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Hull Number: DD-829

Launch Date: 01/13/1945

Commissioned Date: 03/20/1945

Decommissioned Date: 10/01/1979

Call Sign: NAZI

Voice Call Sign: HAWKEYE, DREADNOUGHT (68-72), CHAMBERPOT (45)

Other Designations: DDR-829


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: MYLES CROSBY FOX

MYLES CROSBY FOX

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016

Myles Crosby Fox was born in New York City 13 October 1918; graduated from Williams College in 1939; enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve 4 May 1939; was commissioned second lieutenant 29 November 1940; and promoted to first lieutenant 11 April 1942. In the initial assault on the Solomons, Fox was with a Marine Raider battalion during the seizure of Tulagi on the night of 7 August 1942. He ignored mortal wounds to deploy his men skillfully in filling a key gap in the American lines, thus repulsing an enemy attack with heavy losses. He was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross for his great valor.


Disposition:

Stricken 10/1/1979. Sold to Greece 8/1/1980.


A Tin Can Sailors Destroyer History

USS MYLES C. FOX DD-829

The Tin Can Sailor, July 1995

Submitted by Carl Rectenwald

Though MYLES C. FOX, a destroyer homeported in Newport, passed her 21st birthday on the 20th of March, there was scarcely time for her to celebrate. For several days her crew had been engaged in a firefighting effort to save a stricken merchant vessel, LA PALMA, in the South Atlantic.

But this effort was nothing new to MYLES C. FOX. She has been busy since her commissioning in 1945 in the Boston Naval Shipyard. After a brief but vigorous shakedown in the Caribbean, she departed from Boston and headed for the Pacific. On September 21, she sailed into Tokyo Bay as a unit of Task Force 38, and she later operated in the China Sea until returning to the United States in late April 1946.

It was on her next cruise to the Orient that FOX was initiated into the practice of aiding merchant ships. The cruise was highlighted by the rescue of 600 survivors from a stranded passenger ship which had been overturned near Hong Kong by a typhoon.

In May 1949, FOX returned to the Atlantic. From then until 1953, she made four Mediterranean cruises and participated in the first large-scale NATO naval maneuver, Operation Mainbrace. From June to August of ‘53, she made a South America cruise with midshipmen embarked for training.

From 1954 to 1964, FOX was kept busy on Mediterranean duty, Atlantic Fleet operations and other operations with NATO. During that time she had a homeport change from Newport to Mayport, and established new standards of excellence for her class as she won the Navy “E” for overall Battle Efficiency.

In January 1964, FOX moved to Boston for Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization. In the Boston yard the ship was converted from a radar picket destroyer to a general-purpose destroyer. Two new antisubmarine weapons – the antisubmarine rocket system and the drone antisubmarine helicopter – were added, and the engineering plant was overhauled during her FRAM conversion.

When the Dominican Republic crisis broke, MYLES C. FOX, with only twelve hours notice, was underway, arriving off the coast of the Dominican Republic on May 13th. Operations consisted of surveillance patrols.

In August 1965, FOX again deployed to the Mediterranean and returned to Newport, her present homeport, in mid-December.

While on station in the Atlantic as one of the recovery ships for Gemini Eight, FOX was called on to aid the merchantman LA PALMA, which had a smoldering fire in her holds.

FOX was the first U.S. Navy ship to reach the stricken vessel, some 700 miles southwest of the Cape Verde Islands. Gemini Eight had unexpectedly landed in the Pacific, and FOX took up her new task of firefighting. The merchant vessel was carrying a cargo of tobacco, wool, baled cotton, sheep skin and ground nut meal. The fire aboard LA PALMA had started about three days before from spontaneous combustion of the nut meal. FOX arrived on the scene Tuesday, March 15, and her firefighting teams battled the blaze unaided until Thursday when the fleet oiler CALOOSA-HATCHEE arrived. The destroyer CHARLES P. CECIL arrived the next day to render assistance.

The cargo, especially the cotton bales, was slow burning and made the fire difficult to extinguish. Efforts were also hampered by the nut meal, which clogged the water pumps.

Navymen on the scene decided the best way to fight the fire was to jettison the smoldering cotton bales. After a Navy team repaired the inoperative cargo booms on LA PALMA, the men on deck set about their task of raising the 400 pound cotton bales out of the hold and dropping them over the side.

With the fire contained, but Navymen still aboard, LA PALMA began to steam for port. FOX and the other U.S. ships escorted the merchant vessel to within a day’s trip of her port, then proceeded back to Newport.

USS MYLES C. FOX DD-829 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016

Myles C. Fox (DD‑829) was laid down by the Bath Iron Works Corp., Bath, Maine, 14 August 1944; launched 13 January 1945; sponsored by Mrs. James C. Fox, mother of Lieutenant Fox; and commissioned at Boston 20 March 1945, Comdr. John S. Fahy in command.

After Caribbean shakedown and training off New Jersey, Miles C. Fox sailed 5 July 1945 for the Panama Canal, San Diego, and Hawaii, arriving Pearl Harbor on the 28th. She departed Pearl Harbor 10 August for the Marshalls, receiving word en route of cessation of hostilities. After calling at Eniwetok, she continued to Japan, anchoring in Tokyo Bay 9 September to begin duty screening carriers providing air cover for the occupation landings on Japan.

The destroyer served in the occupation until sailing for Saipan 8 January 1946. On 25 March, she headed from the Marianas for San Diego with veterans aboard for transportation home. Arriving 11 April, she operated along the west coast until 6 January 1947, when she sailed for the Far East, arriving Yokosuka on the 25th. In ensuing months she called at principal ports of Japan with missions to Korea, China, Okinawa, and Hong Kong.

On 19 July Myles C. Fox and Hawkins (DD‑873) with British escort ship HMS Hart saved the crew and passengers of SS Hong Kheng after the passenger ship had run aground on Chilang Point some 8 miles north of Hong Kong. Six motorboats, two from each warship, and two skiffs from Hong Kong, made 76 trips to rescue some 1,800 survivors.

Myles C. Fox departed Yokosuka 23 September and reached San Diego 8 October. After west coast operations and overhaul, she made another Far Eastern cruise, 2 October-23 December 1948, operating principally in the ocean approaches to Tsingtao, China, with fast carrier forces. She then operated out of San Diego until sailing 2 May 1949 for a new home port, Newport, R.I. She had been redesignated a radar picket destroyer (DDR‑829) 18 March 1949.

Following arrival Newport 23 May 1949, the ship served in the North Atlantic for a year before getting underway from Norfolk 3 May 1950 for the Mediterranean. Her 6th Fleet operations included simulated attack problems with submarines and other fleet readiness exercises. She visited ports of France, Italy, Turkey, Trieste, Greece, and Spain, cleared Gibraltar 1 October, and returned to Newport on the 10th.

Repairs in New York Naval Shipyard, convoy exercises to Bermuda, and tactics in the Virginia Cape area kept her busy until 20 March 1951 when she put to sea with a carrier striking force that reached Gibraltar 6 April. She returned from this Mediterranean cruise to Newport 4 October.

After working on the east coast for almost a year, she stood out from Newport 26 August 1952 with a fast carrier striking force built around Midway (CVB‑41) and Franklin D. Roosevelt (CVB‑42). This cruise took her to Greenock, Scotland, and thence into the Norwegian Sea as a unit of the NATO force guarding the free world. She visited ports of the British Isles before proceeding by way of Lisbon to the Mediterranean for another tour with the powerful 6th Fleet, returning Newport 4 February 1953.

On 8 June 1953 Myles C. Fox left Norfolk on a midshipman cruise that included good will calls at Rio de Janeiro and Cartagena, Colombia. She debarked the midshipmen at the Naval Academy 5 August and returned to Newport. For the next 2 years she operated an the east coast and in the Caribbean. She departed Newport 2 May 1955 for the Mediterranean. After 3 months with the 6th Fleet, she returned to Newport 25 August.

During the ensuing years, Myles C. Fox continued this pattern of service, alternating operations on the east coast and in the Caribbean with 6th Fleet deployments. In 1961 she won the Battle Efficiency “E,” and in 1964 her home port was changed to Boston. That year the ship underwent FRAM I overhaul and modernization, and she was redesignated DD‑829 on 1 April.

The destroyer was assigned to the Gemini 8 recovery team 6 March 1966 and stationed in the eastern Atlantic. While off the coast of Africa, she sped to the aid of Swedish freighter M/V Palma which was afire. For 3 days firefighting teams battled the blaze before Caloosahatchee (AO‑98) and Charles P. Cecil (DD‑835) arrived to lend a hand. The combined efforts of these U.S. Navy ships finally extinguished the flames, and Palma resumed steaming under her own power.

After DASH qualifications off the Virginia Capes, the destroyer operated along the east coast until getting underway for the Far East 4 October. Steaming via the Panama Canal, Hawaii, Japan, and the Philippines, the destroyer arrived off the coast of North Vietnam 7 January 1967. While in the war zone Myles C. Fox delivered numerous fire support missions against enemy ground forces and installations. Her guns also damaged three enemy junks and two Communist sampans. She headed home on the second half of a round‑the‑world cruise 20 February and arrived Newport from Suez and Gibraltar 25 April.

Myles C. Fox operated on the east coast and in the Caribbean during most of 1967. She entered Boston Naval Shipyard 26 September for overhaul through 81 January 1968.