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Hull Number: DE-1044

Launch Date: 06/06/1964

Commissioned Date: 08/05/1965

Decommissioned Date: 03/31/1988

Call Sign: NERA

Voice Call Sign: HUCKSTER

Other Designations: FF-1044


Class: GARCIA

GARCIA Class


Namesake: THOMAS M. BRUMBY

THOMAS M. BRUMBY

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, August 2023

Named in honor of Lieutenant Thomas M. Brumby, USN and his nephew, Admiral Frank H. Brumby.

Thomas Mason Brumby was born 20 November 1855 in Marietta, Ga. and graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1877. He served as flag-lieutenant to Admiral Dewey on board Olympia and as Dewey’s personal representative in negotiating for the surrender of Manila. Lieutenant Brumby died in Washington, DC on 17 December 1899.

Frank Hardeman Brumby was born in Athens, Ga. 11 September 1874 and graduated from the Naval Academy with the class of 1897. During the Spanish-American War he served aboard the armored cruiser New York. In 1905 he became flag lieutenant of the Atlantic Training Squadron and later commanded cruiser Cincinnati and battleship Kansas. Following this he was Captain of the Washington Navy Yard with additional duty as Assistant Superintendent of the Naval Gun Factory, Washington, DC. In 1924 he assumed command of battleship New Mexico. Two years later he became Commander Control Force having additional duty as Commander Submarine Divisions, Control Force until 1928 when he was appointed President of the Board of Inspection and Survey, Navy Department, Washington, DC. In 1929 he commanded a light cruiser division, and later the Fifth Naval District. Admiral Brumby retired in 1938 and died in Norfolk, 16 July 1950.


Disposition:

Transferred to the Pakistan Navy and recommissioned as PNS Harbah. Returned to the United States, she was stricken 9 September 1994.


USS BRUMBY DE-1044 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, August 2023

The first Brumby was laid down on 1 April 1963, at Westwego, La., by Avondale Shipyards Corp.; launched on 6 June 1964 and sponsored by Misses Muriel T. Fitzgerald and Cornelia Truxtun Fitzgerald, Adm. Brumby’s granddaughters; and commissioned on 5 August 1965, Cmdr. George F. Tolson, Jr., commanding.

During Brumby’s Caribbean shakedown training in 1966, she assisted in efforts to save cruise ship MS Viking Princess by searching for survivors after the ship caught fire. Of the 484 passengers on board, all were rescued except two that died of apparent heart attacks. Arriving back at her homeport at Newport, R.I., Brumby made her first deployment to the North Atlantic and Mediterranean (May-September 1967). She also received the Battle “E” award for 1966.

Transferred to Destroyer Squadron (DesRon) 12 in 1968, Brumby steamed to her new homeport at Mayport, Fl., in 1969. Her second deployment to the Mediterranean occurred from May-September. After a brief refit, Brumby conducted workups before steaming to the Mediterranean in November 1970, returning to Mayport in May 1971.

In mid-1972, Brumby participated in Exercise STRONG EXPRESS in the North Atlantic. Suffering damage to her steam generators in October, Brumby was towed for a month-long trans-Atlantic journey from Greenock, Scotland, to Charleston, S.C., by Preserver (ARS-8), arriving on 15 November 1972. Brumby immediately went into the shipyard for repairs to her generators.

By 1973, she became an element of DesRon 4 and moved her homeport to Charleston, S.C. As a unit of the Middle East Force, Brumby deployed to the Indian Ocean. Making a visit to Karachi, Pakistan, she returned in 1974.

Brumby participated in SOLID SHIELD 75 and UNITAS XVI in 1975. She was re-designated a frigate on 30 June. In 1976, Secretary of the Navy J. William Middendorf III presented her with the “Golden Snipe” award. She also took part in the North Atlantic exercise TEAMWORK 76 and Exercise BONDED ITEM.

From 1 February 1977-14 April 1978, Brumby underwent the first of three regular overhauls conducted by Bath Iron Works, Corp. The overhaul focused mainly on the engineering plant. She later deployed to the Mediterranean in 1978. While underway, she steamed alongside her squadron in SHAREM 30 and Exercise “National Week.”

Brumby deployed on 22 February 1980, enjoying her first Middle Eastern liberty port upon visiting Bahrain (16-18 April). After Brumby’s second overhaul period (March-December 1981) at Bath Iron Works, the frigate returned to Charleston on New Year’s Day. On 25 January 1982, Brumby’s Rescue and Assistance Team, along with teams from John Rodgers (DD-983), Sierra (AD-18), and Thorn (DD-988), fought a Class Bravo fire in the fireroom of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dredge McFarland, anchored in Charleston harbor. Brumby later received a Coast Guard Unit commendation for helping extinguish the blaze and preventing an oil spill in the harbor. On 11 October, Brumby collided with Mullinnix (DD-944) while participating in the War-at-Sea phase of READEX 1-83. No personnel injuries occurred and damage to both ships was minor.

United Kingdom. Beginning on 3 May 1985, the frigate participated in SOLID SHIELD 85, before taking up duties as antisubmarine (ASW) escort for Saratoga (CVA-60). She later served as flagship for Commander, Destroyer Squadron (ComDesRon) 22 in ASW patrols in the Atlantic.

Brumby spent the first two months of 1986 in dry dock receiving a replacement of her rubber sonar dome and general upkeep. Command Master Chief (CMC) QMCM George Dervin unexpectedly died of a heart attack while jogging on 3 June. Several crewmembers participated in his military funeral four days later in Sumter, S.C. In October, the frigate conducted counter-narcotics operations in the Caribbean.

In the first three weeks of January 1987, Brumby participated in counter-narcotics operations in the Caribbean. She participated in SOLID SHIELD 87 (22 April), until receiving a search and rescue tasking to assist tug Guardian, en route from New Orleans to New York. Caught in a storm off Cape Hatteras, Guardian took on water over her stern and began to founder. Brumby steamed to Guardian’s assistance and remained with the sinking vessel all evening until a rescue the next day saved all five crewmembers. In August, she entered the Bath Iron Works to commence a regularly scheduled overhaul.

From January-March 1989, Brumby prepared to decommission before transferring to the Pakistan Navy under the Foreign Military Sales Program. The Pakistani crew arrived in Charleston the first week of February and underwent intensive training by Brumby crewmembers in port and at sea.

Brumby decommissioned on 31 March 1988, before transferring to the Pakistan Navy and recommissioned as PNS Harbah.

Returned to the United States, she was stricken from the Navy Register on 9 September 1994.

Commanding Officers                                                          Date Assumed Command

Cmdr. George F. Tolson, Jr. 5 August 1965
Cmdr. Peter G. Brown 7 July 1966
Cmdr. Peter R. Walker 19 August 1968
Cmdr. Luther C. Holder 21 November 1970
Cmdr. Stanley L. Turner 15 February 1972
Cmdr. Edward C. Snyder, Jr. 07 March 1972
Cmdr. John J. Kingston 13 April 1973
Cmdr. Frederick N. Mangol 14 July 1973
Cmdr. William W. Pippenger 15 July 1975
Cmdr. David G. MacPherson 14 October 1976
Cmdr. William F. Glover III 10 June 1978
Cmdr. Jimmy D. Henderson 16 June 1980
Cmdr. Franklin G. West, Jr. 13 September 1982
Cmdr. James D. Eldridge, Jr. 14 September 1984
Cmdr. John R. “Rusty” Wall 14 November 1986