|
USS Reeves (DLG-24)
Ship's History
Source:
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
The second
Reeves
(DLG-24) was
laid down 1 July
1960 by the
Puget Sound
Naval Shipyard,
Bremerton,
Wash.; launched
12 May 1962;
sponsored by
Mrs. Joseph M.
Reeves, Jr.,
daughter-in-law
of Vice Adm. J.
M. Reeves; and
commissioned 15
May 1964, Capt.
Wynne A.
Stevens, Jr., in
command.
Following an extended trial and
shakedown period, Reeves,
a guided missile frigate
homeported at Long Beach,
underwent availability and
further training and, on 10
April 1965, departed California
for her first tour with the 7th
Fleet in the western Pacific.
Deployed for just over 6 months,
she operated primarily in
support of Allied operations in
the Republic of Vietnam, serving
as an AAW picket, first with TG
77.3 built on Oriskany
(CVA-34), then with TG 77.6
centered on Midway
(CVA-41). Returning to Long
Beach 3 November, she conducted
local operations for the
remainder of the year and into
1966. On 26 May, she got
underway for Japan and a 2-year
non-rotated tour with the 7th
Fleet. Arriving at her new
homeport, Yokosuka, 16 June, she
departed again in July and on
the 7th anchored at DaNang, RVN
to begin another tour off that
embattled coast. For the next 2
years, she regularly sailed
south from Japan for air-sea
rescue tours off Vietnam,
compiling a total of 493 days
underway, 312 of which were
spent in the Gulf of Tonkin.
Rotated back to the United
States in August 1968, Reeves
operated out of Long Beach for
the remainder of the year,
participating in local
operations and testing and
evaluating radar systems. With
the new year, 1969, however,
Reeves was ordered to Bath,
Maine, for overhaul and
modernization. Arriving 31
March, she was placed out of
commission, special, 10 April,
and the extensive modification
work was begun.
Reeves was recommissioned 29
August 1970 at Bath, Captain W.
S. Mayer, USN, in command. She
spent the period 10 September-19
November making the passage from
Bath to her new home port, Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii. The uncommonly
long duration of the passage was
due to frequent stops along the
way at various places for
additional work to be done and
by a three-week refresher
training period in the vicinity
of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. After
arriving at Pearl Harbor,
Reeves engaged in numerous
exercises and operations in the
area around Hawaii.
June
1971 found her steaming westward
for deployment in the Gulf of
Tonkin. Reeves returned
to Pearl Harbor 20 December 1971
and remained in the Hawaii-west
coast area until September 1972,
participating in various
operations and exercises,
notably a Midshipman cruise in
July. She departed Hawaii, 18
September, headed for her second
WestPac deployment since
recommissioning, arriving in
Subic Bay, Philippine Islands,
14 days later. After six months
in the western Pacific,
stationed off the coast of
Vietnam, Reeves sailed
into port at Pearl Harbor 17
March 1973.
Reclassified a guided missile
cruiser CG-24, on 30 June 1975,
Reeves was decommissioned
and stricken from the Navy
Register on 12 November 1993 at
Pearl Harbor.
Reeves
earned three battle stars for
Vietnam service.
|