- USS Stribling (DD-96)
The first USS "Stribling" (DD-96) was a "Wickes"-class
destroyer in theUnited States Navy duringWorld War I and the years following. She was named in honor of Cornelius Kinchiloe Stribling.History
"Stribling" was laid down at
Quincy, Massachusetts , on14 December 1917 by theFore River Shipbuilding Company ; launched on29 May 1918 ; sponsored by MissMary Calvert Stribling ; and commissioned at theBoston Navy Yard on16 August 1918 , Lieutenant CommanderThomas E. Van Metre in command.On
31 August , "Stribling" departed New York to escort a convoy across the Atlantic. However, machinery trouble forced her back into New York the following day. After almost three weeks in port, she got underway again on18 September , this time as an escort to aGibraltar -bound convoy. She fueled atPonta Delgada in theAzores and made Gibraltar in early October. From there, she sailed with a convoy forMarseilles on10 October . For the next month, she made several Gibraltar-to-Marseilles circuits with Allied convoys.After the
Armistice , she sailed toVenice ,Italy , to investigate post-armistice conditions there and at various other ports on Italy'sAdriatic coast and inDalmatia . At the completion of that duty, she headed back to theUnited States , arriving home in July 1919. "Stribling" entered thePortsmouth Navy Yard for overhaul and repairs before being placed in reduced commission atPhiladelphia . There, she was converted to aminelayer and, on17 July 1920 , she was redesignated DM-1.In September 1921, she departed Philadelphia and sailed to the west coast and, from there, proceeded on to
Pearl Harbor ,Hawaii . After a series of maneuvers in the islands, "Stribling" was decommissioned on26 June 1922 . On1 December 1936 , her name was struck from the Navy list. The following month, her hulk was towed toSan Pedro, California , where she was sunk as a target.ee also
*See USS "Stribling" for other ships of this name.
*List of United States Navy destroyers References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/s19/stribling-i.htm
External links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/096.htm NavSource Photos]
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