- USS Wiley (DD-597)
USS "Wiley" (DD-597), a "Fletcher"-class
destroyer , was a ship of theUnited States Navy named forWilliam Wiley , a sailor of the Navy in the 1800s who served in theFirst Barbary War . Wiley took part in the daring raid led by LieutenantStephen Decatur, Jr. , intoTripoli harbor on16 February 1804 , to destroy thefrigate "Philadelphia"."Wiley" (DD-597) was laid down on
10 August 1943 at Bremerton, Wash., by thePuget Sound Navy Yard ; launched on25 September 1944 ; sponsored by Mrs. Herbert V. Wiley, wife of Vice AdmiralHerbert V. Wiley , USN (Ret.); and commissioned there on22 February 1945 , Commander B. P. Field, Jr., in command.History
The destroyer conducted shakedown out of
San Diego , Calif., through the end of April 1945; underwent post-shakedown availability at Puget Sound; and then sailed for theHawaiian Islands , departing Port Angeles on19 May and arriving atPearl Harbor on the 26th. She trained in the vicinity ofOahu for three weeks before getting underway on13 June to escort "Cape Gloucester" (CVE-109) to thePhilippines .Arriving at Leyte on
13 July and inSubic Bay on the 15th, "Wiley" operated out of the Philippines on training exercises through the first week of August. The ship departed Subic Bay on9 August and escorted a small group of tankers to the Ryukyus. Within a week,Japan capitulated, ending the war in the Pacific."Wiley" subsequently joined the North China force in operations off the coast of
Asia , while Chinese communist and Nationalist forces fought for supremacy in the strategic northern provinces once occupied by the Japanese. Over the next three months, this peacekeeping duty took the destroyer toDairen , Port Arthur,Chefoo , Tsingtao, andChinwangtao . The ship destroyed floating Japanese mines with gunfire and screened thecruiser s ofCruiser Division 6 . On8 September , "Wiley" covered the landings of a peacekeeping force of American troops atInchon (then called Jinsen),Korea .Detached from this duty with the cruisers, "Wiley" joined a fast carrier
task force on12 October for operations in theGulf of Pohai . During the latter part of October, the destroyer served in the screen for "Antietam" (CV-36) and "Boxer" (CV-21) and served as plane guard for the carriers while they conducted routine flight operations over theYellow Sea . Detached from this duty on18 November , "Wiley" joined "San Francisco" (CA-38) at anchor offTaku . Four days later, "Wiley" shifted to Jinsen, took on board passengers and mail, and proceeded toShanghai , Tsingtao, and Taku, disembarking some of her passengers at each port before returning to Jinsen on30 November ."Wiley" remained in the Far East into December and then sailed, via
Guam ,Eniwetok , and Pearl Harbor, for the United States. After arriving atSan Francisco , Calif., on3 January 1946 , "Wiley" received her inactivation orders on11 March and put into San Diego the next day.Fate
Decommissioned and placed in reserve on
15 May 1946 , "Wiley" remained berthed at San Diego until struck from theNavy list on1 May 1968 . She was sold to theNational Metal and Steel Corporation ,Terminal Island ,Los Angeles, California , on2 April 1970 and subsequently scrapped.References
*DANFS|http://history.navy.mil/danfs/w8/wiley.htm
External links
* [http://history.navy.mil/danfs/w8/wiley.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Wiley"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/597.htm navsource.org: USS "Wiley"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd597txt.htm hazegray.org: USS "Wiley"]
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