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Hull Number: DD-491

Launch Date: 11/19/1941

Commissioned Date: 04/02/1942

Decommissioned Date: 04/26/1946


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: OSCAR WALTER FARENHOLT

OSCAR WALTER FARENHOLT

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, July 2015

Oscar Walter Farenholt, born 2 May 1843 in San Antonio, Tex., entered the Navy as a seaman 24 April 1861, after 3 years in the merchant service. Distinguished service led to his appointment as acting ensign 19 August 1864, and command of the mortar schooner Henry Janes in the sounds of North Carolina later that year. His last of many important billets at sea was in command of Monocacy, who acted as base of procurement at Shanghai for Dewey’s fleet in the Spanish-American War. Rear Admiral Farenholt retired 1 September 1901, and died 30 June 1920 at Mare Island, Calif.


Disposition:

Sold 11/22/1972 to Luria Brothers and Co. Inc., Cleveland, Ohio for $73,000.00. Scrapped.


A Tin Can Sailors Destroyer History

USS FARENHOLT DD-491

The Tin Can Sailor, April 2002

Launched on 19 November 1941 at Staten Island, New York, DD-491 was commissioned on 2 April 1942. By August she was part of the screen for the WASP (CV-7) as the carrier launched air strikes to support the marines on Guadalcanal. As flagship for DesRon 12, the FARENHOLT escorted ships carrying reinforcements to Guadalcanal. During an attack by two enemy submarines on 15 September, she rescued 143 survivors of the torpedoed WASP and carried them to Espiritu Santo before joining the BUCHANAN (DD-484) and LAFFEY (DD-459) to screen transports headed for Funafuti.

In October 1942 she and the DUNCAN (DD-485), LAFFEY, BUCHANAN, and McCALLA (DD-488) joined the task force ordered to prevent the reinforcement of Guadalcanal. On the night of 11-12 October, the American and Japanese forces met in the Battle of Cape Esperance. The FARENHOLT and DUNCAN were caught between two opposing cruiser columns when they opened fire. The DUNCAN was so badly damaged that she had to be abandoned and sunk the next day. The FARENHOLT was also seriously damaged. Three of her crew were killed and 43 were wounded; her torpedo tubes were inoperative; and flooding from waterline holes gave her a port list. To keep the ship afloat, oil, water, and movable topside weight were shifted causing her to list to starboard bringing the shell holes out of the water. In the darkness and confusion, she retired from the scene of battle, but without functioning navigational instruments or communications equipment, she was soon far off course. The rest of the task force thought that she’d been sunk until four the next afternoon when one of her signals got through thanks to radio Honolulu. A day later the AARON WARD (DD-483) arrived to escort her to Espiritu Santo and from there to Pearl Harbor for permanent repairs.

The “Old Overholt” returned to Espiritu Santo in March 1943 and began escort operations in the Solomons in early April. Off Lunga Point on the night of 6 April, she engaged enemy bombers, and the next day, with the WOODWORTH (DD-460) and STERRETT (DD-407), escorted six vessels eastward through Sealark Channel. At 1518, 14 torpedo bombers attacked. She splashed one and a near miss wounded one of her crew. Escort missions to the Solomons continued into May when on the 13th she drove off a bomber attack that wounded another one of her crew. From 0706 to 1455 on 30 June she engaged shore batteries on Munda Point as troops landed on Rendova. At 1550, 24 torpedo planes attacked the FARENHOLT and six other destroyers. The “Old Overholt” splashed three, successfully dodged two torpedoes, but could not evade a third, which fortunately was a dud. Two of her crew were injured in the battle, which also claimed the McCAWLEY (APA-4). The DD-491 took McCAWLEY survivors aboard and carried them to Guadalcanal. During this period the ship acquired a mascot, a hound pup they named Oscar. With the captain’s eventual approval, Oscar proved to be a great morale booster and, many believed, brought the ship good luck.

As the New Georgia operation continued, the FARENHOLT escorted support ships, fired shore bombardment, made anti-enemy shipping sweeps, and brought troops and supplies to Vella Lavella. Following a visit to Australia in October, she returned to screen the carrier strike force off Bougainville. The FARENHOLT continued her operations in support of the Bougainville and New Britain operations, escorting reinforcements to Empress Augusta Bay, searching for enemy shipping, and bombarding Choiseul and other targets. Bombardment operations in the Shortland Islands began in January 1944. While covering landings on Green Island on 14 February, she fought off a dive bomber attack and splashed at least one plane.

On the night of 17-18 February her squadron made a daring dash down St. George Channel to fire on shipping in Blanche Bay and bombard Rabaul, sinking two merchantmen and inflicting much damage on shore installations. A similar attack on Kavieng on 25 February provoked heavy counter fire from shore. At 0705 the FARENHOLT and BUCHANAN were hit simultaneously by 6-inch shells. The FARENHOLT was holed at the waterline on her starboard side flooding the after fire room, but her crew used skill and determination to control the flooding and keep the power up and her guns firing. After temporary repairs at Purvis Bay, she steamed for the West Coast and overhaul at Mare Island.

She was back in the war on 21 July screening transports for the assault on Guam. Her next major operation was Palaus. Through the summer she screened carriers during air strikes on Palaus and the southern Philippines, bombarded a radar station on Cape San Augustine, Mindanao, supported landings at Morotai and Angaur, screened carriers as they launched raids on Manila and Leyte. En route to the Battle of Leyte Gulf, the FARENHOLT’s squadron was detached to escort the CANBERRA (CA-70) and HOUSTON (CL-81), damaged in air battles off Taiwan, to Ulithi.

In January 1945, the FARENHOLT was station ship at Ulithi and Kossol Passage heading the Western Carolinas and Marianas Patrol and Escort Group. She and her squadron escorted convoys until 5 May 1945. Three days later she was off Okinawa and for the next month, bombarded shore targets, plane guarded carriers, screened shipping, and rescued downed pilots and survivors of damaged and sunken ships, among them the OBERRENDER (DE-344). She moved north to San Pedro Bay in mid-June to support carriers during their air strikes against the Japanese home islands. On 28 July the FARENHOLT returned to Okinawa for screening duties and with the end of hostilities, sailed with the U.S. Army general assigned to accept the surrender of the islands in the southern Ryukyus and in the Sakishima Gunto. Following escort duty between Buckner Bay, Okinawa, and Sasebo, Japan, she headed for San Diego and then, Charleston, South Carolina, arriving in December. She was placed out of commission in reserve at Charleston on 26 April 1946. She was struck from the navy’s list on 1 June 1971 and sold for scrap on 22 November 1972.

USS FARENHOLT DD-491 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, July 2015

The second Farenholt (DD-491) was launched 19 November 1941 by Bethlehem Steel Co., Staten Island, N.Y.; sponsored by Miss N. L. Garland, great-grand-niece of Admiral Farenholt; and commissioned 2 April 1942, Lieutenant Commander E. T. Seaward in command.

Farenholt sailed from San Diego 1 July 1942 for Tongatabu, Tonga Islands, where between 18 and 23 July she joined in shore bombardment exercises. Sailing in the task force centered around Wasp (CV-7), Farenholt took part in the invasion of Guadalcanal 7 August, the first American land offensive of the war. She screened Wasp as the carrier launched air strikes supporting the Marines in the initial days of this long and bitter struggle, and acted as flagship for Destroyer Squadron 12. After replenishing at Noumea from 3 to 8 September, she returned to the Wasp group, covering the transportation of reinforcements from Espiritu Santo to Guadalcanal. When her force was attacked by two Japanese submarines 15 September, she rescued 143 survivors of torpedoed Wasp, including the task force commander and the commanding officer of the carrier.

Farenholt returned to Espiritu Santo with the survivors next day, then sailed to Noumea to screen occupation troops to Funafuti. Back at Espiritu Santo 6 October 1942, she joined a force whose mission was to intercept and destroy Japanese shipping and to prevent the reinforcement of Guadalcanal by the nightly “Tokyo Express” runs into the island. On the night of 11-12 October, her force contacted the Japanese in the Battle of Cape Esperance, sinking a Japanese destroyer. Three American ships, one of which later sank, were damaged in the action. One of these was Farenholt who received three hits, and suffered three killed, 43 wounded. Although her torpedo tubes were inoperative, she continued to fire on the Japanese ships until the close of the action, scoring hits on a cruiser and a destroyer. Flooding through shell holes on her waterline, Farenholt was saved when oil, water, and topside weights were shifted to list the ship 9° to starboard, bringing the holes out of the water; she made Espiritu Santo 13 October under her own power.

Farenholt sailed to repair battle damage at Pearl Harbor, and returned to Espiritu Santo 3 March 1943. After a month of patrol duty and training exercises in the New Hebrides, she sailed 3 April for escort operations in the Solomons. Off Lunga Point on the night of 6 April, she engaged enemy bombers, and the next day, escorting six ships eastward through Sealark Channel, was under attack by 14 torpedo bombers, at least one of which she splashed. One of her men was wounded by a near miss. Once more she replenished at Espiritu Santo, and then joined in training operations, resuming escort missions to and from the Solomons 30 April. On 13 May she drove off a bomber attack which wounded one of her men, and on 30 June engaged shore batteries on the coast of New Georgia at Munda to protect transports landing troops on the island of Rendova across the channel. As the assault shipping retired from Rendova late that day, guarded by Farenholt and six other destroyers, a flight of Japanese torpedo planes attacked. Farenholt joined in the general barrage which splashed many of the attackers, maneuvered to avoid two torpedoes, and was struck by a third which fortunately failed to explode. When flagship McCawley (APA-4) was sunk, Farenholt took aboard the task force commander, Rear Admiral R. K. Turner.

As the New Georgia operation continued, with new landings at various points on the large island, Farenholt escorted support shipping north from the lower Solomons and fired shore bombardment until 16 July 1943. After a brief period alongside a tender at Espiritu Santo, she operated out of that port and Efate on escort and patrol duty between Noumea and Guadalcanal, sweeping against Japanese shipping, and bringing troops and supplies to Vella Lavella. In October, she sailed for a 6-day visit at Sydney, Australia, returning to Purvis Bay 29 October, and 2 days later joining the screen of the carrier striking force operating northeast of Bougainville in the initial landings. Along with their direct support of the assault and the ensuing battle, the carriers launched air strikes on Buka and Rabaul. From November through February 1944, Farenholt continued her operations in support of the Bougainville and New Britain operations, escorting reinforcements and supplies to Empress Augusta Bay, searching for enemy shipping, and bombarding Choisoul, many points on Bougainville, and the Shortlands. She covered landings on Green Island 14 February, fighting off a dive bomber attack in which she downed at least one plane. On the night of 17-18 February, her squadron made a daring dash down St. George Channel to fire on shipping in Blanche Bay and bombard Rabaul, sinking two merchantmen and inflicting much damage on shore installations. A similar attack on Kavieng 25 February provoked heavy counterfire from shore, and Farenholt was holed at the waterline on her starboard side. Once again her crew saved their ship, controlling flooding with skill and determination.

Temporary repairs were made at Purvis Bay, and Farenholt sailed for a much needed west coast overhaul. She sailed for action once more 16 June 1944, and after training briefly at Pearl Harbor, arrived off Guam 21 July to screen the transports landing assault troops. She patrolled off Guam until 10 August, then sailed back to Eniwetok to prepare for the Palaus operation, major in itself as well as being the most important preliminary to the liberation of the Philippines. Through September, she screened carriers for preliminary strikes on the Palaus and the southern Philippines, bombarded a radar station on Cape San Augustine, Mindanao, supported the unopposed landings on Morotai and the bitterly contested assault of Angaur, and sailed with the carriers as they launched raids on Manila and photographic reconnaissance flights over Leyte and Samar.

Between 28 September 1944 and 13 October she replenished at Manus, then rendezvoused with the fleet carriers once more in time to screen during flights flown in support of the assault landings at Leyte 20 October. After fueling on the 21st, her group shaped course for Ulithi, to be called back on the 24th for its role in the decisive Battle for Leyte Gulf. Farenholt’s squadron, however, was detached to rendezvous with Canberra (CA-70) and Houston (CL-81), damaged in the air battles off Taiwan earlier in the month and still making their epic retirement toward Ulithi. The group arrived at Ulithi 27 October.

With Commander, Destroyer Squadron 12 assigned to command the Western Carolines and Marianas Patrol and Escort Group, his flagship Farenholt served as station ship at Ulithi and Kossol Passage and escorted convoys between those points and to ocean rendezvous until 5 May 1945. Three days later she reached Okinawa, and for the next month carried out the usual varied destroyer duties around the embattled island, screening and escorting shipping of all kinds, rescuing downed pilots and survivors of damaged and sunken ships, bombarding shore targets, and operating with carriers as they launched air strikes on Japanese positions and bases, especially those in the Sakishima Gunto from which suicide flights were flown. She sailed north to San Pedro Bay, arriving 19 June, to join the logistics group supporting the fast carriers in their air strikes against the Japanese home islands. On 28 July Farenholt returned to Okinawa for screening duties until 22 September, when she sailed with an Army general aboard to accept the Japanese surrender of islands in the southern Ryukyus and in the Sakishima Gunto. From 20 October to 31 October, she voyaged from Buckner Bay to Sasebo escorting a transport, then sailed for San Diego and Charleston, S.C., arriving 8 December. She was placed out of commission in reserve at Charleston 26 April 1946.

Farenholt received 11 battle stars for World War II service.