- USS Richard W. Suesens (DE-342)
USS "Richard W. Suesens" (DE-342) was a "John C. Butler"-class
destroyer escort in theUnited States Navy . It was named afterLieutenant (Junior Grade) Richard Wayne Suesens (30 July 1915 -5 June 1942 ) who died during theBattle of Midway and was posthumously awarded theNavy Cross for "extraordinary heroism"."Richard W. Suesens" was laid down
1 November 1943 by theConsolidated Steel Corporation , ofOrange, Texas ; launched on11 January 1944 , sponsored by Mrs. R. W. Suesens, widow of Lieutenant (junior grade) Suesens; and commissioned on26 April 1944 , withLieutenant Commander Milford McQuilkin in command.History
Completing shakedown off
Bermuda and post-shakedown availability atBoston , "Richard W. Suesens" sailed forLong Island Sound on29 June 1944 . That night, in Buzzard's Bay, she collided with USS|Valor|AMc-108. The coastal minesweeper sank and the DE transported survivors toNewport, Rhode Island . Then she continued on, reported for duty atNew York City , thence, on4 July , proceeded south. A unit of CortDiv 69, she served as escort for ships en route toMayport , then steamed on through thePanama Canal , reporting to the Pacific Fleet23 July . On2 August she arrived atSan Diego , whence she sailed with TransDiv 10 toHawaii . Arriving on19 August , she trained there until mid-September, then headed west with convoy PD-89-T, bound forEniwetok . There, on22 September , she joined TF 33 and 8 days later sailed for Manus and duty with the7th Fleet .Assigned to TU 77.4.24, an escort carrier unit, "Richard W. Suesens" sailed for the
Philippines 14 October . On16 October , TG 77.4 rendezvoused with TG 78.6 to provide air coverage for transports en route fromHollandia to Leyte. Through the landings on20 October and the covering operations which followed, the DE, alternating plane guard and screening duties continued to operate with the "jeep" carriers. On22 October TU 77.4.24 was dissolved. "Richard W. Suesens" with six CVE's, threeDD 's, and four otherDE 's formed TU 77.4.2 and with TU 77.4.1 and TU 77.4.3 took up patrol duties to the east ofLeyte Gulf whence their planes could provide air support for the amphibious forces, fly CAP andASP for the Leyte areas, interdictJapan ese supply movements, and drop supplies to Army units inland. Called "Taffy 1", "Taffy 2", and "Taffy 3" from the radio call sign used by each unit commander, the units proceeded to their operational areas: Taffy 1 off northernMindanao , Taffy 2 off the entrance to Leyte Gulf, Taffy 3 off Samar.During the early morning hours of
25 October , theBattle of Surigao Strait was fought and daybreak searches were ordered flown to hunt down the retiring Japanese ships. Planes from Taffy 1 were designated to fly the searches while other units continued air support and patrol operations. At dawn the planes were launched on their missions. At 0645 "Suesens" intercepted ship plane traffic onVHF reporting an enemybattleship andcruiser force closing on Taffy 3 as its carriers made every effort to gettorpedo planes airborne along with fighters to drive off the enemy ships. All available planes from Taffy 2 were dispatched to join those of Taffy 3. The Battle off Samar had begun. By 0720 the enemy force had closed to within 20 miles of Taffy 2. The destroyers formed a line between the carriers' circular disposition and the approaching enemy. The escorts remained with the carriers as they continued to rearm returning planes and send them northward into the now visible gunsmoke clouds over Taffy 3.Through the morning "Richard W. Suesens", screening Taffy 2, listened as torpedo planes and fighters conducted aerial attacks and Taffy 3's
destroyer s and escorts challenged the enemy's larger ships on the surface. By 0920 the latter were only 12 miles from Taffy 2 and their shells splashed among the destroyers, but the battle was turning. The Japanese now so close to their objective-entrance into Leyte Gulf-were no longer on the offensive. TG 77.4, despite staggering losses while protecting shipping in the Gulf, now commenced the pursuit, which, taken up by others, continued until29 October . Rescue operations and logistic resupply followed on26 October . On the night of27 October –28 October , "Richard W. Suesens" resumed screening and plane guard duties and at the end of the month she headed south.Arriving at Manus
3 November , "Richard W. Suesens" spent the next 3 weeks undergoing upkeep and maintenance, then reported for duty in TF 79, the force staging for the invasion ofLuzon . On31 December the force sortied fromSeeadler Harbor and headed for the Philippines. On8 January 1945 , the Japanese attacked. USS|Kitkun Bay|CVE-71|6 (CVE-71) and HMAS "Westralia" (F95) were damaged bykamikaze s, but the force continued on to arrive inLingayen Gulf in the early hours of9 January . During the assault, and after, "Richard W. Suesens" patrolled off the transport area. On12 January as she rescued survivors from USS|Gilligan|DE-508|6 (DE-508), she was closed by a kamikaze in a steep, full-power dive.Anti-aircraft fire apparently killed the pilot, but the plane kept its momentum and, after skimming the after 40 mm gun, crashed into the sea. The subsequent explosion injured 11 of the DE's crew and caused minor damage to the hull."Richard W. Suesens" then retired to Leyte, whence she sailed on
27 January to screen landing craft toNasugbu . There, on31 January , she covered the assault forces as they began their fight toManila . Retiring toMindoro on2 February , she screened resupply runs to Nasugbu and brought out casualties through23 February , witnessing on16 February the paratroop landing onCorregidor .Returning to Leyte, she prepared for
Operation Iceberg , the invasion of theRyukyus , and on21 March sailed with the Western Islands Attack Force. Arriving offKerama Retto on26 March she screened the transport area there during the initial assault, then remained on patrol off that anchorage into mid-April when she shifted to theHagushi Beach anchorage. Employed as a picket ship in the antisubmarine and antiaircraft ring around the Kerama Retto-Okinawa area, she survived the nightly air raids and numerous kamikaze attacks, splashing four planes and assisting in the destruction of two more before retiring toUlithi on26 April .In early May she underwent availability at Ulithi, then served as radar picket ship north of that base. On
27 May she returned to Okinawa where, until28 June , she alternated escort duty with picket ship responsibilities. She then returned to Leyte, joined TG 32.1 and between1 July and6 August covered minesweeping operations in theEast China Sea in support of the blockade of the Japanese home islands. On7 August she returned to Okinawa where she was employed in escort work for the remainder of the war. From the mid-August cessation of hostilities until late September, she continued escort runs, including one toJinsen ,Korea . Then, on22 September , she sailed for Japan. There she supported occupation forces in theWakayama -Wakanoura area through October. On1 November , she was en route home.Fate
On
21 November "Richard W. Suesens" arrived at San Diego for inactivation. In commission, in reserve, from March 1946, she decommissioned on15 January 1947 and was berthed with the San Diego Group,Pacific Reserve Fleet . Although she was later moved toStockton, California , she remained a unit of the Reserve Fleet until struck from theNavy List on15 March 1972 . She was sold13 June 1973 to theNational Metal and Steel Corporation ,Terminal Island ,California for scrapping.Honors
"Richard W. Suesens" earned five battle stars during
World War II .References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/r6/richard_w_suesens.htm
External links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/06/342.htm NavSource.org DE-342]
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