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Hull Number: DD-357

Launch Date: 04/18/1936

Commissioned Date: 11/25/1936

Decommissioned Date: 10/15/1945

Voice Call Sign: BANGTAIL


Class: PORTER

PORTER Class

Data for USS Selfridge (DD-357) as of 1945


Length Overall: 381' 1"

Beam: 36' 11"

Draft: 13' 9"

Standard Displacement: 1,850 tons

Full Load Displacement: 2,840 tons

Fuel capacity: 4,061 barrels

Armament:

Five 5″/38 caliber guns
Two 40mm twin anti-aircraft mounts
One 40mm quadruple anti-aircraft mounts
Two 21″ quadruple torpedo tubes

Complement:

16 Officers
278 Enlisted

Propulsion:

4 Boilers
2 New York Shipbuilding Turbines: 50,000 horsepowe

Highest speed on trials: 36.4 knots

Namesake: THOMAS O. SELFRIDGE, JR AND SR

THOMAS O. SELFRIDGE, JR AND SR

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, September 2015

Thomas O. Selfridge was born on 24 April 1804 and was appointed midshipman on 1 January 1818. Promoted to Lieutenant in 1827, he served in the East India, Mediterranean, and Pacific squadrons. He took command of sloop, Dale, in May 1847 and participated in the capture of Mazatlan and Guaymas. Badly wounded in the latter engagement, he was invalided home in June 1848. He was subsequently assigned to the Boston Navy Yard, where he remained until 1861. He commanded Mississippi, flagship of the Gulf Squadron, on blockade duty off Mobile and off the passes of the Mississippi. His old wound forced him to relinquish his command in February 1862, and he served ashore until retiring in 1866. Rear Admiral Selfridge died in Waverly, Mass., on 15 October 1902.

Thomas O. Selfridge, Jr., son of the above, was born in Charlestown, Mass., on 6 February 1836 and graduated from the Naval Academy in 1854. At the beginning of the Civil War, he helped with efforts to destroy the untenable Norfolk Navy Yard; and he then escaped from that burning and beleaguered base in Cumberland, helping to save the sloop of war for the Union Navy. He participated in the capture of the Hatteras forts and was on board Cumberland on 8 March 1862 when she was sunk by Confederate ironclad, Virginia. He then briefly commanded Monitor, after Lt. Worden was wounded; and commanded Alligator, an experimental submarine, in testing operations based at the Washington Navy Yard.

In August, he joined the Mississippi Squadron, and subsequently commanded Cairo and Conestoga when those ships were sunk in action. Late in the war, he returned to the Atlantic where he commanded Huron in the attacks on Fort Fisher; and he participated in the ensuing bombardment of Fort Anderson and the capture of Wilmington. His postwar service included command of Nipsic, Enterprise, and Omaha, the last two on the Asiatic Station, and duty as Commander in Chief of the European Squadron from 1895 to 1898. He retired on 6 February 1898 and died on 4 February 1924.

DD-357 was named for both officers.


Disposition:

Stricken 11/1/1945. Sold 12/20/1946 for $11,041.28 to George H. Nutman, Brooklyn, N.Y. Scrapped.


A Tin Can Sailors Destroyer History

USS SELFRIDGE DD-357

The Tin Can Sailor, October 1996

The second PORTER-class destroyer, USS SELFRIDGE, was laid down on the same day and in the same yard as the class leader, USS PORTER. DD-357 took more than a year longer to complete; DD-357 would not be launched until 1936, though she would be commissioned in the same year.

Like PORTER, SELFRIDGE was named for a historic navy family. The senior Selfridge served with distinction in the War with Mexico and commanded USS MISSISSIPPI, a steam-powered sailing sloop which was the flagship of the gulf Blockading Squadron during the Civil War. The younger Selfridge commanded a number of vessels during the Civil War, including USS ALLIGATOR, arguably one of the U.S. Navy’s first submarines. Immediately prior to retirement, Thomas O. Selfridge, Jr. had served as Commander-in-Chief of the European Squadron.

Another destroyer, DD-320, had been named for Thomas 0. Selfridge, Sr.; the Navy Department made a point of naming the new destroyer for both renowned officers.

USS SELFRIDGE conducted her shakedown cruise in the Mediterranean as part of a show of naval might while Spain was torn by a civil war and dictators rising in Germany and Italy had ratified the Rome-Berlin axis. Throughout the spring and summer of 1917, the big flotilla leader was assigned to escort President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on his frequent yachting expeditions. By the end of the year, however, she had been transferred to the Pacific Fleet.

DD-357 was firing at the raiders within five minutes of the beginning of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor; she sortied from the devastated base three hours later, looking for the enemy. For the next several days, she and her sisters protected Hawaii from an invasion the islanders expected momentarily.

For the first several months of 1942, SELFRIDGE convoyed needed supplies to embattled outposts across the Pacific. The destroyer’s assignment to Task Group 62.6 led her into the thick of action off Guadalcanal. SELFRIDGE was everywhere. She blasted enemy tankers with that prevented a Japanese landing on the north coast of Australia, and generally appeared exactly where she was needed. In the slug-fest off Vella Lavella, she sustained serious damage from an encounter with six Japanese destroyers and three destroyer-transports. Sixty of DD-357’s crew were casualties.

Extensive repairs, which included the replacement of her bow, allowed the valiant destroyer to return to the action in time for operations in the Marianas in 1944. SELFRIDGE alternated between shore bombardment and screening assault forces over the next several weeks. She had been extensively rebuilt. Gone were two of her massive gun houses, replaced by a single 5″ mount and numerous anti-aircraft mounts. Still, given the increased ferocity of Japanese air attacks, the Navy Department decided that SELFRIDGE might be better utilized in the Atlantic. DD-357 transferred to Task Force 65 and served as the force flagship in conveying duties between the East Coast and North African ports. Her last conveying mission was completed on June 7, 1945. After training exercises off the Maine coast, she returned to New York for decommissioning. On November 1, 1945, SELFRIDGE was stricken from the Navy list. She was scrapped in October 1947.

USS SELFRIDGE DD-357 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, September 2015

The second Selfridge (DD-357) was laid down on 18 December 1933 by the New York Shipbuilding Corp., Camden, N.J.; launched on 18 April 1936; sponsored by Mrs. Duncan I. Selfridge; and commissioned on 25 November 1936, Comdr. H.D. Clarke in command.

Commissioned just after the proclamation of the Rome-Berlin Axis and the beginning of the siege of Madrid, Selfridge conducted her shakedown cruise in the Mediterranean in January and February 1937 and returned to the east coast, via the Caribbean, in March. From April into August, she underwent post- shakedown overhaul at, and conducted training exercises out of Philadelphia. In September, Presidential escort duties took her to Poughkeepsie, N.Y.; and, in October, she proceeded to Norfolk, whence she got underway for the Panama Canal Zone and duty with the Battle Force in the Pacific. Diverted back to Norfolk for another Presidential escort mission in early November, she got underway again for the west coast on 9 December.

Selfridge transited the Panama Canal and joined the Battle Force as flagship of Destroyer Squadron (Des-Ron) 4 on 13 December and reached San Diego on the 22d. Except for fleet problems and exercises, she remained in the southern California area for the next two years. In 1940, she was reassigned to Pearl Harbor, whence she operated until after the Japanese attack on 7 December 1941. That day, Selfridge, having just completed an escort run from Palmyra Island, was moored in berth X-9. Within five minutes of the start of hostilities, Selfridge’s guns were firing on the enemy planes. By 1300, manned by a mixed crew from various ships, she was underway and soon thereafter joined other ships in patrolling off Oahu.

During the remainder of the month, Selfridge patrolled the Hawaiian area and, screening Saratoga, participated in the abortive attempt to reinforce Wake Island. In January 1942, she continued operations in the Saratoga group until that carrier was torpedoed some 500 miles southwest of Oahu on the 11th. Selfridge then screened the carrier back to Pearl Harbor. Exercises and patrols in the Hawaiian area followed until 20 January when she assumed escort duty for a merchant ship on a Canton Island run. After arriving at Canton on the 27th, she patrolled off the island until the merchant ship completed offloading, then started back to Hawaii. En route, on the 30th, Selfridge depth charged and probably damaged an enemy submarine.

Selfridge returned to Pearl Harbor on 6 February and was underway again on the 9th to escort Saratoga to Bremerton for permanent repairs. In mid-March, she returned to Hawaii in the screen of a convoy and, by the end of the month, had escorted more supplies to Canton. In April, she carried Marine Corps personnel and mail to Palmyra and Christmas islands, then proceeded to Bora Bora in the Society Islands, to rendezvous with and escort convoys carrying reinforcements to the Samoan and Tonga groups. On 21 May, she departed the latter group for the New Hebrides and Australia; where, by the end of the month, she had commenced coastal escort work. A unit of TF 44, she remained in Australian waters into July; then, with others of the force, proceeded to the Fiji Islands to rehearse for Operation “Watchtower,” the assault and occupation of Guadalcanal and Tulagi.

Soon after 0120 on 7 August, TF 44, now designated TG 62.6, the screening group for the transports, arrived in the Guadalcanal area. At 0620, Selfridge opened fire on a small gasoline carrier entering Tulagi harbor. A few hours later, the transports moved in toward the beaches. At 1320, the Japanese sent in a high level bombing attack. Shortly thereafter, they followed that strike with a dive bomber attack. On the 8th, Selfridge continued to screen the transports and, after a noon bombing attack, picked up two Japanese airmen. On the morning of the 9th, she assisted survivors of the Battle of Savo Island and, with Ellet, sank the badly-damaged Australian cruiser, Canberra; then, toward evening, departed the area to escort the transports to Noumea.

For the remainder of the month, the Australian group (TF-44) screened the carriers of the air support group. On the 31st, the ships headed back to Brisbane; and, for the next nine months, Selfridge continued to operate with that force as it plied the waters of the Coral Sea to prevent a Japanese landing at Port Moresby and to cover Allied shipping to the Papuan peninsula.

In May, Selfridge was reassigned to the 3d Fleet. On the 12th, she arrived at Noumea. Through the summer, she operated with cruisers of TF 36, later TF 37, and participated in exercises with TF’s 38, 39, and 34. In late September, as a unit of the 3d Fleet’s amphibious force, she escorted an LST convoy to Vella Layella, then commenced nighttime patrols up -the Slot- to intercept Japanese shipping.

On the night of 6 October, Selfridge, O’Bannon, and Chevalier intercepted an enemy force of six destroyers, three destroyer transports, and smaller armed craft some 12 miles off Marquana Bay as it attempted to evacuate land forces from Vella Lavella. In the ensuing Battle of Vella Lavella, Chevalier was torpedoed and damaged beyond repair. She was sunk on the 7th by an American torpedo. Selfridge and O’Bannon were both heavily damaged; Selfridge by an enemy torpedo, O’Bannon by enemy action compounded by collision with Chevalier just after the latter had gone dead in the water.

Personnel casualties on board Selfridge amounted to 13 killed, 11 wounded, and 36 missing.

Temporary repairs to Selfridge were made at Purvis Bay and at Noumea. Permanent repairs, including the installation of a new bow, were made at Mare Island; and, after refresher training out of San Diego, she returned to Pearl Harbor on 10 May 1944 in time to join the forces staging for the invasion of the Marianas. Initially assigned to TG 50.11, she joined TF 58, the fast carrier force, at Majuro in early June; and, on the 11th, screened Bunker Hill as sweeps were conducted over Guam. On the 13th, she participated in a shore bombardment of Saipan to cover minesweeping operations off that target island; then shifted to night harassing fire. On the 14th, she joined the fire support unit; and, on the 15th, screened the transport area as the assault troops landed on Saipan. From then to the 17th, she rotated between daytime screening activities and nightime harassment duty. On the latter date, word of a Japanese force moving in from the Philippines reached the assault force, and Selfridge rejoined TF 58 and took station as the linking vessel between TG’s 58.7 and 58.3. On the 19th, the Battle of the Philippine Sea raged; but none of the enemy’s aircraft came within range of Selfridge’s guns. On the 20th and 21st, the Japanese were chased westward. On the 24th, Selfridge rejoined the transport screen off Saipan; and, on the 26th, resumed fire support duties.

Selfridge departed Saipan on 11 July; and, screening the transports, arrived at Eniwetok on the 15th. Three days later, she was underway again to return to the Marianas with reinforcements for the Guam assault. She arrived off Agat on the 22d, the day after the initial assault and, for the next three weeks, provided screening and fire support services and conducted anti-boat and barge patrols. On 10 August, she sailed for Eniwetok, whence, she returned to Pearl Harbor. On 21 August, she received orders back to the Atlantic.

Transiting the Panama Canal on 7 September, Selfridge proceeded to New York for an abbreviated overhaul after which she joined TF 65; and, serving as flagship, commenced transatlantic escort duty for convoys plying between the east coast and Tunisia. Continuing that duty until after the fall of Germany in May 1945, she completed her last run at New York on 7 June. Upkeep and training exercises in the Caribbean and off the Maine coast took her through August; and, on 15 September, she returned to New York to prepare for inactivation.

Decommissioned on 15 October 1945, Selfridge was struck from the Navy list on 1 November 1945; sold to George H. Nutman, Inc., Brooklyn, N.Y.; removed from Navy custody on 20 December 1946; and scrapped in October 1947.

Selfridge earned four battle stars during World War II.