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USS Harwood

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USS Harwood (DD-861)
USS Harwood (DD-861) after FRAM II
History
United States
NameUSS Harwood
BuilderBethlehem Shipbuilding, San Pedro, California
Laid down29 October 1944
Launched22 May 1945
Commissioned28 September 1945
Stricken1 February 1973
FateSold to Turkey, 17 December 1971
Turkey
NameTCG Kocatepe
Acquired17 December 1971
IdentificationD 354
FateSunk in error by Turkish aircraft, 21 July 1974 [1]
General characteristics
Class and typeGearing-class destroyer
Displacement3,460 long tons (3,516 t) full
Length390 ft 6 in (119.02 m)
Beam40 ft 10 in (12.45 m)
Draft14 ft 4 in (4.37 m)
PropulsionGeneral Electric geared turbines, 2 shafts, 60,000 shp (44,742 kW)
Speed36.8 knots (68.2 km/h; 42.3 mph)
Range4,500 nmi (8,300 km) at 20 kn (37 km/h; 23 mph)
Complement336 (1945), 247 (After FRAM II overhaul)
Armament

USS Harwood (DD/DDE-861) was a Gearing-class destroyer of the United States Navy, in service from 1945 to 1971. She was transferred to Turkey on 17 December 1971 and sunk in error by Turkish aircraft on 21 July 1974.[1]

Namesake

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Bruce Lawrence Harwood was born 10 February 1910 at Claremont, California. He enlisted in the Navy on 6 June 1935. After training as an aviation cadet at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida, he was commissioned Ensign on 7 July 1939 and began flying duty with a torpedo plane squadron. He received the Navy Cross for extraordinary heroism on 24 August 1942 during the Solomon Islands campaign. Leading his squadron in an unsupported aerial torpedo raid against an Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) task force, Lieutenant Harwood pressed home the attack through antiaircraft fire. The squadron scored one certain and two estimated hits on an enemy aircraft carrier. He was awarded the Gold Star in lieu of a second Navy Cross for heroism as squadron commander 20 September-5 October 1942. Leading an attack group of bombers through adverse flying conditions, he located a force of IJN destroyers landing troops and supplies on Guadalcanal. Despite violent maneuvering by the IJN ships, he and his men scored at least one and probably more hits. On 4 October he led another attack group of torpedo planes against an IJN light cruiser and three destroyers. In spite of bad visibility and heavy AA fire, he pressed home the attack, scoring two positive and one possible hit on the cruiser. The following night he and his bombers flying on instruments through a violent tropical storm to Rekata Bay, bombed shore installations there despite fierce opposition from Japanese fighter planes which swarmed to the attack. Appointed Commander on 1 July 1944, he was killed 24 October 1944 when the USS Princeton received bomb hits which triggered a series of fatal explosions. While serving as air officer on the Princeton, he had received another Gold Star in lieu of a third Navy Cross.

Construction and commissioning

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Harwood was laid down by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding at San Pedro in California on 29 October 1944, launched on 22 May 1945, by Mrs. Bruce Lawrence Harwood, widow of Commander Harwood and commissioned on 28 September 1945.

Operational history

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1945–1971

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After shakedown along the California coast, Harwood joined the United States Seventh Fleet in Chinese waters. In addition to aiding in the occupation of Japan, the destroyer also participated in fleet and anti-submarine (ASW) exercises before returning to San Diego 21 February 1947. Harwood entered the Mare Island Naval Shipyard after a second Western Pacific cruise in January 1949 to be equipped with the latest antisubmarine equipment. Redesignated DDE-861 on 4 March 1950, the escort destroyer reported to her new home port, Naval Station Newport, Rhode Island, on 11 September 1949 to participate in research on cold weather ASW operations as well as fleet and training exercises. Departing Norfolk in late August, Harwood made her first Mediterranean cruise with the United States Sixth Fleet and returned to the United States 10 November 1950.

Harwood in October 1945.

Subsequent years fell into a pattern for Harwood as she engaged in varied training maneuvers and made yearly cruises to the Mediterranean. Harwood sailed 4 January 1957 for a 3-month ASW demonstration which took her along the South American coast to Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Panama and Cuba. Entering the New York Naval Shipyard on 2 May 1961, Harwood underwent a Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization (FRAM II) overhaul. Her bridge was totally reconstructed, new types of torpedo tubes were installed, and the 76 mm antiaircraft guns were removed to accommodate a hangar and launching deck for Gyrodyne QH-50 DASH anti-submarine drones. Departing the yard 2 February 1962, Harwood sailed to her home port, Naval Station Mayport, Florida, and from there to the Caribbean Sea. When the Cuban Missile Crisis erupted in October 1962, Harwood and sailed with 4 hours' notice to join the blockading fleet "quarantining" Cuba. She returned to Mayport on 2 November 1962 and was redesignated DD-861 on 1 July 1963.

Harwood sailed for the Mediterranean on 6 August 1963 and provided ASW service during exercise "Riptide IV" en route. She transited the Straits of Gibraltar on the 22d for intense periods of anti-aircraft, anti-submarine, and binary chemical weapon exercises in the Mediterranean Sea. Returning home 23 December, the destroyer operated along the East Coast of the United States until getting under way 31 March 1964 for a brief visit to Brazil. She arrived at Annapolis, Maryland on 1 June, embarked midshipmen, and sailed for Europe. She visited Norway, Belgium, France, and the United Kingdom before debarking the "Middies" at Naval Station Norfolk.

In April 1965, she began overhaul and alterations at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. On 22 August she returned to Mayport en route to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba, for refresher training. She operated along the coast of the United States' southern states until departing Mayport on 22 July 1966 for the Mediterranean deployment. On this tour she transited the Suez Canal and visited Aden and Kenya before rejoining the 6th Fleet in the Medediterranean Sea on 2 November 1965.

Harwood returned home 17 December. She operated out of Newport, off the New England coast until sailing for her 10th Mediterranean deployment 29 June 1967. Reaching Naval Station Rota, Spain on 10 July, Harwood soon joined the 6th Fleet, an element of stability in the ancient and volatile sea which had so recently been churned by the Six-Day War.

The HARWOOD deployed to Vietnam on 10 April of 1968. After transit of the Panama Canal and brief but enjoyable stays in San Diego and Pearl Harbor, HARWOOD, the lone wolf of DesRon 14, began her long journey across the Pacific to Subic Bay, R.P. There she underwent a short upkeep and preparation before leaving for Vietnam and the gunline. Naval gunfire support off the coast of South Vietnam was her primary duty, and one in which she was extremely successful. HARWOOD spent forty-two days on the gunline in support of our troops ashore, destroying or damaging 410 enemy bunkers and structures, neutralizing numerous storage and assembly areas and accounting for many confirmed enemy casualties, firing a total of over 10,000 rounds. In this effort, the Naval Gunfire Support Officer working for the 1st Marine Division and directing the HARWOOD�s targeting was a former 1st Lt on the HARWOOD.

In addition, HARWOOD operated off the coast of North Vietnam in OPERATION SEA DRAGON, during which time she worked with the USS BERKELEY� in a massive interdiction of enemy waterborne logistics craft described as �one if the heaviest off-shore bombardments of the war�, Fifty-eight �WBLC�s� were either destroyed or damaged by the HARWOOD-BERKELEY team. Of these, thirty-six were officially credited to the HARWOOD.

On five separate occasions the ship was taken under fire by enemy coastal defense batteries and in one instance received a hit in her after gun mount, inflicting two personnel casualties and resulting in two Purple Hearts and one Bronze Star awarded to HARWOOD crew members.

In the words of Jack Van Devender, who was there -

"...the Harwood was on a daytime firing mission at a target well inland. For some reason the ship was moving very slow while on the firing mission. The forward mount (mount 51) was the only mount manned at the time because of a hydraulic problem with mount 52. Believe it or not, the ship was not at general quarters at the time as I was out on the main deck amid ships on the port side watching mount 51 fire. All of a sudden a round went off in the water about 30 yards off the port beam opposite mount 51. My first thought was something went wrong with the fire control system and mount 51 had fired a round into the water. A few seconds after that, I heard a round go off back around the fantail area. As it turned out, we had about 15 to 20 rounds fired at us but we only took one hit which was right on top of mount 52.

Harwood continued alternated operations along the East Coast of the United States and in the Caribbean Sea with the 2nd Fleet with deployments to the Mediterranean Sea until being decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 1 February 1973 after her transfer to the Turkish Navy on 17 December 1971.

1971–1974

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Harwood was transferred to the Turkish Navy on 17 December 1971, and renamed TCG Kocatepe (D 354). The ship was bombed and sunk in error by Turkish Lockheed F-104 Starfighter and North American F-100 Super Sabre aircraft on 21 July 1974,[1] mistaking it for a Greek vessel during Turkish landings on Cyprus.[1] Fifty-four members of her crew were killed in the incident.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Bilalis, Aris. Turecka inwazja Cypru w 1974, in: "Okręty Wojenne" Nr. 3/2001 (48), p. 68–69 (in Polish)

Bibliography

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Public Domain This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.

  • Morison, Samuel Loring (1988). "Question 35/87". Warship International. XXV (3): 317–318. ISSN 0043-0374.
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