- USS Conner (DD-72)
USS "Conner" (DD-72), a "Caldwell"-class
destroyer , served in theUnited States Navy , and later in theRoyal Navy as HMS "Leeds".As USS "Conner"
The first US Navy ship named for Commodore David Conner (1792-1856), "Conner" was launched
21 August 1917 byWilliam Cramp & Sons Ship and Engine Building Company,Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , sponsored by Miss E. Diederich; and commissioned12 January 1918 , Commander A. G. Howe in command."Conner" put to sea from New York
12 May 1918 to escort aconvoy to theAzores andBrest, France . From Brest, she operated with U.S. Naval Forces, France, escorting convoys inbound to English and French ports, and outbound forBermuda . Frequently sent to aid ships which had reported sightingsubmarine s, she rescued survivors from the sea twice in July 1918. At the end of the war, she had duty on regular mail and passenger runs between Brest andPlymouth, England , and on8 May 1919 she put out from Plymouth escorting the ships carrying PresidentWoodrow Wilson and Secretary of the NavyJosephus Daniels to Brest for the Peace Conference.Returning to the United States, "Conner" joined in fleet maneuvers in
Narragansett Bay in the summer of 1919, and enteredPhiladelphia Navy Yard 4 October . Later she lay atNorfolk, Virginia in reserve until May 1921, when she participated in large-scale fleet exercises with a reduced complement. She remained atNewport, Rhode Island , for operations with submarines. Between13 October 1921 and29 March 1922 , she lay atCharleston, South Carolina , returning then to Philadelphia, where she was decommissioned21 June 1922 .As HMS "Leeds"
"Conner" was recommissioned
23 August 1940 and fitted out at Philadelphia. Designated for inclusion in the destroyers for land bases exchange withGreat Britain , she sailed to Halifax, Nova Scotia, where she was decommissioned23 October 1940 and transferred to Britain and commissioned in the Royal Navy as HMS "Leeds" the same day, Lieutenant Commander W. M. I. Astwood, RN, in command."Leeds" cleared Halifax
1 November 1940 forBelfast, Northern Ireland , arriving10 November . Under theRosyth Command , she escorted convoys in theNorth Sea between theThames and theFirth of Forth , successfully weathering many air attacks. On20 April 1942 , she went to the aid of mine-damaged destroyer HMS "Cotswold", towing her into Harwich. She drove GermanE-boat s away from her convoy on the night of 24–25 February 1944 . "Leeds" was placed in reserve atGrangemouth in the Firth of Forth in April 1945.References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/c12/conner-i.htm
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