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USS Shaw (DD-68)
Ship's History
Source:
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships (Published
1981)
The first Shaw
(DD-68) was laid
down on 7
February 1916 by
the Mare Island
Navy Yard;
launched on 9
December 1916;
sponsored by
Mrs. Virginia
Kemper Lynch
Millard; and
commissioned on
9 April 1917,
Lt. Comdr.
Milton S. Davis
in command.
Shaw sailed from Mare Island on
25 May 1917 and arrived at New
York on 10 June 1917 ready for
distant service. She sailed a
week later as one of the Escort
of Group 4 of the Expeditionary
Force from the United States to
France. On 26 June, she fueled
at sea from a tanker, and the
convoy arrived at Quiberon Bay,
France, on 1 July. On the 4th,
she sailed from St. Nazaire and
arrived at Queenstown, Ireland,
the next day. On 10 July, she
began patrol and convoy escort
duty based on Queenstown,
convoying eastbound and
westbound ships through the
submarine danger zone around the
British Isles, for the most part
without incident. On 1 July
1918, she received an SOS from
the torpedoed American
transport, USS Covington, and
rushed to her aid. On arrival,
she found that Covington's
survivors had been removed and
the ship had been taken under
tow. But, the crippled transport
sank later in the day. On 25
September, a ship in Shaw's
convoy was attacked by a
submarine but not damaged.
Shaw's own ordeal came on 9
October 1918. While escorting
the giant British transport,
Aquitania, Shaw's rudder jammed
just as she was completing the
right leg of a zigzag, leaving
her headed directly towards the
transport. A moment later,
Aquitania struck Shaw, cutting
off 90 feet of the destroyer's
bow, mangling her bridge and
setting her on fire. Shaw's crew
heroically brought her damage
under control, and a skeleton
crew of 21 men took the wreck 40
miles into port under her own
power.
Shaw remained under repair at
Portsmouth, England, until 29
May 1919 when she sailed for the
United States. She arrived at
New York on 17 June 1919 and
moved to the Philadelphia Navy
Yard on 2 October where she
joined the reserve destroyer
group and was decommissioned on
21 June 1922.
Shaw was struck
from the Navy list on 25 March
1926 and transferred to the
Coast Guard the same day. She
was returned to the Navy by the
Coast Guard and reinstated on
the Navy list effective 30 June
1933. Her name was canceled on 1
November 1933 for assignment to
a new destroyer, and the ship
was struck again on 5 July 1934
and sold on 22 August 1934 for
scrapping to Michael Flynn, Inc,
Brooklyn, N.Y.
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