneasy armistice. The far-ranging destroyer returned to the States the long way, departingHong Kong 28 May 1954 and sailing through theSuez Canal to reach Newport17 July .During the next few years "Hazelwood" maintained a pattern of training and readiness operations along the East Coast and in the Caribbean interspersed with deployments to the
Mediterranean . During theSuez Crisis in the fall of1956 she served with the mighty 6th Fleet, patrolling the eastern Mediterranean and helping to stabilize a tense international situation.In
1958 "Hazelwood" began extensive testing of helicopters for antisubmarine warfare both inNarragansett Bay and out of the Naval Ordnance Laboratory inMaryland . Assigned to the Destroyer Development Division, she participated in tests on equipment used with radar and electronic counter-measure systems. Her primary research and development work involved the testing of the Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter (DASH), an example of the Navy's continuing effort to apply the technological advances of modern science for the security of our nation and the free world. "Hazelwood" provided on board testing facilities and helped make possible the perfection of DASH, an advanced and vital ASW weapons system. In August1963 alone the drone helicopter made 1,000 landings on the versatile destroyer's flight deck.In addition to experimental developments, "Hazelwood" continued to engage in the many duties assigned to a destroyer. As America confronted
Russia over the introduction of offensive missiles into Cuba in October1962 , she steamed again to the troubled Caribbean for antisubmarine and surveillance patrols. "Hazelwood" arrived Guantanamo Naval Base5 November , just after the quarantine ofCuba had gone into effect and remained on guard during the crisis, serving as a Gun Fire Support Ship for Task Force 84. When the nuclear submarine "Thresher" (SSN-593) failed to surface10 April 1963 , "Hazelwood" immediately deployed to the scene of the tragedy with scientists from theWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution to begin a systematic search for the missing ship."Hazelwood" resumed testing of DASH during June and later in the year conducted on board trials of the Shipboard Landing Assist Device (SLAD). She continued both developmental and tactical operations along the East Coast during the next year. She decommissioned
19 March 1965 , and entered theAtlantic Reserve Fleet . "Hazelwood" was struck from theNaval Vessel Register 1 December 1974 and sold14 April 1976 .Honors
"Hazelwood" received 10
battle star s for World War II service.References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/h4/hazelwood-ii.htm
External links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/531.htm NavSource.org - DD-531]
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