- USS William C. Cole (DE-641)
USS "William C. Cole" (DE-641) was a "Buckley"-class
destroyer escort of theUnited States Navy , named in honor ofVice Admiral William C. Cole (1868–1935)."William C. Cole" was laid down on
5 September 1943 atSan Francisco, California , by theBethlehem Steel Co. ; launched on29 December 1943 ; sponsored by Mrs. William C. Cole, the widow of Adm. Cole; and commissioned on12 May 1944 , Lieutenant Clay Harrold in command.World War II
Following
shakedown in the San Diego area, "William C. Cole" underwent post-shakedown availability at her builder's yard before departing the west coast on19 July , bound for theHawaiian Islands . After reachingOahu , the new destroyer escort trained out ofPearl Harbor for the remainder of the month.August 1944 – March 1945
"William C. Cole" departed Oahu on
1 August in company with USS|Snyder|DE-745, as part of the screen for the oilers USS|Neches|AO-47 and USS|Atascosa|AO-66; theseaplane tender USS|Kenneth Whiting|AV-14; theescort carrier s USS|Bougainville|CVE-100 and USS|Admiralty Islands|CVE-99; therefrigeration ship USS|Aldebaran|AF-10; and the merchantfreighter SS "Cape Pillar". After delivering thatconvoy safety toMajuro in the Marshalls, "Cole" escorted "Admiralty Islands" and "Bougainville" back to Pearl Harbor.After a five-day availability, "William C. Cole" departed Pearl Harbor with the destroyer escorts USS|Melvin R. Nawman|DE-416 and USS|Samuel B. Roberts|DE-413 in the screen for a Marshalls-bound merchant convoy. "William C. Cole" was detached on
28 August and escorted the freighter SS "Cape Page" toKwajalein before she headed for Hawaii on1 September . Upon her arrival at Pearl Harbor, the destroyer escort commenced a week's availability."William C. Cole" departed the Hawaiian Islands on
15 September and subsequently convoyed the escort carrier USS|Copahee|CVE-12 toManus Island , in theAdmiralty Islands . On25 September , "Cole" reported to Commander,South Pacific Forces , for duty.Underway from
Seeadler Harbor , Manus, on1 October , "William C. Cole" andsister ship USS|Gendreau|DE-639 sailed for theSolomon Islands . From 4 to 11 October, "Cole" trained out ofPurvis Bay with the other ships of Escort Division 73 (CortDiv 73). One week later, on18 October , the destroyer escort escorted SS "Cape Johnson" fromLunga Point ,Guadalcanal , toCape Torokina , Bougainville, before returning to Purvis Bay for upkeep and gunnery training that lasted for the remainder of October."William C. Cole" operated out of Purvis Bay into February 1945, performing local escort missions between Guadalcanal, Bougainville, and
New Caledonia ; ships escorted included SS "Sea Cat", SS "Sea Snipe", USS|General O. H. Ernst|AP-133, USS|Wharton|AP-7, USS|West Virginia|BB-48, USS|General M. M. Patrick|AP-150, USS|Windsor|APA-55, USS|Ormsby|APA-49, and USS|Crescent City|APA-21.After gunnery exercises from 3 to 23 February, "William C. Cole" reported by dispatch on the 23d to Commander, 5th Fleet. From
24 February through the first week in March, she performed screening duties off the transport staging area, Lunga Point, Guadalcanal, protecting the transports of Amphibious Squadron 4 (PhibRon 4) during landing exercises in the vicinity. While the transports of PhibRon 4 loaded at Lunga Point, "Cole" screened them from 10 to 13 March. On the latter day, she received onward routing and proceeded for theRussell Islands .On the 15th, the destroyer escort headed for
Ulithi , in the Western Carolines, in company with USS|Lang|DD-399, USS|Stack|DD-406, and USS|Paul G. Baker|DE-642, escorting various units of PhibRon 4. Detached on the 21st, "William C. Cole" joined "Paul G. Baker" to escort for theattack cargo ship s, USS|Theenim|AKA-63 and USS|Lacerta|AKA-29, to the Marianas. After delivering their charges safely toSaipan , the two destroyer escorts proceeded immediately to Ulithi where they were replenished before sortieing with Carrier Division 22 (CarDiv 22) — less USS|Sangamon|CVE-26 and USS|Santee|CVE-29 — as part of the escort that included the destroyers USS|Massey|DD-778, USS|Drexler|DD-741, and USS|Metcalf|DD-595. Relieved of escort and screening duties for the carriers on31 March , "William C. Cole" subsequently joined other ships of CortDiv 73 escorting Transport Squadron 18 (TransRon 18) on its way toOkinawa .Battle of Okinawa
The ships made their final approaches through the western islands off Okinawa and arrived off the beachhead by midday. Light enemy aircraft activity greeted the initial forces — activity that would, in time, become heavy and nearly ceaseless. Between 1 and 4 April, the ship went to
general quarters numerous times during the many air raid alerts caused by enemy planes in the vicinity. "William C. Cole" downed one plane and assisted in downing two others.Retiring from Okinawa on
5 April as an escort for Transport Division 42 (TransDiv 42), "William C. Cole" headed for Saipan. Upon arrival, the ship received routing to Ulithi where she took on stores. Underway again on13 April , "Cole" sailed for Okinawa once more, this time in the screen for ships of TransDiv 56.Detached from escort duties upon her arrival off the western invasion beaches on
17 April , "William C. Cole" soon commenced her activities as a vessel in the screen. She remained on screening stations in the vicinity of transport anchorages until retiring on the 26th in company with USS|Bunch|APD-79, USS|Mullany|DD-528, USS|Charles Lawrence|APD-37, and USS|Richard W. Suesens|DE-342, as escort for TransDiv 104. After reaching Ulithi on the 30th, "Cole" underwent four days of availability.Returning to active duty upon completion of repairs, the destroyer escort steamed on a picket station off the island of
Yap before returning to the Western Carolines on13 May . The following day, in company with USS|Chase|APD-54 and as escort for thebattleship "West Virginia" and theheavy cruiser USS|Tuscaloosa|CA-37, "William C. Cole" got underway to return to Okinawa. Arriving there on the 17th, she reported for screening duties.While on station, "William C. Cole" observed moderate enemy air action from 19 to 23 May; but, on the 24th, she came under attack herself. Between 18:30 on the 24th and 06:00 on the 25th, the ship destroyed two enemy aircraft. First, a
Nakajima Ki-43 "Oscar" attempted a suicide run while "Cole" was northeast ofIe Shima and crashed within a few feet of the destroyer escort's starboard beam. The plane passed so close to the ship that one of its wingtips bent a "spoon" of a tube of a torpedo mount which had been trained to starboard. The second plane, aKawasaki Ki-61 "Tony", came in from the ship's starboard side and was taken under a heavy fire from the ship's 20-millimeter and 40-millimeter guns. This attacker overshot the ship and crashed some thousand yards beyond its target.June – August 1945
On
30 May , "William C. Cole" loaded ammunition atKerama Retto to replenish her depleted magazines before weighing anchor on the next day to sail to Saipan with a convoy of merchantmen. On2 June , USS|Ringness|APD-100 and "William C. Cole" rendezvoused at sea with a Ulithi-bound convoy, and they arrived at their destination on the 6th having safely delivered their charges. Upon fueling, "Cole" sailed for thePhilippines , in company with the destroyer USS|Shields|DD-596 and the destroyer escort USS|George E. Davis|DE-357, as escorts for a merchant, Leyte-bound convoy.The convoy reached San Pedro Bay on
10 June , and "William C. Cole" received repairs to the damage she had suffered during thekamikaze attack off Okinawa on24 May . Subsequently sailing forLuzon in company with USS|Vammen|DE-644, "Cole" fueled upon arrival atLingayen and soon thereafter headed for Okinawa convoying LST group 104. Arriving there on the 24th, the destroyer escort shifted to Kerama Retto the following day where she rendezvoused with USS|Curtiss|AV-4, two ATA's (124 and 125), and "LCI-993" to join USS|Witter|DE-636 and USS|Forrest|DMS-24 in escorting those ships to Saipan, where they arrived on30 June .Assigned to a patrol area east of Saipan on
2 July , "William C. Cole" operated on that station until relieved on the 11th by USS|Fieberling|DE-640. The destroyer escort remained at Saipan until22 July , when she shifted toGuam . Once there, she performed patrol work out ofApra Harbor for a week before she returned to Saipan in company with USS|Austin|DE-15. "Cole" ended July escorting theattack transport USS|Logan|APA-196 to the Marshalls.After shepherding the attack transport safely to
Eniwetok , "William C. Cole" proceeded independently to Saipan, arriving on8 August . Following training exercises withsubmarine s, antiaircraft firing practices, and a six-day availability, the destroyer escort patrolled offTinian until relieved on17 August , two days after Japan capitulated, bringing the longPacific War to a close.Post-war operations
For "William C. Cole", however, the end of the war did not mean the end to her activities. She escorted "PC-1587" to
Iwo Jima and later operated off that island on air-sea rescue assignments for the remainder of August. "Cole" then operated out of Iwo Jima on air-sea rescue assignments for the entire month of September and into October 1945 before she returned to Saipan, her base for similar operations until she departed the western Pacific, bound for the west coast of the United States.After a yard availability at the
Puget Sound Navy Yard ,Bremerton, Washington , "William C. Cole" returned — via Pearl Harbor and Guam — to the Far East in the spring of 1946 and operated out ofShanghai , Okinawa, and Tsingtao into the summer. She then returned — via Guam, Kwajalein, and Pearl Harbor — to San Diego on28 July . Following still another tour of duty in the Far East under the aegis of Commander, Naval Forces, Far East from10 March to31 August 1947 — at Sasebo,Pusan , Yokosuka, Wakayama, and Kagoshima — "Cole" operated locally out of San Diego until she was decommissioned and placed in reserve on13 March 1948 . She was later inactivated on28 April of that year."William C. Cole" remained in reserve until struck from the
Naval Vessel Register on1 March 1972 . She was then sold to Zidell Explorations, Inc., ofPortland, Oregon , on20 November 1972 and subsequently scrapped."William C. Cole" (DE-641) received one
battle star for her participation in the capture and occupation of Okinawa.References
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/w8/william_c_cole.htm history.navy.mil: USS "William C. Cole"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/06/641.htm navsource.org: USS "William C. Cole"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/escorts/de641.htm hazegray.org: USS "William C. Cole"]
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