- USS Mullany (DD-528)
USS "Mullany" (DD-528), a "Fletcher"-class
destroyer , was the second ship of theUnited States Navy to be named for Rear AdmiralJames Robert Madison Mullany (1818 –1887 ).World War II service
"Mullany" was originally "Beatty" (DD-528) but was renamed on
28 May 1941 . Laid down15 January 1942 byBethlehem Steel Co., Union Plant,San Francisco, Calif. , she was launched10 October 1942 , sponsored by Mrs. Elton W. Grenfell; and commissioned23 April 1943 , Commander Baron J. Mullaney in command.After shakedown and training off
San Diego and escort duty in theAleutians , "Mullany" joined the 7th Fleet in the southwest Pacific in December 1943. Her first action came 2 to4 March 1944 when she protected minesweepers clearing the approaches toSeeadler Harbor ,Admiralty Island s, prior to the amphibious landings onLos Negros , the island forming the northeastern side of the harbor. AttractingJapan ese gunfire, "Mullany" silenced the Japanese harbor defenses with 5 inch fire, enabling the minesweepers to complete their vital mission. For the next 2 days "Mullany" fired to support American troops fighting ashore.Screening 7th Fleet
flagship USS|Wasatch|AGC-9 during the invasion of Leyte Gulf, "Mullany" fired to help drive off nine separate enemy air attacks from 20 to29 October , then sailed for overhaul at San Francisco. After training nearHawaii in January1945 , she joined Task Force 54 (TF 54) for the invasion of Iwo Jima, to which she escorted troop transports. After firing in the preinvasion bombardment, she supported troops landing and fighting ashore, hitting caves and machinegun nests onMount Suribachi 19 February .An anti
submarine picket guarding the Okinawa invasion force6 April 1945 , "Mullany" opened fire on a Japanesekamikaze plane at 17:45. A few seconds later the fighter was smoking from numerous hits, but somehow managed to stay together. Skipper Comdr. Albert O. Momm ordered the ship to turn out of the kamikaze's path, but couldn't get out of the way in time. The plane slammed into the after deckhouse. Before damage control parties could remove all the wounded from the twisted metal and exploding ammunition, the ship'sdepth charge s exploded. In the next 20 minutes three more enemy aircraft attacked stricken "Mullany". Her forward gunners downed two and drove the other away.An hour later, Momm received a report that the bulkhead of one of the aft magazines was hot and an explosion was apparently imminent. Many of the ship's officers had seen the disastrous consequences of a magazine explosion, and at 18:29 Momm gave the order to abandon ship. USS|Gherardi|DMS-30 stood by to take on survivors while her rescue and assistance team continued to spray water on "Mullany". The USS|Execute |AM-232 rescued 70 members of the Mullany crew from the water. The "Execute" then came alongside and helped fight the fires. In the next hours USS|Purdy|DD-734 came alongside the burning ship and extinguished the flames. Since the expected explosion had been prevented by punctured fuel and water tanks flooding the compartments above the hot magazine, Commander Momm took a skeleton crew back aboard at 23:00. After the fires were extinguished the "Execute" attempted a tow using her sweep gear. At first the "Mullany" was in tow at low speed. With an increase in speed the sweep cable snapped and the tow attempt was discontinued. The "Mullany" crew then succeeded in lighting off one boiler, and "Mullany" limped off on one shaft for
Pearl Harbor and San Francisco, arriving29 May . Courage and determination had saved their ship, but 21 of her crew were killed, nine missing, and 36 wounded.Completely repaired, "Mullany" put to sea
25 September for thePanama Canal and duty with the Atlantic Fleet, until decommissioning14 February 1946 to join theReserve Fleet atCharleston, South Carolina Post World War II service
Recommissioned
8 March 1951 , "Mullany" rejoined the Atlantic Fleet and by January1954 had made three deployments to theMediterranean to join in the peace-keeping missions of the 6th Fleet.With her squadron,
Destroyer Squadron 18 (DesRon 18), "Mullany" departed Newport, R.I.1 December 1954 for San Diego, where the squadron was redesignated DesRon 21 for service in the Pacific Fleet. In the next 10 years, "Mullany" served eight times in the western Pacific with the 7th Fleet, joining in patrol and training operations essential to the protection of freedom inAsia .Vietnam war
Veteran "Mullany" returned to combat during her ninth cruise to the coast of Asia, screening carrier USS|Independence|CVA-62 in flight operations off
Vietnam in1965 , as well as serving as harbor defense ship atDa Nang . On6 July 1965 , "Mullany's" five-inch guns were fired in anger for the first time sinceOkinawa . This time it was in support of theU.S. 7th Marine Regiment landing atQui Nhon . The following year she returned to the coast of Vietnam to seek out and destroy craft moving enemy supplies. From 20 to30 November 1966 , she destroyed 28 enemy watercraft and damaged 26 others with her 5 inch guns. She screened USS|Ticonderoga|CVA-14 until sailing for San Diego in March1967 . Following an overhaul at Long Beach, "Mullany" spent the remainder of the year conducting refresher training and local operations off the coast of California. In February1968 , she once again deployed to the Western Pacific. On9 July 1968 , "Mullany" left Vietnamese waters for the last time. During 137 days at sea, she had steamed 46,468 miles, nearly twice around the earth. Over a career that spanned 25 years, she would have circumnavigated the globe more than 40 times. After a visit toAuckland, New Zealand , she returned to San Diego in September.Based in Long Beach, "Mullany" spent the next two years steaming up and down the West Coast as a reserve training ship.By
1971 , "Mullany" was the oldest destroyer on active service. She was decommissioned and stricken from theNaval Vessel Register 6 October 1971 , and sold to theRepublic of China for $150,000, plus $3,000, "administrative charges."Awards
"Mullany" received seven
battle star s forWorld War II service."Chiang Yang"
Transferred to the
Republic of China Navy 6 October 1971 , the ship was renamed "Chiang Yang". "Chaing Yang" was stricken16 July 1999 ."Chaing Yang" was sunk as an artificial reef on1 November 2001 .Fact|date=September 2008References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/m15/mullany-ii.htm
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/m15/mullany-ii.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Mullany"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/528.htm navsource.org: USS "Mullany"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd528txt.htm hazegray.org: USS "Mullany"]
* [http://www.ussmullany.org/ USS "Mullany" website]
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