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USS Wilkes (DD-67)
Ship's History
Source:
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships (Published
1981)
The second
Wilkes
(Destroyer No.
67) was laid
down on 11 March
1915 at
Philadelphia by
the William
Cramp & Sons
Ship & Engine
Building Co.;
launched on I8
May 1916;
sponsored by
Miss Carrie
McIver Wilkes;
and commissioned
on 10 November
1916, Lt. Comdr.
Julius P.
Hellweg in
command.
Wilkes spent the winter
preceding America's entry into
World War I outfitting-first in
the Philadelphia Navy Yard and
later in the Torpedo Station
located at Newport, R.I.-and
conducting fleet maneuvers in
Cuban waters. She returned from
those operations at the height
of the crisis over the German
declaration of unrestricted
submarine warfare, arriving in
Norfolk on 7 March 1917. Just
one month later, on 6 April, the
United States joined the war
against the Central Powers. At
the end of April, the destroyer
escorted the French cruiser
Amiral Auge from Norfolk to New
York. On 15 June, she departed
New York in the screen of the
first American troop convoy to
voyage to Europe. She escorted
her charges into Saint Nazaire
on 26 June then headed for
Portsmouth, England, where she
celebrated Independence Day.
From there, she continued on to
her permanent European base,
Queenstown, Ireland, where she
arrived on the 6th.
Wilkes operated from the
Queenstown base for the duration
of World War I. For the most
part, she conducted
antisubmarine patrols and
escorted convoys bound for
England on the last leg of their
voyage. Occasionally, however,
she was called upon to shepherd
convoys into port at Brest and
Saint Nazaire, France. Although
her duties appeared routine,
they were strenuous. She spent
many arduous days at sea in the
stormy Atlantic with only hours
or, at most, a day or two in
port to provision. Though it
appears that she never saw
combat with German U-boats, she
did witness the results of their
depredations once when she
rescued 23 survivors of the
torpedoed British merchantman SS
Purley on 25 July 1917. She
continued her patrol and escort
duties until after Christmas
1918, over a month after the
cessation of hostilities. On 26
December, she departed
Queenstown and beaded for home.
On 7 January 1919, she arrived
in New York. Immediately upon
her return, Wilkes began
overhaul at New York. That
occupied her time until 1 May
when the destroyer embarked upon
her most noteworthy postwar
mission-duty as a picket ship
for the first transatlantic
flight. Only one of the four
Navy-Curtiss (NC) flying boats
slated for the mission actually
completed the flight. NG-4
reached the Azores at Horta on
17 May, made the hop to Ponta
Delgada on the 20th, and
departed the Azores for Lisbon,
Portugal, on the 27th. Wilkes
served as a picket on that
second leg of the flight as the
fourth ship in a line of 14
destroyers between the Azores
and the European continent. The
NC-4 reached her destination
that same day, and Wilkes' part
in the event was completed.
While NC-4 finished the third
and last leg of its flight-from
Lisbon to Plymouth, England on
30 and 31 May, Wilkes pointed
her bow homeward. The destroyer
reentered New York harbor on 4
June and resumed peacetime
operations along the Atlantic
coast. For the next 34 months,
she plied the waters off the
eastern seaboard in the spring,
summer, and fall. Late each
fall, she beaded south to
participate in fleet maneuvers
in Cuban waters, the Caribbean,
and the Gulf of Mexico. During
that time, she was based at
three different ports-Newport,
R.I.; New York, N.Y.; and
Charleston, S.C. On 12 April
1922, Wilkes entered the
Philadelphia Navy Yard where she
was placed out of commission on
5 June 1922.
Wilkes remained
inactive at Philadelphia for
over four years. In the summer
of 1926, she was turned over to
the Coast Guard, desperately in
need of additional ships to
suppress the illegal, but
lucrative, traffic in alcoholic
beverages spawned by
Prohibition. She was
commissioned a Coast Guard
destroyer at New London, Conn.,
on 23 August 1926, Lt. Comdr. M.
J. Ryan, USCG, in command. For
the next eight years, she
patrolled the east coast from
New England to Florida. In 1934,
the repeal of Prohibition
brought an end to the illicit
alcohol trade and the "Rum
Patrol" as well. Wilkes
completed her last Coast Guard
patrol at Philadelphia on 15
March 1934. There, she was
placed out of commission on 29
March and returned to the Navy.
On 5 July, her name was struck
from the Navy list. She was sold
on 22 August 1934 for scrapping
under the terms of the London
Treaty for the limitation of
naval armaments.
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