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USS Sarsfield

22°59′18.7980″N 120°09′22.8168″E / 22.988555000°N 120.156338000°E / 22.988555000; 120.156338000

USS Sarsfield underway on 23 July 1973
History
United States
NameSarsfield
NamesakeEugene S. Sarsfield
BuilderBath Iron Works
Laid down15 January 1945
Launched27 May 1945
Sponsored byMrs. Eugene S. Sarsfield
Commissioned31 July 1945
Decommissioned1 October 1977
Stricken1 October 1977
Identification
Motto
  • Volens et Valens
  • (Willing and Capable)
Honors and
awards
See Awards
FateTransferred to Taiwan, 1 October 1977
Badge
Taiwan
Name
  • Te Yang
  • (德陽)
NamesakeTe Yang
Acquired1 October 1977
CommissionedJanuary 1978
IdentificationHull number: DD-925
ReclassifiedDDG-925, December 1989
Decommissioned1 April 2005
StatusMuseum ship at Anping Port since 22 January 2009
General characteristics
Class and typeGearing-class destroyer
Displacement3,460 long tons (3,516 t) full
Length390 ft 6 in (119.02 m)
Beam40 ft 10 in (12.45 m)
Draft14 ft 4 in (4.37 m)
Propulsion2 General Electric geared turbines, 2 shafts, 60,000 shp (45 MW)
Speed36.8 knots (68.2 km/h; 42.3 mph)
Range4,500 nmi (8,300 km) at 20 kn (37 km/h; 23 mph)
Complement367
Armament

USS Sarsfield (DD-837), was a Gearing-class destroyer of the United States Navy. It then served in Taiwan's navy as ROCS Te Yang (DD-925) for 27 years, and now is a ship museum.

Namesake edit

Eugene S. Sarsfield was born on 19 April 1902 in Brooklyn, New York. He entered the United States Naval Academy in 1922. Upon his graduation on 3 June 1926, he was commissioned ensign and served on the USS Nevada, USS New York, and USS Hannibal, before receiving submarine instruction in 1929 and torpedo training in 1930. During the next four years, he served successively on USS Greer, USS Argonne, and USS Constitution. Following duty with the 3d Naval District, he joined USS Badger in July 1935, and returned to New York in September 1937. He instructed naval reservists in the 3d Naval District for two years before reporting to USS Kearny on 10 June 1940 to serve as executive officer and navigator. He was commended by the Secretary of the Navy, Frank Knox, for "Leadership, personal courage and ingenuity in solving the many problems arising under adverse conditions" when Kearny was torpedoed off Iceland on 17 October 1941.

Given command of USS McCormick on 8 December 1941, he was detached on 3 October 1942 to supervise the outfitting of the USS Maddox and he assumed command of that destroyer at its commissioning on 3 October 1942. He was awarded the Legion of Merit for exceptionally meritorious conduct as commanding officer of Maddox when she attacked and probably sank an enemy submarine on 6 May 1943. While acting as an escort for an Atlantic convoy, the destroyer made contact with the submerged enemy submarine and delivered two accurate depth charge attacks. The submarine was damaged by the first attack, and after the second attack, appeared briefly on the surface upside down.

On 10 July 1943 during the Allied invasion of Sicily, Maddox was steaming alone in support of the assault at Gela, and was attacked by a Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 88 bomber of KG 54. The ship was gravely damaged by one direct hit and two near misses. Lieutenant Commander Sarsfield remained on board supervising the abandonment of the rapidly sinking ship and helped greatly to save the lives of 9 officers and 65 men of the 284 on board. He was reported missing and officially presumed dead on the next day. He was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross.

Construction and career edit

Sarsfield was laid down on 15 January 1945 by the Bath Iron Works Co., Bath, Maine, and launched on 27 May 1945, sponsored by Mrs. Eugene S. Sarsfield. The ship was commissioned at Boston Naval Shipyard on 31 July 1945.

Service in the United States Navy edit

 
Sarsfield underway off Boston 1945

After the ship's fitting-out was complete, she sailed on 24 August, for Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and shakedown training. She returned to Boston on 30 September and, after postshakedown alterations, got underway, on 25 October, for New York City and the Navy Day celebration. Following her stay at New York, she participated in training exercises in the Chesapeake Bay-Virginia Capes area until 13 December, when she entered the Brooklyn Navy Yard for installation of some experimental equipment.

On 1 February 1946, Sarsfield sailed from New York bound for Key West, Florida. She arrived in Key West on 4 February to begin two decades with the Operational Development Force located there. Attached to the Surface Antisubmarine Development Detachment, Atlantic Fleet, she participated in the testing and evaluation of new weapons and equipment and made periodic training cruises in the Caribbean and in the Gulf of Mexico. In 1950, the ship helped the new Eastern Test Range out of Cape Canaveral test two U.S. Army Bumpers, which were German V-2 rockets modified to carry an upper stage. Sarsfield was stationed a mile or two from shore for the first, 48-mile Bumper launch, and tracked it with its Mk.25 fire director, which provided radar and optical tracking.[1]

 
Sarsfield underway on 30 August 1952

In addition to the work she did for the Operational Development Force, Sarsfield also served the Naval Mine Countermeasures Station at Panama City, Florida, from 9 to 14 February 1947; conducted operations for the Underwater Sound Laboratory at New London, Connecticut, from 3 September 1953 until 18 October 1954; and operated out of Newport, Rhode Island, between 8 July and 4 August 1955.

In 1956, she embarked VIPs for antisubmarine warfare demonstrations out of Key West, and in 1957, underwent overhaul at the Norfolk Navy Yard. On 6 February 1958, she joined units of Escort Squadron 14 at Charleston, South Carolina, for antisubmarine exercises. Following a cruise as plane guard to the aircraft carrier Leyte in early 1958, she returned to the Operational Development Force at Key West on 15 February. In the fall of 1958, Sarsfield entered Charleston Naval Shipyard for another overhaul. She departed Charleston on 5 January 1959 and conducted five weeks of refresher training out of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, after which she returned to Key West and further experimental work.

Project Mercury edit

This employment, testing antisubmarine detection and destruction devices, continued until January 1961, when she was deployed, with shore bombardment responsibilities, to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Later that year, in June, Caribbean unrest again required the Navy to deploy ships. Sarsfield cruised off the coast of Hispaniola. In September 1961, Sarsfield took station in the Atlantic as a recovery ship for Project Mercury, the manned space flight program.

In January 1962, she again took station for Project Mercury, this time off the coast of Africa. In August, she entered Boston Naval Shipyard for almost a year of Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization overhaul. Before leaving Boston, in June 1963, she received several new weapons systems, including ASROC, DASH, long-range, distant air search radar, and long-range sonar. From Boston, she sailed to Guantanamo Bay for refresher training, then, to Charleston for another six months of weapons and sonar modifications. At the completion of these latest alterations, she cruised the Caribbean and then returned to Key West and the Operational Test and Evaluation Detachment. This employment continued until 1966. On 15 July, she again commenced overhaul, including still more sonar and radar changes.

The overhaul was completed on 30 January 1967, and by 7 February, she was back in Key West. Sarsfield spent the remainder of the month engaged in refresher training out of Guantanamo Bay. In April, she joined the aircraft carrier Forrestal for antisubmarine warfare exercises, then returned to Key West on 1 May to operate with the Fleet Sonar School. June and July were occupied by fleet exercises and NATO exercise Lashout. On 21 September, Sarsfield departed Key West for the Mediterranean, and on 17 December, returned home.

In early 1968, she operated off the Virginia Capes and in the Caribbean. In July 1968, she deployed to the Middle East. She called at many exotic ports on her voyage along the coasts of Africa and the Indian Ocean littoral. While on this tour of duty, Sarsfield also had the unique opportunity to participate in a spontaneous exercise with units of the Imperial Ethiopian Navy and the French Air Force. By 30 December, she was underway for the Western Hemisphere, and on 10 January 1969, arrived in Mayport, Florida.

Sarsfield remained in the Western Hemisphere for all of 1969 and 1970. During the first seven months of 1969, she resumed Caribbean and Atlantic operations. On 28 July, she commenced UNITAS X, an exercise involving elements of the United States, Brazilian, Argentine, Colombian, Chilean, Ecuadorian, Peruvian, Venezuelan, and Uruguayan navies. In December, upon the completion of this exercise, during which she visited ports in all the countries named, Sarsfield returned to Mayport to prepare for overhaul.

From January to June 1970, she was at Charleston, South Carolina, undergoing overhaul. In June, she commenced eight weeks of refresher training out of Guantanamo Bay, and upon completing it, returned to local operations out of Mayport for the rest of the year.

In January 1971, Sarsfield again deployed to the Middle East, entering the Indian Ocean in February. Tensions were rising in the region; the Bangladesh Liberation War broke out in March and led to the war between India and Pakistan in December. By 29 June, she was back at Mayport and resumed normal operations for the rest of 1971 and for the first three months of 1972.

Vietnam War edit

 
Rick Jorgensen disposing a palm tree he had grown in Guam, 1972

On 13 April 1972, she got underway for an entirely different deployment. Proceeding via the Panama Canal, she arrived in Subic Bay, Philippines, on 11 May. Throughout the summer, Sarsfield plied the waters of the Gulf of Tonkin, first as plane guard for the carrier Saratoga, then, patrolling off Hainan Island. She also participated in shore bombardment missions. She departed the gunline on 12 September; stopped at Hong Kong for six days of liberty (15 to 21 September) and at Yokosuka, Japan, for four days (25 to 29 September); and then, got underway to return to the United States.

She entered San Diego on 13 October, transited the Panama Canal on 21 October, and reentered Mayport on 25 October. Upon her return, she resumed local operations out of Mayport. This employment continued until 29 May 1973, when she weighed anchor to join the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean.

She sailed with the 6th Fleet until 22 September, when she passed through the Straits of Gibraltar to join NATO units in exercises in the Bay of Biscay and in the North Sea. On 10 October, she entered the Firth of Forth and, the next day, berthed at Edinburgh, Scotland. Two days later, at the outbreak of the Arab-Israeli War, she departed Scotland to reenter the Mediterranean with the carrier John F. Kennedy and sped to the eastern end of that sea. After more than a month of uncertainty, Sarsfield put into Athens, Greece, on 14 November for a five-day tender and leave period.

On 18 November, she was ordered to rejoin John F. Kennedy for the voyage back to the United States. She arrived at Mayport on 1 December and spent the rest of 1973 in a standdown and leave status. She remained in port at Mayport, Florida until May 1974 at which time she resumed Atlantic seaboard operations.

On 14 June 1974, in protest of perceived racism on the part of the command, nearly all of the ship's minority sailors occupied the fantail and refused orders to handle lines while Sarsfield was attempting a difficult mooring in an off-setting wind at the Charleston Naval Station. After being surrounded by the ship's Master-at-Arms force and being individually ordered by the Executive Officer, most of the demonstrating sailors returned to their quarters. Seven of them, however, refused to leave the quarterdeck despite direct orders to do so, and eventually left the ship without authority to do so. The seven sailors were eventually apprehended and originally charged with, among other things, mutiny. They were all eventually convicted of lesser charges in a joint General Courts Martial at NAS Jacksonville, Florida.

In the fall of 1974, Sarsfield departed Mayport, Florida to participate in Northern Merger with NATO units, and enjoyed port visits in Plymouth, England and Edinburgh, Scotland, as well as Lubeck, West Germany.

Sarsfield deployed on a Mediterranean cruise from 27 July 1975 to 27 January 1976, and enjoyed port visits in Gibraltar, BCC, Barcelona, Valencia, Rota and Algeciras, Spain, Siracusa and Taormina, Sicily, Naples, Italy, Palma, Mallorca, as well as Athens, and after transiting the Bosporus and Dardanelles, steamed in company with USS Belknap in the Black Sea.

The year 1976 saw gunnery practice in Chesapeake Bay, and a short shipyard period in Charleston, South Carolina. Winter of 1976-1977 was the ship's last deployment to the Mediterranean as part of the Franklin D. Roosevelt task force. Port visits included Rota, Spain; Naples, Italy; Trapani, Sicily (helping the city recover from a flood); Kalamata, Greece (American-style hamburger cookout at the local orphanage at Christmas); Sfax, Tunisia; Palma and Morocco. She anchored off the coast of Egypt with dozens of Russian ships and monitored Russian submarine operations; as well as extensive operations as part of Roosevelt's group. On return to the United States, many Taiwanese sailors joined the crew to learn ship operations before Sarsfield was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 1 October 1977. On the same day she was transferred to the Republic of China (Taiwan).

 
Te Yang as a museum ship in December 2016

Service in the Republic of China Navy edit

The ship served in the Republic of China Navy as ROCS Te Yang (DD-925).

Arrived in Taiwan in January 1978, via the Panama Canal, Long Causeway Port, Pearl Harbor, Midway Island, Guam, etc about 13,000 nautical miles. In addition to serving as a Taiwan Strait escort and excellent performance in various exercises, she also participated in the Sino-US anti-submarine exercise and Dun Muyuan.[2]

In December 1989, the Wu-Chin III modification project was carried out, which was later changed from DD-925 to DDG-925, which means missile destroyer.[2]

In December 1994, the Hsiung Feng II anti-ship missile was installed.[2]

In October 1997, she was incorporated into the 131 fleet.[2]

Te Yang was decommissioned on 1 April 2005 at Kaohsiung, Taiwan.[2]

On 22 January 2009, the ship was towed to the Anping Port in Tainan City to be preserved as a museum ship to this day.[3]

Awards edit

Sarsfield earned one battle star for service in the Vietnam War.

References edit

  1. ^ "Rocketships".
  2. ^ a b c d e "安平定情碼頭 德陽艦園區". www.teyang925.com.tw. Retrieved 2021-09-10.
  3. ^ http://mimg47.pixnet.net/blog/post/4287007-%E3%80%90%E5%8F%B0%E5%8D%97%E6%99%AF%E9%BB%9E%E3%80%91%E5%AE%89%E5%B9%B3%EF%BC%8E%E5%BE%B7%E9%99%BD%E8%BB%8D%E8%89%A6%E5%8D%9A%E7%89%A9%E9%A4%A8%EF%BC%9A%E7%99%BB%E8%89%A6%E5%8F%83 2017-05-20 at the Wayback Machine . Many pictures and information from a local Taiwanese. Retrieved 3 April 2017.

External links edit

  • Photo gallery of USS Sarsfield at NavSource Naval History

sarsfield, 7980, 8168, 988555000, 156338000, 988555000, 156338000, underway, july, 1973history, united, states, namesarsfield, namesakeeugene, sarsfield, builderbath, iron, works, laid, down15, january, 1945, launched27, 1945, sponsored, bymrs, eugene, sarsfie. 22 59 18 7980 N 120 09 22 8168 E 22 988555000 N 120 156338000 E 22 988555000 120 156338000 USS Sarsfield underway on 23 July 1973History United States NameSarsfield NamesakeEugene S Sarsfield BuilderBath Iron Works Laid down15 January 1945 Launched27 May 1945 Sponsored byMrs Eugene S Sarsfield Commissioned31 July 1945 Decommissioned1 October 1977 Stricken1 October 1977 IdentificationCallsign NBBK Hull number DD 837 MottoVolens et Valens Willing and Capable Honors andawardsSee Awards FateTransferred to Taiwan 1 October 1977 Badge Taiwan NameTe Yang 德陽 NamesakeTe Yang Acquired1 October 1977 CommissionedJanuary 1978 IdentificationHull number DD 925 ReclassifiedDDG 925 December 1989 Decommissioned1 April 2005 StatusMuseum ship at Anping Port since 22 January 2009 General characteristics Class and typeGearing class destroyer Displacement3 460 long tons 3 516 t full Length390 ft 6 in 119 02 m Beam40 ft 10 in 12 45 m Draft14 ft 4 in 4 37 m Propulsion2 General Electric geared turbines 2 shafts 60 000 shp 45 MW Speed36 8 knots 68 2 km h 42 3 mph Range4 500 nmi 8 300 km at 20 kn 37 km h 23 mph Complement367 Armament6 5 38 caliber guns 12 40 mm AA guns 11 20 mm AA guns 10 21 inch 533 mm torpedo tubes 6 depth charge projectors 2 depth charge tracks USS Sarsfield DD 837 was a Gearing class destroyer of the United States Navy It then served in Taiwan s navy as ROCS Te Yang DD 925 for 27 years and now is a ship museum Contents 1 Namesake 2 Construction and career 2 1 Service in the United States Navy 2 1 1 Project Mercury 2 1 2 Vietnam War 2 2 Service in the Republic of China Navy 3 Awards 4 References 5 External linksNamesake editEugene S Sarsfield was born on 19 April 1902 in Brooklyn New York He entered the United States Naval Academy in 1922 Upon his graduation on 3 June 1926 he was commissioned ensign and served on the USS Nevada USS New York and USS Hannibal before receiving submarine instruction in 1929 and torpedo training in 1930 During the next four years he served successively on USS Greer USS Argonne and USS Constitution Following duty with the 3d Naval District he joined USS Badger in July 1935 and returned to New York in September 1937 He instructed naval reservists in the 3d Naval District for two years before reporting to USS Kearny on 10 June 1940 to serve as executive officer and navigator He was commended by the Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox for Leadership personal courage and ingenuity in solving the many problems arising under adverse conditions when Kearny was torpedoed off Iceland on 17 October 1941 Given command of USS McCormick on 8 December 1941 he was detached on 3 October 1942 to supervise the outfitting of the USS Maddox and he assumed command of that destroyer at its commissioning on 3 October 1942 He was awarded the Legion of Merit for exceptionally meritorious conduct as commanding officer of Maddox when she attacked and probably sank an enemy submarine on 6 May 1943 While acting as an escort for an Atlantic convoy the destroyer made contact with the submerged enemy submarine and delivered two accurate depth charge attacks The submarine was damaged by the first attack and after the second attack appeared briefly on the surface upside down On 10 July 1943 during the Allied invasion of Sicily Maddox was steaming alone in support of the assault at Gela and was attacked by a Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 88 bomber of KG 54 The ship was gravely damaged by one direct hit and two near misses Lieutenant Commander Sarsfield remained on board supervising the abandonment of the rapidly sinking ship and helped greatly to save the lives of 9 officers and 65 men of the 284 on board He was reported missing and officially presumed dead on the next day He was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross Construction and career editSarsfield was laid down on 15 January 1945 by the Bath Iron Works Co Bath Maine and launched on 27 May 1945 sponsored by Mrs Eugene S Sarsfield The ship was commissioned at Boston Naval Shipyard on 31 July 1945 Service in the United States Navy edit nbsp Sarsfield underway off Boston 1945 After the ship s fitting out was complete she sailed on 24 August for Guantanamo Bay Cuba and shakedown training She returned to Boston on 30 September and after postshakedown alterations got underway on 25 October for New York City and the Navy Day celebration Following her stay at New York she participated in training exercises in the Chesapeake Bay Virginia Capes area until 13 December when she entered the Brooklyn Navy Yard for installation of some experimental equipment On 1 February 1946 Sarsfield sailed from New York bound for Key West Florida She arrived in Key West on 4 February to begin two decades with the Operational Development Force located there Attached to the Surface Antisubmarine Development Detachment Atlantic Fleet she participated in the testing and evaluation of new weapons and equipment and made periodic training cruises in the Caribbean and in the Gulf of Mexico In 1950 the ship helped the new Eastern Test Range out of Cape Canaveral test two U S Army Bumpers which were German V 2 rockets modified to carry an upper stage Sarsfield was stationed a mile or two from shore for the first 48 mile Bumper launch and tracked it with its Mk 25 fire director which provided radar and optical tracking 1 nbsp Sarsfield underway on 30 August 1952 In addition to the work she did for the Operational Development Force Sarsfield also served the Naval Mine Countermeasures Station at Panama City Florida from 9 to 14 February 1947 conducted operations for the Underwater Sound Laboratory at New London Connecticut from 3 September 1953 until 18 October 1954 and operated out of Newport Rhode Island between 8 July and 4 August 1955 In 1956 she embarked VIPs for antisubmarine warfare demonstrations out of Key West and in 1957 underwent overhaul at the Norfolk Navy Yard On 6 February 1958 she joined units of Escort Squadron 14 at Charleston South Carolina for antisubmarine exercises Following a cruise as plane guard to the aircraft carrier Leyte in early 1958 she returned to the Operational Development Force at Key West on 15 February In the fall of 1958 Sarsfield entered Charleston Naval Shipyard for another overhaul She departed Charleston on 5 January 1959 and conducted five weeks of refresher training out of Guantanamo Bay Cuba after which she returned to Key West and further experimental work Project Mercury edit This employment testing antisubmarine detection and destruction devices continued until January 1961 when she was deployed with shore bombardment responsibilities to Guantanamo Bay Cuba Later that year in June Caribbean unrest again required the Navy to deploy ships Sarsfield cruised off the coast of Hispaniola In September 1961 Sarsfield took station in the Atlantic as a recovery ship for Project Mercury the manned space flight program In January 1962 she again took station for Project Mercury this time off the coast of Africa In August she entered Boston Naval Shipyard for almost a year of Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization overhaul Before leaving Boston in June 1963 she received several new weapons systems including ASROC DASH long range distant air search radar and long range sonar From Boston she sailed to Guantanamo Bay for refresher training then to Charleston for another six months of weapons and sonar modifications At the completion of these latest alterations she cruised the Caribbean and then returned to Key West and the Operational Test and Evaluation Detachment This employment continued until 1966 On 15 July she again commenced overhaul including still more sonar and radar changes The overhaul was completed on 30 January 1967 and by 7 February she was back in Key West Sarsfield spent the remainder of the month engaged in refresher training out of Guantanamo Bay In April she joined the aircraft carrier Forrestal for antisubmarine warfare exercises then returned to Key West on 1 May to operate with the Fleet Sonar School June and July were occupied by fleet exercises and NATO exercise Lashout On 21 September Sarsfield departed Key West for the Mediterranean and on 17 December returned home In early 1968 she operated off the Virginia Capes and in the Caribbean In July 1968 she deployed to the Middle East She called at many exotic ports on her voyage along the coasts of Africa and the Indian Ocean littoral While on this tour of duty Sarsfield also had the unique opportunity to participate in a spontaneous exercise with units of the Imperial Ethiopian Navy and the French Air Force By 30 December she was underway for the Western Hemisphere and on 10 January 1969 arrived in Mayport Florida Sarsfield remained in the Western Hemisphere for all of 1969 and 1970 During the first seven months of 1969 she resumed Caribbean and Atlantic operations On 28 July she commenced UNITAS X an exercise involving elements of the United States Brazilian Argentine Colombian Chilean Ecuadorian Peruvian Venezuelan and Uruguayan navies In December upon the completion of this exercise during which she visited ports in all the countries named Sarsfield returned to Mayport to prepare for overhaul From January to June 1970 she was at Charleston South Carolina undergoing overhaul In June she commenced eight weeks of refresher training out of Guantanamo Bay and upon completing it returned to local operations out of Mayport for the rest of the year In January 1971 Sarsfield again deployed to the Middle East entering the Indian Ocean in February Tensions were rising in the region the Bangladesh Liberation War broke out in March and led to the war between India and Pakistan in December By 29 June she was back at Mayport and resumed normal operations for the rest of 1971 and for the first three months of 1972 Vietnam War edit nbsp Rick Jorgensen disposing a palm tree he had grown in Guam 1972 On 13 April 1972 she got underway for an entirely different deployment Proceeding via the Panama Canal she arrived in Subic Bay Philippines on 11 May Throughout the summer Sarsfield plied the waters of the Gulf of Tonkin first as plane guard for the carrier Saratoga then patrolling off Hainan Island She also participated in shore bombardment missions She departed the gunline on 12 September stopped at Hong Kong for six days of liberty 15 to 21 September and at Yokosuka Japan for four days 25 to 29 September and then got underway to return to the United States She entered San Diego on 13 October transited the Panama Canal on 21 October and reentered Mayport on 25 October Upon her return she resumed local operations out of Mayport This employment continued until 29 May 1973 when she weighed anchor to join the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean She sailed with the 6th Fleet until 22 September when she passed through the Straits of Gibraltar to join NATO units in exercises in the Bay of Biscay and in the North Sea On 10 October she entered the Firth of Forth and the next day berthed at Edinburgh Scotland Two days later at the outbreak of the Arab Israeli War she departed Scotland to reenter the Mediterranean with the carrier John F Kennedy and sped to the eastern end of that sea After more than a month of uncertainty Sarsfield put into Athens Greece on 14 November for a five day tender and leave period On 18 November she was ordered to rejoin John F Kennedy for the voyage back to the United States She arrived at Mayport on 1 December and spent the rest of 1973 in a standdown and leave status She remained in port at Mayport Florida until May 1974 at which time she resumed Atlantic seaboard operations On 14 June 1974 in protest of perceived racism on the part of the command nearly all of the ship s minority sailors occupied the fantail and refused orders to handle lines while Sarsfield was attempting a difficult mooring in an off setting wind at the Charleston Naval Station After being surrounded by the ship s Master at Arms force and being individually ordered by the Executive Officer most of the demonstrating sailors returned to their quarters Seven of them however refused to leave the quarterdeck despite direct orders to do so and eventually left the ship without authority to do so The seven sailors were eventually apprehended and originally charged with among other things mutiny They were all eventually convicted of lesser charges in a joint General Courts Martial at NAS Jacksonville Florida In the fall of 1974 Sarsfield departed Mayport Florida to participate in Northern Merger with NATO units and enjoyed port visits in Plymouth England and Edinburgh Scotland as well as Lubeck West Germany Sarsfield deployed on a Mediterranean cruise from 27 July 1975 to 27 January 1976 and enjoyed port visits in Gibraltar BCC Barcelona Valencia Rota and Algeciras Spain Siracusa and Taormina Sicily Naples Italy Palma Mallorca as well as Athens and after transiting the Bosporus and Dardanelles steamed in company with USS Belknap in the Black Sea The year 1976 saw gunnery practice in Chesapeake Bay and a short shipyard period in Charleston South Carolina Winter of 1976 1977 was the ship s last deployment to the Mediterranean as part of the Franklin D Roosevelt task force Port visits included Rota Spain Naples Italy Trapani Sicily helping the city recover from a flood Kalamata Greece American style hamburger cookout at the local orphanage at Christmas Sfax Tunisia Palma and Morocco She anchored off the coast of Egypt with dozens of Russian ships and monitored Russian submarine operations as well as extensive operations as part of Roosevelt s group On return to the United States many Taiwanese sailors joined the crew to learn ship operations before Sarsfield was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 1 October 1977 On the same day she was transferred to the Republic of China Taiwan nbsp Te Yang as a museum ship in December 2016 Service in the Republic of China Navy edit The ship served in the Republic of China Navy as ROCS Te Yang DD 925 Arrived in Taiwan in January 1978 via the Panama Canal Long Causeway Port Pearl Harbor Midway Island Guam etc about 13 000 nautical miles In addition to serving as a Taiwan Strait escort and excellent performance in various exercises she also participated in the Sino US anti submarine exercise and Dun Muyuan 2 In December 1989 the Wu Chin III modification project was carried out which was later changed from DD 925 to DDG 925 which means missile destroyer 2 In December 1994 the Hsiung Feng II anti ship missile was installed 2 In October 1997 she was incorporated into the 131 fleet 2 Te Yang was decommissioned on 1 April 2005 at Kaohsiung Taiwan 2 On 22 January 2009 the ship was towed to the Anping Port in Tainan City to be preserved as a museum ship to this day 3 nbsp Te Yang on 12 November 2012 nbsp Aerial view of Te Yang on 2 July 2017Awards editSarsfield earned one battle star for service in the Vietnam War References edit Rocketships a b c d e 安平定情碼頭 德陽艦園區 www teyang925 com tw Retrieved 2021 09 10 http mimg47 pixnet net blog post 4287007 E3 80 90 E5 8F B0 E5 8D 97 E6 99 AF E9 BB 9E E3 80 91 E5 AE 89 E5 B9 B3 EF BC 8E E5 BE B7 E9 99 BD E8 BB 8D E8 89 A6 E5 8D 9A E7 89 A9 E9 A4 A8 EF BC 9A E7 99 BB E8 89 A6 E5 8F 83 Archived 2017 05 20 at the Wayback Machine Many pictures and information from a local Taiwanese Retrieved 3 April 2017 This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entries can be found here and here External links editPhoto gallery of USS Sarsfield at NavSource Naval History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USS Sarsfield amp oldid 1190513780, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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