- USS Wilkes (DD-67)
USS "Wilkes" (DD-67) was a Sclass|Sampson|destroyer in the
United States Navy duringWorld War I . She was the second Navy ship named for CommodoreCharles Wilkes (1798–1877). She served with theUnited States Coast Guard as (CG-25).hip history
"Wilkes" was laid down on
11 March 1915 atPhiladelphia by the William Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Building Co.; launched on18 May 1916 , sponsored by Miss Carrie Mclver Wilkes; and commissioned on10 November 1916 , Lieutenant CommanderJulius F. Hellweg in command.World War I service
"Wilkes" spent the winter preceding America's entry into
World War I outfitting—first in thePhiladelphia Navy Yard and later in the Torpedo Station located at Newport, R.I.—and conducting fleet maneuvers inCuba n waters. She returned from those operations at the height of the crisis over the German declaration of unrestricted submarine warfare, arriving in Norfolk on7 March 1917 . Just one month later, on6 April , theUnited States joined the war against theCentral Powers . At the end of April, the destroyer escorted the Frenchcruiser "Amiral Auge" from Norfolk toNew York . On15 June , she departed New York in the screen of the first American troop convoy to voyage toEurope . She escorted her charges intoSaint Nazaire on26 June then headed forPortsmouth, England , where she celebrated Independence Day. From there, she continued on to her permanent European base,Queenstown, Ireland , where she arrived on the 6th."Wilkes" operated from the Queenstown base for the duration of World War I. For the most part, she conducted antisubmarine patrols and escorted convoys bound for
England on the last leg of their voyage. Occasionally, however, she was called upon to shepherd convoys into port at Brest and Saint Nazaire,France . Although her duties appeared routine, they were strenuous. She spent many arduous days at sea in the stormyAtlantic with only hours or, at most, a day or two in port to provision. Though it appears that she never saw combat with GermanU-boat s, she did witness the results of their depredations once when she rescued 23 survivors of the torpedoed British merchantman SS "Purley" on25 July 1917 . She continued her patrol and escort duties until after Christmas 1918, over a month after the cessation of hostilities. On26 December , she departed Queenstown and headed for home. On7 January 1919 , she arrived in New York.Immediately upon her return, "Wilkes" began overhaul at New York. That occupied her time until
1 May when the destroyer embarked upon her most noteworthy postwar mission—duty as a picket ship for the first transatlantic flight. Only one of the four Navy-Curtiss (NC) flying boats slated for the mission actually completed the flight.NC-4 reached theAzores at Horta on17 May , made the hop toPonta Delgada on the 20th, and departed the Azores forLisbon ,Portugal , on the 27th. "Wilkes" served as a picket on that second leg of the flight as the fourth ship in a line of 14 destroyers between the Azores and the European continent. The NC-4 reached her destination that same day, and "Wilkes"' part in the event was completed. While NC-4 finished the third and last leg of its flight—from Lisbon toPlymouth, England —on 30 and31 May , "Wilkes" pointed her bow homeward. The destroyer reentered New York harbor on4 June and resumed peacetime operations along the Atlantic coast. For the next 34 months, she plied the waters off the eastern seaboard in the spring, summer, and fall. Late each fall, she headed south to participate in fleet maneuvers in Cuban waters, theCaribbean , and theGulf of Mexico . During that time, she was based at three different ports—Newport, R.I.; New York, N.Y.; and Charleston, S.C. On12 April 1922 , Wilkes entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard where she was placed out of commission on5 June 1922 .USCG service
"Wilkes" remained inactive at Philadelphia for over four years. In the summer of 1926, she was turned over to the Coast Guard, desperately in need of additional ships to suppress the illegal, but lucrative, traffic in alcoholic beverages spawned by Prohibition. She was commissioned a Coast Guard destroyer at
New London, Connecticut , on23 August 1926 , Lt. Comdr. M. J. Ryan, USCG, in command. For the next eight years, she patrolled the east coast fromNew England toFlorida . In 1934, the repeal of Prohibition brought an end to the illicit alcohol trade and the "Rum Patrol " as well.Decommissioning and disposal
"Wilkes" completed her last Coast Guard patrol at Philadelphia on
15 March 1934 . There, she was placed out of commission on29 March and returned to the Navy. On5 July 1934 , her name was struck from the Navy list. She was sold on22 August 1934 for scrapping under the terms of the London Treaty for the limitation of naval armaments.See also
*
List of United States Navy destroyers References
External links
* [http://www.destroyers.org/DANFS/h-DD-67.htm Tin Can Sailors.com USS Wilkes DD-67]
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