Hull Number: DDG-6
Launch Date: 12/10/1960
Commissioned Date: 08/11/1962
Decommissioned Date: 12/17/1990
Call Sign: NDSD (63-65)
Voice Call Sign: BAND MASTER
Other Designations: DD-956
Class: CHARLES F. ADAMS
CHARLES F. ADAMS Class
Data for USS Cochrane (DDG-21) as of 1982
Length Overall: 440’ 3"
Beam: 44’ 11 1/2"
Draft: 16’ 0"
Standard Displacement: 3,527 tons
Full Load Displacement: 4,642 tons
Fuel capacity: 736 tons
Armament:
Two 5″/54 caliber guns
One ASROC Launcher
Two 12.75″ triple anti-submarine torpedo tubes
One Mark 13 Mod 0 Guided Missile Launching System (Tartar)
Complement:
22 Officers
21 Chief Petty Officers
298 Enlisted
Propulsion:
4 Boilers
2 General Electric Turbines: 70,000 horsepower
Highest speed on trials: 35 knots
Namesake: JOSHUA BARNEY
JOSHUA BARNEY
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, March 2006
Joshua Barney, born in Baltimore on 6 July 1759, went to sea at an early age and commanded a merchantman at 15. He entered the new Continental Navy in October of 1775 in Hornet. Later, in Wasp, he participated in engagements with HMS Roebuck and HMS Liverpool in April 1776 and subsequently helped to defend Nancy after that merchant brig had run aground attempting to slip through the British blockade to Philadelphia.
Appointed a lieutenant in the Continental Navy in June 1776, Barney sailed on 6 July, his 17th birthday, as Sachem‘s executive officer. After that sloop captured British letter of marque Three Friends on 12 August, Barney commanded the crew that took the prize to Philadelphia.
Transferred to Andrew Doria, Barney sailed on 23 October for St. Eustatius for a cargo of military stores. While returning home, that warship captured the 12 gun British sloop Racehorse and the armed British snow, Thomas, of which Barney was appointed prize master. While sailing home, the prize was retaken by the British on 4 January 1777.
Exchanged on 20 October 1777, Barney was appointed 1st lieutenant of Virginia but again became a prisoner when that long-blockaded new frigate was captured on the night of 31 March 1778 while attempting to escape to sea. Exchanged again in August 1778, Barney, finding no openings in the Continental Navy, served in privateers until becoming 1st lieutenant of Continental sloop Saratoga in the summer of 1780.
After escorting the packet Mercury to sea, Saratoga fought an inconclusive battle with the British brig HMS Keppel and captured the rum-laden snow Sarah and the sloop Elizabeth. Early in October, when Saratoga encountered a 22 gun letter of marque in company with another ship and a brig, Barney led the 50 man boarding party that captured Charming Molly and took command of the prize. However, the leaking Charming Molly was retaken by the ship of the line HMS Intrepid.
After escaping from England’s Old Mill Prison, Barney commanded Hyder Ally. While escorting a convoy of merchantmen down the Delaware in April 1782, that Pennsylvania state ship encountered the frigate HMS Quebec, the 20 gun ship HMS General Monk, and several Loyalist privateers. General Monk and privateer Fair American bore down on the American convoy as Barney attempted to shepherd it back upriver. After giving Hyder Ally two broadsides, Fair American went after the convoy. While waiting for his larger opponent, Barney held his fire keeping his gunports closed to lure General Monk in close, instructing his helmsman to steer in the opposite direction from that called out. Accordingly, when Barney ordered the helm to port, General Monk‘s captain gave the same command. However, Hydr Ally‘s helmsman actually turned to starboard, causing General Monk to become entangled with Barney’s ship. Barney lashed the two ships in a position that enabled Hyder Ally‘s starboard guns to rake General Monk, rendering her deck a shambles, wounding her captain and killing most of her other officers. Barney’s men then cut General Monk‘s rigging and made her unmanageable. The last British officer on his feet, a midshipman, then struck General Monk‘s colors.
In General Monk, renamed General Washington, Barney voyaged to Haiti with dispatches to the French fleet, and thence to France where Benjamin Franklin presented the young officer to the court of Louis XVI. The voyage home, begun early in January 1783, brought news of peace and recognition of independence to America.
Before returning to civilian life, Barney retained command of General Washington, the last active ship of the Continental Navy, until May 1784, making several voyages to Europe on diplomatic missions. He became a post captain in the French Navy early in 1795, but his service to France brought him little but the empty distinction of reaching a rank equivalent to that of commodore. As a civilian, the former naval hero made two unsuccessful campaigns for Congress and supported retaliation for British depredations against American shipping.
When war came, Barney departed the Chesapeake Bay on 15 July 1812 in the 12-gun schooner Rossie and captured 18 ships, including His Majesty’s packet ship Princess Amelia, before returning on 21 November 1812. Upon learning that a British naval force had entered the Chesapeake Bay in July 1813 and was preying on American shipping and coastal communities, Barney presented President James Madison and Secretary of the Navy William Jones with a plan to defend the region. Approving his program, they appointed him Commodore of the Chesapeake Flotilla.
By 17 March 1814, when he put out of Baltimore and sailed south to meet the British, Barney had put together a force of 13 barges, two gunboats, and his flagship Scorpion, a 5 gun cutter. With this small flotilla, Barney played an adroit cat and mouse game as he opposed a vastly superior enemy until late in the summer. Then, hemmed in by an overwhelming more powerful enemy, he left a skeleton force to destroy the flotilla and struck out overland with 400 battle tested sailors to join in the land defense of Washington. Meanwhile, British General Ross’s 4,500 redcoats began their march north along the left bank of the Patuxent while Admiral Cockburn led a flotilla of small craft up the river on the right flank. As Cockburn’s force hove in sight of the Chesapeake Flotilla, Barney’s stubborn barges blew up in their faces.
On the morning of 24 August, Barney and his men hurried to join in a battle that was brewing near Bladensburg, Md. The action had already begun when they arrived, so the American sailors took up station in the third and final line of defense. After the British had smashed the first two American lines, only Barney and his flotillamen remained on the field with their five guns supported by some of the braver remnants of other units. The commodore, a conspicuous target on horseback, directed the fire at the oncoming redcoats. In all, his battery and 400 to 500 men stopped four British frontal assaults. However, ravines on both sides of Barney’s position enabled the British to mount flanking movements that doomed Barney and his men. Support units on both flanks abandoned him and snipers harassed the embattled sailors. The commodore’s horse was shot from under him; but Barney, ignoring the wound in his thigh, continued the fight until ammunition for the cannon ran out. At that point, he ordered his sailors to spike the guns and retire. Barney once more fell captive to the British.
The British went on to sack and burn the nation’s capital before retiring to their ships. Barney was paroled and returned to his farm at Elkridge, Md., to convalesce. When exchanged he resumed command of the flotilla on 10 October and carried out that frustrating assignment until the flotilla was disbanded in April 1815.
Resuming private life Barney made several trips to Kentucky. In November 1817, President James Monroe appointed him Naval Officer of the Port of Baltimore. Late in October 1818, he began another journey to Kentucky with the intention of moving there, but, during a stopover at Pittsburgh occasioned by ill health, Barney died on 1 December 1818.
Disposition:
Stricken 11/20/1992