- USS Charles J. Kimmel (DE-584)
The Charles J. Kimmel was a
Rudderow class destroyer escort serving in theUS Navy from 1944 through 1947. She served in both the Atlantic and Pacific theaters of WWII. The Kimmel was laid down by Bethlehem Steel inHingham MA on 1 December 1943 and launched on 15 January 1944, she was commissioned 20 April 1944Decommissioned 15 January 1947, stricken 30 June 1968 and ultimately sunk as target off California, 13 November 1969. [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/escorts/de584.htm Charles J. Kimmel (DE-584) ] ]Charles Kimmel
The ship was named after Charles Jack Kimmel, born in
Rushsylvania, Ohio , 2 July 1918. Charles enlisted in the Marine Corps 29 October 1941 and was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant 31 January 1942. He was killed in action near the bloody Matanikau River onGuadalcanal 2 November 1942 while leading his platoon in a bayonet charge. His superb courage in this hand-to-hand combat won recognition in the posthumous award of theNavy Cross .Atlantic Duty
The USS Charles J. Kimmel escorted coastwise convoys between
Norfolk, VA ., andNew York City until Augst 1944. On 2 August she sailed to guard the passage of a convoy toOran , where she was ordered to sail independently escorting a transport to Naples, both of these movements in support of the recent assault on southernFrance . She rejoined her original escort group at Oran on 26 August, and returned toBoston, MA 18 September. Here she received repairs, and Pacific-type camouflage.Pacific Duty
The Kimmel transited the
Panama Canal arriving at Manus 7 November 1944. On 20 November, she sailed forHollandia to join the group escorting a reinforcement convoy to Leyte. She returned toNew Guinea to prepare for the assault onLingayen . On 28 December she put to sea as part of the San Fabian Attack Force, coming under air attack with her force on 6, 7, and 8 January 1945 as the huge amphibious fleet sailed north. Her guns joined the antiaircraft barrage shielding the vulnerable transports and landing craft then and during the assault on 9 January.The Charles J. Kimmel continued to operate in the
Philippines though the remainder of the war, escorting convoys fromNew Guinea to Leyte and Lingayen as well as within the Philippine Archipelago. Twice she screened shipping to thePalaus .From 2 June, she served with the local naval defense force in
Davao Gulf , providing communications for naval forces ashore as well as performing air-sea rescue missions. On the first day of her new assignment, she dashed under the guns of enemy-held Auqui Island to rescue 22 survivors of a downed Air Force transport. The Kimmel aided Filipino troops in their mop-up activities by bombarding Piso Point to dislodge approximately 600 Japanese soldiers. In September 1945, the Charles J. Kimmel escorted a convoy to Okinawa, returning to patrol duties in the Philippines until 29 November, when she hoisted the homeward-bound pennant atSamar . She arrived inSan Diego 18 December 1945, and there was placed out of commission in reserve 15 January 1947.The USS Charles J. Kimmel received one battle star for World War II service.
External links
*http://www.navsource.org/archives/06/584.htm
*http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/escorts/de584.htmReferences
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