< Woodson DE-369

Woodson DE-369

 


Woodson

(DE-369: dp. 1,360; 1. 306'0"; b. 36'7", dr. 13'4", s. 24.3 k. (tl.); cpl. 222; a. 2 6", 4 40mm., 10 20mm.,8 dcp., 1 dcp. (hh.), 2 act., 3 21" tt.; cl. John C.Butler)

Woodson (DE-369) was laid down on 7 March 1944 at Orange, Tex., by the Consolidated Steel Corp., Ltd.; launched on 29 April 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Joyce M. Woodson, and commissioned on 24 August 1944, Lt. Comdr. J. L. Foley in command.

After fitting out at Galveston, Tex., the destroyer escort embarked upon her shakedown cruise on 11 September. En route to her training area in the vicinity of Bermuda, she assisted the survivors of Warrington (DD-383) which had sunk off the east coast during a hurricane. Woodson rescued a number of survivors, carried them to Norfolk, VA., and then resumed shakedown training around Bermuda. The warship completed that training and arrived in Boston, Mass., on 26 October. After two weeks of post-shakedown availability, she stood out of Boston on 6 November, bound for Norfolk where she spent the remainder of the month serving as a school ship for the Operational Training Command, Atlantic Fleet.

On the last day of November, she departed Norfolk and shaped a course for the Pacific Ocean and duty with the 7th Fleet in the southwestern Pacific. Steaming via the Panama Canal, the Galapagos Islands, and Bora Bora in the Society Islands, she arrived at Hollandia on the northern coast of New Guinea on 3 January 1945. Upon her arrival, the destroyer escOrt was assigned to convoy duty between New Guinea and the Philippines, primarily on the Hollandia-to-Leyte run. Early in April, however, she dropped her runs to New Guinea and limited her operations to escort missions among major ports in the Philippines such as Leyte, Lingayen Gulf, and Manila Bay. That duty lasted until 25 May when she reported to the Commander, ~ask Group (TG) 71.5 at Subic Bay for duty escorting submarines to and from their war patrol release points. When not engaged in her primary duty, Wood son participated in post-refit exercises with submarines and conducted antisubmarine patrols. Such activities occupied her through the end of hostilities and until the end of August.

On the 31st, she was detached from TG 71.6 and departed Subic Bay, bound for the Ryukyus. At Okinawa on 4 September, she became an element of TG 70.3, the escort group for the occupation forces headed for northern China and Korea. On 6 October, she left Okinawa and steamed to Shanghai where she arrived late the following day. She next returned to Leyte and remained there until 22 October when she headed back to Okinawa where she joined another China occupation convoy which sailed in early November. At Hong Kong at mid-month, the destroyer escort departed again on the 21st and shaped a course for Okinawa where she arrived on 24 November. Two days later, she began her voyage home.

Stopping at Pearl Harbor en route, Woodson arrived in San Pedro Calif., on 16 December to begin inactivation overhaul;. On 16 May 1946, the was placed in commission, in reserve, and remained so until 16 January 1947 at which time she was decommissioned. Except for a brief period during the winter of 1948 and 1949 when she made a round-trip run under tow to Long Beach for an overhaul, she remained at San Diego until the spring of 1961. On 19 May 1961, Woodson was recommissioned at San Diego, Lt. Comdr. A. Dennett in command.

The warship spent most of the summer of 1961 conducting shakedown training and other local operations along the coast of southern California. On 4 September, she got underway from San Diego on her way to the east coast. Steaming via the Panama Canal Woodson arrived in Newport, R.I., in mid-September and began local operations. On 19 October, the warship departed the Newport area to participate in the annual Atlantic Fleet exercises held in the vicinity of Puerto Rico. She returned to Newport on 17 November and remained there through the end of the year.

On 16 January 1962, the destroyer escort headed for Philadelphia where she arrived two days later. There she began a three-month overhaul at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. Woodson completed repairs on 22 April and headed back to Newport but under tow given by Atakapa (YTB-49).

She reentered Newport on 26 April but remained there less than two weeks, departing again on 7 May. She reached Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, four days later and began six weeks of refresher training. The de stroyer escort completed that assignment on 20 June and set course—via Ciudad Trujillo, Dominican Republic—for Newport. The warship reentered her home port on 28 June. Two days later, she became an element of the newly formed Hunter/Killer Group, Atlantic Fleet, under the overall command of Rear Admiral Daniel V. Gallery, the captor of U-505 during World War II.

For the next five years, Woodson ranged the length of the Atlantic coast of the United States from Newport in the north to Cuba and the West Indies in the south. Her activities consisted mostly of type training and independent ship's exercises. Frequently, however, she served as target ship for submarines engaged in training and as school ship for the Fleet Sonar School located at Key West. Fleet exercises, special projects, and periodic overhauls also added further variety to her schedule of operations. During June 1967, she also participated in the International Fleet Review held at Norfolk. That same month, her home port was changed from Newport, R.I., to Key West, Fla. Summer brought a midshipman cruise down the St. Lawrence to Quebec, Canada, and thence back to Boston and finally to Norfolk. On 16 August, she finally entered her new home port for the first time since her reassignment.

Her stay there proved brief for, on :30 August, she embarked upon her first voyage to the: Mediterranean Sea in company with Escort Squadron; (CortRon) 12. She arrived at Naples, Italy, on 14 September and, soon thereafter, began a full round of N4TO exercises, highlighted by amphibious assault trainl~g at Soudha Bay, Crete. At the conclusion of her Mediterranean assignment on 6 November, she departed Gibraltar and headed via the Azores to Key West. Upon her arrival in Key West on 20 November, Woodson saw CortRon 12 broken up and parcelled out ship by ship to various ports to support the training of Naval Reserve units.

She got underway on 2 December; headed for her own new home port, New Orleans, La., and arrived there two days later. For the remainder of her active career, Woodson cruised the waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the West Indies training New Orleans-based naval reservists. On 16 May 1969, her status was reduced from in commission to in service, though her mission, Naval Reserve training, remained the same. She helped naval reservists to polish their skills both at dockside at New Orleans and underway in the Gulf of Mexico until 11 August 1962 when she was placed in reserve. Following inspection and survey in June 1966, her name was struck from the Navy list on 1 July 1966. She was sold for scrapping to the Boston Metals Co., of Baltimore, Md., on 16 August 1966.