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USCGC Campbell (WPG-32)

USCGC Campbell (WPG-32) was a 327-foot (100 m) Secretary-class (also known as Treasury-class) United States Coast Guard ship built at the Philadelphia Navy Yard in 1935-1936 and commissioned in 1936. Seven similar "combat cutters" were built and named for secretaries of the United States Treasury.

USCGC Campbell (WPG-32) in final configuration
History
United States
Name
  • USCGC George W. Campbell (1936–37)
  • USCGC Campbell (1937–84)
NamesakeGeorge Washington Campbell
BuilderPhiladelphia Naval Shipyard
Laid down1 May 1935
Launched3 June 1936
Commissioned16 June 1936
Decommissioned1 April 1982
Refit1941, 1943, 1945, 1946, 1966
IdentificationWPG-32
Nickname(s)"Queen of the Seas"
FateSunk as target ship
General characteristics
Class and typeTreasury-class cutter
Displacement2,350 tons (original)
Length327 ft (100 m)
Beam41 ft (12 m)
Propulsion
Speed21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph)
Range8,270 nmi (15,320 km; 9,520 mi)
Complement125 to 225 (depending on time period)
Armament
Aircraft carriedoriginally 1 Grumman JF Duck seaplane (later removed)

Campbell was named for George Washington Campbell. She earned the title "Queen of the Seas" during a 46-year career, spanning World War II, the Korean War, and Vietnam War.

Launch and early service

George W. Campbell was launched on 3 June 1936 and sailed to her homeport of Stapleton, New York, under the command of Commander E.G. Rose, USCG, assigned to conduct search and rescue and law enforcement patrols. She left New York on 22 October 1936 for her shakedown cruise to Southampton, England, returning to New York on 16 November. Her peace-time armament consisted of two 5-inch (127 mm) 51 caliber and two 6-pounder (3 kg) signal guns, all mounted forward. Unlike the other Secretary-class cutters, George W. Campbell and Ingham did not continue to carry aircraft, though they had originally been equipped to do so.

In August 1937, her official name was shortened to Campbell and it was also during this time that her mascot Sinbad reported aboard. Sinbad remained aboard Campbell throughout her tour of duty during World War II, caused at least two international incidents in foreign harbors, faithfully manned his battle station during combat, and generally kept the crew amused during her long voyages over eleven years;[1] Sinbad died on 30 December 1951, after many years of service,[2] and was the first and one of the few Coast Guardsmen to have a published biography.[3]

Wartime duties

On 5 September 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt proclaimed American neutrality in the conflict and ordered the formation of a neutrality patrol by the Navy to report and track any belligerent air, surface, or submarine activity in the waters off the East Coast and in the West Indies. The United States Navy determined that its destroyers were not capable of extended cruises in the North Atlantic and asked that the Coast Guard conduct these patrols. The Coast Guard assigned Campbell to conduct the first Coast Guard neutrality patrol, which were referred to as "Grand Banks Patrols." Campbell would perform five such cruises, each lasting approximately two weeks, the last such cruise returning to New York on 29 January 1940.

When prepared for convoy escort duty prior to her sailing for Portugal, workers at the New York Navy Yard added three 3-inch (76 mm) 51 caliber guns in-line, aft. Her two signal guns that were directly forward of the bridge were replaced with a single 3-inch 50 caliber gun. Her two 5-inch 51 caliber main batteries remained unchanged. Campbell was the first Secretary-class cutter to transfer for duty with the Navy (on 1 July 1941) and the first to sail on escort of convoy duties when she escorted Convoy HX 159 which sailed on 10 November 1941.[4] Campbell's permanent station was changed from Stapleton to Boston in February 1942, and she later exchanged a 5-inch (127 mm) for a 3-inch (76 mm) gun, installed six more 20 mm guns, substituted two "K" guns for "Y" guns and had splinter protection built around three gun decks, bridge and wheel house.

Campbell, along with USCGC Spencer, were the first U.S. warships equipped with HF/DF, pioneered by the Royal Navy for the fight against the German U-boat fleet. The two cutters had been selected by the Navy to serve as test ships to gain experience with HF/DF, using British FH3 systems (carrying the U.S. designation Type DAR) installed in the American shipyard in Northern Ireland under the supervision of experts from the Admiralty Signals Establishment.[5] As the Royal Navy had already discovered, HF/DF was an important part of combatting the threat posed to Allied convoys by U-boats, and the experience with the interim DAR equipment provided impetus to the U.S. development of its own Type DAQ system.[6]

Convoys escorted; 1941 – early 1943 (later convoys not listed)

Convoy Escort Group Dates Notes
ON 28 31 Oct-3 Nov 1941[7] from Iceland to Newfoundland prior to US declaration of war
HX 159 10-19 Nov 1941[8] from Newfoundland to Iceland prior to US declaration of war
ON 39 29 Nov-4 Dec 1941[7] from Iceland to Newfoundland prior to US declaration of war
HX 166 25-31 Dec 1941[8] from Newfoundland to Iceland
ON 53 9-19 Jan 1942[7] from Iceland to Newfoundland
HX 174 MOEF group A3 9-17 Feb 1942[8] from Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 69 MOEF group A3 25 Feb-4 March 1942[7] from Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
SC 76 MOEF group A3 28 March-11 April 1942[9] from Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
HX 190 MOEF group A3 20–27 May 1942[8] from Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 102 MOEF group A3 10–21 June 1942[7] from Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
HX 196 MOEF group A3 2–10 July 1942[8] from Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 114 MOEF group A3 20–30 July 1942[7] from Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
SC 100 MOEF group A3 16-27 Sept 1942[9] from Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 135 MOEF group A3 3-14 Oct 1942[7] from Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
HX 212 MOEF group A3 23 Oct-1 Nov 1942[8] from Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 145 MOEF group A3 10-20 Nov 1942[7] from Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
ON 156 25-30 Dec 1942[9] Iceland shuttle
HX 223 MOEF group A3 19-late Jan 1943[8] from Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 166 MOEF group A3 12-22 Feb 1943[7] from Northern Ireland to Newfoundland; convoy attacked (see below)

When the British and Canadians assumed full responsibility for convoys in the North Atlantic in mid-1943, the U.S. took control of all mid-Atlantic and Mediterranean convoys, where the cutters faced a constant threat from U-boats and the Luftwaffe. Convoys were especially vulnerable once they cleared Gibraltar. Campbell sailed as an escort for Mediterranean convoys in 1943–1944 and saw considerable action against both U-boats and aircraft, with two incidents in particular of note.

U-boat attack, February 1943

 
WPG-32 USCGC Campbell heading to port at Norfolk Navy Yard on July 26, 1943.

On 21 February 1943, Campbell was escorting the 48-ship convoy ON 166 when the convoy was surrounded by a U-boat "wolf pack". U-92 and U-753 torpedoed and sank whale factory ship N.T. Nielsen Alonso.[10] Dispatched to assist, Campbell rescued fifty survivors and then turned to attack U-753, damaging it so badly that it had to withdraw. Throughout 21 and 22 February, Campbell attacked several U-boats, inflicting damage and driving them off. Later on 22 February, U-606, having sustained heavy damage inflicted by the Polish destroyer ORP Burza, surfaced in the midst of the convoy attempting a surface attack. Campbell struck the U-boat a glancing blow that gashed Campbell's hull in the engine room below the waterline, but continued to attack, dropping two depth charges which exploded and lifted the U-boat out of the water. The crew brought all guns to bear on the U-boat, fighting on until water in the engine room shorted out all electricity. As the ship lost power and the searchlights illuminating the U-boat went out, the U-boat's commander ordered the vessel abandoned. Campbell ceased fire and lowered boats to rescue the U-boat's survivors. Campbell, disabled in the attack, was towed to port nine days later, repaired and returned to escort duty.

Illustrator Anton Otto Fischer, working for Life magazine, was serving as a lieutenant commander aboard Campbell for this voyage. His series of detailed oil paintings depicting the battle and its aftermath appeared in Life's 5 July 1943 edition.[11]

Luftwaffe attack, May 1944

 
Campbell in 1944

In April 1944, the Convoy UGS-40, consisting of some 80 vessels, sailed for the Mediterranean, led by Campbell. The escort screen contained three destroyers, six American destroyer escorts from CortDiv 5, and two French destroyer escorts. Due to recent attacks by the Luftwaffe against Allied convoys in the western Mediterranean, UGS-40 sailed with an elaborate air defense plan, formulated by the convoy's screen commander, Comdr. Jesse C. Sowell, aboard Campbell. Practiced in Hampton Roads prior to the convoy's departure and as it crossed the Atlantic, these tactics were designed to meet mass aerial attacks by German aircraft carrying a variety of weapons ranging from bombs, to torpedoes, to radio-controlled glider bombs. Off Gibraltar, UGS-40 acquired additional escorts: British antiaircraft cruiser HMS Caledon, the destroyer escort USS Wilhoite, the destroyer USS Benson, and two American minesweepers (USS Steady and USS Sustain) carrying special apparatus to jam radar transmissions and thus confuse the German glider bombs. On 9 May 1944, the convoy passed through the Straits of Gibraltar en route to Bizerte, Tunisia, without incident, but two days later detected German "snoopers" trailing the convoy. In the next few hours, ten successive shore-based fighter interception sorties failed to drive off the enemy reconnaissance aircraft. First alerted by shore-based radar, the escort screen went to general quarters at 13:16 on 11 May, beginning the first of five successive alerts. In Campbell, Commander Sowell warned the escorts to be alert to the possibility of a dusk attack. At 20:25, radar noted the approach of enemy aircraft, and Sowell formed the convoy into eight columns 1,000 yards (910 m) apart for maneuvering room. When the enemy was reported 70 miles (110 km) north of Cape Corbelin, UGS-40 steered due east, past Cape Bengut. Shortly after sunset, escort ships commenced laying smoke screens, as the German aircraft, a mixed force of Junkers Ju 88s, Heinkel He 111s, and Dornier Do 217s, approached from the stern of the convoy and broke into groups to attack from different points of the compass. The destroyer escorts and friendly fighter craft downed an estimated 17 of the enemy planes, and drove away all the remainder, and the Allied convoy emerged unscathed.

Later service

 
USCGC Campbell (WPG-32) in 1963

After conversion to an Amphibious Command Ship (Type AGC) in the Boston Navy Yard between 4 January and 28 March 1945, Campbell was assigned to duty in the Pacific as an Amphibious Flagship. She sailed from Pearl Harbor for Saipan and arrived on 3 August 1945, sailing again for Manila on 10 August, and Leyte on 19 August. On 1 October 1945 she was anchored at Wakanoura Wan, Honshū, Japan as the flagship for Communications Service Division 103. On 30 October she sailed to Sasebo and stayed until 30 November when she was ordered back to the U.S.[1] In August 1948, Campbell found wreckage from an Air France Latécoère 631 aircraft which had crashed into the Atlantic Ocean with the loss of all 52 people on board.[12] In January 1959, Campbell was one of the ships which answered the distress call of Hans Hedtoft which had struck an iceberg off Greenland. She participated in the search until it was called off on 7 February.[13]

Vietnam

 
USCGC Campbell (WPG-32) log book entry January 1, 1968

Campbell was assigned to combat duty in Vietnam from January to July 1968. During Operation Market Time, Campbell destroyed or damaged 105 Viet Cong structures and steamed over 32,000 miles (51,000 km) in the Vietnamese War Zone.

After returning from Vietnam, Campbell was assigned to routine Search-and-Rescue, Maritime Law Enforcement, Military Readiness, and Ocean Station duties.

She was homeported at Governors Island in New York City until 1969 when she moved to Portland, Maine. In 1974 her homeport was again changed, this time to Port Angeles, Washington. There she continued her peacetime duties until decommissioned in 1982. At the time of decommissioning, Campbell was the oldest active continually commissioned vessel in the United States Coast Guard.[14]

Sinking

 
Campbell with port decks awash following hit from US Navy Harpoon missile

USCGC Campbell was sunk on 29 November 1984 as a target in the mid-Pacific Ocean by the United States Navy at coordinates 22°48′N 160°06′W / 22.800°N 160.100°W / 22.800; -160.100Coordinates: 22°48′N 160°06′W / 22.800°N 160.100°W / 22.800; -160.100, northwest of Hawaii, and rests at 2,800 fathoms (5,100 m). A final message was transmitted as the ship, which remained largely intact after a Harpoon missile strike, went down. It said:

UNCLAS //N05752//
SUBJ: FINAL FAREWELL

1. I SERVED WITH HONOR FOR ALMOST FORTY-SIX YEARS, IN WAR AND PEACE, IN THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC. WITH DUTY AS DIVERSE AS SAVING LIVES TO SINKING U-BOATS, OCEAN STATIONS TO FISHERIES ENFORCEMENT, AND FROM TRAINING CADETS TO BEING YOUR FLAGSHIP. I HAVE BEEN ALWAYS READY TO SERVE.

2. TODAY WAS MY FINAL DUTY. I WAS A TARGET FOR A MISSILE TEST. ITS SUCCESS WAS YOUR LOSS AND MY DEMISE. NOW KING NEPTUNE HAS CALLED ME TO MY FINAL REST IN 2,600 FATHOMS AT 22-48N 160-06W.

3. MOURN NOT, ALL WHO HAVE SAILED WITH ME. A NEW CUTTER CAMPBELL BEARING MY NAME, WMEC-909, WILL SOON CONTINUE THE HERITAGE. I BID ADIEU. THE QUEEN IS DEAD. LONG LIVE THE QUEEN.[15]

Awards

Source:[1]

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

References

  1. ^ a b c . U.S. Coast Guard. Archived from the original on 2017-04-30. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  2. ^ . U.S. Coast Guard. Archived from the original on 2010-12-21. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  3. ^ Foley, Chief Specialist George F., Jr. (1945). Sinbad of the Coast Guard. New York City: Dodd, Mead & Co.
  4. ^ . U.S. Coast Guard. Archived from the original on 2010-12-10. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  5. ^ Redgment, P. G. (1995). "High-Frequency Direction Finding in the Royal Navy: Development of Anti-U-Boat Equipment, 1941–5". In Kingsley, F. A. (ed.). Applications of Radar and Other Electronic Systems in the Royal Navy in World War II. Basingstoke: Macmillan Press. ISBN 978-0-33362-748-8.
  6. ^ Williams, Kathleen Broome (1996). Secret Weapon: U.S. High-Frequency Direction Finding in the Battle of the Atlantic. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-935-2.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i "ON convoys". Andrew Hague Convoy Database. from the original on 2011-09-29. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g "HX convoys". Andrew Hague Convoy Database. from the original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  9. ^ a b c "SC convoys". Andrew Hague Convoy Database. from the original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved 2011-06-21.
  10. ^ Lawson, Siri Holm (April 7, 2012). "N. T. Nielsen Alonso". Warsailors.com. from the original on 2008-09-07.
  11. ^ "The Cruise of the 'Campbell' - She Fights in the Atlantic". Life. 5 July 1943. p. 57.
  12. ^ "Missing Flying-Boat". The Times. No. 51143. London. 6 August 1948. p. 4.
  13. ^ . TIME. 9 February 1959. Archived from the original on 26 January 2009. Retrieved 4 November 2009.
  14. ^ . U.S. Coast Guard. Archived from the original on 2008-04-17. Retrieved 2007-10-23.
  15. ^ . U.S. Coast Guard. Archived from the original on 2012-10-14. Retrieved 2011-02-16.

External links

  • USCGC Campbell Association
Preceded by
none
United States Coast Guard "Queen of the Fleet"
1970s?–1982
Succeeded by

uscgc, campbell, other, ships, with, same, name, uscgc, campbell, foot, secretary, class, also, known, treasury, class, united, states, coast, guard, ship, built, philadelphia, navy, yard, 1935, 1936, commissioned, 1936, seven, similar, combat, cutters, were, . For other ships with the same name see USCGC Campbell USCGC Campbell WPG 32 was a 327 foot 100 m Secretary class also known as Treasury class United States Coast Guard ship built at the Philadelphia Navy Yard in 1935 1936 and commissioned in 1936 Seven similar combat cutters were built and named for secretaries of the United States Treasury USCGC Campbell WPG 32 in final configurationHistoryUnited StatesNameUSCGC George W Campbell 1936 37 USCGC Campbell 1937 84 NamesakeGeorge Washington CampbellBuilderPhiladelphia Naval ShipyardLaid down1 May 1935Launched3 June 1936Commissioned16 June 1936Decommissioned1 April 1982Refit1941 1943 1945 1946 1966IdentificationWPG 32Nickname s Queen of the Seas FateSunk as target shipGeneral characteristicsClass and typeTreasury class cutterDisplacement2 350 tons original Length327 ft 100 m Beam41 ft 12 m Propulsion2 Babcock amp Wilcox boilers 2 Westinghouse double reduction geared steam turbine engines 6 200 hp 4 623 kW Speed21 knots 39 km h 24 mph Range8 270 nmi 15 320 km 9 520 mi Complement125 to 225 depending on time period Armament1936 2 5 in 127 mm 51 caliber guns 2 1 2 6 pounder guns 1 1 pounder pom pom gun 1941 3 5 51 caliber 3 1 3 3 50 caliber guns 3 1 4 M2 Browning 50 caliber machine guns 2 depth charge racks 1 Y gun depth charge projector 1943 2 5 51 caliber gun 2 1 4 3 50 caliber 4 1 2 20 mm 80 caliber Oerlikons 2x1 1 Hedgehog 2 K gun depth charge projectors 2 depth charge racks 1945 2 5 38 caliber guns 2 1 3 40 mm 60 caliber Bofors 6 20 mm 80 caliber 6 1 1946 1 5 38 caliber 2 40 mm 60 caliber Bofors 1 2 8 20 mm 80 Oerlikon 8 1 1 Hedgehog 1966 1 5 38 caliber MK30 Mod75 1 1 Mark 52 Mod 3 director 1 Mark 10 Mod 1 Hedgehog 2 P amp S Mk 32 Mod 5 torpedo tubes 4 Mark 44 Mod 1 torpedoes 2 50 cal M2 Browning MG 2 MK 13 high altitude parachute flare mortarsAircraft carriedoriginally 1 Grumman JF Duck seaplane later removed Campbell was named for George Washington Campbell She earned the title Queen of the Seas during a 46 year career spanning World War II the Korean War and Vietnam War Contents 1 Launch and early service 2 Wartime duties 2 1 Convoys escorted 1941 early 1943 later convoys not listed 2 2 U boat attack February 1943 2 3 Luftwaffe attack May 1944 3 Later service 3 1 Vietnam 4 Sinking 5 Awards 6 References 7 External linksLaunch and early service EditGeorge W Campbell was launched on 3 June 1936 and sailed to her homeport of Stapleton New York under the command of Commander E G Rose USCG assigned to conduct search and rescue and law enforcement patrols She left New York on 22 October 1936 for her shakedown cruise to Southampton England returning to New York on 16 November Her peace time armament consisted of two 5 inch 127 mm 51 caliber and two 6 pounder 3 kg signal guns all mounted forward Unlike the other Secretary class cutters George W Campbell and Ingham did not continue to carry aircraft though they had originally been equipped to do so In August 1937 her official name was shortened to Campbell and it was also during this time that her mascot Sinbad reported aboard Sinbad remained aboard Campbell throughout her tour of duty during World War II caused at least two international incidents in foreign harbors faithfully manned his battle station during combat and generally kept the crew amused during her long voyages over eleven years 1 Sinbad died on 30 December 1951 after many years of service 2 and was the first and one of the few Coast Guardsmen to have a published biography 3 Wartime duties EditOn 5 September 1939 President Franklin D Roosevelt proclaimed American neutrality in the conflict and ordered the formation of a neutrality patrol by the Navy to report and track any belligerent air surface or submarine activity in the waters off the East Coast and in the West Indies The United States Navy determined that its destroyers were not capable of extended cruises in the North Atlantic and asked that the Coast Guard conduct these patrols The Coast Guard assigned Campbell to conduct the first Coast Guard neutrality patrol which were referred to as Grand Banks Patrols Campbell would perform five such cruises each lasting approximately two weeks the last such cruise returning to New York on 29 January 1940 When prepared for convoy escort duty prior to her sailing for Portugal workers at the New York Navy Yard added three 3 inch 76 mm 51 caliber guns in line aft Her two signal guns that were directly forward of the bridge were replaced with a single 3 inch 50 caliber gun Her two 5 inch 51 caliber main batteries remained unchanged Campbell was the first Secretary class cutter to transfer for duty with the Navy on 1 July 1941 and the first to sail on escort of convoy duties when she escorted Convoy HX 159 which sailed on 10 November 1941 4 Campbell s permanent station was changed from Stapleton to Boston in February 1942 and she later exchanged a 5 inch 127 mm for a 3 inch 76 mm gun installed six more 20 mm guns substituted two K guns for Y guns and had splinter protection built around three gun decks bridge and wheel house Campbell along with USCGC Spencer were the first U S warships equipped with HF DF pioneered by the Royal Navy for the fight against the German U boat fleet The two cutters had been selected by the Navy to serve as test ships to gain experience with HF DF using British FH3 systems carrying the U S designation Type DAR installed in the American shipyard in Northern Ireland under the supervision of experts from the Admiralty Signals Establishment 5 As the Royal Navy had already discovered HF DF was an important part of combatting the threat posed to Allied convoys by U boats and the experience with the interim DAR equipment provided impetus to the U S development of its own Type DAQ system 6 Campbell in the New York Navy Yard 1940 Sinbad and crew 1943Convoys escorted 1941 early 1943 later convoys not listed Edit Convoy Escort Group Dates NotesON 28 31 Oct 3 Nov 1941 7 from Iceland to Newfoundland prior to US declaration of warHX 159 10 19 Nov 1941 8 from Newfoundland to Iceland prior to US declaration of warON 39 29 Nov 4 Dec 1941 7 from Iceland to Newfoundland prior to US declaration of warHX 166 25 31 Dec 1941 8 from Newfoundland to IcelandON 53 9 19 Jan 1942 7 from Iceland to NewfoundlandHX 174 MOEF group A3 9 17 Feb 1942 8 from Newfoundland to Northern IrelandON 69 MOEF group A3 25 Feb 4 March 1942 7 from Northern Ireland to NewfoundlandSC 76 MOEF group A3 28 March 11 April 1942 9 from Newfoundland to Northern IrelandHX 190 MOEF group A3 20 27 May 1942 8 from Newfoundland to Northern IrelandON 102 MOEF group A3 10 21 June 1942 7 from Northern Ireland to NewfoundlandHX 196 MOEF group A3 2 10 July 1942 8 from Newfoundland to Northern IrelandON 114 MOEF group A3 20 30 July 1942 7 from Northern Ireland to NewfoundlandSC 100 MOEF group A3 16 27 Sept 1942 9 from Newfoundland to Northern IrelandON 135 MOEF group A3 3 14 Oct 1942 7 from Northern Ireland to NewfoundlandHX 212 MOEF group A3 23 Oct 1 Nov 1942 8 from Newfoundland to Northern IrelandON 145 MOEF group A3 10 20 Nov 1942 7 from Northern Ireland to NewfoundlandON 156 25 30 Dec 1942 9 Iceland shuttleHX 223 MOEF group A3 19 late Jan 1943 8 from Newfoundland to Northern IrelandON 166 MOEF group A3 12 22 Feb 1943 7 from Northern Ireland to Newfoundland convoy attacked see below When the British and Canadians assumed full responsibility for convoys in the North Atlantic in mid 1943 the U S took control of all mid Atlantic and Mediterranean convoys where the cutters faced a constant threat from U boats and the Luftwaffe Convoys were especially vulnerable once they cleared Gibraltar Campbell sailed as an escort for Mediterranean convoys in 1943 1944 and saw considerable action against both U boats and aircraft with two incidents in particular of note U boat attack February 1943 Edit WPG 32 USCGC Campbell heading to port at Norfolk Navy Yard on July 26 1943 On 21 February 1943 Campbell was escorting the 48 ship convoy ON 166 when the convoy was surrounded by a U boat wolf pack U 92 and U 753 torpedoed and sank whale factory ship N T Nielsen Alonso 10 Dispatched to assist Campbell rescued fifty survivors and then turned to attack U 753 damaging it so badly that it had to withdraw Throughout 21 and 22 February Campbell attacked several U boats inflicting damage and driving them off Later on 22 February U 606 having sustained heavy damage inflicted by the Polish destroyer ORP Burza surfaced in the midst of the convoy attempting a surface attack Campbell struck the U boat a glancing blow that gashed Campbell s hull in the engine room below the waterline but continued to attack dropping two depth charges which exploded and lifted the U boat out of the water The crew brought all guns to bear on the U boat fighting on until water in the engine room shorted out all electricity As the ship lost power and the searchlights illuminating the U boat went out the U boat s commander ordered the vessel abandoned Campbell ceased fire and lowered boats to rescue the U boat s survivors Campbell disabled in the attack was towed to port nine days later repaired and returned to escort duty Illustrator Anton Otto Fischer working for Life magazine was serving as a lieutenant commander aboard Campbell for this voyage His series of detailed oil paintings depicting the battle and its aftermath appeared in Life s 5 July 1943 edition 11 Luftwaffe attack May 1944 Edit Campbell in 1944 In April 1944 the Convoy UGS 40 consisting of some 80 vessels sailed for the Mediterranean led by Campbell The escort screen contained three destroyers six American destroyer escorts from CortDiv 5 and two French destroyer escorts Due to recent attacks by the Luftwaffe against Allied convoys in the western Mediterranean UGS 40 sailed with an elaborate air defense plan formulated by the convoy s screen commander Comdr Jesse C Sowell aboard Campbell Practiced in Hampton Roads prior to the convoy s departure and as it crossed the Atlantic these tactics were designed to meet mass aerial attacks by German aircraft carrying a variety of weapons ranging from bombs to torpedoes to radio controlled glider bombs Off Gibraltar UGS 40 acquired additional escorts British antiaircraft cruiser HMS Caledon the destroyer escort USS Wilhoite the destroyer USS Benson and two American minesweepers USS Steady and USS Sustain carrying special apparatus to jam radar transmissions and thus confuse the German glider bombs On 9 May 1944 the convoy passed through the Straits of Gibraltar en route to Bizerte Tunisia without incident but two days later detected German snoopers trailing the convoy In the next few hours ten successive shore based fighter interception sorties failed to drive off the enemy reconnaissance aircraft First alerted by shore based radar the escort screen went to general quarters at 13 16 on 11 May beginning the first of five successive alerts In Campbell Commander Sowell warned the escorts to be alert to the possibility of a dusk attack At 20 25 radar noted the approach of enemy aircraft and Sowell formed the convoy into eight columns 1 000 yards 910 m apart for maneuvering room When the enemy was reported 70 miles 110 km north of Cape Corbelin UGS 40 steered due east past Cape Bengut Shortly after sunset escort ships commenced laying smoke screens as the German aircraft a mixed force of Junkers Ju 88s Heinkel He 111s and Dornier Do 217s approached from the stern of the convoy and broke into groups to attack from different points of the compass The destroyer escorts and friendly fighter craft downed an estimated 17 of the enemy planes and drove away all the remainder and the Allied convoy emerged unscathed Later service Edit USCGC Campbell WPG 32 in 1963 After conversion to an Amphibious Command Ship Type AGC in the Boston Navy Yard between 4 January and 28 March 1945 Campbell was assigned to duty in the Pacific as an Amphibious Flagship She sailed from Pearl Harbor for Saipan and arrived on 3 August 1945 sailing again for Manila on 10 August and Leyte on 19 August On 1 October 1945 she was anchored at Wakanoura Wan Honshu Japan as the flagship for Communications Service Division 103 On 30 October she sailed to Sasebo and stayed until 30 November when she was ordered back to the U S 1 In August 1948 Campbell found wreckage from an Air France Latecoere 631 aircraft which had crashed into the Atlantic Ocean with the loss of all 52 people on board 12 In January 1959 Campbell was one of the ships which answered the distress call of Hans Hedtoft which had struck an iceberg off Greenland She participated in the search until it was called off on 7 February 13 Vietnam Edit USCGC Campbell WPG 32 log book entry January 1 1968 Campbell was assigned to combat duty in Vietnam from January to July 1968 During Operation Market Time Campbell destroyed or damaged 105 Viet Cong structures and steamed over 32 000 miles 51 000 km in the Vietnamese War Zone After returning from Vietnam Campbell was assigned to routine Search and Rescue Maritime Law Enforcement Military Readiness and Ocean Station duties She was homeported at Governors Island in New York City until 1969 when she moved to Portland Maine In 1974 her homeport was again changed this time to Port Angeles Washington There she continued her peacetime duties until decommissioned in 1982 At the time of decommissioning Campbell was the oldest active continually commissioned vessel in the United States Coast Guard 14 Sinking Edit Campbell with port decks awash following hit from US Navy Harpoon missile USCGC Campbell was sunk on 29 November 1984 as a target in the mid Pacific Ocean by the United States Navy at coordinates 22 48 N 160 06 W 22 800 N 160 100 W 22 800 160 100 Coordinates 22 48 N 160 06 W 22 800 N 160 100 W 22 800 160 100 northwest of Hawaii and rests at 2 800 fathoms 5 100 m A final message was transmitted as the ship which remained largely intact after a Harpoon missile strike went down It said UNCLAS N05752 SUBJ FINAL FAREWELL 1 I SERVED WITH HONOR FOR ALMOST FORTY SIX YEARS IN WAR AND PEACE IN THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC WITH DUTY AS DIVERSE AS SAVING LIVES TO SINKING U BOATS OCEAN STATIONS TO FISHERIES ENFORCEMENT AND FROM TRAINING CADETS TO BEING YOUR FLAGSHIP I HAVE BEEN ALWAYS READY TO SERVE 2 TODAY WAS MY FINAL DUTY I WAS A TARGET FOR A MISSILE TEST ITS SUCCESS WAS YOUR LOSS AND MY DEMISE NOW KING NEPTUNE HAS CALLED ME TO MY FINAL REST IN 2 600 FATHOMS AT 22 48N 160 06W 3 MOURN NOT ALL WHO HAVE SAILED WITH ME A NEW CUTTER CAMPBELL BEARING MY NAME WMEC 909 WILL SOON CONTINUE THE HERITAGE I BID ADIEU THE QUEEN IS DEAD LONG LIVE THE QUEEN 15 Awards EditSource 1 Coast Guard Meritorious Unit Commendation American Defense Service Medal with FLEET clasp and A device American Campaign Medal with A device European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with three battle stars Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal World War II Victory Medal Navy Occupation Medal with ASIA clasp National Defense Service Medal with one service star Vietnam Service Medal with two campaign stars Humanitarian Service Medal Philippine Presidential Unit Citation Vietnam Gallantry Cross with palm Philippine Liberation Medal with two service stars Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal References Edit a b c Campbell U S Coast Guard Archived from the original on 2017 04 30 Retrieved 2010 11 16 Sinbad USCG Ret K9C U S Coast Guard Archived from the original on 2010 12 21 Retrieved 2010 11 16 Foley Chief Specialist George F Jr 1945 Sinbad of the Coast Guard New York City Dodd Mead amp Co U S Coast Guard Combat Cutters of World War II A Historic Image Gallery The Secretary Class 327 foot Cutters U S Coast Guard Archived from the original on 2010 12 10 Retrieved 2010 11 16 Redgment P G 1995 High Frequency Direction Finding in the Royal Navy Development of Anti U Boat Equipment 1941 5 In Kingsley F A ed Applications of Radar and Other Electronic Systems in the Royal Navy in World War II Basingstoke Macmillan Press ISBN 978 0 33362 748 8 Williams Kathleen Broome 1996 Secret Weapon U S High Frequency Direction Finding in the Battle of the Atlantic Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 935 2 a b c d e f g h i ON convoys Andrew Hague Convoy Database Archived from the original on 2011 09 29 Retrieved 2011 06 19 a b c d e f g HX convoys Andrew Hague Convoy Database Archived from the original on 2011 05 20 Retrieved 2011 06 19 a b c SC convoys Andrew Hague Convoy Database Archived from the original on 2011 05 20 Retrieved 2011 06 21 Lawson Siri Holm April 7 2012 N T Nielsen Alonso Warsailors com Archived from the original on 2008 09 07 The Cruise of the Campbell She Fights in the Atlantic Life 5 July 1943 p 57 Missing Flying Boat The Times No 51143 London 6 August 1948 p 4 Little Titanic 1 of 2 TIME 9 February 1959 Archived from the original on 26 January 2009 Retrieved 4 November 2009 CGC Campbell WMEC 909 History U S Coast Guard Archived from the original on 2008 04 17 Retrieved 2007 10 23 Campbell Historic Photo Gallery U S Coast Guard Archived from the original on 2012 10 14 Retrieved 2011 02 16 External links EditUSCGC Campbell AssociationPreceded bynone United States Coast Guard Queen of the Fleet 1970s 1982 Succeeded byUSCGC Duane WPG 33 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USCGC Campbell WPG 32 amp oldid 1127137640, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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