Hull Number: DE-668
Launch Date: 11/27/1943
Commissioned Date: 12/18/1944
Decommissioned Date: 08/19/1946
Call Sign: NTAP
Class: BUCKLEY
BUCKLEY Class
Namesake: WILLIAM JOHN YOKES
WILLIAM JOHN YOKES
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, December 2015
William John Yokes, born on 15 November 1918 in Franklin, Pa., enlisted in the U.S. Navy at Cleveland, Ohio, on 3 January 1942 and ultimately advanced to the rating of seaman 2d class.
Attached to the armed guard detachment in the freighter Steel Navigator, Yokes was killed in action on 19 October 1942 when his ship, a straggler from Convoy ON-137, was attacked by the German submarine U-610. For several days prior to the engagement, heavy seas and high winds had caused a dangerous shift in ballast in the merchantman. Yokes acted beyond the scope of his duty when he and his shipmates volunteered to go below and perform the physically exhausting task of shifting ballast to trim the ship. That they did for some 30 hours without rest. On 19 October 1942, lookouts spotted the periscope of U-610, and the armed guard unit swiftly manned their guns. Soon the gunfire registered several near-misses around the enemy’s periscope, and he withdrew temporarily.
Later that day, U-610 returned and torpedoed the merchantman, sinking her immediately. Among the dead, Yokes was commended posthumously by the Chief of Naval Personnel, who cited the seaman’s “courageous and unfailing devotion to duty . . . fortitude, skill and bravery” in conduct “in keeping with the highest traditions of the naval service.”
Disposition:
Stricken 1 April 1964. Sold to the National Metal & Steel Corp., Terminal Island, Calif., the hulk of the former high-speed transport was scrapped subsequently.