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Hull Number: DD-392

Launch Date: 05/06/1937

Commissioned Date: 09/22/1937

Decommissioned Date: 11/08/1945


Class: BAGLEY

BAGLEY Class

Data for USS Bagley (DD-386) as of 1945


Length Overall: 341' 4"

Beam: 35' 6"

Draft: 13' 1"

Standard Displacement: 1,500 tons

Full Load Displacement: 2,325 tons

Fuel capacity: 3,452 barrels

Armament:

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

Complement:

16 Officers
235 Enlisted

Propulsion:

4 Boilers
2 General Electric Turbines: 49,000 horsepower

Highest speed on trials: 35.9 knots

Namesake: DANIEL TODD PATTERSON

DANIEL TODD PATTERSON

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, March 2019

Daniel Todd Patterson was born on Long Island, N.Y., on 6 March 1786. John Patterson, his father, emigrated from Ireland to America in the 1750s and was the younger brother of Walter Patterson, the first Royal Governor of Prince Edward Island. His mother Catherine (née Livingston) was the daughter of Robert Livingston. As acting midshipman, he joined the sloop of war Delaware on 11 June 1799, to cruise against French privateers and warships in the West Indies to August 1800. He was appointed a midshipman on 20 August 1800, though his warrant was subsequently altered to date from 11 June 1799, his initial posting as acting midshipman. On the close of the Quasi-War with France, he resumed nautical studies, and then served blockade duty off Tripoli in the frigates Constellation and Philadelphia. Captured when Philadelphia grounded and surrendered on 13 October 1803, he remained a captive of the Barbary pirates until the American victory over Tripoli in 1805. Upon returning home, he spent much of his following years on station at New Orleans where he took command after the outbreak of the War of 1812.

On 16 September 1814, Patterson raided the base of the pirate Jean Lafitte at Barataria Bay, La., capturing six schooners and other small craft. That same month, he refused Andrew Jackson’s request to send his few ships to Mobile Bay where Patterson knew they would be bottled up by a superior British fleet. Foreseeing British designs against New Orleans almost two months before their attack, Patterson, not Jackson, was the first to prepare to defend the city. The victory resulted as much from his foresight and preparations as from Jackson’s generalship. His flotilla delayed the enemy until reinforcements arrived and then provided crucial naval gunfire support in defense of the entrenchments from which Jackson was never driven. Patterson, highly commended by Jackson, received a note of thanks from Congress and was promoted to captain on 28 February 1815.

Patterson remained on the southern stations until 1824, when he became fleet captain and commanding officer of the flagship Constitution in Commodore John Rodgers’ Mediterranean Squadron. Returning home in 1828, he was appointed one of the three Navy commissioners. Later, he commanded the Mediterranean Squadron (1832-1836) and then became commandant of the Washington Navy Yard in 1836, a position of responsibility he held until his death at Wilmington, N.J., on 25 August 1839. Patterson was interred at the Congressional Cemetery of Washington, D.C.


Disposition:

Stricken 2/25/1947. Sold for scrap 8/18/1947


A Tin Can Sailors Destroyer History

USS PATTERSON DD-392

The Tin Can Sailor, April 1997

USS PATTERSON was one of two BAGLEY class destroyers built by the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, Washington. She was laid down in July 1935 and launched two years later. Commissioned four months later, DD- 392 was ready for service.

USS PATTERSON was named for Daniel Todd Patterson, who won fame for his service during the War of 1812. In command at New Orleans in the early part of the Nineteenth Century, Patterson alternated between fighting the pirate Jean Lafitte and defending the city against British invasion in the War of 1812. He died while still in a commanding role, as superintendent of the Washington Navy Yard.

Following a short shakedown period, PATTERSON was assigned to operations in the Pacific in the period immediately before World War II. DD-392 was moored in Pearl Harbor at the time of the Japanese attack and was credited with shooting down one aircraft before the destroyer cleared the harbor to protect the remains of the Pacific fleet from submarine attack.

PATTERSON transited to the Southwest Pacific for service around Guadalcanal in the early days of August 1942. PATTERSON would be the destroyer to sound the alarm as seven Japanese cruisers and one destroyer steamed into the waters around Savo Island. They came straight at the single-stacker, angling at the cruisers the destroyer was screening. The Australian cruiser HMAS CANBERRA was hit. PATTERSON began blasting away, drawing fire to herself from the marauding cruisers. Accurate enemy fire knocked out the destroyer’s number 4 gun, killing ten. Still she fought on. Skillfully launching a torpedo salvo of her own, supported by as much firepower as the destroyer could muster, DD-392 helped to delay the attacking forces and deny access to the cluster of transports the Japanese had as a major target. In that busy night, four Allied cruisers were lost but the anchorage was safe. Guadalcanal would remain in Marine hands. After escorting HMAS AUSTRALIA to the repair yards in Brisbane, PATTERSON took up convoy duties in the area for almost a year.

Even convoy duty did not prove uneventful for PATTERSON’s crew. DD3-92 provided anti-aircraft cover for landing forces, gunfire support for raiding parties; she even suffered a collision that almost severed her bow. Thirteen casualties were recorded.

Like her sisters, she spent the remainder of the war escorting fast carrier task forces in the crucial battles in the Central Pacific and around the Philippines. As part of a carrier screen, she fought off kamikazes, shielded the flat tops from submarines, and provided plane guard services.

At the end of the war, she was still providing escort services, this time for fast battleships.

PATTERSON arrived at the New York Naval Shipyard in October 1945, to be decommissioned the following month. She was sold for scrapping to the Northern Metals Company an August 18, 1947.

USS PATTERSON DD-392 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, March 2019

The second Patterson (DD–392) was laid down 23 July 1933 at Bremerton, Wash., by the Puget Sound Navy Yard; launched on 6 May 1937; sponsored by Miss Elizabeth P. Patterson; and commissioned on 22 September 1937, Cmdr. Francis T. Spellman in command.

Patterson departed Puget Sound Navy Yard 26 November 1937, calling at San Francisco en route to Pearl Harbor, arriving 7 December. She returned to Puget Sound 22 December, trained in coastal waters until 31 March 1938, then cruised to Hawaii. She arrived at San Pedro from Hawaii 28 April for operations along the western seaboard and combined fleet maneuvers that once took her through the Panama Canal and into the Caribbean Sea. On 3 June 1940 she set course to patrol in the Hawaiian Sea Frontier area from Pearl Harbor to Midway and Palmyra. This duty continued for the next 18 months except for periods on the west coast for overhaul and training.

Patterson was moored at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese carrier-based planes attacked 7 December 1941. Her gunners sped to battle stations, opened fire, and blasted one enemy plane out of the sky. Within an hour the destroyer men were searching for possible enemy submarines off the harbor entrance.

Patterson patrolled the Hawaiian Sea Frontier in the screen of aircraft carrier Saratoga without finding trace of the enemy. On 28 December 1941, returning from patrol, she rescued 19 survivors of merchant ship Marimi adrift for several days after having been torpedoed by a Japanese submarine. In the following weeks, her duties included convoy of reinforcements for the garrison on Canton Island, Phoenix Group, and hasty voyage repairs at Pearl Harbor. She departed 5 February 1942 bound in the screen of cruiser Pensacola for rendezvous with the Lexington carrier task group in the southwest Pacific. She rescued a Lexington pilot as air strikes were launched on the Japanese stronghold at Rabaul, New Britain, 20 February. The carriers rained devastation on the Japanese bases at Lae and Salamaua, New Guinea, 10 March, then proceeded to Pearl Harbor.

Patterson sailed from Pearl Harbor 7 April 1942 for overhaul in the Mare Island Naval Shipyard. She returned to Pearl Harbor 17 May and was underway five days later, enroute by way of Noumea, New Caledonia, to join Rear Adm. Richmond K. Turner’s Expeditionary Task Force preparing in Australia for the invasion of the Solomons. On 22 June she got underway from Brisbane for final staging and amphibious warfare rehearsals in the Fiji Islands, then set course in the screen of attack transports carrying Marines to the Solomon Islands.

Patterson helped guard attack transports 7 August 1942 as they landed Marines on Guadalcanal, later opening fire to help repel more than twenty attacking horizontal bombers. Several enemy planes fell in flames. Then Japanese torpedo planes came in and hit destroyer Mugford. On 8 August Patterson gunners shot down four enemy torpedo planes while protecting the transports, but destroyer Jarvis and transport George F. Elliot were lost.

As Patterson fought off aerial raiders, seven enemy cruisers and a destroyer raced down the slot of water formed by the Solomon Islands Chain and stretching southward from the Japanese base at Rabaul. By midnight of 8 August, the Japanese task force was only 35 Miles from Savo Island, having been undetected since early morning.

Between Savo Island and Florida Island were three American cruisers and two destroyers. Below Florida Island were light cruisers San Juan, HMAS Hobart, and two destroyers. Driving rain slashed the waters between the northern force and ships of Patterson’s southern force.

The Japanese task force slipped past two picket destroyers, entered Savo Sound, and ran head-on into destroyer Patterson whose patrol task group included the Australian cruisers Australia and Canberra, cruiser Chicago and destroyer Bagley. At 0143, 9 August, Patterson radioed the alarm, “Warning! Warning! Strange ships entering the harbor!” But Japanese cruisers had already launched torpedoes and opened gunfire, disabling Canberra.

Patterson repeated her warning by blinker and opened up her guns. She received a 5-inch return salvo from the enemy that knocked out her Number 4 gun, killed 10 men, injured eight others, and damaged the deck and the Number 3 gun.

Patterson’s gunners continued shooting until the enemy, flinging torpedoes, split formation, and raced northeast in a pincer movement on the northern force of three cruisers. Cruisers Vincennes, Astoria and Quincy were lost. The Japanese now sped northward for return to Rabaul, New Britain catching destroyer Ralph Talbot in her path. Ralph Talbot fought off the attack until she took cover in a rain-squall. The Japanese suffered only minor damage to four war-ships in the Battle of Savo Island that cost the Allies four cruisers, and severely damaged cruiser Chicago and destroyer Ralph Talbot.

Patterson assisted HMAS Australia and HMAS Canberra and took part in rescue work before proceeding to Noumea, New Caledonia, arriving 14 August. Patterson immediately put to sea with the Saratoga carrier task group to help guard the approaches to Guadalcanal, until a Japanese submarine damaged Saratoga and she returned to Pearl Harbor.

Patterson helped guard HMAS Australia to Brisbane, arriving 3 September. She performed patrol and escort duty off the Great Barrier Reef with an Australian-American force of cruisers and destroyers. She rescued 19 survivors of the torpedoed SS Fingal 5 May 1943, then escorted merchantman SS Pennant to Noumea, New Caledonia, She arrived 13 May to patrol approaches to Guadalcanal in the screen of carriers Saratoga and HMS Victorious. This duty was followed by innumerable convoy escort and patrol missions ranging from Guadalcanal south to Australian ports, and to the South Pacific island bases in the New Hebrides Islands and Noumea, New Caledonia. The morning of 25 July, she joined four other destroyers in bombarding Lambeti Plantation, near the Munda air strip on New Georgia Island.

The evening of 25 August Patterson was helping guard a convoy bound from the New Hebrides Islands toward the lower Solomons. A warning pip on her radar screen brought her into action against a diving Japanese submarine. Her sonar picked up the underwater enemy and depth charge patterns exploded in the sea. Patterson sent her last depth charge barrage on its way, and five minutes later she was rewarded by a deep underseas boom, presumably silencing the enemy.

Patterson next escorted troop transports from Noumea, New Caledonia, to the New Hebrides, patrolled off Guadalcanal out of Purvis Bay, Florida, Solomon Islands. The night of 24 September she helped guard an amphibious landing convoy to Vella Lavella Island, then departed to escort high speed transports to Rendova Island. She soon turned back to Vella Lavella Island at full speed, having received word that unloading tank landing craft there were under enemy air attack. The attack had ceased by the time she reached the scene but she launched motor whaleboats with medical and rescue parties to aid the wounded.

The night of 29-30 September Patterson proceeded up the slot to destroy enemy barge traffic. Destroyer McCalla, after ripping into radar contacts with gunfire, attempted to rejoin the destroyer task unit formation, but suffered a steering casualty and unavoidably collided into the port bow of Patterson. Three men in Patterson were killed and ten injured by the force of the collision that almost severed Patterson’s bow. The broken section parted as she slowly proceeded towards base, breaking off just forward of gun mount No. 1. Both ships entered Purvis Bay for emergency repairs, thence to Espiritu Santo, New Hebrides Islands where Patterson received a false bow. On 6 December she put to sea, touching the Samoan and Hawaiian Islands enroute to the Mare Island Naval Shipyard, arriving 22 December.

Patterson stood out of San Francisco Bay 8 March 1944 with a convoy that entered Pearl Harbor 15 March. Training with fast attack carriers in Hawaiian waters was followed by similar battle rehearsals out of Marshall Island ports in preparation for the Marianas Campaign. On 6 June Patterson departed Majuro Atoll enroute to Saipan with the Bunker Hill Carrier Task Group. She joined in the preinvasion bombardment of Saipan, then guarded troop transports sending in assault troops for the initial invasion of Saipan 15 June. On approach of the Japanese Mobile Fleet, she became a unit of the anti-aircraft screen around the Fast Carrier Task Force whose pilots shot down hundreds of Japanese carrier-based planes, in a series of actions known as the “Great Marianas Turkey Shoot,” before they could reach the American Fleet.

The few enemy planes that managed to get past the American carrier pilots met curtains of anti-aircraft fire from Patterson and her sister ships. The destroyer helped guard American attack carriers through 21 June as they pursued the fleeing Japanese fleet, decisively defeated in the Battle of the Philippine Sea, then turned back to help protect the approaches to Saipan. She provided night illumination fire for advancing troops on Saipan, then bombarded enemy targets on nearby Tinian Island.

Bombardment support and anti-submarine patrol continued off Saipan and Tinian until 9 August. Patterson then called briefly at Apra Harbor, Guam, enroute to Eniwetok Atoll in the Marshalls. There, she joined the screen of fast carriers that struck hard at enemy bases on Iwo Jima and in the Western Caroline Islands. She participated in the bombardment of Yap Island 8 September. From there she proceeded to the Palau Islands to guard fast carriers giving direct support to the landing troops there until 9 October.

After replenishment at Manus, Admiralty Islands, Patterson made a high-speed run with attack carriers to blast enemy defenses on Okinawa and the entire Kerama Retto chain. From there the fast carrier task forces approached the Philippines to rain destruction on enemy air installations in Northern Luzon, thence proceeded to the coast of Formosa for air strikes launched 12 October. That evening and through the following day, Patterson helped fight off and destroy enemy aerial raiders that approached her carrier task group.

From Formosa, the carriers sped back to Luzon where Patterson helped drive off attacking enemy dive bombers that made a near miss on carrier Franklin. On 20 October her carrier task group gave direct air support to troops landing at Leyte to begin the liberation of the Philippine Islands. As the Japanese Fleet approached the Philippines in a three-pronged attack, 24-25 October, her carrier task force hit hard at the Japanese Southern Force of battleships, cruisers, and destroyers, struck at the even more powerful Japanese Central Force aiming at the Central Philippines, then raced north to destroy the Japanese decoy carrier task force in the Battle of Cape Enganno, 25 October. She joined in the pursuit of enemy fleet units fleeing the Battle for Leyte Gulf, then helped fight off the suicide attacks of Japanese kamikaze aircraft 30 October. She rescued men blown into the water from the damaged carriers Franklin and Belleau Wood, escorting the damaged carriers safely to Ulithi in the Caroline Islands, arriving 3 November.

Patterson helped protect attack carriers providing air cover to convoys approaching the Philippines until 9 December. She then proceeded independently to Kossol Roads, Palau Islands. There, she joined the screen of an escort carrier-bombardment task group that sailed 10 December to provide heavy gunfire support and air cover for the initial landings on Mindoro Island. For seven days the destroyer remained in the Sulu Sea, fighting off frequent suicide attacks of enemy aerial raiders that closed her carrier task group formation. There was a brief replenishment at Palau before Patterson again sailed with escort aircraft carriers, this time to support the invasion landings at Lingayen Gulf, Luzon, P.I. She rescued survivors of the kamikaze-damaged escort carrier Ommoney Bay 4 January 1945, and survivors of destroyer Stafford and escort carrier Manila Bay the following day. She shot down a suicide plane diving on carrier Salamaua 13 January, remaining on guard for carriers in support of the Lingayen Gulf invasion landings until the 17th. She then proceeded to Ulithi in the Carolines to prepare for the impending invasion of Iwo Jima.

Patterson departed Ulithi 10 February for final battle rehearsals and staging in the Marianas, thence in the screen of escort carriers covering the amphibous expeditionary troops for the landings on Iwo Jima, 19 February. She rescued 106 survivors of the escort carrier Bismarck Sea, sunk by enemy torpedo plane attacks off Iwo Jima 21 February. The fighting destroyer remained off Iwo Jima with escort carriers until 10 March, then set course for Ulithi to prepare for the capture and occupation of Okinawa, the “last stepping stone” to Japan.

Patterson sailed from Ulithi the morning of 21 March, enroute with a support unit of seven escort aircraft carriers that gave direct cover to troops storming ashore at Okinawa 1 April. She shot down an enemy suicide plane that attacked escort carrier Lunga Point 2 April and continued to guard the escort carriers as they pounded enemy troop concentrations and installations through 29 April. When her sonar gear became inoperative 29 April, she set course for repairs at Apra Harbor, Guam. She put to sea from Apra Harbor 4 June, escorting battleship New Mexico as far as Leyte in the Philippines, There she joined a troop and supply reinforcement convoy bound to Kerama Retto. By 12 June she had rejoined the escort carriers giving direct support to troops until the bitter contest for Okinawa was won.

Patterson returned to Leyte for repairs then headed for Saipan, Mariana Islands. This was her base for escort-patrol missions reaching to Okinawa, Guam, and towards the Marshalls until the close of hostilities with Japan. On 16 August she departed Saipan as escort for battleship New Jersey bound to Manila, thence to Buckner Bay, Okinawa. She departed Buckner Bay 8 September, touching Saipan, Eniwetok, and Pearl Harbor, enroute to San Diego, Calif., arriving 26 September. The following day she got underway to transit the Panama Canal for the eastern seaboard. She arrived in the New York Naval Shipyard 11 October and decommissioned there 8 November 1945. She remained in reserve until her name was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 25 February 1947. She was sold for scrapping on 18 August 1947 to the Northern Metals Co., Philadelphia, Pa.

Patterson received 13 battle stars for World War II service.