Hull Number: DE-596
Launch Date: 02/23/1944
Commissioned Date: 04/25/1945
Decommissioned Date: 05/15/1957
Call Sign: NUCJ (APD)
Voice Call Sign: KOSHER ZEBRA (APD)
Other Designations: APD-106
Class: RUDDEROW
RUDDEROW Class
Namesake: WALTER B. COBB
WALTER B. COBB
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, November 2015
Walter Benjamin Cobb, born on 8 September 1919 at Grays, Kentucky, enlisted in the Navy on 17 November 1937 and attained the rating of coxswain.
While assigned to Mugford (DD-389), Cobb served in the crew of that destroyer’s number four 5-inch mount. On 7 August 1942, Mugford screened transports unloading troops off Guadalcanal on the first day of the landings. At 1457, lookouts spotted seven planes with distinctive fixed landing gear. Mugford rang up 30 knots and prepared for action, putting her helm over hard right. Four of the planes, identified now as “Vals,” dove toward the destroyer; and each, in quick succession, dropped its bomb. The first struck the water 25 yards off Mugford’s starboard propeller guard; the second splashed 25 yards to port, abreast her number four torpedo tube mount; the third hit the ship’s after deckhouse, silencing her after 5-inch and 20-millimeter guns, as well as disabling her secondary conning and after radio stations; and the last missed to starboard, some 200 yards off the bridge. In return, Mugford splashed two “Vals.”
The direct hit aft blew four men overboard, including Cobb, who was uninjured. After Ralph Talbot (DD-390) picked up the four displaced Sailors, Cobb volunteered to join the crew of that destroyer’s number four gun.
In the early morning darkness of 9 August, Ralph Talbot patrolled the waters to the northeast of Savo Island to protect the northern flank of the transport forces still unloading off Tulagi and Guadalcanal. Between the destroyer and the transports, steamed the northern force of Allied cruisers: Vincennes (CA-44), Astoria (CA-34), and Quincy (CA-39). Unbeknownst to the Americans, a strong force of Japanese cruisers steamed into these waters. With lightning-like speed,the Japanese torpedoed Australian heavy cruiser Canberra and Chicago (CA-29) further to the south. They also set Canberra afire in a flurry of shellfire. Then, turning north, Rear Admiral Gunichi Mikawa’s force, led by cruiser Chokai,proceeded to subject the other three American cruisers to an avalanche of shellfire.
Ralph Talbot sighted the first gun flashes at 0200 and altered course to close. At 0217, Tenryu spotted the destroyer and, in company with Yubari and Furutaka, loosed seven salvoes at Ralph Talbot. One shell struck her number one torpedo tube mount. Thinking that she was under fire from friendly guns, Ralph Talbot called out her identity over TBS radio; flashed her recognition lights and drew a respite, but not for long. Yubari, bringing up the rear of Mikawa’s force, opened fire and, on the second salvo, got the range. Illuminated by searchlights and skewered by the shaft of light like a bug on the end of a pin, Ralph Talbot staggered under the impact of the Japanese barrage. Four 5.5-inch salvos struck in quick succession, the last of which hit the American destroyer’s number four gun mount, killing Cobb. For his gallantry Cobb was awarded the Silver Star.
Disposition:
Stricken 15 January 1966. Sold to Taiwan on 22 February 1966, Walter B. Cobb and Gantner (APD-42) were accepted by the Chinese Navy on 15 March. The Chinese dispatched tug Ta Tung to tandem-tow the two transports to Taiwan. While en route to the western Pacific, the two APD's collided on 21 April and both suffered heavy damage. Gantner was towed to Treasure Island, Calif., but Walter B. Cobb, however, listed progressively from 18 to 40 degrees while settling aft. At 2340 on 21 April, the former high-speed transport filled with water and sank, stern first, in 2,100 fathoms of water.