- USS Keith (DE-241)
USS "Keith" (DE-241) was an sclass|Edsall|destroyer escort of the
United States Navy named in honor of Ellis Judson Keith, Jr., who was killed in action on 11 June 1942, Seaman Keith was posthumously awarded theAir Medal ."Keith" was originally laid down as "Scott" but renamed "Keith" on
8 December 1942 , and was launched21 December 1942 by theBrown Shipbuilding Company inHouston, Texas . "Keith" was sponsored by Mrs. Ellis J. Keith, Sr., the mother of Seaman Keith; and commissioned19 July 1943 at Houston, Texas, with Lieutenant D. Cochran in command.After shakedown and training exercises out of
Bermuda , "Keith" sailed fromNorfolk, Virginia 14 September 1943 on the first of three voyages escortingconvoy s from East Coast ports toGibraltar .After returning from convoy escort duty
22 February 1944 , "Keith" underwent extensive refresher training and participated in antisubmarine warfare exercises before sailing on15 March as part ofescort carrier USS|Tripoli|CVE-64|6's newly formed hunter-killer group. With this group she patrolled theAtlantic Ocean fromBrazil toNewfoundland in search of enemysubmarine s.In July, she joined a similar group operating with escort carrier USS|Core|CVE-13|6. On
30 August , "Core"’s hunter-killer group contacted an enemy submarine. "Keith", assisting in the search, made two hedgehog attacks with inconclusive results."Keith" continued to operate with the hunter-killer group patrolling the waters of the Atlantic, escorting convoys from "mid-ocean point" to ports in Brazil,
Bermuda , Newfoundland,Cuba , and theUnited States . On23 April 1945 , the hunter-killer group, operating as a combined force against a large wolfpack ofU-boat s, spotted a partially submerged submarine but could not locate it after it dived. While searching the next day, USS|Frederick C. Davis|DE-136|6, a destroyer escort in company, was torpedoed and sunk. "Keith" and a task group ships headed to the position where the "Frederick C. Davis" had gone down and launched adepth charge attack that lasted some 12 hours beforeU-546 was forced to surface. The destroyer escorts opened fire on the submarine; and "Keith" made two direct hits before the U-boat sank. After the engagement, "Keith" rescued four survivors from the submarine.In mid-July, "Keith" departed
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba , for duty in thePacific Ocean . "Keith" found herself inPearl Harbor at the end of hostilities with theJapan ese and got underway forSaipan to perform escort duty and mop-up operations. Shortly after arriving,31 August , she was assigned an air-sea rescue station betweenIwo Jima and Japan. At the end of the year "Keith" sailed forChina , arrivingShanghai on the last day of December. She remained there patrolling and escorting vessels until sailing for the United States on10 April 1946 via Pearl Harbor and thePanama Canal arriving atCharleston, South Carolina on15 May 1946. "Keith" was towed toGreen Cove Springs, Florida , where she was decommissioned and placed in reserve20 September 1946. By the late 1960's she was still in reserve and berthed atOrange, Texas being stricken from theNaval Vessel Register on1 November 1972 and sold for scrap on1 December 1973 ."Keith" received one
battle star forWorld War II service.References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/k2/keith.htm
*NVR|http://www.nvr.navy.mil/nvrships/details/DE241.htmExternal links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/06/241.htm Navsource entry]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.