Three quarters of a century after enduring some of the most vicious naval battles of the Pacific War as well as the infamous Typhoon Cobra in December 1944, USS The Sullivans (DD 537) rests quietly at the Buffalo and Erie County Naval Park. (Courtesy of Swire Chin, Toronto, Canada) |
HRNM Educator
On April 4, 1943, USS The Sullivans (DD 537) was launched. The Fletcher-class destroyer was originally to be named USS Putnam, but its name was changed to The Sullivans by direction of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The name change honored the five Sullivan brothers who were killed in action off of Guadalcanal in 1942.
USS The Sullivans (DD 537) slides down the ways at Bethlehem Shipbuilding in San Francisco on April 4, 1943. INSET: Her emblem, seen here as an embroidered patch, was in use in 1962. Note the motto, "We Stick Together," and a three-leaf clover denoting the brothers' Irish heritage. (David Buell/ Navsource.org) |
The Sullivans kept busy for two days screening the carriers USS Essex (CV 9), USS Intrepid (CV 11), and USS Cabot (CVL 28) as they launched airstrikes during the Battle of Kwajalein. The Sullivans would see additional action during the Battles of Saipan, Tinian, Guam, Philippine Sea, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa. The ship was decommissioned after the war and placed into the Pacific Reserve Fleet.
USS The Sullivans (DD 537) as seen from USS Essex (CVS 9) in December 1960. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph) |
USS The Sullivans as a museum ship in Buffalo, New York, beside USS Little Rock (CLG 4). (Wikimedia Commons) |
No comments:
Post a Comment