USS KEPPLER DD-765 Ship History
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016
Keppler (DD-765) was launched 24 June 1946 by Bethlehem Steel Co. Shipbuilding Div., San Francisco, sponsored by Mrs. Elizabeth L. Keppler, widow of John R. Keppler; and commissioned 23 May 1947, Comdr. P. M. Cauiglio in command.
After shakedown along the West Coast, Keppler cleared San Diego 9 October 1947 for training exercises in Hawaiian waters. The destroyer then sailed to Australia and China before returning San Diego 20 May 1948. Early in 1949 Keppler entered San Francisco Navy Yard for conversion to antisubmarine destroyer. Resuming operations on the West Coast 9 June, she departed San Diego 5 October for duty in the Atlantic.
Arriving Norfolk 15 days later, she immediately commenced intensive ASW exercises along the Atlantic Coast. Keppler sailed to Newport, R.I., her new homeport, for additional hunter-killer operations, arriving 27 November. She was reclassified DDE-765 on 4 March 1950 and cleared Newport 5 July for the Mediterranean. Arriving Greece 27 July, the antisubmarine destroyer was ordered to the Far East to help repel Communist aggression in Korea.
After transiting the Suez Canal and crossing the Indian Ocean, Keppler joined the 7th Fleet in mid-August. For the next 2 months she patrolled the Formosa Strait before joining Philippine Sea (CV-47) on 17 November. For the next 3 months she screened her task group during continued carrier air strikes against Communist positions on the Korean mainland. Keppler then steamed for Yokosuka, Japan, arriving 7 February 1951. Three days later she cleared port for the United States, reaching Newport 14 March. She was overhauled and for the rest of the year engaged in refresher training and ASW operations.
Keppler cleared Newport once again 9 January 1952 to participate in antisubmarine exercises with the powerful 6th Fleet. This cruise culminated in NATO Exercise “Grandslam,” In which ships of several freedom-loving nations operated together in practice maneuvers to prevent aggression. The antisubmarine destroyer returned to Newport 26 March and resumed operations along the Atlantic Coast.
From 1952 to 1957 Keppler continued her vital ASW exercises out of Newport and the Caribbean in addition to NATO operations and Mediterranean cruises with the 6th Fleet. During these years such exercises steadily perfected her ability to protect the nation from the threat of a growing Soviet submarine force.
On 4 January 1957 she sailed toward South American waters for a training and good will cruise. Before returning Newport 18 March, she visited ports in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, and Panama. After completing additional costal exercises, Keppler was deployed to the Mediterranean 12 August During September she transited the Suez Canal to strengthen forces in the Red Sea, as Communists had gained control of the Syrian Army and threatened the pro-western government in Jorden. This display of American determination assuaged the crisis enabling Keppler to return to Newport 21 December.
From 1958 to 1961 the antisubmarine destroyer engaged in concentrated ASW operations along the Atlantic coast and Caribbean NATO exercises, a midshipmen cruise in 1959, and a 6th Fleet deployment in the summer of 1960. Keppler entered New York Naval Shipyard 1 March 1961 for a FRAM II overhaul designed to increase her service and effectiveness. Following the overhaul she returned Newport 25 October and resumed antisubmarine duty 8 March 1962. Keppler sailed 4 June for a summer midshipmen cruise to Europe, returning to Newport 30 August. She was reclassified DD-765 during that period.
Two months later a grave international crisis loomed, as the Russians planted offensive missiles in Cuba only 90 miles from the United States. President Kennedy accepted this challenge and ordered a naval quarantine of Cuba. Keppler cleared Newport 22 October to take her station in the blockade. While patrolling her Caribbean sector, she sighted a surfaced Russian submarine 2 November and observed her for the next 7 days. On 9 November the submarine joined a Russian trawler, and Keppler continued her surveillance until the Russian ships turned back toward the Azores. Effective American sea-power helped persuade the Soviet government to withdraw the missiles easing the crisis. The destroyer returned Newport 21 November.
During 1963 and 1964 Keppler continued hunter-killer exercises along the East Coast and Caribbean. She sailed 8 September 1964 for Mediterranean deployment and engaged in NATO exercises en route. The destroyer returned home 18 December.
Following overhaul in Boston Naval Shipyard, Keppler operated out of Newport until sailing for the Far East 4 October 1966. Steaming via the Panama Canal she arrived Pearl Harbor 24 October and pushed on toward Japan a week later. She departed Yokosuka 14 November for plane guard duty in the Gulf of Tonkin. Early in December she was assigned naval gunfire support missions to assist allied troops fighting in South Vietnam, and she also served in Operation “Sea Dragon” helping to interrupt infiltration of men and weapons into South Vietnam from the North. On the night of 11 and 12 December she rescued a downed pilot. Early in 1967 she returned to “Yankee Station” for plane guard duty and on 28 January assisted in the rescue of another pilot. In January and February her guns damaged or destroyed 51 Communist junks. Keppler’s crew derived great “satisfaction from the fact that many of these targets suffered secondary explosions thus proving it was not ‘fish’ they were carrying.” During this period Keppler frequently engaged enemy batteries ashore, and 11 March a Communist gun scored a hit on one of the destroyer’s gun mounts. Nevertheless she remained in the fight until returning to Subic Bay on the 23d. Three days later she headed homeward via the Indian Ocean, the Suez Canal, and the Mediterranean. Upon arriving Newport 8 May she resumed operations along the East Coast to prepare for future action.
Keppler received two battle stars for Korean service.