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Hull Number: DD-460

Launch Date: 11/29/1941

Commissioned Date: 04/30/1942

Decommissioned Date: 04/11/1946

Call Sign: NBRF


Class: BENSON

BENSON Class

Data for USS Benson (DD-421) as of 1945


Length Overall: 347' 10"

Beam: 36' 1"

Draft: 13' 6"

Standard Displacement: 1,620 tons

Full Load Displacement: 2,525 tons

Fuel capacity: 2,912 barrels

Armament:

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

Complement:

16 Officers
260 Enlisted

Propulsion:

4 Boilers
2 Bethlehem Turbines: 47,000 horsepower

Highest speed on trials: 36.7 knots

Namesake: SELIM E. WOODWORTH

SELIM E. WOODWORTH

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016

Selim E. Woodworth was born circa the year 1824 in New York State. Appointed a midshipman on 16 June 1838, he was ordered to duty with the Wilkes Exploring Expedition. However, the order was sent to Norfolk and was not forwarded to him. When he finally reported in response to a duplicate order, the expedition had already sailed. As a result, he was sent on 20 November to the Mediterranean for duty in the ship of the line Ohio. On 3 August, he was detached from Ohio for a three-month leave; he requested and received an additional leave of three months to visit Milano, Italy. On 24 December, Woodworth was ordered to Falmouth, fitting out at New York.

While he was serving in Falmouth, news reached him at Pensacola, Fla., of the death of his father. He obtained leave, returned to New York, and became attached to the receiving ship, North Carolina. He next served on Lawrence in September before entering the Naval School in Philadelphia on the 29th of that month. On 20 May 1844, Selim Woodworth was warranted a passed midshipman. After a leave of six months, he reported to the new sloop-of-war Jamestown and served in her on the coast of Africa, helping to suppress the slave trade. He was transferred to Truxtun, detached on 24 November 1845, and granted a three-month leave.

At that time, Woodworth requested permission to cross the United States to join his squadron on the Pacific Coast. He arrived at West Port, Missouri, where he joined a party consisting of approximately 1,800 persons, including women and children, which was to travel in 560 wagons drawn by oxen. After a long and difficult journey across the North American continent, once long interrupted when he left the main party to lead an expedition to rescue a group of Americans who were in grave distress in the Rocky Mountains, Woodworth reported on board sloop-of-war Warren at Monterey Bay, Calif., on 17 May 1847. On 8 October, he requested a leave of absence in order to make a trip across the southern part of South America with permission to join the squadron on the coast of Brazil or in the United States. Permission was to be granted whenever he could be spared. He left Warren on 16 February 1848 to take command of the bark Anita. From 5 June 1848 until 1850, naval registers carry him as attached to the Pacific Squadron; however, no record of him has ever been found.

On 11 February 1850, Selim E. Woodworth resigned. For a little more than a decade, he lived in San Francisco and took a prominent part in the development of the state of California. He and his brother were among the organizers of the vigilance committee, and Selim Woodworth was the group’s first president.

After the outbreak of the Civil War, Woodworth returned to the east coast and reentered the Navy on 10 September 1861 as an acting lieutenant. On 13 January 1862, he assumed command of John P. Jackson, a former ferry boat, converted to a steam gunboat. This vessel was assigned to the Mortar Flotilla raised by Comdr. David D. Porter to support Flag Officer Farragut’s conquest of New Orleans and the lower Mississippi River. While in command, he assisted in the capture of Forts Jackson and St. Philip in April and participated in operations around Vicksburg in June and July. Porter commended Woodworth for these services, and President Lincoln recommended him to Congress for special thanks. On 29 September 1862, at his own request, he was detached from command of John P. Jackson and allowed to return to the North. Later that autumn, he was assigned to the Mississippi Squadron and reported at Cairo, Ill., for duty.

On 1 January 1863, he was given command of the “tinclad,” stern-wheel steamer, Glide. On 24 January, Porter, now a Rear Admiral, recommended Woodworth for appointment to the regular Navy. Woodworth was commissioned a commander in April 1863, to date from 16 July 1862. After Glide was burned, he commanded the ram General Price from 7 February 1863 through August. After months of commendable fighting up and down the Mississippi River, Comdr. Woodworth was detached from General Price and sent to the Pacific where he took command of the bark Narragansett on 7 October 1863. After having brought Narragansett around the Horn, he arrived in New York on 18 March 1865. Monocacy, a double-ended gunboat, was his last command, which he assumed on 30 November 1865. Comdr. Selim E. Woodworth resigned from the Navy on 2 March 1866 and resided with his family in Europe until 1871 or 1872. During the siege of the Franco-Prussian War, he was in Paris and cleverly escaped through the Prussian lines by way of that city’s famous sewers. He then returned to San Francisco in 1872 and died there in 1873.


Disposition:

Transferred to Italy, as grant aid, 01/?/1951 as ARTIGILERE (D-553). Lately employed as command ship of motor torpedo boat flotillas. Struck from the Italian Naval Vessel Register in 01/1971 and scrapped.


A Tin Can Sailors Destroyer History

USS WOODWORTH DD-460

The Tin Can Sailor, July 2000

Selim E. Woodworth served the U.S. Navy on both the East and West Coasts from 1838 through the Civil War. Launched on 29 November 1941, the WOODWORTH was commissioned on 30 April 1942. By summer’s end, she was convoying ships loaded with materials for landings in the New Hebrides, New Caledonia, and Tulagi.

Near Guadalcanal on 7 April 1943, she was escorting the TAPPAHANNOCK (AO-43) when six enemy planes targeted the oiler with their bombs, which splashed close enough to the ships to give the WOODWORTH a good dousing. The destroyer’s machine gunners sent one of the attackers off with smoking engines. During landings on Rendova Island on 30 June, a dozen torpedo planes attacked her formation. While maneuvering to avoid their torpedoes, the WOODWORTH brought down four of the planes. Although damage to the ship from machine gun fire was superficial, one of her company died and two were injured.

On 2 July 1943, the WOODWORTH and the JENKINS (DD-447) shelled Japanese positions on Wickham Island. She went on to Rice Anchorage, New Georgia, with the KILTY (APD-15), CROSBY (APD-17), SCHLEY (APD-14), and GWIN (DD-433) to support landings there. On 6 and 7 July, she and the GWIN were dispatched to rescue survivors of the HELENA (CL-50), which had been sunk, and then returned for the second landing at Rice Anchorage on 11 July. On the night of 13 July, the cruisers HONOLULU (CL-48), ST. LOUIS (CL-49), and HMS LEANDER along with the WOODWORTH and other destroyers, met a Japanese cruiser and five destroyers for the Battle of Kula Gulf and Kolombangara. Using torpedoes and radar-controlled gunfire, the American and British ships sank the enemy cruiser and one destroyer and severely damaged three others. All three Allied cruisers were torpedoed and the GWIN (DD-433) was sunk with tremendous loss of life. During the action, the WOODWORTH was slightly damaged by a collision with the BUCHANAN (DD-484), but continued to cover the ST. LOUIS.

For the next three months, she escorted shipping and patrolled the Solomons Islands and then joined the carriers SARATOGA (CV-3) and PRINCETON (CV-23) during air attacks on Buka, Shortland Islands, and Rabaul. She ended 1943 with a trip from Espiritu Santo to Purvis Bay with a deck cargo of 1,500 rounds of 5-inch projectiles and powder charges.

The year 1944 began with bombardment of the Shortland Islands and Bougainville in company with the FARENHOLT (DD-491), LANSDOWNE (DD-486), LARDNER (DD-487), and BUCHANAN of Destroyer Squadron 12. On 14 February, the ST. LOUIS was hit and many of her crew killed or wounded. The WOODWORTH’s gunners accounted for one attacker. After escorting the disabled cruiser to Purvis Bay, she raced 550 miles to rejoin the squadron for the attack on Rabaul. She was with the squadron for a high speed run into Rabaul Harbor, bombarding the town and torpedoing shipping, troop concentrations, and supply dumps. Later that month, the squadron repeated the operation at Kavieng. The success was marred this time when the BUCHANAN and FARENHOLT were hit by shore batteries. In the two raids, the WOODWORTH accounted for the sinking of a destroyer and a merchantman.

A month later, she was in San Francisco for overhaul at Mare Island. In July, she joined the DUNLAP (DD-384), CUMMINGS (DD-365), FANNING (DD-385), and the heavy cruiser BALTIMORE (CA-68), carrying President Roosevelt to Pearl Harbor for a meeting with Admiral Nimitz and General MacArthur. By early fall, the WOODWORTH was back in the war with Task Force 38 gathering to strike Formosa and the Ryukyus. She spent a lonely, but quiet night on radar picket station on 12 October and at dawn rejoined the main force. That evening, five enemy torpedo planes attacked the formation, leaving the CANBERRA (CA-70) heavily damaged by one of their torpedoes. On 14 October, the WOODWORTH claimed one of the four attackers shot down. She returned to her picket station, where nine planes headed for the main formation dove on the ship, losing three of their number to her guns. The surviving planes flew on to severely damage the HOUSTON (CL-81). The task group then moved on for attacks against Luzon after which the WOODWORTH was detached to escort the CANBERRA and HOUSTON to Ulithi. She finished the year with escort duty and antisubmarine patrol.

In January 1945, she became the station ship for the Ulithi Surface Patrol and Escort Group, operating at various times with the MCCALLA (DD-488) and HARRY E. HUBBARD (DD-748). She then screened the carrier force supporting troops on Okinawa. At one point, she and the JOHN D. HENLEY (DD-553) escorted the escort carrier NATOMA BAY (CVE-62), which was later crashed by a kamikaze. Through June, the WOODWORTH engaged in destroying mines, rescuing a downed pilot from the STEAMER BAY (CVE-87), and patrolling for submarines. She subsequently joined the screen for the so-called “hidden fleet” that fueled and replenished Task Force 38 as it bombarded and launched air strikes against the Japanese homeland. Following Japan’s surrender, she joined a task unit organized around the TICONDEROGA (CV-14), which provided air cover for the occupation forces. By 1 October 1945, she was homeward bound and proceeded to Charleston, South Carolina, where she served as a Naval Reserve training ship. Finally, on 14 January 1951, the WOODWORTH was decommissioned at the New York Navy Yard and struck from the navy’s list on 22 January 1951. On 11 June 1951, she was turned over to the Italian navy and renamed the ARTIGILERE (D-553) to serve as a torpedo boat flotilla command ship. She was struck from the Italian naval register in January 1971 and scrapped.

USS WOODWORTH DD-460 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016

Woodworth (DD-460) was laid down on 30 April 1941 at San Francisco, Calif., by the Bethlehem Steel Company; launched on 29 November 1941; sponsored by Mrs. Selim E. Woodworth, niece and daughter-in-law of Comdr. Woodworth; and commissioned on 30 April 1942, Lt. Comdr. R. C. Webb, Jr., in command.

After four months spent in fitting out and shakedown, Woodworth spent the remainder of 1942 performing escort duty in the Southwest Pacific area. She stopped at many ports between Australia and Guadalcanal. Woodworth was attached to Task Force (TF) 65 in January 1943, conducting patrols and exercises at the western entrance to Espiritu Santo, New Herbrides.

On 2 February, Woodworth passed to the control of Vice Admiral Leary who commanded TF 69 from his flagship, New Mexico (BB-40). Two days later, that formation was merged with TF 18 consisting of Wichita (CA-45), two carriers, three light cruisers, and four destroyers. An oiler and another destroyer also joined the force on the 5th. The month of February was devoted to patrolling and escorting transports in waters between the Solomons and the New Hebrides. After escorting transports to the Fiji Islands on 1 March, Woodworth returned to Espiritu Santo on the 13th and joined TF 15 organized around the carrier Enterprise (CV-6). Woodworth entered port at Espiritu Santo on 21 March and the following day commenced tender availability. On 3 April, she headed back to the Solomons, arriving at Tulagi on the 5th for entrance patrol. The next day, Woodworth escorted Tappahannock (AO-43) to Kukum and then resumed her patrol.

On the 7th, while escorting oiler Tappahannock in the Solomons area, Woodworth came under enemy air attack by six planes north of Rua Sura Island. Four bombs dropped close aboard Tappahannock. Two struck the sea on the starboard side and threw considerable water over the ship. The attack, which lasted about four minutes, caused no personnel casualties and only minor material damage. Woodworth spent the remainder of April and early May in tactical training exercises, escort, and patrol in waters between the New Hebrides and New Caledonia. From 8 May to 29 June, Woodworth escorted transports carrying reinforcements to Guadalcanal and helped to screen TF 10-consisting of two carriers, three battleships, one cruiser, and several destroyers-to Noumea. Woodworth continued on to Aukland, New Zealand, where she underwent restricted availability before escorting oiler Tallulah (AO-50) to Noumea. Woodworth then screened transports steaming from Espiritu Santo to Guadalcanal.

On 30 June, while escorting amphibious forces to Rendova Island, Solomon Islands,Woodworth came under air attack by 12 low-flying Japanese torpedo bombers. Woodworth’s successful maneuvers enabled her to avoid the torpedoes, and she suffered only one personnel casualty and mere superficial damage from three machine gun hits. The majority of the enemy aircraft fell in flames, and none was seen to escape.

On 2 July 1943, Woodworth and Jenkins (DD-447) bombarded Japanese positions on Wickham Island, Vonguna, New Georgia, to assist the advance of troops ashore. The next day, Woodworth sailed for Tulagi, touched at Port Purvis and Rendova Harbor, and arrived off Rice Anchorage on 5 July 1943 to participate in the first landing operations there. Later that day, she headed for Port Purvis. On 11 July, Woodworth, with fast transports Kilty (DD-137), Crosby (DD-164), and Schley (DD-103), took part in the second landing operations at Rice Anchorage. While returning to Guadalcanal the following morning, Taylor (DD-468) fired on, depth charged, but failed to sink a Japanese submarine-1-25.

On 13 July, as part of Task Group (TG) 36.1, Woodworth took part in the Battle of Kolombangara, one of a series of naval engagements for control of waters between Vella La Vella and Kolombangara to the south and Choiseul to the north. The enemy force consisted of one cruiser and five destroyers. Woodworth fired four torpedoes, and a fifth misfired. During the action, she was struck a glancing blow to the stern by destroyer Buchanan (DD-484) causing some flooding and light damage, but she continued to screen cruiser St. Louis (CL-49) which was hit by a torpedo. Gwin (DD-433) was also hit and exploded. Nothing could be seen of that destroyer but a 300-foot-high column of smoke. Damage control efforts for Gwin were futile, and she was scuttled. Woodworth suffered no personnel casualties.

Woodworth conducted patrol and escort operations between Espiritu Santo and Guadalcanal until 7 October when she joined TF 38. Following training exercises, she departed Espiritu Santo on 29 October with TF 38 organized around carriers Saratoga (CV-3) and Princeton (CV-23). They launched air attacks on Buka, Shortland Islands, on 1 and 2 November 1943 and conducted raids on Rabaul on 5 and again on 11 November before becoming detached from TF 38 on the 14th.

Woodworth sailed for Guadalcanal on 16 November in the escort of transport Pinckney (APH-2) ; then took part in patrol operations in the Solomon area until late December as part of TG 36.1. On 26 December, Woodworth departed Espiritu Santo to carry a deck cargo of 1,500 rounds of 5-inch projectiles and 1,500 rounds of 5-inch powder charges to Port Purvis near Tulagi.

On the evening of 8 January 1944, Woodworth took part in the bombardment of the Shortland Islands and encountered ineffective return fire from the shore. She conducted escort and patrol operations between the northern Solomons and the Bismarck Archipelago until 13 January when she joined Destroyer Squadron (Des Ron) 12 and, with Farenholt (DD-491), Lansdowne (DD-486), and Buchanan (DD-484), conducted a bombardment of shore installations, barge concentrations, and staging points on the northeast coast of Bougainville, Baniu Harbor, and Ruri Bay, Solomon Islands; but she encountered no return fire and no air or surface opposition. While transiting Bougainville Strait, Woodworth fired five salvoes at a Japanese tent camp on the northwest tip of Choiseul Island. She then spent the remainder of January and February, through the 13th, in escort and training exercises to Torokina, barge-hunting off Bougainville, escort to Port Purvis, and escort and training exercises at Sidney, Australia.

On 13 February, Woodworth, in the company of TF 38, covered the advance of the assault on Green Island. The following day, the task force was attacked by a group of six enemy dive bombers. St. Louis (CL-49) was hit and suffered the loss of 23 men. Several snoopers later approached the task force and were taken under fire, Woodworth’s guns accounted for one while she and her sister ships sustained no casualties or damage. On 14 and 15 February, Woodworth, with Farenholt, Buchanan, Lansdowne, and Lardner (DD-487), conducted an antishipping sweep of St. George’s Channel north of Rabaul, New Britain, but encountered no Japanese vessels. On 17 and 18 February, the same destroyers bombarded Rabaul and shore batteries on Praed Point. Woodworth fired torpedoes at two ships leaving Simpson Harbor and later at large groups of ships in Kervia Bay. She also fired her guns at targets near Timber Point and Cape Gazelle. On 24 February, while conducting an antishipping sweep along Truk-Kavieng, New Ireland, shipping lanes about 60 miles northwest of Kavieng, she made radar contact with a Japanese merchant vessel and a large, heavily laden tanker. Woodworth fired 38 rounds of 5″/38-caliber at the merchant vessel which was closed and sunk by DesDiv 24. Woodworth fishtailed at various times to avoid shells from the shore batteries. Two enemy ships were sunk in the harbor, and one other was damaged and left burning. The American warship also set numerous barges afire in Steffen Strait and engaged Japanese shore batteries. Woodworth arrived at Port Purvis, Florida Island, on 26 February.

From 1 through 21 March, Woodworth conducted training exercises, escort missions, antisubmarine searches, and barge-hunting operations throughout the Solomon Islands. She fired at enemy positions and encountered no opposition. Woodworth departed Port Purvis with Buchanan on 22 March, bound for Pearl Harbor. She joined TG 35.6 with a merchant convoy of five ships off Guadalcanal and proceeded to Hawaii with it. On 9 April, Woodworth cleared Pearl Harbor and steamed to San Francisco. She was drydocked at the Mare Island Navy Yard on 15 April 1944.

The destroyer underwent an overhaul and refresher training exercises until 21 July when she joined TG 12.1 and steamed to Hawaii on a presidential cruise with Dunlap (DD-384), Cummings (DD-365), Fanning (DD-385), and Baltimore (CA-68). That cruiser was carrying President Franklin D. Roosevelt to Pearl Harbor to discuss future strategy in the Pacific with Admiral Nimitz and General MacArthur. Following the historic conference, the task force took the President north to Alaska and the Aleutian Islands. Mr. Roosevelt left Baltimore at Kodiak on 8 August and proceeded to Bremerton, Wash., on destroyer Cummings. Woodworth arrived at San Francisco on 14 August 1944 but sailed the following day for Pearl Harbor where she arrived on 20 August for more than one month of training exercises. On 30 September, she entered Ulithi Atoll for antisubmarine patrol; and, on 7 October, she joined TG 38.1.

The carriers of Woodworth’s task group launched an air strike on Okinawa on 10 October, and the planes later raided Japanese installations at Aparri, northern Luzon. On 12 October, the first strikes on Formosa were launched. Woodworth was on a picket station 12 miles east of the formation when she was attacked by Japanese torpedo planes at 1815. She fired at several planes but failed to score any hits. The ship sustained heavy weather damage and expended 160 rounds of 5-inch ammunition, 100 rounds of 40-millimeter, and 320 rounds of 20-millimeter. The following day, five Japanese twin-engine, land-based planes attacked the formation. Woodworth shot down one plane which crashed in flames after passing over the fantail. During the action, Canberra (CA-70) was hit by a torpedo and sustained heavy damage. A third day of strikes against Formosa on the 14th summoned three waves of air attacks by the Japanese. Friendly fighters intercepted and repelled the first two strikes. The third wave consisted of eight or nine enemy aircraft; Woodworth claimed to have shot down three: “Two planes were seen to burst into flames. It was a pretty sight.” All the planes destroyed were credited to the use of Mk 32 projectiles of which the Woodworth used 75 percent. Unfortunately, in this action, Houston (CL-81) was torpedoed and heavily damaged.

On 15 October, TG 38.1 began preparations for attacks on Japanese installations in the Philippines. The first of these occurred on 18 October at Luzon, Philippine Islands. These attacks continued through the end of the month to support the first phase of General MacArthur’s liberation of the Philippines. Woodworth was then detached from TG 38.1 and steamed to Leyte Gulf to join TG 30.3 before it sailed for Ulithi.

Woodworth spent November in screening exercises, antisubmarine patrol at Eniwetok, and escorted a convoy to the Palau Islands. She spent December patrolling off Peleliu and Angaur Island in the Palau group; conducting independent antisubmarine patrol; and escorting a convoy to Leyte Gulf. Woodworth and McCalla (DD-488) then screened a five-ship convoy to Ulithi on 2 January 1945. There, Woodworth underwent tender availability until 11 January. The next day, she assisted in the rescue of LCI-GOO and participated in hunter-killer operations with McCalla.

Woodworth got underway as TU 94.18.12 on 15 January for gunnery practice. She was boarded by Capt. W. P. Burford and staff and served as a station ship for gunnery practice off Kossol Roads, Palau, throughout February. On 12 March, Capt. Burford relieved Comdr. D. E. Brown as CTU 94.6.21. Thus, Woodworth became the station ship for the Ulithi Surface Patrol and Escort Group and participated in search and rescue operations for the remainder of March. Woodworth next underwent tender availability and took patrol station off Mugai Channel at the entrance to Ulithi Harbor on 25 April. She took part in escort and gunnery exercises with Enterprise and Hubbard (DD-748) until 5 May.

Woodworth patrolled the transport anchorage area southwest of Okinawa on 9 May; the following day, she escorted Makin Island (CVE-93) to Kerama Retto harbor and there joined a task unit consisting of six CVE’s and nine escorts. From 10 May through 28 May, Woodworth took part in daily air strikes on Okinawa. On 28 May, she and Henley (DD-553) escorted Natoma Bay (CVE-62) to Kerama Retto, Okinawa Shima, where Woodworth underwent repairs until 6 June. The following day, while conducting air strikes on Miyako Retto of Sakishimo Gunto, two undetected enemy planes closed the formation and made suicide dives on the CVE’s. One crashed into Natoma Bay and the other into the sea.

Woodworth supported air strikes on Okinawa; Kyushu, Japan; and various islands of the Ryukyus from 8 June until 21 June when she rescued a crashed pilot from Steamer Bay (CVE-87). She spent 22 and 23 June on radar picket duty off Okinawa and departed the Ryukyus on 24 June, bound for Leyte Gulf. She underwent tender availability from 1 to 10 July when she turned her attention to screening the fueling and replenishing of TF 38 (Fast Carrier Force) and devoted the remainder of July to assisting logistic operations for the Fast Carrier Force during strikes on the main islands of Japan.

On 2 August, Woodworth escorted oiler Neshanic (AO-71) via Guam to Ulithi. On the 12th, Woodworth joined in an attempt to rescue a downed pilot, but he was dead when help arrived. On 14 August, Woodworth was ordered to proceed independently to Iwo Jima to pick up mail and passengers for the Fast Carrier Force. She joined in the refueling and replenishment of the flattops on 18 August. On 22 August, she was then assigned to a task unit organized around Rear Admiral Thomas L. Sprague in Ticonderoga (CVA-14) which was charged with providing air coverage for the first occupation force to go to the Japanese homeland. On 5 September, Woodworth took part in firing practices and replenishment until 10 September when she anchored in Tokyo Bay. But for brief training and escort periods at sea, she remained there through the end of the month.

On 1 October, Woodworth got underway for Okinawa and left that island on 6 October, bound for home with 50 men and eight officers embarked as passengers for the voyage. She arrived in Portland, Oreg., on 19 October and, 10 days later, headed south for San Pedro, Calif.

Woodworth was transferred to the Atlantic Fleet in November and proceeded through the Panama Canal to Charleston, S.C. After inactivation overhaul there,the destroyer was placed out of commission, in reserve, on 11 April 1946. She was placed in service on 30 January 1947 for Naval Reserve training duty. Placed in full commission on 21 November 1950, the ship was briefly assigned to the 3d Naval District before she was decommissioned at the New York Naval Shipyard on 14 January 1951 and overhauled to prepare her for transfer to the Government of Italy. Her name was struck from the Navy list on 22 January 1951, and she was turned over to the Italian Navy on 11 June 1951. She served Italy as Artigilere (D-553), operating as a command ship for motor torpedo boat flotillas, until struck from the Italian Naval Vessel Register in January 1971 and scrapped.

Woodworth received seven battle stars for her service in World War II.