Hull Number: DE-747
Launch Date: 09/26/1943
Commissioned Date: 06/30/1944
Decommissioned Date: 04/19/1946
Call Sign: NZWQ
Class: CANNON
CANNON Class
Namesake: GRAHAM PAUL BRIGHT
GRAHAM PAUL BRIGHT
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016
Graham Paul Bright, born on 4 September 1912 in Wilkinsburg, Pa., was appointed a midshipman at the Naval Academy on 17 June 1931 and graduated on 6 June 1535. After service in Idaho (BB-42) and study at the Naval Finance and Supply School at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, Bright transferred from the unrestricted line to the Supply Corps in June 1937 and reported to his first fiscal billet as disbursing officer for Destroyer Division (DesDiv) 24, Battle Force, on 15 June 1937.
Advanced to lieutenant (junior grade) a year later, Bright served as disbursing officer for DesDiv 11, Battle Force, from 15 October 1938 to 12 July 1939 and then become disbursing and commissary officer at the Anacostia Naval Air Station in Washington, D.C. Eventually becoming assistant to the supply officer at Anacostia in the summer of 1940, Bright served for a month with the 12th Naval District before reporting to Guam on 19 August 1941.
When war came to that lightly defended American possession, Lt.(jg.) Bright was serving as assistant supply officer with the naval government of Guam, working in the administrative unit at Agana. He was killed by machinegun fire during the fighting that followed the Japanese landing on 10 December 1941.
Disposition:
Reactivated on 18 March 1950 for transfer to France under the Mutual Defense Assistance Pact (MDAP), Bright was turned over to the French at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard on 11 November 1950. Stricken 20 December 1950. Renamed Touareg (F.721), she served the French Navy until placed in reserve in 1960. In May 1964, the French struck her name from their navy list and then sold her for scrapping in May of 1965 to the Compagnie Métallurgique et Minière, of Paris.