- USS Craven (DD-70)
USS "Craven" (DD-70), a Sclass|Caldwell|destroyer, served in the
United States Navy , and later in theRoyal Navy as HMS "Lewes".As USS "Craven"
The second US Navy ship named for Commander
Tunis Craven (1813–1864), "Craven" was launched on29 June 1918 byNorfolk Navy Yard , sponsored by Mrs. F. Learned, daughter of Cmdr. Craven; and commissioned on19 October 1918 , Lieutenant Commander M. B. McComb in command."Craven" cruised on the east coast and in the
Caribbean in training, maneuvers, andtorpedo practice, until3 May 1919 when she sailed from New York forTrepassey Bay, Newfoundland . Here she served on a weather station and observed the flight of Navyseaplane s in the historic first aerial crossing of the Atlantic. After overhaul, "Craven" participated in Army gun tests atFort Story ,Virginia , and had recruiting duty atHampton Roads, Virginia ;Fall River, Massachusetts ; andNewport, Rhode Island ; until placed in reserve atPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania 10 October 1919 .Still in reduced commission, "Craven" arrived at
Charleston, South Carolina ,10 February 1921 . She transported liberty parties between Charleston andJacksonville, Florida , and took part in the fleet maneuvers off Virginia and inNarragansett Bay . Arriving at Philadelphia29 March 1922 , "Craven" was placed out of commission15 June 1922 . On12 November 1939 she was renamed "Conway" for William Conway.As HMS "Lewes" (G68)
Recommissioned
9 August 1940 , "Conway" arrived at Halifax, Nova Scotia,17 October . Here she was decommissioned23 October 1940 and turned over to British authorities in the land bases for destroyers exchange. She was commissioned as HMS "Lewes" (G68) (afterLewes inEast Sussex ) the same day."Lewes" departed Halifax
1 November and arrived atBelfast, Northern Ireland ,9 November , searching for the Germanpocket battleship "Admiral Scheer" during her passage. She was refitted atPlymouth, England , and ordered to remain there under the command of Commander-in-Chief, Plymouth. Severely damaged in enemy air raids on 21 and22 April 1941 , she remained out of action until December when she joined theHome Fleet . In February 1942 she joinedRosyth Escort Force , escortingconvoy s between theThames and theFirth of Forth ,Scotland . On 9 and10 November 1942 she engaged GermanE-boat s which attacked her convoy offLowestoft . "Lewes" escorted a troop convoy on its way to theMiddle East and arrived atSimonstown , Union ofSouth Africa ,18 May 1943 . As well as serving as target for aircraft during their training, she searched for enemysubmarine s reported roundingCape of Good Hope .In 1944 she joined the Eastern Fleet as a
submarine tender and torpedo target ship. "Lewes" departed Durban13 August and arrived atCeylon a month later. She was based atTrincomalee until January 1945 when she was transferred to theBritish Pacific Fleet as a target ship for aircraft training. Arriving atFremantle, Australia ,11 February 1945 , she shifted toSydney 20 February and remained there until the end of hostilities. On12 October 1945 this most-widely travelled of the "Town"-class destroyers was reported as no longer necessary to the fleet, and was ordered scrapped.See also
*
List of United States Navy destroyers References
USS Conway Website http://www.ussconway.com
*Fitzsimons, Bernard, General Editor. "The Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare", Volume 5, pp. 510–11, "Caldwell", and Volume 16, pp. 1717–18, "Leeds". London: Phoebus, 1978.
*cite web | url= http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/070.htm
title= DD-70 USS "Craven"
last= Willshaw | first= Fred
date= |year= |month= | work= Destroyer Photo Archive | publisher= NavSource Online
accessdate= 2008-05-17External links
* [http://www.destroyerhistory.org/flushdeck/usscraven/index.html USS "Craven" website] at [http://www.destroyerhistory.org/index.html Destroyer History Foundation]
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