- USS Taylor (DD-468)
USS "Taylor" (DD/DDE-468) was a "Fletcher"-class
destroyer of theUnited States Navy , named for Rear AdmiralWilliam Rogers Taylor (1811 –1889 ). She was laid down on28 August 1941 atBath, Maine , by theBath Iron Works Corp.; launched on7 June 1942 , sponsored by Mrs. H. A. Baldridge; and commissioned on28 August 1942 at theCharlestown Navy Yard near Boston, Mass., Lieutenant Commander Benjamin Katz in command."Taylor" was the first
destroyer to anchor in Japanese coastal waters at the end ofWorld War II — one that, wrote AdmiralWilliam F. Halsey , "admirably performed every mission assigned to her."Fact|date=September 2008World War II
"Taylor" began her naval career with the Atlantic Fleet. Assigned to
Destroyer Squadron 20 (DesRon 20), the destroyer trained atCasco Bay ,Maine , and made her shakedown cruise in the northern Atlantic before beginning duty as a coastwiseconvoy escort. The latter duty lasted until mid-November when she escorted a transatlantic convoy to a point just offCasablanca . The transit was uneventful, save for the interception of a Spanish merchantman, SS "Darro". A boarding party from "Taylor" sent the neutral ship off toGibraltar to prevent her from transmitting information about the convoy to the enemy. "Taylor" returned to the United States at Norfolk early in December and remained there until mid-month.Rennell Island, Jan. 1943
On
17 December , the warship clearedHampton Roads in company with Task Force 13 (TF 13) on her way to duty in the Pacific. After transiting thePanama Canal and stopping atTutuila in theSamoan Islands , the destroyer reported atNoumea ,New Caledonia , on20 January 1943 for duty in theSouth West Pacific Area . From Noumea, "Taylor" continued west toEfate in theNew Hebrides group, entering Havannah Harbor on the 26th. There, she became a unit of DesRon 21's Destroyer Division 41 (DesDiv 41), one of two four-destroyer divisions screening Rear AdmiralRobert C. Giffen 's TF 18, comprised of threeheavy cruiser s, threelight cruiser s, and two escort carriers.On
27 January , "Taylor" clearedHavannah Harbor with the other ships of TF 18, one of several task forces sent out to screen an important reinforcement echelon toGuadalcanal . Admiral William Halsey, operating upon intelligence which indicated a majorJapan ese attempt to reinforce their beleaguered garrison on the island, sent put the large screening force in the hope and expectation of a major naval engagement. That sea battle never materialized because the enemy activities upon which he predicated his actions were actually movements preparatory to a Japanese withdrawal. Instead, at thebattle of Rennell Island , the enemy subjected TF 18 to a scathing air attack. On the evening of29 January , enemyMitsubishi G4M "Betty" bombers attacked TF 18 withtorpedo es. The ships brushed off the first attack with antiaircraft fire, suffered negligible damage, and raced on to rendezvous with the other elements of the covering force. After a concerted effort, the Japanese fliers finally scored a crippling torpedo hit on "Chicago" (CA-29). When "Louisville" (CA-28) took the stricken cruiser in tow, "Taylor" helped to screen the retiring ships as they steamed out of range of enemy aircraft. The following day, more enemy planes appeared and attacked. After "Chicago" took four more torpedo hits, her crew and the warships covering her abandoned the heavy cruiser to her watery fate and returned to Efate.Feb. – April 1943
On
4 February , "Taylor" and the other ships of DesRon 21 were transferred to TF 67, Rear AdmiralWalden L. Ainsworth 's cruiser-destroyer force. Soon thereafter, TF 67 became TF 18, and the former TF 18 became TF 19. In any event, during February and March, "Taylor" screened Ainsworth's cruisers—"St. Louis" (CL-49),
"Honolulu" (CL-48), and
"Helena" (CL-50)—during operations betweenEspiritu Santo and Guadalcanal. During the night of 15–16 March , she joined
"Nicholas" (DD-449),
"Radford" (DD-446), and
"Strong" (DD-467) in the fourth bombardment of theVila-Stanmore Plantation located onKolombangara Island in the centralSolomon Islands . On26 March , the destroyer cleared Espiritu Santo to escort
"Kanawha" (AO-1),
"Aloe" (YN-1), and six coastal transports to Guadalcanal. The ships reachedTulagi on the 29th; and, while "Kanawha" discharged cargo, "Taylor" resumed operations at sea with Ainsworth's cruisers.On the nights of 4, 5, and
6 April , she joined them in sweeps up "the Slot " before being ordered back to Tulagi on the 7th to pick up "Kanawha". When the destroyer was just about to enter Tulagi, a strong Japanese air raid cancelled her mission by severely bombing "Kanawha" before the old oiler could clear the harbor completely. With "Kanawha" disabled, "Taylor" rang up 30 knots and cleared the area viaSealark Channel . During her transit of the channel, the warship claimed the destruction of three enemy planes and hits on two others.For much of the month, "Taylor" escorted convoys in the Solomons and between those islands and Espiritu Santo. On
20 April , she rejoined TF 18. After a brief tender overhaul, the destroyer accompanied the cruisers up the "Slot" twice during the 10 days between 4 and14 May to cover mining operations inVella Gulf . During the second operation, conducted between the 11th and the 14th, she and the other warships bombarded enemy installations atVila ,Bairoko Harbor , andEnogai Inlet .May – July 1943
Between late May and early July, "Taylor" performed escort duty. On
25 May , she cleared Espiritu Santo with "Munargo" (AP-20), escorted the transport to the180th meridian , and returned to Espiritu Santo on the 30th. During her next assignment—escorting a convoy of troop transports to Guadalcanal and back—she defended her charges against Japanese planes which jumped the task unit on10 June south of San Cristobal. After repairs at Espiritu Santo, she served with the antisubmarine screen of escort carrier "Sangamon" (ACV-26) until6 July when she headed for Tulagi to report for duty with TF 31.For the next four months, "Taylor" supported the invasions of the central Solomons. In July, she supported the
New Georgia landings. On the 11th and 12th, the destroyer covered the landing of troops and supplies atRice Anchorage onKula Gulf as well as the evacuation of wounded. On the morning of the 12th, she attacked and damaged a JapaneseRO-type submarine , but could claim no definite sinking. That afternoon, "Taylor" was temporarily detached from TF 31 and assigned to TF 18. She headed up the "Slot" with Ainsworth's cruisers—the same ones with which she had previously served except that HMNZS "Leander" replaced "Helena" after the latter cruiser was lost in theBattle of Kula Gulf —to intercept a Japanese surface force. That evening, the two forces collided. "Taylor" and the other van destroyers launched torpedoes and then joined the remainder of TF 18 in engaging the enemy with their guns. It may well have been one of "Taylor"'s "fish" that slammed into the Japanese cruiser "Jintsu"'s hull just abaft her number 2 stack and ripped her in half. There is no way of knowing for sure, but the accumulated effect of the destroyer's torpedoes and the entire task force's gunfire cost the enemy hisflagship and his commander, Rear AdmiralShunji Izaki .Following the
Battle of Kolombangara , "Taylor" reported back to TF 31 and resumed support for the amphibious operations in the central Solomons. On the night of 15–16 July , the destroyer took "Helena" survivors offVella Lavella Island where they had found refuge after their ship went down. Almost a week later, on the night of 23–24 July , the destroyer supported the landings at Enogai Inlet and participated in another bombardment of Bairoko Harbor. The following morning, her main battery joined in a bombardment of the Japanese positions around the Munda area of New Georgia.Aug. – Sept. 1943
On
30 July , "Taylor" cleared Guadalcanal in company with a troop transport convoy bound for New Caledonia. She was detached en route to Noumea and ordered to join TF 37 at Efate. On11 August , "Nicholas",
"O'Bannon" (DD-450),
"Chevalier" (DD-451), and "Taylor" were ordered to return to Guadalcanal and rejoin TF 31 for the Vella Lavella phase of the central Solomons operation. First, she covered the landings on15 August . Two days later, the same four destroyers were ordered out of the anchorage atPurvis Bay to intercept a force of troop-laden barges covered by four destroyers. During the ensuing action off Horaniu, a mad melee of torpedoes and gunfire, neither side lost a destroyer; but the Japanese suffered some damage when American shells set "Hamakaze" ablaze. Later, after the enemy destroyers had made good their escape, the Americans turned their attention to the scatteredbarge s and combat craft, sinking twosubchaser s, an equal number oftorpedo boat s, and one barge before retiring. Forty-eight hours later, the four American destroyers returned once again to the area northwest of Vella Lavella to seek out enemy barge traffic. They encountered nothing except enemy aircraft and dodged heavy bombing attacks throughout the evening. Over the next nine days, "Taylor" and her division mates made eight more trips up the "Slot"—one of which was to cover mining operations off the west coast of Kolombangara—but saw little or no action."Taylor" departed Guadalcanal and the Solomons on
28 August to escort "Titania" (AKA-13) to Noumea. Then—after a ten-day repair, rest, and relaxation period inSydney ,Australia —the destroyer escorted a troop transport convoy from Noumea to Guadalcanal. She returned to the Tulagi-Purvis Bay area on30 September and resumed support of the subjugation of Vella Lavella. By this time, the Japanese had already begun to evacuate bypassed Kolombangara and would soon make the decision to do the same at Vella Lavella. Thus, "Taylor" and other destroyers continued their nocturnal forays up the "Slot" to interdict barge traffic.Vella Lavella, Oct. 1943
On the night of
2 October , she,
"Terry" (DD-513), and
"Ralph Talbot" (DD-390) engaged enemy barges and a surface force in the waters between Choiseul and Kolombangara. Four nights later came the big action of the Vella Lavella and Kolombangara evacuations, theBattle of Vella Lavella . While south of New Georgia escorting a convoy, "Taylor", "Ralph Talbot", and "La Valette" (DD-448) were ordered to join "O'Bannon", "Chevalier", and "Selfridge" already embroiled in a slugfest with nine Japanese destroyers covering the Vella Lavella evacuation group. During the ensuing battle, the American and Japanese forces traded torpedo salvoes and gunfire, as well as exchanged destroyer "Chevalier" for "Yugumo". During the battle, "Selfridge" and "O'Bannon" also received torpedo hits, but neither was lost. "Taylor" went alongside "Selfridge" in the closing moments of the battle and evacuated most of her crew while a skeleton crew began their successful attempt to save the damaged destroyer. She then screened the two cripples while they limped back down the "Slot" to Purvis Bay.On
17 October , "Taylor" departed the southern Solomons with the other members of DesDiv 41. She and her consorts escorted a convoy of troop transports to Efate, where they reported for duty withTF 37 . Between 23 and26 October , she made a round-trip voyage between Efate and Noumea, escorting "Lassen" (AE-3) to Noumea and "Aldebaran" (AF-10) to Efate.Nov. – Dec. 1943
"Taylor" and her division were reassigned to the
Central Pacific Force on31 October in preparation for the first step in the Navy's central Pacific thrust, the seizure and occupation of theGilbert Islands . For that operation, she was assigned to the screen of TG 50.1, built around carriers
"Lexington" (CV-16),
"Yorktown" (CV-10), and
"Cowpens" (CV-25). She screened TG 50.1 during the raids onJaluit andMili in the Marshalls conducted during the first half of November in preparation for the Gilberts assault. During the actual landings and occupations, she protected her charges from enemy aircraft andsubmarine s while their planes took off to help those of the escort carriers maintain air supremacy over the islands. Following the Gilberts operation, she steamed with the carriers during raids on the Marshall Islands. Near the end of those forays, she teamed up with "La Vallette" and "San Francisco" (CA-38) to splash two of four enemyNakajima B5N "Kates" which attacked the task group just after noon on4 December .Feb. – May 1944
Following those raids, "Taylor" was ordered back to the United States for extensive yard work, arriving in
San Francisco on16 December . Repairs completed, she put to sea on1 February 1944 and headed back to the western Pacific viaPearl Harbor . She reachedKwajalein in the Marshalls on18 February . "Taylor" escorted one convoy toEniwetok Atoll where she joined the screen of carriers
"Coral Sea" (CVB-43) and
"Corregidor" (CVE-58) on29 February . The task unit cleared Eniwetok on29 February and headed for Pearl Harbor, where it arrived on3 March . After 12 days of training operations and repairs, the destroyer denarted Pearl Harbor in the screen of
"Sangamon" (CVE-26),
"Suwannee" (CVE-27),
"Chenango" (CVE-28), and
"Santee" (CVE-29), and arrived in Purvis Bay near Guadalcanal on the 27th. She remained there until5 April when she left forMilne Bay ,New Guinea , for temporary duty with the 7th Fleet.The warship reached Milne Bay on
7 April and, the following day, headed on toCape Sudest , where she became a unit ofTF 77 for the amphibious assault at Humboldt Bay. During the assault, she screened aircraft carriers and acted as fighter director until24 April when she departed to escort a convoy back to Cape Sudest. From there she moved toMorobe Bay , where she spent the remainder of the month in availability alongside "Dobbin" (AD-3). During the first week in May, "Taylor" escorted a convoy fromCape Cretin to theHollandia invasion area and acted as fighter director ship once more. She returned to Cape Cretin on7 May and departed again two days later to screen a convoy of LSTs to theRussell Islands subgroup in the Solomons. On13 May , the destroyer reported back to the 3d Fleet in the Solomons, dropped off the convoy, and departed again to screen another convoy to New Caledonia.May – Aug. 1944
On
24 May , she stood out of Noumea in company with DesDiv 41 to return to the Solomons and arrived at her new base of operations,Blanche Harbor , on27 May . "Taylor" operated out of that port in the northern Solomons and Bismarcks area until early August. On the night of 28–29 May , she patrolled offMedina Plantation on New Ireland while her sister ships bombarded the area to neutralize mobile coastal guns. From 1 to6 June , she operated with DesDiv 41 conducting antisubmarine operations. During the week from 7 to14 June , "Taylor" and the other ships of DesDiv 41 joined TG 30.4 for hunter-killer antisubmarine operations. On the 10th, she depth-charged an enemy submarine, forced it to the surface, and damaged it heavily with 5 inch and 40-mm fire. The submarine submerged again, and "Taylor" made two moredepth charge runs and netted a probable kill. She returned to Blanche Harbor on the 15th and operated in that vicinity until the first week in August.On
5 August , she changed operational command from the 3d Fleet to the 7th Fleet. She began her duty with that fleet with a practice bombardment of theAitape area of New Guinea late in August and a practice landing atMoffin Bay conducted on6 September . Both operations were in preparation for the landings made on the island ofMorotai in theNetherlands East Indies on15 September . For the remainder of the month, she acted as fighter director ship and as a unit of the invasion force's antisubmarine and antiaircraft screen. The destroyer also escorted convoys to the landing area until mid-October.Oct. – Dec. 1944
Between 18 and
24 October , "Taylor" was a unit of the screen for the second reinforcement echelon for the Leyte invasion. During a Japanese aerial assault on the 24th, the destroyer laid a smoke screen to protect the convoy. That night, as theBattle of Surigao Strait opened, "Taylor" and the other destroyers of her division were anchored near the entrance of San Pedro Bay. Though she did not actually join the surface engagement, "Taylor" joined the support force on the following morning. Following that, she patrolled the vicinity ofDinagat Island with a unit known as the "torpedo attack force". On 27 and28 October , the warship screened TG 77.4, the escort carrier group. During that duty, she rescued a downed fighter pilot of "Enterprise" (CV-6) and a seaman from "Petrof Bay" (CVE-80). Frequently, she helped fend off Japanese air attacks.On
29 October , she joined TG 77.2 and departed the area ofLeyte Gulf . After visits toSeeadler Harbor ,Ulithi Atoll, andKossol Roads , she returned to Leyte Gulf on16 November . Between 16 and29 November , the destroyer continued to screen TG 77.2 and to patrol the eastern entrance to theSurigao Strait . Again, she joined her sister ships in beating off heavy enemy air raids, climaxed by a large attack of "kamikaze " suicide planes anddive bomber s on the 29th. She claimed one sure kill and two assists during those raids. "Taylor" then cleared Leyte Gulf for almost a month at Seeadler Harbor before returning to Leyte on28 December to prepare for the invasion of Luzon.Jan. – June 1945
"Taylor" departed Leyte Gulf on
4 January 1945 in the screen for the cruisers in the covering force. The next day, the destroyer sighted two torpedoes running toward her formation. After giving the submarine alarm, "Taylor" launched a depth-charge attack on the enemy submarine—a midget. Following those attacks, she rammed the small submarine and sent it on its last dive. During the Allied approach toLingayen Gulf and in the days following the landings, the Japanese subjected "Taylor" and her sister ships to a series of heavy air raids. "Taylor"'s antiaircraft gunners assisted in splashing at least two of the attackers. Through the end of January, the warship screened the cruisers and the escort carriers on patrol west ofLuzon .From early February through mid-June 1945, "Taylor" operated out of
Subic Bay in thePhilippines . Between 13 and18 February , she participated in an extensive bombardment ofCorregidor and of theMariveles Bay area of Luzon to support minesweeping operations and to pave the way for an assault by airborne troops. Early in March, she supported the recapture ofZamboanga onMindanao during which the destroyer's guns helped reduce enemy shore installations. She also covered the minesweepers while they cleared the way for the invasion force. On15 March , "Taylor" returned to Corregidor where she bombarded caves on the island's western cliffs. On26 March , the ship participated in the amphibious assault onCebu Island , where she joined
"Boise" (CL-47),
"Phoenix" (CL-46),
"Fletcher" (DD-445), "Nicholas",
"Jenkins" (DD-447), and
"Abbot" (DD-629) in laying down a heavy pre-landing bombardment.After a short two-day sightseeing visit to
Manila , "Taylor" cleared the Philippines with "Boise", "Phoenix", two Australian warships, and four other American destroyers to support the amphibious landings in northeasternBorneo . En route, she captured five Japanese who were attempting to escape fromTawi Tawi on a raft. On27 April , "Taylor" and her sister ships reached the vicinity of the invasion—Tarakan, a small island located just off the eastern coast of Borneo and north ofMakassar Strait . She operated in that area until3 May and delivered a preinvasion bombardment and call fire. On3 May , two days after the actual landings, she departed Tarakan to resume duty in the Philippines, where for the remainder of the month she conducted training operations.June – Nov. 1945
In mid-June, "Taylor" rejoined the 3d Fleet at Leyte Gulf and, for the remainder of the war, screened various units of that fleet. During the latter part of the month, she screened aircraft carriers operating south of
Okinawa which conducted air strikes onSakishima Gunto . On25 June , she returned to Leyte Gulf and remained there until8 July , when she departed in the screen of TG 30.8, the logistics group for the fast carriers of TF 38. The destroyer operated with TG 30.8 offHonshū until3 August when she joined the screen of one of the fast carrier task groups, TG 38.4. On8 August , she resumed duty with the logistics group for five days. On the 13th, "Taylor" rejoined TG 38.4 just in time to be a part of the last offensive actions directed atJapan .Following the cessation of hostilities on
15 August , she patrolled off Honshū with the fast carriers. Admiral William Halsey, commander of the 3rd Fleet ordered that the destroyers from DesRon 21 be present inTokyo Bay for Japan's surrender "because of their valorous fight up the long road from the South Pacific to the very end." On23 August , "Taylor" and her old sisters "Nicholas" and "O'Bannon" formed the screen of "Missouri" (BB-63), and as such she was one of the first American warships to enter Tokyo Bay, arriving on29 August . The destroyer was present at the surrender ceremony conducted on board "Missouri" on2 September and carried Allied war correspondents to and from the ceremony. She operated in the Far East until10 October when she departed Tokyo Bay to return to the United States. "Taylor" arrived in San Francisco on1 November and began preparations for inactivation. On31 May 1946 , the destroyer was decommissioned and placed in reserve atSan Diego .1951 – 1953
After four years of inactivity, "Taylor" moved to the
San Francisco Naval Shipyard on9 May 1950 and, three days later, began an extensive conversion to anescort destroyer . While still completing conversion, she was officially redesignated DDE-468 on2 January 1951 . On3 December 1951 , "Taylor" was recommissioned at San Francisco, Comdr.Sheldon H. Kenney in command. On3 February 1952 , she put to sea for a two months shakedown period off San Diego. On24 March , the escort destroyer headed west to her newhome port , Pearl Harbor, and arrived there on the 30th. Following two months in theHawaiian Islands , "Taylor" set out to return to the western Pacific for the first time sinceWorld War II . She stopped atMidway Atoll and Yokosuka, Japan, before joining TF 77 on16 June to screen the carriers during air operations off theKorea n coast.During the five months that she spent in the Far East, "Taylor" drew several different assignments. Initially, she operated with the fast carriers and conducted bombardments of enemy-held positions along the coasts of Korea. During the second week in July, she returned to Yokosuka for upkeep and then went to sea again for exercises which included several weeks of hunter-killer operations. On
1 August , the escort destroyer rejoined TF 77 and, in September, stood blockade watch offWonsan for three weeks. Her blockade duty at Wonsan was far from passive for, on numerous occasions, she was called upon to shell enemy shore batteries and lines of transportation and to screen minesweepers during daily sweeps of the harbor. Late that month, "Taylor" headed south for a tour of duty on theTaiwan Strait Patrol during which she made a weekend port call atHong Kong . In late October, the escort destroyer returned north to the western coast of Korea where she patrolled with two British warships, the carrier HMS "Glory" (R62) and the cruiser HMS "Birmingham" (C19). On21 November , "Taylor" returned to Yokosuka, completing the first leg of her voyage home.After conducting patrols in the western Pacific while en route to
Hawaii , "Taylor" entered Pearl Harbor on8 December . Following a month of leave and upkeep, she entered thePearl Harbor Naval Shipyard for a month of repairs. For the next three months, she conducted shakedown training in the Hawaiian Islands in order to integrate her replacements with the rest of the crew. On2 May 1953 , the warship exited Pearl Harbor to deploy to the western Pacific again. She reached Yokosuka on the 12th and, after visiting that port and Sasebo, put to sea to join a carrier task group built around USS "Bairoko" (CVE-115) and HMS "Ocean" (R68) off the western coast of Korea. For the most part, she screened the carriers during air operations; however, on two occasions, she patrolled close to the enemy-held shoreline to discourage theNorth Korea ns from attempting to take offshore islands held byUnited Nations forces. She returned to Sasebo on1 June for 11 days of upkeep before heading for Okinawa and two weeks of antisubmarine warfare (ASW) training. On25 June , "Taylor" returned to Japan at Yokosuka, but she departed againalmost immediately for duty with the Taiwan Strait Patrol. During that assignment, she visited Hong Kong once again as well asKaohsiung where she trained sailors of theRepublic of China Navy . The escort destroyer returned to Yokosuka on20 July and, after two days of voyage repairs, departed the Far East. She arrived in Pearl Harbor on31 July and, the following day, entered the naval shipyard there for a three month overhaul."Taylor"'s return to Pearl Harbor coincided very closely with the formal end to hostilities in Korea. The armistice came on
27 July 1953 when she had just passed the midpoint of her voyage—five days out of Yokosuka and four days from Pearl Harbor. While she saw some action during her twoKorean War deployments, they occurred during the relatively quiet, final two years of the conflict. Her subsequent deployments, while they included both duty off Korea and on the Taiwan Strait Patrol, were entirely peaceful in nature until the expansion of the American role in theVietnam ese civil war in1965 .1954 – 1962
In the five years between
1 March 1954 and1 March 1959 , "Taylor" completed five more deployments to the western Pacific. During each, she conducted training exercises and made goodwill visits to Far Eastern ports. When not in the Orient, she conducted normal operations out of Pearl Harbor. During her sixth post-Korean War deployment in 1959 and1960 , she visited Australia for the celebration commemorating the victory at theBattle of the Coral Sea in May1942 . Upon her return to Pearl Harbor on26 May 1960 , the escort destroyer conducted normal operations again until December when she entered the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard for a major overhaul before deploying to the western Pacific again in August1961 . In lieu of her annual western Pacific deployment, "Taylor" spent the spring and summer of1962 in the mid-Pacific as one of the support units forOperation Dominic , nuclear tests conducted in the upper atmosphere. In October, she returned to Hawaii to begin a repair period which saw her through the end of 1962. During that year, she reverted to the classification of destroyer and was re-designated DD-468 on7 August 1962 .1962 – 1965
Local operations in the Hawaiian Islands occupied the remainder of 1962 and the first six months of
1963 . On4 June 1963 , the destroyer stood out of Pearl Harbor with a hunter/killer group bound for duty with the 7th Fleet. During this deployment to the Far East, "Taylor" called atKobe , Japan; Hong Kong; Okinawa; and Kushiro as well as the base ports of Yokosuka, Sasebo, and Subic Bay. The call at Kushiro—a fishing port onHokkaidō , the northernmost of the Japanese home islands—constituted "Taylor"'s contributions to the People to People Program and aided in developing greater understanding between the peoples of the United States and Japan. Other than that, the warship engaged in numerous unilateral and bilateral training exercises through the remainder of the cruise which ended at Pearl Harbor on29 November . "Taylor" operated locally in Hawaii until April1964 when she entereddrydock for a three-month overhaul. In July she resumed operations in Hawaiian waters.Those operations continued throughout most of the fall of 1964. On
23 November , the destroyer cleared Pearl Harbor in company with "Yorktown" (CVS-10) and
"Thomason" (DD-746) to return to the Orient. The task unit steamed via Midway Atoll and, on3 December , made port at Yokosuka, Japan. Four days later, she put to sea for two weeks of combined antiaircraft/ antisubmarine warfare exercises conducted with
"Hancock" (CVA-19) and
"Strauss" (DDG-16) near Okinawa. On19 December , the warship returned to Japan at Sasebo and remained there through the holidays and into the New Year.On
4 January 1965 , "Taylor" cleared Sasebo and rejoined "Yorktown" and "Thomason" for a voyage to Hong Kong. The three ships remained in theBritish Crown Colony for five days before clearing port for a series of special operations conducted in thePhilippine Sea . At the conclusion of that duty, she put into Subic Bay on24 February . After four days in the Philippines, "Taylor" headed back to Sasebo, where she arrived on3 March . Exactly two weeks later, the destroyer got underway for the western portion of theSouth China Sea . She arrived off the coast ofVietnam on21 March and patrolled there for the following five weeks. On27 April , "Taylor" headed back to Yokosuka for a brief stop—from 3 to6 May —before returning to Hawaii. The destroyer reentered Pearl Harbor on the 13th and conducted local operations in Hawaiian waters. On6 December , "Taylor" entered the drydock for another overhaul.1966 – 1967
The destroyer left the dock in mid-January
1966 and stood out of Pearl Harbor on7 February and, with the other ships of DesDiv 111, shaped a course for the western Pacific. The warship reached Yokosuka 10 days later and spent eight days undergoing voyage repairs. On25 February , she departed Yokosuka to join Task Group 70.4 off the coast of Vietnam the following day. She patrolled Vietnamese waters until theIdes of March , when she headed north to patrol the Taiwan Strait. During her stay in the area aroundTaiwan , she visited Kaohsiung. Her relief arrived on12 April , and "Taylor" steamed off to Hong Kong for a five-day port call. On the 21st, she returned toYankee Station to resume operations in support of American andSouth Vietnam ese forces ashore. Among other tasks, she brought her main battery to bear on the enemy and rendered naval gunfire support between28 April and1 May . She conducted upkeep at Sasebo in May and ASW drills from26 May to10 June before resuming patrols in the Taiwan Strait on the 11th. She cleared the area again on5 July , rejoined TG 70.4 on7 July , and put into Yokosuka the following day. After a week of preparations, the warship departed Yokosuka to return to Pearl Harbor, where she arrived on22 July .On
2 August , "Taylor" began a tender availability period alongside "Prairie" (AD-15) which lasted through the end of the month. Following a short cruise for gunnery practice, "Taylor" commenced a restricted availability which lasted until late in November. During the first two weeks in December, the destroyer made a round-trip voyage toPago Pago ,American Samoa . She returned to Pearl Harbor on16 December for holiday leave and upkeep. During the first three months of1967 , the ship conducted local operations around Hawaii, made repairs, and generally prepared to return to the Far East in late spring.Following an Operational Readiness Inspection in mid-April, she cleared Pearl Harbor on the 18th to join the 7th Fleet in the Orient. On
25 April , she changed operational control from the 1st Fleet to the 7th and, three days later, steamed into Yokosuka. During the first half of June, the destroyer participated in exercises with units of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force and ships of theRepublic of Korea Navy . After two days in port at Sasebo, she got underway on19 June for her first line period on Yankee Station. Between22 May and25 June , she plied the waters of theGulf of Tonkin , plane-guarding for "Hornet" (CV-12) and providing gunfire support for Allied forces operating ashore. On27 June , "Taylor" put into Subic Bay. After a tender availability at Subic Bay and a visit to Manila, she put to sea on10 July to participate inSEATO exercise "Sea Dog." Between the 26th and the 28th, she visitedBang Saen on theGulf of Thailand . After three more days on Yankee Station—from28 July to1 August —the destroyer made for Taiwan. She reached Kaohsiung onAugust 3 and remained untilAugust 15 , when she headed back to the coast of Vietnam. From19 August to11 September , she cruised along the Vietnamese coast providing naval gunfire support as needed by the forces operating ashore. She cleared the coast ofIndochina on the 12th, and, after a five-day stop at Hong Kong and another tour of duty in the Gulf of Tonkin, she returned to Yokosuka on11 October . Five days later, she shaped a course back to Hawaii.1968 – 1969
"Taylor" arrived in Pearl Harbor on
23 October , and the destroyer commenced her regular overhaul on11 December . Repairs and modifications occupied her time through the first three months of1968 . The warship completed overhaul on22 March and conducted sea trials during the first week in April. Later, engineering problems forced the postponement of further operations until the end of the month. At that time, she began preparations for refresher training. The warship conducted refresher training in May and June, then got underway for San Diego, Calif., on27 June . She conducted operations—primarily gunnery drills atSan Clemente Island —from 3 to11 July . On the latter date, she headed back to Hawaii. En route, "Taylor" conducted bombardment exercises atKahoolawe Island and then entered Pearl Harbor on the 17th. Three weeks later, the destroyer cleared Pearl Harbor on5 August and set course for the Gulf of Tonkin.After fueling stops at Midway,
Guam , and Subic Bay, she arrived on station off Vietnam on21 August . "Taylor" did plane guard duty for
"Intrepid" (CVS-11) for a day; then steamed off with the carrier and destroyers
"Maddox" (DD-731) and
"Preston" (DD-795) toward Sasebo. She returned to the Gulf of Tonkin on5 September and conducted air and surface surveillance as well as antisubmarine warfare exercises in addition to planeguarding for the carriers. On the 19th, the destroyer moved in closer to the coast to provide naval gunfire in support of troops ashore. That duty continued until6 October when she cleared the combat zone to return to Subic Bay for repairs, supplies, and ammunition. On20 October , the warship took up where she left off and began a week pounding various targets in Vietnam. That line period was followed by visits toCebu City and Subic Bay in the Philippines. During late November and early December, she resumed duty on the gunline. On4 December , she cleared the combat zone and set a course through theLuzon Strait to Yokosuka, where she arrived on the 12th. She spentChristmas in Yokosuka, but returned to Yankee Station by New Year's Day1969 .In mid-January, she departed Vietnamese waters for the last time. After stops at Subic Bay;
Manus Island ;Melbourne , Australia;Auckland ,New Zealand ; and Pago Pago,Samoa , the warship arrived back in Pearl Harbor on28 February . In May, a board of inspection and survey looked her over and determined that she was unfit for further naval service. Early in June, "Taylor" was moved to San Diego, California, and was decommissioned on3 June 1969 . Her name was struck from theNavy list on2 July 1969 , and she was transferred toItaly at the same time. The former American destroyer served in theItalian Navy as NMM "Lanciere" (D-560) until January1971 . At that time, she was decommissioned and struck from the Italian Navy list. She was subsequently cannibalized to maintain her sister ships still serving in the Italian Navy.Honors
"Taylor" earned 15
battle star s duringWorld War II , two battle stars for theKorean conflict , and six battle stars forVietnam War service.ee also
See USS "Taylor" for other ships of the same name.
References
*DANFS|http://history.navy.mil/danfs/t3/taylor-ii.htm
External links
* [http://www.destroyerhistory.org/fletcherclass/usstaylor/index.html USS "Taylor" home page] at [http://www.destroyerhistory.org/index.html Destroyer History Foundation]
* [http://history.navy.mil/danfs/t3/taylor-ii.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Taylor"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/468.htm navsource.org: USS "Taylor"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd468txt.htm hazegray.org: USS "Taylor"]
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