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Hull Number: DE-1051

Launch Date: 10/20/1965

Commissioned Date: 07/13/1968

Decommissioned Date: 05/31/1989

Call Sign: NZKI

Voice Call Sign: IRISH SONG (68-70) (DE), RAINTUNNEL

Other Designations: FF-1051


Class: GARCIA

GARCIA Class


Namesake: JOSEPH T. O'CALLAHAN

JOSEPH T. O'CALLAHAN

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, August 2015

Captain Joseph T. O’Callahan (1905-1964), Chaplain Corps, USNR, served on board carrier Franklin when she endured her fiery ordeal off the coast of Japan in 1945. Captain O’Callahan received the Medal of Honor for “conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty.”


Disposition:

To Pakistan 2/8/1989, returned 11/14/1993. Leased to Pakistan 31 May 1989. However, following Pakistan's refusal to halt its nuclear weapons program, the lease was cancelled in 1994. She was returned to United States custody at Singapore on 19 August 1994. Stricken 19 August 1994. On 9 September she was transferred to the Maritime Administration and sold to Trusha Investments Pte. Ltd, c/o Jacques Pierot, Jr. & Sons, Inc., of New York City for over $600,000. She was then towed to Hong Kong and scrapped.


USS O`CALLAHAN DE-1051 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, August 2015

O’Callahan (DE-1051) was laid down 19 February 1964 by Defoe Shipbuilding Co., Bay City, Mich.; launched 20 October 1965; sponsored by Sister Rose Marie O’Callahan of the Philippines Maryknoll College, sister of Chaplain O’Callahan and first nun to sponsor a U.S. Navy ship; and commissioned 13 July 1968 at Boston Naval Shipyard, Boston, Mass., Captain Robert L. Brown in command.

After fitting out at Boston, O’Callahan got underway 16 August for her homeport of San Diego, Calif., calling at Norfolk, Charleston, and Fort Lauderdale enroute. She stood out of San Diego 1 October for twenty five days of electronics and weapons systems tests off the Pacific Northwest, then she commenced shakedown out of San Diego 4 November. After at-sea training operations off the Hawaiian Islands 6-17 February 1969, she entered Long Beach Naval Shipyard 4 March for post-shakedown availability through mid-May. She had since into 1970, conducted training operations out of San Diego in preparation for her first WestPac deployment.