The second Barry (DD-248) was launched 28 October 1920 by New
York Shipbuilding Co., Camden, N. J.; sponsored by Mrs. Shelton E. Martin,
great-grandniece of Commodore Barry, and commissioned with 50-percent
complement 28 December 1920, Lieutenant (junior grade) A. H. Bamberger, USNR,
in command.
Barry was held in reserve commission until 15 November 1921
when she was placed in full commission and reported to the Atlantic Fleet. In
October 1922 she departed Hampton Roads, Va., for the Mediterranean where she
served with the U. S. Naval Detachment in Turkish Waters until July 1923.
Returning to the east coast 10 August 1923 she joined Destroyer Squadron 14,
Scouting Fleet.
Early in 1925 Barry transited the Panama Canal and joined the
Battle Fleet for maneuvers in the Pacific. She returned to the east coast in
July 1925 and took up routine duties with the Scouting Fleet until February
1932, when she returned to the Pacific for fleet maneuvers. Upon completion of
maneuvers she returned to the Atlantic and was assigned to Rotating Reserve
Destroyer Squadron 19 at Norfolk, 20 December 1932.
Barry was recommissioned at Norfolk 20 June 1933 and on 1
July sailed for San Diego to join Destroyer Division 7, Scouting Force. She
served with the Scouting Force until May 1936 when she returned to the Atlantic
and for a short time served as flagship of Destroyer Division 8. Later in 1936
she again returned to the Pacific, joining Destroyer Division 22, Battle Force.
Between January and April 1938 she was in Hawaiian waters and on 21 May 1938
was transferred to Destroyer Division 21, in the Atlantic.
Barry joined Destroyer Division 67 in the Canal Zone 18
October 1940. Still on duty there when the United States entered World War II,
she was assigned escort and anti-submarine warfare missions against the German
submarine menace in the Atlantic. Early in 1942 Barry operated in the
Caribbean escorting convoys between Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and Panama; and
Curacao and Trinidad. Later in the year and throughout the first half of 1943
she performed escort duties in the South Atlantic, operating from Trinidad.
Between July and November 1943 she served as a unit of TG 21.14, a
hunter-killer group which operated along the North Atlantic convoy lanes. The
group conducted two sweeps (30 July-10 September and 28 September-8 November)
during which aircraft from Card (CVP-11) sank eight German submarines. Barry
and Goff (DD-247) rescued survivors of Borie (DD-215) after she
was mortally damaged 1 November while sinking the German submarine U-405
by ramming.
Barry underwent conversion to a high-speed transport at
Charleston Navy Yard, 31 December 1943-17 February 1944 (reclassified APD-29,
15 January 1944). Barry departed the east coast 13 April 1944 for
Mers-el-Kebir, Algeria, arriving 30 April. Practice amphibious landings were
carried out until 14 August when she sortied for the invasion of southern
France.
Between 15 ad 20 August 1944 she landed her troops on the Islands of
Levant and Port Cros, as well as on the mainland of France. Between August and
December Barry served on escort duty in the western Mediterranean and
then returned to the United States, arriving at Norfolk 23 December 1944. After
brief repairs, Barry departed for the pacific and arrived at Pearl
Harbor 24 March 1945. After training in the Hawaiian Islands, she arrived off
Okinawa 16 May and performed patrol and escort duties during the occupation of
the island.
On 25 May she was attacked by two kamikazes while on patrol 85 miles
northwest of Okinawa. One was shot down, but the other broke through the
barrage and struck
Barry below her bridge. Twenty-eight of her valiant crew
were wounded by shrapnel. The explosion of the plane's gasoline tanks and bomb
ignited fuel oil escaping from Barry's ruptured tanks. The fire threatened the
forward magazine which could not be reached to flood. At 1340, 40 minutes after
the plane struck, the commanding officer gave the order to abandon ship.
Barry's boats were lowered and all hands safely cleared the side.
At 1500 the water had risen until the forward magazine was covered,
minimizing the danger of explosion. A skeleton crew, together with parties from Sims
(APD-50) and Roper (APD-20), then reboarded
Barry and the last fires
were extinguished at 0630 the next day.
Barry was towed to the anchorage at Kerama Retto 26 May and found
too extensively damaged to warrant repair or salvage. Stripped of useful gear,
she was decommissioned 21 June 1945. Later in the day she was towed from the
harbor of Kerama Retto to be used as a decoy for the kamikazes. While under tow
she was attacked by Japanese suicide planes and sunk along with her escort, LSM-59.
Barry received the Presidential Unit Citation as a unit of TG 21.14
and four battle stars for her actions in the Atlantic and Pacific during World
War II.