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Hull Number: DE-136

Launch Date: 01/24/1943

Commissioned Date: 07/14/1944

Call Sign: NXSM


Class: EDSALL

EDSALL Class


Namesake: FREDERICK CURTICE DAVIS

FREDERICK CURTICE DAVIS

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, December 2019

Frederick Curtice Davis—born in Rock County, Wisc., on 21 October 1915. Graduating from the University of Wisconsin in early 1939, Davis enlisted in the U.S. Naval Reserve on 7 July, and began his primary flight training at Long Beach, Calif. He received his pilot’s wings, and was commissioned an ensign on 4 September 1940, after successfully completing instruction at the Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida.

Ens. Davis received assignment to the battleship Nevada (BB-36), operating out of Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii. Reporting to Observation Squadron One (VO-1), Battleship Division One (consisting of Nevada, Pennsylvania (BB-38) and Arizona (BB-39), Ens. Davis was present during the Japanese attack on the U.S. fleet anchored at Pearl. With no aircraft on board at the time of attack, Davis ran forward to help load and command an anti-aircraft machine gun battery, until machine gun fire from strafing enemy aircraft attacking Nevada killed him. Ens. Davis posthumously received the Navy Cross for his actions.


Disposition:

Stricken 2 June 1945.


USS FREDERICK C. DAVIS DE-136 Ship History

Wikipedia (as of 2024)

USS Frederick C. Davis (DE-136) was an Edsall-class destroyer escort built for the United States Navy during World War II. It was the last US Naval vessel lost in the Battle of the Atlantic.

Frederick C. Davis was laid down on 9 November 1942 by the Consolidated Steel Company of Orange, Texas that was launched on 24 January 1943, sponsored by Mrs. Dorothy H. Robins. The ship was commissioned on 14 July 1943. Frederick C. Davis sailed from Norfolk on 7 October 1943 to escort a convoy to Algiers. She was assigned to escort duty between North African ports and Naples, and on 6 November first came under enemy air attack. A wave of torpedo and medium bombers damaged three ships in her convoy but were driven off by the escort’s anti-aircraft fire before further damage could be done. Again under air attack on 26 November, Frederick C. Davis splashed at least two of the enemy aircraft.

Continuing her escort duty in the western Mediterranean SeaFrederick C. Davis took part in an attack on 16 December 1943 which resulted in the sinking of U-73 by two of her group. On 21 January 1944 the escort sortied from Naples for the Anzio landings, during which her superlative and courageous performance was to win her a Navy Unit Commendation. After providing protection from submarines and aircraft to ships giving fire support to the assault on 22 January, Frederick C. Davis maintained a patrol off the besieged beachhead for the next six months, leaving only for brief periods of replenishment at Naples. Equipped with special equipment to jam the control frequency of the enemy’s rocket-propelled, radio-directed glider bombsFrederick C. Davis fought off enemy air attacks, protecting shipping in the anchorage and the men enduring the fighting ashore. Particularly during the earlier stages of this bitter operation, Frederick C. Davis came under shellfire from shore batteries. Shrapnel caused slight damage to the ship, but only one man was wounded during this service.

After a return to escort duty in the Mediterranean in June and July 1944, Frederick C. Davis cleared Naples on 9 August for Corsica, her staging point for the assault on southern France. Here again she provided her special jamming services to protect the headquarters ship for the operation, USS Catoctin. She remained off the assault area on anti-submarine patrol and controlling shipping until 19 September, then returned to New York Navy Yard for overhaul.

Returning to duty in the western Atlantic early in 1945, Frederick C. Davis served on coastal convoy escort and anti-submarine patrol service and in mid-April joined a special surface barrier force, formed to protect the Atlantic coast from the threat of close penetration by snorkel-equipped German submarines during Operation Teardrop. It was one of these, U-546, which was contacted 24 April by Frederick C. Davis. Within minutes, as the destroyer escort prepared to attack, the submarine torpedoed her, hitting on the port side, forward. Five minutes later, Frederick C. Davis broke in two, and efforts to preserve the buoyancy of the stern, where the damage was less and the majority of survivors were located, failed. Her survivors abandoned the ship and were taken from the water within three hours, while 115 men were lost. The attacking submarine U-546 was sunk by the other US Navy escorts later that day with the surviving German crew being captured.