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Hull Number: DD-822

Launch Date: 11/09/1945

Commissioned Date: 10/26/1946

Call Sign: NAYM

Voice Call Sign: TOWN HALL


Class: GEARING

GEARING Class

Data for USS Gearing (DD-710) as of 1945


Length Overall: 390’ 6"

Beam: 40’ 10"

Draft: 14’ 4"

Standard Displacement: 2,425 tons

Full Load Displacement: 3,479 tons

Fuel capacity: 4,647 barrels

Armament:

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

Complement:

20 Officers
325 Enlisted

Propulsion:

4 Boilers
2 General Electric Turbines: 60,000 horsepower

Highest speed on trials: 34.6 knots

Namesake: ROBERT HOWARD MCCARD

ROBERT HOWARD MCCARD

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, October 2020

Robert Howard McCard, born at Syracuse, N.Y., 25 November 1918, enlisted in the Marine Corps 18 December 1939. He was subsequently assigned to Parris Island, S.C.; Norfolk Navy Yard; Tuscaloosa (CA-37), New York Navy Yard; U.S. Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I.; and Central Recruiting Division, Chicago, Ill. With the outbreak of war with Japan, he was assigned to the Naval Training Station, Great Lakes, Ill.; then the Training Center, Quantico, Va.; Camp Lejeune, N.C.; and Camp Pendleton, Calif. He was in the field from 31 January 1944 until he was killed in action 16 June 1944 on Saipan. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity while serving as Platoon Sergeant of a company of a tank battalion during the battle for Saipan. When his tank was put out of action by a battery of enemy 77 mm. guns, Gunnery Sergeant McCard carried on resolutely, bringing all the tank’s weapons to bear on the enemy, until the severity of hostile fire caused him to order his crew out the escape hatch. Meanwhile, he courageously exposed himself to enemy guns by hurling hand grenades to cover the evacuation of his men. Seriously wounded during this action and with his supply of grenades exhausted, Gunnery Sergeant McCard then dismantled one of the tank’s machine guns and delivered vigorous fire into Japanese positions, destroying 16 of the enemy.



USS ROBERT H. MCCARD DD-822 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, October 2020

Robert H. McCard (DD-822) was laid down by Consolidated Steel Corp., Orange, Tex., 20 June 1945; launched 9 November 1945; sponsored by Mrs. Robert H. McCard; and commissioned 23 October 1946, Comdr. E. A. Michael, Jr., in command.

Following shakedown off Guantanamo Bay, Robert H. McCard joined Destroyer Squadron 10 and was homeported in Newport, R.I. She operated out of Newport until 1955 on the standard employment schedule for destroyers in the Atlantic Fleet. [Robert H.] McCard was a unit of the 6th Fleet on eight tours of duty in the Mediterranean and also participated in two midshipman cruises, visiting Caribbean, Canadian, Belgian, and Portuguese ports. Between deployments, the ship had four overhauls in the Boston Naval Shipyard, each being followed by a refresher training period under the supervision of the Fleet Training Group, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

In December 1955, [Robert H.] McCard became a unit of Destroyer Squadron 4, with her homeport in Norfolk. Making a ninth and 10th tour of duty with the 6th Fleet, she operated as a unit of the Middle East Force in the Persian Gulf for a month during the ninth tour. Following plane guard duties and type training exercises off the Atlantic Coast, [Robert H.] McCard participated in a midshipman cruise in June and July 1958, calling at Portuguese, Danish and Belgian ports.

Returning to type training exercises, an Atlantic Fleet exercise in the Caribbean, Fleet Sonar School duty, and an overhaul, [Robert H.] McCard’s homeport was then changed to Charleston. She operated out of Charleston until departing on 6 September 1960 for a NATO exercise, followed by other exercises. From 29 January 1961 to 3 February, she participated in recovery operations for Project Mercury, then departed Charleston 8 March to join the 6th Fleet. In July she proceeded through the Suez Canal and reported to Commander, Middle East Force, for a 6-week patrol of the Red Sea and Persian Gulf area. She returned to Charleston via the Mediterranean 4 October.

Following plane guard duties and type training exercises, [Robert H.] McCard underwent FRAM I overhaul at Boston. Returning to Charleston 3 January 1963, for refresher training during which she searched for the hijacked Venezuelan ship Anzoategui, the destroyer then served for 2 weeks as schoolship for the Fleet Sonar School. She next participated in a joint Canadian-United States exercise. [Robert H.] McCard was deployed with the 6th Fleet from 13 October 1963 to 5 March 1964 and deployed again on 5 January 1965. In February and March she operated under the Middle East Force, returning to Charleston via the Mediterranean on 7 June.

Following further operations off the Atlantic Coast and an overhaul period, [Robert H.] McCard underwent refresher training off Guantanamo Bay then conducted two midshipman cruises, the latter taking her to Wilhelmshaven, Germany. From 29 September 1966 to 31 January 1967, [Robert H.] McCard was deployed to the 6th Fleet.

Operating in the western Atlantic, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean until 5 November, Robert H. McCard then transited the Panama Canal and joined the Pacific Fleet. At the end of 1967, she was serving on Yankee Station in the Tonkin Gulf. In January and February 1968, she was on plane guard duty for Coral Sea (CVA-43) in the Tonkin Gulf, participating in an emergency search and rescue mission on the east coast of Hainan Island. In March she served as plane guard forKitty Hawk (CVA-63) and Bon Homme Richard (CVA-31) in the Tonkin Gulf. In April she provided naval gunfire support off South Vietnam, and on 10 May she departed Japan for return to the east coast of the United States.

Operating in NATO exercise “Silvertower” in the North Atlantic in September and October 1968, Robert H. McCard then put into port at Southampton. Following overhaul at Charleston from December to April 1969, she operated off the Atlantic Coast and in the Caribbean until deploying to the Mediterranean in September. She returned to Charleston from her 6 months with the 6th Fleet, 28 March 1970, and remained with the Atlantic Fleet for the duration of 1970 and four months of 1971. On 15 April 1971, she sailed eastward from Charleston for another six months service in the Mediterranean, returning 16 October. She stayed in Charleston for the remainder of 1971 and spent the first eight months of 1972 engaged in Atlantic and Caribbean operations.

Robert H. McCard entered Charleston 6 September 1972 for a six-month overhaul, at the completion of which she returned to normal operations in the western Atlantic and Caribbean.

Robert H. McCard was decommissioned on 5 June 1980 and transferred to the Republic of Turkey through the Security Assistance Program (SAP) that same day. She served as Kilic Ali (D 349) with the Turkish Navy until 1998.