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Hull Number: DD-964

Launch Date: 02/23/1974

Commissioned Date: 02/21/1976

Call Sign: NMDX


Class: SPRUANCE

SPRUANCE Class


Length Overall: 563’ 3"

Beam: 55’

Draft: 29'

Full Load Displacement: 8,040 tons

Armament:

Two 5″/54 caliber guns
Two 20mm Close-In Weapons Systems
One ASROC Launcher
Two 12.75″ triple anti-submarine torpedo tubes

Complement:

19 Officers
315 Enlisted

Propulsion:

4 General Electric LM2500 Gas Turbines: 80,000 horsepower

Highest speed on trials: 32.5 knots

Namesake: PAUL FREDERICK FOSTER

PAUL FREDERICK FOSTER

Wikipedia (as of 2024)

Paul Frederick Foster (March 25, 1889 – January 30, 1972) was a highly decorated officer in the United States Navy with the rank of vice admiral. A graduate of the Naval Academy at Annapolis, he distinguished himself during the Battle of Veracruz in April 1914 and received Medal of Honor, the United States of America’s highest and most-prestigious personal military decoration.[1][2]

During World War I, Foster commanded submarine L-2 and is credited with the sinking of German SM UB-65 in July 1918, for which he received Navy Distinguished Service Medal. He remained in the Navy following the war and received Navy Cross for valor during the explosion of turret gun of light cruiser Trenton in October 1924. Foster resigned from active duty in 1929, but was recalled to active service during World War II, serving as Assistant Inspector General of the Navy until 1946.[2]

Foster then served as General Manager for International Activities, Atomic Energy Commission until February 1959, when he was appointed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower as a Permanent U.S. Representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency in ViennaAustria.[1][3]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Paul F. Foster)
Paul Frederick Foster

Vice Admiral Paul Foster in the 1950s
Born March 25, 1889
Wichita, Kansas, US
Died January 30, 1972 (aged 82)
Virginia Beach, Virginia, US
Buried
Arlington National Cemetery (Section 5, site 106)
Allegiance  United States of America
Service/branch  United States Navy
Years of service 1911–1929, 1941–1946
Rank  Vice admiral
Commands held USS L-2
USS G-4
Battles/wars Mexican Revolution

World War I
World War II

Awards Medal of Honor
Navy Cross
Distinguished Service Medal
Legion of Merit
Navy Commendation Medal
Other work International Atomic Energy Agency

Paul Frederick Foster (March 25, 1889 – January 30, 1972) was a highly decorated officer in the United States Navy with the rank of vice admiral. A graduate of the Naval Academy at Annapolis, he distinguished himself during the Battle of Veracruz in April 1914 and received Medal of Honor, the United States of America’s highest and most-prestigious personal military decoration.[1][2]

During World War I, Foster commanded submarine L-2 and is credited with the sinking of German SM UB-65 in July 1918, for which he received Navy Distinguished Service Medal. He remained in the Navy following the war and received Navy Cross for valor during the explosion of turret gun of light cruiser Trenton in October 1924. Foster resigned from active duty in 1929, but was recalled to active service during World War II, serving as Assistant Inspector General of the Navy until 1946.[2]

Foster then served as General Manager for International Activities, Atomic Energy Commission until February 1959, when he was appointed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower as a Permanent U.S. Representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency in ViennaAustria.[1][3]

Following his return to the United States in November 1914, Foster was ordered to the Naval Submarine Base New LondonConnecticut, for submarine instruction. He completed the instruction in early 1915 and was attached to the submarine G-4, the experimental vessel of Italian design under command of Lieutenant Ernest D. McWhorter. Foster served as his executive officer and participated in maneuvers with the submarine flotilla off Newport, Rhode Island, and was promoted to lieutenant (junior grade) on March 7, 1915.[5][3][6]

Foster relieved McWhorter as commanding officer of the submarine in February 1916 and led her during the maneuvers with Atlantic Fleet off Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard. He also transported Elmer A. Sperry to try out his gyroscopic ship stabilizer, but when the United States entered the War in April 1917, Foster travelled to Washington, D.C., where he approached his former commanding officer from Utah, now Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral William S. Benson, and requested to be assigned to the war zone in Europe. But Benson declined to interfere in personnel matters and turned down Foster’s request.[7][8][3][6]

He subsequently return to command of the submarine G-4 and conducted further experiments with professors from Cornell University. During his return from one experiment, Foster landed his submarine so skillfully, that he impressed Captain Thomas C. Hart, chief of staff to the commander, Submarine Force, Atlantic Fleet and he requested Foster to be assigned to his command.[5][3][6]

Foster transferred to his flagship, submarine tender Bushnell and was promoted to the temporary rank of lieutenant on July 1, 1917. He served first as ship’s navigator under Commander Wilhelm L. Friedell and took part in the transports of submarines to Azores in early autumn 1917. Foster was later appointed an aide to Captain Hart and participated in the patrols in Atlantic, before he was appointed commanding officer of submarine L-2 in March 1918.[5][3][6]

He took part in patrols to Bishop Rock Lighthouse off the England coast and Bantry BayIreland and later received orders for patrol to Bay of Biscay, north of Bordeaux. During the patrol in mid-July 1918, Foster’s submarine had one of his engines damaged and was ordered back to submarine base at Bantry Bay. On her return, Foster’s crew spotted German SM UB-65 near Fastnet Rock, the U.S. submarine L-2 observed what Foster first took to be a buoy on the horizon. Moving closer, he found that it was actually a German submarine, only later to be identified as UB-65. It was listing heavily on the water’s surface, seemingly disabled. Forster guided his sub around it, hoping to line up a torpedo shot. But before he could do so, the crippled vessel was torn apart by a huge explosion. UB-65 rose up on its bows and sank. There were no survivors and no bodies were ever recovered.[2][5][9][3][6]

Foster was subsequently decorated with the Navy Distinguished Service Medal for his part in the sinking of enemy submarine. It was one of the three enemy submarines officially listed as sunk by the U.S. Navy. He was also promoted to the temporary rank of lieutenant commander on July 1, 1918.[10][5][3][6]

Following the Armistice, Foster was transferred to the staff of Commander, Division 2, Submarine Force, Atlantic Fleet and served under Harold M. Bemis until late 1920, when he joined protected cruiser San Francisco under Captain Henry E. Lackey. He participated in the patrols in west Atlantic and the Caribbean and was transferred to the Navy Recruiting Bureau in New York City in July 1921.[11]

In April 1924, Foster was ordered to the Philadelphia Navy Yard for duty in connection with fitting out of light cruiser Trenton and upon her commissioning, he was appointed ship’s Engineer officer under Captain Edward C. Kalbfus. Foster took part in the shakedown cruise to the Mediterranean Sea and Port SaidEgyptAden, Arabia; and BushehrPersia, where took on board the remains of Vice Consul Robert Imbrie, who was assassinated.[12][13]

By the end of October 1924, Trenton was conducting gunnery drills off the Virginia Capes near Norfolk, but powder bags in her forward turret exploded, killing or injuring every member of the gun crew. Noting the difficulties of rescuing the men in the turret through the access door, or of extinguishing the fire from the forecastle, and with total disregard for his own safety, Foster entered the turret from the upper handling rooms, took the fire hose which was passed to him from without and extinguished the fire in the turret and in the clothing of the members of the crew. For this act of valor, he was decorated with the Navy Cross.[2][14][5][3]

The Trenton was repaired shortly thereafter and returned to patrols along the East Coast of the United States. She was later attached to the Scouting Fleet off Guantánamo BayCuba and took part in gunnery exercises off the Panama Canal Zone. Foster was detached in July 1927 and ordered back to New York City, where he was attached to the headquarters of Third Naval District under Rear admiral Charles P. Plunkett.[15]

At the beginning of Great Depression, Foster resigned from active duty at his own request in March 1929 and was active in various civilian organizations, some directly involved with U.S. Military functions. In 1941, Foster surveyed resources of the Galapagos Islands for the Pacific Development Company. He remained a member of the United States Naval Reserve and received Naval Reserve Medal for 10 years of service with the reserves.

Following the Japanese Attack on Pearl Harbor and the United States entry into World War II, Foster was recalled to active duty with the rank of commander in the Naval Reserve and was tasked directly by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to conduct special naval inspections. One of his first mission was to conduct investigation in the Panama Canal Zone following the series of complaints from the Army‘s Lieutenant General Daniel Van Voorhis, commander of Caribbean Defense Command on Army-Navy cooperation.[3]

Foster arrived to Balboa and after few weeks, he concluded that Rear Admiral Frank H. Sadler, commandant of the Fifteenth Naval District, was the main reason of the lack of effective cooperation with the Army. Foster recommended Sadler to be relieved of command and be succeeded some able and younger officer, who would improve the relations with the Army.

Upon his return stateside, Foster is promoted to captain and was assigned to the Logistics Plans Division of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations. He was later transferred to the recently created Office of General Inspector of the Navy under Admiral Charles P. Snyder. He is later promoted to rear admiral and appointed assistant naval inspector general in August 1943.[1][5]

Foster then conducted inspections and investigation on Naval DistrictsSea Frontiers, Naval Air Training Commands, and shore-based activities in the United States as well in Pacific or Atlantic areas until September 1945 and received Legion of Merit and Navy Commendation Medal for his service during the War. He was transferred to the inactive list of the Navy in October 1946 and was advanced to the rank of vice admiral on the retired list for having been specially commended in combat.[2][5]

Following his second retirement from the Navy, Foster assumed job as vice president, Mandel Brothers, Inc., a department store company in ChicagoIllinois, and served in this capacity until late 1950. He then worked for the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development in Washington, D.C., until June 1954, when was appointed special assistant to general manager for international activities, Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), which was established to foster and control the peacetime development of atomic science and technology.[1][16]

Foster is promoted to acting general manager of the commission in July 1957 and held that assignment until June of the following year. He then resumed his job as special assistant to general manager and remained in that capacity until February 1959. For his service with the Atomic Energy Commission, he was decorated with the AEC Distinguished Service Award.[1][17][3]

One month later, President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed Foster Permanent U.S. Representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency with headquarters in ViennaAustria. In this capacity he participated in Fourth General Conference in Vienna a, in the early 1960s and had the opportunity to meet Pope John XXIII.[1]

Foster retired in April 1961 and settled in Virginia Beach, Virginia, where he died at his home on January 30, 1972, aged 82. He was buried at Arlington National CemeteryVirginia, and his wife, Isabelle De La Vicendiere Lowe (1892–1981) is buried beside him.[18] They had together one son, Paul. The Spruance-class destroyer USS Paul F. Foster was named in his honor in 1976.[1][5]

Medal of Honor Citation

Rank and organization: Ensign Organization: U.S. Navy Born: Wichita, Kans. Entered service at: Kansas Place/Date: Vera Cruz, Mexico, 21 and 22 April 1914 Date of issue: 12/04/1915

Citation:

For distinguished conduct in battle, engagements of Vera Cruz, 21 and 22 April 1914. In both days’ fighting at the head of his company, Ens. Foster was eminent and conspicuous in his conduct, leading his men with skill and courage.[2]


Disposition:

Not yet available


USS PAUL F. FOSTER DD-964 Ship History

Wikipedia (as of 2024)

USS Paul F. Foster (DD-964), named for Vice Admiral Paul F. Foster USN (1889–1972), is a Spruance-class destroyer built by the Ingalls Shipbuilding Division of Litton Industries at Pascagoula, Mississippi. She was commissioned on 21 February 1976 and decommissioned on 27 March 2003. She is now ex-Paul F. Foster, serving as a Self Defense Test Ship for experimental U.S. Navy weapons and sensors. She is the last Spruance-class destroyer still afloat.

As the initial Spruance-class destroyer assigned to the Pacific FleetPaul F. Foster had many milestone firsts, including successfully firing a NATO Sea Sparrow missile, demonstrating the feasibility of landing H-46 helicopters, and determining the operational limits of the SH-3 helicopter.[2]

Operating out of San Diego, Paul F. Foster became the first Spruance-class destroyer to deploy to the Western Pacific in March 1978. The ship deployed again in 1979 and 1982, serving in the Indian Ocean and Western Pacific.[2]

Paul F. Foster joined Destroyer Squadron Nine and moved to its new home port of Long Beach, California, in August 1983. She became the Navy’s first “all electric destroyer” after major modifications at Long Beach Naval Shipyard, which included the addition of a fourth ship’s service gas turbine generator.[2]

On 29 August 1984, Paul F. Foster began its fourth Western Pacific deployment as Destroyer Squadron Nine’s flagship, with then Desron Nine Commodore, T.O. Gabriel and his staff embarked aboard, leading a five-ship surface action group and participating in several major allied fleet exercises.[2]

During a fifth deployment beginning in August 1986 with Desron Nine as part of the Carl Vinson Battle GroupPaul F. Foster was awarded the Meritorious Unit Commendation for her performance in Operation Kernel Potlatch in the North Pacific and Bering Sea.[2]

From July 1987 through July 1988, Paul F. Foster completed a regular overhaul at Northwest Marine Iron Works in Portland, Oregon. During the overhaul the ship received over 55 major ship alterations, including installation of the Mk 41 Vertical Launch System for Tomahawk cruise missiles, the AN/SQQ-89 Anti-Submarine Warfare Detection System, and facilities to employ the Navy’s most sophisticated submarine helicopter, the LAMPS MkIII.[2]

Paul F. Foster departed on its sixth Western Pacific/Indian Ocean deployment on 24 February 1989 in company with the Ranger Battle Group. Conducting operations in the northern Arabian Sea, she was awarded the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal.[2]

On 8 December 1990, Paul F. Foster departed Long Beach on its seventh overseas deployment to the Persian Gulf in support of Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm. The first ship to fire Tomahawk missiles against Iraqi targets from the Persian Gulf, she was instrumental in the liberation of Kuwait and in winning the campaign. Deploying for the eighth time on 20 July 1992, she returned to the Arabian Sea, where she operated in support of Persian Gulf Operations-Southern Watch while participating in numerous bilateral exercises with Persian Gulf Nations.[2]

During the ship’s ninth deployment, Paul F. Foster again served with the Carl Vinson Carrier Battle Group and was the first ship on the scene to provide assistance to a burning ocean tug, Glorious City, putting out the fire and saving its crew of seven.[2]

Upon returning from deployment on 20 October 1994, Paul F. Foster entered into a regular overhaul at Long Beach Naval Shipyard where several of the latest technological weapons, sensors and engineering systems were added. A major change implemented during this overhaul was a retrofit of a berthing, to accommodate her first female crew members. After completion of overhaul, she moved to her new home port of Everett, Washington arriving November 1995.[2]

During the ship’s tenth deployment which began 21 February 1997, Paul F. Foster was a part of the multinational force during Persian Gulf Operations, enforcing United Nations sanctions against Iraq.[2]

Paul F. Foster departed for her eleventh deployment on 27 January 1999. While serving as part of the Pacific Middle East Force, she participated in Operation Iron Siren, Eager Sentry, and Arabian Gauntlet. In addition, the ship conducted boarding’s in support of United Nations sanctions against Iraq.[2]

Paul F. Foster departed for her twelfth deployment on 11 January 2001, where the ship once again conducted numerous boarding operations in support of the United Nations sanctions against Iraq.[2] Her thirteenth and final deployment began on 18 June 2002.[citation needed]

Paul F. Foster was decommissioned on 27 March 2003. In 2004, Paul F. Foster was designated to replace ex-Decatur as a test ship for the Navy, a role she assumed in 2005. In support of this new role, the now ex-Paul F. Foster was assigned to Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division.[3] She is the only ship of her class that exists as of 2023, as all of her sister ships were either scrapped or sunk as targets upon decommissioning.[citation needed]

On 8 April 2011, Wired.com reported that ex-Paul F. Foster had successfully used the Maritime Laser Demonstrator for the first time in a sea-to-sea target test, sinking a small inflatable motorboat at a range of one mile in rough seas.[4]

On 17 November 2011, ex-Paul F. Foster demonstrated the use of shipboard alternative fuel, while underway in the Pacific Ocean on a 50–50 blend of an algae-derived, hydro-processed algal oil and petroleum F-76.[5] The ship arrived Thursday morning to the Naval Surface Warfare Center at Port Hueneme in Southern California after traveling for 17 hours on a maiden trip from San Diego.[6]

On 18 July 2016, ex-Paul F. Foster performed a test launch of the LRASM Anti-ship missile from her Mark 41 Vertical Launching System while underway in the Pacific Ocean.[7]

Awards

According to the Navy unit Awards site, Paul F. Foster received the following awards: