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Hull Number: DD-679

Launch Date: 11/14/1943

Commissioned Date: 12/30/1943

Decommissioned Date: 12/30/1963

Call Sign: NKKC (51-54)

Voice Call Sign: FRANKENSTEIN, BLOODTHIRSTY, SIR ECHO (50-54), NEPTUNE (59), GRACEFUL, TWEEZER (44)


Class: FLETCHER

FLETCHER Class

Data for USS Fletcher (DD-445) as of 1945


Length Overall: 376’ 5"

Beam: 39’ 7"

Draft: 13’ 9"

Standard Displacement: 2,050 tons

Full Load Displacement: 2,940 tons

Fuel capacity: 3,250 barrels

Armament:

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

Complement:

20 Officers
309 Enlisted

Propulsion:

4 Boilers
2 General Electric Turbines: 60,000 horsepower

Highest speed on trials: 35.2 knots

Namesake: FREDERICK V. MCNAIR

FREDERICK V. MCNAIR

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016

Rear Adm. Frederick V. McNair, born 13 January 1839 at Abington, Pa., was appointed. midshipman 21 December 1853. He served on the Atlantic blockade stations and Mississippi River patrols during the Civil War. During his later career his command assignments included: Superintendent of the Naval Observatory, 1890‑92; Commander of the Asiatic Station, 1895‑97; and Superintendent of the Naval Academy, 1898‑1900. Rear Admiral McNair died At Washington, D.C., 28 November 1900, while awaiting orders.


Disposition:

Stricken 12/1/1974. Sold for scrap.


USS MCNAIR DD-679 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016

McNair (DD‑679) was laid down 30 June 1943 by the Federal Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., Kearny, N.J.; launched 14 November 1943; sponsored by Mrs. F. V. McNair, Jr., daughter‑in‑law of Rear Admiral McNair; and commissioned 30 December 1943, Comdr. M. L. McCullough, Jr., in command.

McNair departed New York 5 March 1944 for the Pacific. By 14 June, as a unit of DesRon 54, she was in the screen for the battleships that opened their guns against Japanese shore installations on Saipan. For the next 19 days she provided fire support and carried out antisubmarine patrols. On 3 July, she was detached from TF 52 to escort ships between Eniwetok and Saipan. Rejoining that force on the 25th, she provided fire and screening support for the invasion of Tinian. Detached again 2 August, McNair steamed to Guadalcanal to prepare for the next offensive operation, the Palaus. From 6 to 21 September, she supported the land forces effecting the capture and occupation of the southern Palaus with counterbattery and harassing fire. After Anguar, she sailed south to Manus, the staging area for the Leyte invasion.

Arriving in the Leyte Gulf transport area 20 October, McNair took up antisubmarine patrol duty to protect ships and troops as the latter began to storm the shore at Dulag. In the first hours of the 25th, she remained at her station to cover the entrance to Leyte Gulf as her sister ships of DesRon 54 conducted their much heralded night torpedo attack on Japanese men‑of‑war steaming toward the northern end of Surigao Strait and defeat under the guns of Rear Admiral Oldendorf’s battleline.

The next day, she got underway for Hollandia where she took up escort work, ensuring the safe arrival of reinforcements at Leyte. Then she sailed back to the Solomons for rehearsals for the assault on Luzon. Clearing Guadalcanal 25 December, she screened transports to Manus, continuing on to Lingayen Gulf with them 2 January 1945. She entered the gulf 11 January. There, until the 14th, she provided close fire support and met the attacks of Japanese kamikazes with skill. She then joined the fast carriers for strikes in support of the Iwo Jima offensive. By 16 February she was 72 miles off Honshu, screening the carriers as their planes struck at the Tokyo‑Yokohama area, thus keeping Japanese planes at home while landings were made on Iwo. The force next moved south to provide air cover over the embattled island. On the 21st, McNair helped damaged Saratoga fight off suicide and torpedo planes, splashing two of the latter, and then escorted her to Eniwetok for repairs.

On 18 March, the destroyer was back with the carriers for raids on the Nansei Shoto in preparation for the upcoming Okinawa campaign. On 1 April they provided close support as troops landed on that enemy bastion. McNair remained off Okinawa to aid in fighting off the daily air attacks until 27 April when she returned to Ulithi for repairs. Returning to Okinawa 25 May, she conducted further shore bombardment and antiaircraft patrol missions before returning 13 June to Leyte, the staging area of the fast carriers, last deployment against Japan.

The force steamed north 1 July and for the next month and it half ranged the coasts of the enemy-s home islands, raining destruction on industrial and military targets on Honshu, Hokkaido, and the Kuriles. On 12 August, after her guns had pounded Paramushiro in the Kuriles, McNair headed for the Aleutians.

At Adak on the 14th she received news of the Japanese surrender and with that news, new orders to return to Japan for occupation duty in the Aomori‑Ominato area. Two months later, 12 October, she departed for the United States, arriving at San Francisco 4 November. At San Diego, 28 May 1946, she decommissioned and joined the Pacific Reserve Fleet.

In 1950, world tension increased as the divided country of Korea became the site of overt hostilities. McNair was soon taken out of mothballs, recommissioning 6 July 1951. Before the end of the year she had reported for duty in the Atlantic Fleet. On 6 September 1952, she departed her home port, Newport, R.I., for a world cruise that took her through the Panama Canal to Korea, where she served as gunfire support ship for United Nations troops and as guardian of carriers of the 7th Fleet. After 3 months in the combat area, she transited the Suez Canal en route home, arriving Newport 11 April 1953. In July she headed back across the Atlantic for a midshipman training cruise to northern Europe, followed by her first deployment with the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean.

McNair remained on the east coast until 18 April 1956 when she sailed on 72 hours notice for the Middle East. There she cruised the Red Sea and along the northern Egyptian coast until mid‑July. On 20 July she cleared Gibraltar and by the 28th was back at Newport.

Tension in the Middle East remained high and in May 1957 McNair was back in the Mediterranean. Transiting the Suez Canal 22 May with her division, DesDiv 202, she again cruised in the Red Sea area until July. She then returned to the Mediterranean for 6th Fleet operations, departing for Newport 22 August. On June 1958, McNair again sailed eastward to help deal with another explosive situation in the politically unstable eastern Mediterranean area. From 23 July to 20 August she patrolled off Lebanon. In mid‑September tension decreased and the destroyer departed for Newport, arriving on the 30th.

McNair-s 1959 6th Fleet deployment was followed by assignment to the 4th Naval District as a Naval Reserve training ship, based at Philadelphia. On 13 August 1961, the Brandenburg Gate between East and West Berlin was closed and construction on the Berlin Wall was begun by East Germany. As tension in the city, and the world, increased, Allied garrisons were reinforced and ships of the Allied navies stood by to await developments. McNair-s reserve crew was recalled to active duty and the destroyer again joined the active fleet for operations along the east coast and in the Caribbean. In mid‑February she sailed on her last European deployment, a 5‑month cruise to northern European ports. By 7 September she had resumed her status as a Naval Reserve training ship and had returned her reservist crew to civilian life. In August 1963 she entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard for preinactivation overhaul. Decommissioning there 30 December, she joined the Philadelphia Group, Atlantic Reserve Fleet, where she has remained into 1969.

McNair received eight battle stars for World War II service and two for Korean service.