- USS Worden (DD-288)
The second USS "Worden" (DD-288) was a "Clemson"-class
destroyer in theUnited States Navy followingWorld War I . She was named forJohn Lorimer Worden .History
"Worden" was laid down on
30 June 1919 atSquantum, Massachusetts , by theBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation ; launched on24 October 1919 ; sponsored by Mrs. Emilie Neilson Worden; and commissioned on24 February 1920 at theBoston Navy Yard , Lieutenant Commander David H. Stuart in command.The destroyer spent the first four years of her decade of active service in operations along the Atlantic coast of the United States. After fitting out, she departed
Boston, Massachusetts loaded torpedoes and spare parts atNewport, Rhode Island , and embarked upon her shakedown cruise toKey West andCuba n waters. She completed that voyage at New York on1 May and joined Destroyer Division 42, 3d Squadron, Atlantic Fleet. From May to July, she conducted operations along the length of the Atlantic seaboard, from Key West to Newport. On21 July , she arrived in Charleston and remained there until the following summer. On25 June 1921 , she departedCharleston, South Carolina for a4 July visit to New York and gunnery practice offBlock Island . In August, she made a voyage to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, with Naval Academy midshipmen embarked, returning them toAnnapolis, Maryland , on the 22nd."Worden" stopped briefly at
Hampton Roads , then headed via New York to Boston for repairs at the navy yard which she completed early in November. On the 16th, she loaded torpedoes at Newport and headed south to Charleston, where she arrived on the 18th. She remained there until the spring of 1922. On29 May of that year, she got underway for a voyage which took her up the coast toPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania ; thence toYorktown, Virginia , a temporary base for battle practice and gunnery drills. Late in July, "Worden" made a brief cruise to New York and then returned to the southern drill grounds located off the Virginia capes.During August, September, and October, she conducted battle practice off the capes, departing the area periodically for visits to New York;
Beaufort, North Carolina ; and Newport. On21 November , the destroyer entered port at Boston for a repair period which lasted until the end of 1922. Shen then left Boston and loaded torpedoes at Newport on New Year's Day 1923. On5 January , she arrived atLynnhaven Roads , Virginia, but, soon thereafter, continued south to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where she resumed gun and torpedo drills through the end of the month. On12 February , she transited thePanama Canal with theScouting Fleet for Fleet Problem I, the first set of combined maneuvers with Battle Fleet, conducted in the Gulf of Panama. She retransmitted the canal on27 March and resumed training in the Guantanamo Bay area until late April.After visits to several gulf coast ports (
Galveston, Texas ,New Orleans, Louisiana ,Tampa, Florida and Key West) she returned to Newport on15 May . Early in June, she visitedWashington, D.C. , and, by mid-month, had entered thePhiladelphia Navy Yard for repairs. "Worden" left Philadelphia on12 October and resumed gunnery drills and battle practice at the southern drill grounds off the Virginia capes. Those drills, punctuated by visits toFall River, Massachusetts , and toBaltimore, Maryland , occupied her time until mid-November, at which time she entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard for repairs to a ruptured boiler.On
3 January 1924 , "Worden" departed Philadelphia and, after a brief stop at Lynnhaven Roads, rendezvoused with Scouting Fleet as a unit of its screen. Conducting drills and exercises along the way, Scouting Fleet headed forColón, Panama , where the warships refueled before continuing on toCulebra Island with the combinedUnited States Fleet (Scouting Fleet andBattle Fleet ). "Worden" participated in the annual spring exercises in theWest Indies until late spring. On4 May , she arrived back in Philadelphia to prepare for her first and only deployment outside the western hemisphere. After a brief repair period at Boston and a visit to Newport, she headed across the Atlantic in mid-June. On the 27th, she passed through theStrait of Gibraltar to begin a year of duty with theUnited States Naval Forces in Europe . During the early portion of that tour, "Worden" called atPalermo ,Sicily , and then headed for theAdriatic Sea .Her tour in the Adriatic was probably influenced by the murder of two Americans in the newly established state of
Albania and the internal strife which followed and which resulted in the ousting of Prime Minister Ahmed Zogu and his temporary replacement by a provisional government underBishop Fan Stylian Noli . During her stay in the Adriatic, "Worden" visitedPula (now Croatia) andVenice inItaly andSplit (now Croatia) in Kingdom ofYugoslavia as well asDurrës in troubled Albania.Later in the year, the destroyer left the
Mediterranean for visits to Gravesend,England ,Cherbourg ,France ,Leith ,Scotland andAmsterdam in theNetherlands . At the conclusion of that circuit, she returned to the Mediterranean and continued her tour of duty with Naval Forces, Europe, until the summer of 1925.She returned to New York on
16 July of that year and resumed her former schedule of operations with the Scouting Fleet. On13 September , she entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard for repairs. The destroyer did not leave the yard until December. On the 7th, she headed south to join in the annual winter maneuvers held in the West Indies and in Panama Bay on the Pacific side of the isthmus. Scouting Fleet transited the canal on4 February and5 February 1926 to join Battle Fleet for Fleet Problem VI in Panama Bay. In March, "Worden" returned to theCaribbean with Scouting Fleet and resumed battle practice, gunnery drills, and torpedo exercises in the West Indies. She completed that phase of her 1926 training schedule late in the spring and arrived back in Philadelphia on5 May . During the early part of the summer, the warship continued her training schedule, this time off theNew England coast nearNarragansett Bay . On2 July , she entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard for a three-month repair period.On
11 October , "Worden" stood out of Philadelphia on her way south once more. After a brief stop at Hampton Roads, the destroyer continued on her way and arrived in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on the 16th. For the next month, she conducted engineering trials and battle practice nearHaiti in theGulf of Gonaives . Returning north in mid-November, she visited the Naval Academy for a time before heading back to Philadelphia where she arrived on15 December . The warship bade farewell to Philadelphia once again on5 January 1927 and pointed her bow southward for a stop at Yorktown followed by the 1927 edition of the annual winter maneuvers. She reached Guantanamo Bay on12 January and commenced gunnery and battle practice with Scouting Fleet in preparation for the annual Fleet problem.In contrast to the previous fleet problems in which she had participated, Fleet Problem VII brought Battle Fleet to the Caribbean instead of taking Scouting Fleet to the Pacific. The exercise was staged in March; and, by late April, "Worden" had returned north, this time to New York City. During the summer of 1927, she conducted normal training exercises off the Atlantic coast and participated in the Fleet Review conducted off
Cape Henry, Virginia , in June for PresidentCalvin Coolidge . On11 September , she entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard and remained there for the rest of the year.On
7 January 1928 , she started south from Philadelphia. This time, however, she participated only in the preliminary drills and exercises for the annual fleet problem. She headed back to Philadelphia in April and arrived there on the 14th. Meanwhile, Scouting Fleet and Battle Fleet joined and executed Fleet Problem VIII in the broad expanse of the Pacific betweenSan Francisco, California , and theHawaiian Islands . A month later, "Worden" returned to sea for her usual round of operations along the Atlantic seaboard. That duty lasted until late in October at which time her base of operations changed to Charleston. Local operations out of that port occupied her time until early December when she returned north to Philadelphia for a month. In January 1929, she moved to Norfolk for repairs to her turbines; and, after post-repair trials in theChesapeake Bay in February, she headed south for winter maneuvers. The destroyer arrived at Guantanamo Bay on28 February . She concluded her part in those exercises later in the spring and returned north, arriving in New York on2 May .During the summer, she conducted normal operations along the northeastern coast.
Fate
On
21 September , "Worden" arrived in Philadelphia. The warship remained there until she was decommissioned on1 May 1930 . Her name was struck from the Navy list on22 October 1930 , and she was sold for scrapping on17 January 1931 according to DANFS. Other sources state she was converted into an express fruit carrier, either MV "Tabasco" [ [http://www.theshipslist.com/ships/lines/sfruit.htm Standard Fruit Co / Vaccaro Brothers Ship list] ] or MV "Teapa". [ [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/288.htm NavSource] ] [ [http://www.pacificwrecks.com/ships/usn/SS_masaya/index.html The Saga of S.S. Masaya] .]See USS|Worden for other ships of this name.
References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/w11/worden-ii.htm
External links
*http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/288.htm
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