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Hull Number: DE-349

Launch Date: 02/15/1944

Commissioned Date: 06/14/1944

Decommissioned Date: 07/02/1946

Call Sign: NJTC


Class: JOHN C. BUTLER

JOHN C. BUTLER Class


Namesake: WAYNE ROY GENTRY

WAYNE ROY GENTRY

Wikipedia (as of 2024)

Gentry was named after Wayne Roy Gentry who was killed in action 2 November 1942 in the Solomon Islands area while serving as a pilot in a Marine Scout-Bombing Squadron and was posthumously awarded the Air Medal.


Disposition:

Stricken 15 January 1972 and sold for scrap on 15 January 1973.


USS GENTRY DE-349 Ship History

Wikipedia (as of 2024)

USS Gentry (DE-349) was a John C. Butler-class destroyer escort acquired by the U.S. Navy during World War II. The primary purpose of the destroyer escort was to escort and protect ships in convoy, in addition to other tasks as assigned, such as patrol or radar picket.

The destroyer escort’s keel was laid down 13 December 1943 by the Consolidated Steel Corporation at their yard in Orange, TexasGentry was launched on 15 February 1944, sponsored by Miss Jean Maxine Gentry, Lt. Gentry’s sister and commissioned on 14 June 1944.

Following shakedown off Bermuda and duty as a school ship at Norfolk, VirginiaGentry arrived at New York on 25 September 1944. Between 6 October and 23 December, she made two round-trip, convoy-escort voyages out of New York to MarseillesFrance, and OranAlgeriaGentry then sailed from New London, Connecticut on 9 January 1945 escorting the submarines Bullhead and Lionfish to Key West, Florida.

The destroyer escort then continued via the Panama Canal to the Western Pacific, arriving at ManusAdmiralty Islands on 20 February. During the next four months Gentry escorted convoys between New Guinea and the Philippines, throughout the Philippine Archipelago, and from Manila Bay and Leyte Gulf to the Palaus and Western Carolines. In July she escorted a convoy to Okinawa and served on picket duty before returning Leyte late in the month.

After the Japanese capitulation 15 August, Gentry continued escorting convoys out of Leyte Gulf to New GuineaManila Bay, and Okinawa. In addition, she served on air-sea rescue patrol in Leyte Gulf until 27 November when she departed Leyte for the United States. Arriving at Los AngelesCalifornia on 18 December, she was towed to San Diego, California on 6 April 1946.

Gentry decommissioned there on 2 July 1946 and entered the Pacific Reserve Fleet at Stockton, California. She was later transferred to Mare Island, California. The destroyer escort was stricken 15 January 1972 and sold for scrap on 15 January 1973.