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The USS Tarawa LHA-1



April 20, 2003 IN THE NORTH ARABIAN GULF

The amphibious assault ships of Task Force 51 come together in an unprecedented formation during operations in the North Arabian Gulf.

This marked the first time that six large deck amphibious ships from the East and West coasts have deployed together in one area of operations.

Led by the flag ship USS Tarawa (LHA 1), the ships in the second row from bottom to top are USS Saipan (LHA 2) and USS Kearsarge (LHD 3); and the third row ships are USS Boxer (LHD 4), USS Bataan (LHD 5) and USS Bonhomme Richard (LHD 6).

Commander, TaskForce 51 led Navy amphibious forces in the Arabian Gulf region during Operation Iraqi Freedom.

The 32 ships of Task Force 51 composed the largest amphibious force assembled since the Inchon landing during the Korean War.

OIF is the multinational coalition effort to liberate the Iraqi people, eliminate Iraq's weapons of mass destruction and end the regime of Saddam Hussein.

Amphibious Assault Ships

LHA/LHD

Description: Primary landing ships, resembling small aircraft carriers, designed to put troops on hostile shores.
Features: Modern U.S. Navy amphibious assault ships are called upon to perform as primary landing ships for assault operations of Marine expeditionary units. These ships use Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC), conventional landing craft and helicopters to move Marine assault forces ashore. In a secondary role, using AV-8B Harrier aircraft and anti-submarine warfare helicopters, these ships perform sea control and limited power projection missions.

History/Background: Amphibious warships are uniquely designed to support assault from the sea against defended positions ashore. They must be able to sail in harm's way and provide a rapid built-up of combat power ashore in the face of opposition. The United States maintains the largest and most capable amphibious force in the world. The Wasp-class are the largest amphibious ships in the world. The lead ship, USS Wasp (LHD 1), was commissioned in July 1989 in Norfolk, Va.

1 posted on 09/05/2003 3:36:31 AM PDT by snippy_about_it
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To: BeforeISleep; Semper Paratus; Hegewisch Dupa; petuniasevan; L,TOWM; Dog; knighthawk; Miss Marple; ..
San Diego assault ship Tarawa leaves today for Mideast
San Diego Union Tribune ^ | 1/6/03 | Unknown


Posted on 01/06/2003 4:46 PM EST by bkwells

LINK

This was the original thread Brian posted before announcing his deployment. I've pinged most of the original posters that wished them well so they can now welcome him and the crew home.
2 posted on 09/05/2003 3:39:18 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our troops)
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To: snippy_about_it; bkwells
Outstanding pics...outstanding post! What an honor and a treat for you to get the chance to visit and tour the Tarawa.

Our best from Idaho to you all, and particularly to those service men and women deployed in defense of our repiblic and our liberty.

God bless them, each and every one.

Jeff

10 posted on 09/05/2003 5:45:36 AM PDT by Jeff Head
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To: snippy_about_it
Thanks for taking the trip. I would have loved to have been back on my old ship, even for a little while. I would think it couldn't have changed THAT much...
11 posted on 09/05/2003 5:50:34 AM PDT by tarawa
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; radu; bkwells
Welcome back and what a wonderful surprise!!!!!

Welcome Home to the crew of the USS TARAWA!


13 posted on 09/05/2003 6:33:41 AM PDT by Johnny Gage (Don't hate yourself in the morning... Sleep until Noon!)
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To: snippy_about_it; msdrby
Navy ping.

Thanks!!!

14 posted on 09/05/2003 6:41:28 AM PDT by Prof Engineer (HHD - Blast it Jim. I'm an Engineer, not a walking dictionary.)
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To: snippy_about_it
On This Day In History


Birthdates which occurred on September 05:
1187 Louis VIII [Coeur-de-Lion] king of France (1223-26)
1638 Louis XIV the great, king of France (1643-1715)
1735 Johann Christian Bach composer, son of JS Bach (English Bach)
1791 Giacomo Meyerbeer Vogelsdorf Germany, composer (Golt Und Die Natur)
1847 Jesse James Missouri, outlaw
1875 Napoleon "Larry" Lajoie RI, hall of fame shortstop (.426 in 1901)
1892 Joseph Szigeti Budapest Hungary, violinist (Violinist Notebook 1933)
1897 Luella Gear NYC, actress (Joe & Mabel)
1897 A.C. Nielson, founder of the Nielson Ratings.
1901 Florence Elridge actress (Long Days Journey into the Night)
1902 Darryl F Zanuck Hollywood producer & motion picture executive
1905 Arthur Koestler Hungary, writer (Darkness at Noon)
1908 Joaqu¡n Nin-Culmell Berlin, Germany, Cuban/Spanish composer
1912 John Cage LA, Calif, composer (Silence) & fraud
1914 Gail Kubik South Coffeyville, Okla, composer (Gerald McBoing Boing)
1917 Jack Buetel Dallas Tx, actress (The Outlaw, Half Breed)
1921 Jack Valenti Pres of Motion Picture Assn of America
1923 Arthur C Nielsen market researcher (TV's Nielsen's Ratings)
1927 Paul Volcker Federal Reserve chairman
1929 Andrian G Nikolayev USSR, cosmonaut (Vostok III Soyuz 9)
1929 Bob Newhart Oak Park Ill, comedian (Bob Newhart Show, Newhart)
1934 Carol Lawrence Illinois, dancer/actress (Dean Martin Summer Show)
1935 Werner Erhard Phila, founded EST
1937 William Devane Albany NY, actor (Family Plot, Missles of October)
1939 John Stewart San Diego Ca, rocker (Kingston Trio-Fire in the Wind)
1940 Raquel Welch Chic Ill (Myra Breckenridge, 1,000,000 BC, 100 Rifles)
1942 Eduardo Mata Mexico City Mexico, conductor (Improvisaciones)
1945 Al Stewart Glasgow Scotland, rocker (The Year of the Cat)
1946 Freddie Mercury rock vocalist (Queen-We are the Champions)
1950 Cathy Guisewite cartoonist (Cathy)
1950 Kathy Cronkite actress (Annie-Hizzonner)
1952 Graham Salmon blind runner (fastest 100m by a blind man)
1956 Sandra Guiboard US AFB German FR, actress (Donna-One Life to Live)
1956 Steve Denton world's fastest tennis serve-138 mph)
1960 Willie Gault bob sledder/NFL receiver (Chicago Bears, LA Raiders)
1964 Kristian Alfonso actress (Days of our Lives, Falcon Crest)
1965 Christopher Nolan Ireland, handicapped writer (Under Eye of Clock)
1967 Michele Ebadi Omaha Nebraska, Miss Nebraska-America (1991)
1969 Dweezil Zappa rocker/son of Frank Zappa/MTV VJ
1973 Tina Yothers actress (Family Ties)



Deaths which occurred on September 05:
1566 Suleiman I, the Great Law Giver, sultan of Turkey
(1520-66), dies
1683 Jean-Baptiste Colbert, French Minister of Navy, dies
1859 W Friedrich Olivier, German landscape painter, dies
1877 Crazy Horse, [Tashunka Witko], last great Sioux war chief, dies
1969 Mitchell Ayres orch leader (Hollywood Palace), dies at 58
1980 Barbara Loden actress (Ernie Kovacs Show), dies at 48
1981 Ayatollah Ali Qoddusi prosecutor-general of Iran, assassinated


Reported: MISSING in ACTION

1963 INTORATAT PHISIT THAILAND
[ESCAPED 01/07/67]
1963 DE BRUIN EUGENE H.
1963 TIK CHUI TO THAILAND
[NOT ON OFFICIAL LISTS (CIA) AIR AMERICA]
1965 LA GRAND WILLIAM J. PORTLAND OR.
[CRASH EXPLODE NO EJECT SEEN]
1965 MARSHALL RICHARD C. CHICAGO IL.
[CRASH EXPLODE NO EJECT SEEN]
1965 SHAW EDWARD B. CRANSTON RI.
[EXPLODE CRASH SEA NO PARA BEEP]
1966 ABBOTT WILFRED K. AFTON WY.
[03/04/73 RELEASED BY DRV, ALIVE IN 99]
1967 DOWNING DONALD W. JANESVILLE WI.
1967 HANSON THOMAS P. MIAMI FL.
1967 LAPORTE MICHAEL L. LOS ANGELES CA.
[LOST IN HELICOPTER DROP]
1967 MILLER CARL D. MARSHALL MO.
1967 PRATHER MARTIN WILLIAM LOUISVILLE KY.
1967 RAYMOND PAUL D. DEPOSIT NY.
1968 POSEY GEORGE R. ANDERSON IN.
[WASHED OVERBOARD]
1970 HAUER ROBERT D. BROOKLINE MA.
1974 SHARMAN NEIL AUSTRALIA

POW / MIA Data & Bios supplied by
the P.O.W. NETWORK. Skidmore, MO. USA.



On this day...
1519 2nd Battle of Tehuacingo, Mexico: Hernan Cortes vs Tlascala Aztecs
1622 Richelieu becomes Cardinal
1666 The Fire of London is extinguished after two days.
1774 1st Continental Congress assembles, in Philadelphia
1781 Battle of Virginia Capes, French defeat British, traps Cornwallis
1804 In a daring night raid, American sailors under Lieutenant Stephen Decatur, board the captured USS Philadelphia and burn the ship to keep it out of the hands of the Barbary pirates who captured her.
1836 Sam Houston elected president of the Republic of Texas
1844 Iron ore discovered in Minnesota's Mesabi Range
1867 The first shipment of cattle leaves Abilene, Kansas, on a Union Pacific train headed to Chicago.
1862 Lee crosses the Potomac & enters Maryland
1877 Southern blacks led by Pap Singleton settle in Kansas
1882 10,000 workers march in 1st Labor Day parade in NYC
1885 1st gasoline pump is delivered to a gasoline dealer (Ft Wayne, Ind)
1900 France proclaims a protectorate over Chad
1901 National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues formed
1905 Treaty of Portsmouth USA, ends Russo-Japanese War
1906 1st legal forward pass (Brandbury Robinson to Jack Schneider)
1908 Dodger Nap Rucker no-hits Boston Braves, 6-0
1913 Phillies & Braves tie record of only 1 run in a double header, Phillies win 1st game 1-0, then a scoreless tie into 10th
1914 George Herman "Babe" Ruth hit his first minor league home run at Hanlan's Point Stadium in Toronto.
1914 Battle of Marne (WW I) begins
1918 Due to WW I, 15th World Series begins a month early
1922 Yankees final game at the Polo Grounds, after 7 years
1923 Flyweights Gene LaRue & Kid Pancho KO each other simultaneously
1925 112ø F (44ø C), Centerville, Alabama (state record)
1927 Red Sox beat Yankees 12-11 in 18 innings
1936 Red Sox turn a triple-play on the Yankees
1944 Allies liberate Brussels
1946 Joe Garagiola plays his 1st major league baseball game
1953 1st privately operated atomic reactor-Raleigh NC
1956 20 die in a train crash in Springer NM
1958 "Doctor Zhivago" by Boris Pasternak published in the US
1958 1st color video recording on magnetic tape presented, Charlotte NC
1959 Wash Senator Jim Lemon is 7th to get 6 RBIs in an inning (3rd)
1960 Cassius Clay captures the olympic light heavyweight gold medal
1960 President Kasavubu fires PremierLumumba of Congo
1961 President Kennedy signs law against hijacking (death penalty)
1968 21 killed by hijackers aboard a Pan Am jet in Karachi Pakistan
1970 Estimated 15 cm (6") of rainfall, Bug Point, Utah (state record)
1971 NY Mets Don Hahn hits 1st inside the park homer at Phillies Vet
1972 11 Israeli athletes are slain at Munich Olympics
1972 Chemical spill with fog sickens hundreds in Meuse Valley Belgium
1975 Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme attempts to assassinate Ford in Sacramento
1975 Wings release "Letting Go"
1977 Cleveland Indians stage 1st "I hate the Yankee Hanky Night"
1977 Voyager 1 (US) launched toward fly-by of Jupiter, Saturn
1978 Sadat, Begin & Carter began peace conference at Camp David, Md
1979 Earl of Mountbatten funeral held in Bruma
1980 World's longest auto tunnel, St Gotthard in Swiss Alps, opens
1982 Eddie Hill sets propeller-driven boat water speed record of 229 mph
1983 8th Space Shuttle Mission-Challenger 3-lands at Edwards AFB
1983 Elmer Trettr sets record for highest terminal velocity at 201.34 mph end of a 440 yard motorcycle run from a standing start
1984 12th Space Shuttle Mission (41-D) -Discovery 1- lands at Edwards AFB
1986 NASA awards study contracts to 5 aerospace firms
1986 NASA launches DOD-1
1988 Jerry Lewis' 23rd Labor Day telethon raises record $41,132,113
1988 CFL's Earl Winfield (Ham) scores TDs on 101-yd punt return, 100-yd kickoff return & 58-yd pass reception
1989 Deborah Norville becomes news anchor of the Today Show
1990 Iraqi Pres Saddam Hussein urges Arabs to rise against the West
1991 Actor John Travolta weds Kelly Preston
1991 US trial of former Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega begins



Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"

Iran : Iman Ali Day
Namibia, South Africa : Settlers' Day ( Monday )
US, Canada, Guam, Virgin Islands : Labor Day (1894) (Monday)
USA : Be Late For Something Day
Mental Health Workers Week
Cable Television Month.


Religious Observances
Buddhist-Laos : Buddhist Holiday
Christian : St Laurence Justinian, bishop of Venice, confessor



Religious History
1692 At Harvard College in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Colonial clergyman Increase Mather, 53, received the first Doctor of Sacred Theology (STD) degree to be awarded in America.
1810 The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions was formally organized by the Congregational churches of New England at Farmington, Connecticut.
1870 Three Roman Catholic universities were founded in the United States on this exact same date: St. John's in New York City, Loyola in Chicago, and Canisius in Buffalo, New York.
1888 American baseball player-turned-evangelist Billy Sunday, 26, married Helen Thompson, 20. In later years she became affectionately known as "Ma Sunday," and became his evangelistic campaign advisor. She survived Billy (d.1935) by 22 years.
1950 Baptist Bible College was founded in Springfield, MO, under auspices of the Baptist Bible Fellowship. With an enrollment of over 2,000, it is today one of the largest Bible colleges in America.

Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.



Thought for the day :
"No place is boring, if you've had a good night's sleep and have a pocket full of unexposed film."


You might be a caffeine addict if...
you've ever knelt and prayed before a Starbuck's logo.


Murphys Law of the day...(Raskin's Zero Law)
The more zeros found in the price tag for a government program, the less Congressional scrutiny it will receive.


Cliff Clavin says, it's a little known fact that...
The world’s most widely spoken language is the Mandarin dialect of Chinese, with 500 million speakers.
17 posted on 09/05/2003 7:29:11 AM PDT by Valin (America is a vast conspiracy to make you happy.)
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To: snippy_about_it
Awesome picture of the task force in the Gulf!

Thanks for letting the sailors know we're behind them and praying for them.

Congrats, Sam and Snippy, on a great trip!

19 posted on 09/05/2003 8:51:02 AM PDT by colorado tanker (Iron Horse)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf
Whoa Hoe!

What a great surprise. I am so happy that you two were able to tour the ship. That is soooooooo cool. (I'm a wee bit jealous, though.) Thank you for sharing the adventure with us. "Our guys" are absolutely the best, aren't they?

Tell us about the flag. Lemme guess. They gave it to you, right?

Have you heard about our Freeper Hobbit Hole adopting the 82nd Airborne in Kandahar? We freeped 'em good with care packages and letters. They were busting their butts for us, and we were trying to show them how much we appreciated what they were doing--and what did they do? After already sacrificing so much, they sent us each a flag that had flown over their base. I'n tearing up just thinking about it. I will treasure mine forever. Samwise Jr. will pass it to her kids. I'm gonna lose it, so I better stop.

Great trip! Treasure the memories.
20 posted on 09/05/2003 9:10:29 AM PDT by Samwise (There are other forces at work in this world, Frodo, besides the will of evil.)
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To: snippy_about_it

Today's classic warship, USS Trevor (DD-339)/(DMS-16)

Clemson class destroyer converted to minesweeper
Displacement. 1,308 t.
Lenght. 314'4"
Beam. 30'11"
Draft. 9'10"
Speed. 35.0 k.
Complement. 122
Armament. 4 4", 1 3", 12 21" tt.

Trever (DD-339) was laid down on 12 August 1919 at Vallejo, Calif., by the Mare Island Navy Yard; launched on 15 September 1920; sponsored by Mrs. Bess McMillan Trever, widow of Lt. Comdr. George A. Trever; and commissioned on 3 August 1922, Lt. H. E. Snow in command.

After shakedown, Trever was placed in out-of-commission status, with Destroyer Division 44, at San Diego, Calif., on 17 January 1923. She reposed in "red lead row" until called to active duty on 2 June 1930. As part of Destroyer Division (DesDiv) 15 and later, DesDiv 10, she operated out of San Diego with the Battle Force until reclassified as a high-speed minesweeper and redesignated DMS-16 on 19 November 1940. Then, she worked out of Pearl Harbor through 1941, assigned to Mine Division (MineDiv) 4, Mine Squadron 2, as part of the Base Force, United States Fleet.

On 7 December 1941, Trever lay moored in West Loch, Pearl Harbor, with sister ships Zane (DMS-14), Wasmuth (DMS-15), and Perry (DMS-17) the entire complement of MineDiv 4, nested together off the Pearl City Yacht Club. Shortly before 0800 that Sunday morning, Japanese aircraft swept over the Pacific Fleet's base in a daring stroke calculated to immobilize the Fleet at a single blow.

MineDiv 4's ships commenced firing almost immediately. Trever's .50-caliber Browning machine guns concentrated on one attacker strafing the Pearl City Yacht Club and caused the enemy plane to plunge into a hillside and explode. A second, bolder raider peeled off to strafe the nested minecraft, soon lost its wings in a hail of bullets, and tumbled across the flak-torn sky until it crashed and burned near Beckoning Point.

The forthcoming signal to sortie resulted in a frenzied scramble to reach the open ocean. Many ships, including Trever, left behind commanding officers who were unable to reach their departing ships. During the hasty exit, Trever embarked the captain and executive officer of Henley (DD-391). Later in the morning, these two officers returned to their own ship by an ingenious,if unorthodox, method. With the threat of a submarine attack, a direct-alongside high-line transfer was out of the question. Henley assumed a position ahead of Trever and reeled out a long manila line with a life raft attached. Henley's two officers climbed down into the raft, and, after a wet and bumpy ride in choppy seas, reached their own ship and were taken on board.

Trever's own commanding officer, Lt. Comdr. D. A Agnew, who had gone to sea in Wasmuth, boarded his own ship in mid-afternoon as it swept the Pearl Harbor channel. For the next few months, Trever conducted more minesweeping operations, as well as local escort missions and antisubmarine patrols.

On 15 April, Trever and Hopkins (DMS-13), as Task Group (TG) 15.2, got underway to escort a six ship convoy from Honolulu to the California coast, arriving at San Pedro on 25 April. Soon afterwards Trever entered the Mare Island Navy Yard for an extensive overhaul, including the removal of her 4-inch mounts and the installation of 3-inch antiaircraft guns and 20-millimeter Oerlikon cannons.

Newly refitted, Trever joined TG 15.6 and escorted a west-bound convoy to Oahu, arriving at Pearl Harbor on 2 July. She remained in Hawaiian waters until the 12th, when in company with Zane, Hopkins, Navajo (AT-64), and Aldebaran (AF-40) she steamed for Tutuila, Samoa; and Tongatabu in the Tonga Islands. Upon arrival, these ships joined Task Force (TF) 62, which was preparing for the first American amphibious assault of the war in the Pacific, the thrust into the Solomon Islands.

Arriving off Guadalcanal on 7 August, Trever helped to screen the transports until she was detached with Hovey (DMS-11) and Hopkins to bombard targets ashore. While the American ships steamed in column some 3,000 yards away, Japanese shore batteries on Gavatu Island opened fire at 0807. One minute later, as the enemy's shells straddled the American formation, Trever's 3-inch guns, accompanied by the stentorian chatter of her 20-millimeter guns, barked out a telling reply. At 0830, her shells silenced the troublesome gun with a direct hit; and, five minutes later, the destroyer minesweepers ceased fire and withdrew.

Later, while she was conducting sweeping operations with MineRon 2, her antiaircraft fire helped to drive off enemy bombers which had attacked the transport areas. The following day, twin-engined "Betty" bombers swept over the American ships. Trever commenced firing at 1203. In the brief, four-minute, running fight, she helped to splash four bombers.

That evening, a Japanese cruiser force threaded its way down "the Slot" between Guadalcanal and Savo Island and surprised five Allied cruisers (four American and one Australian) and their attendant destroyers. In the brief, bitter night battle known as the Battle of Savo Island, Vincennes (CA-44), Quincy (CA-39), Astoria (CA-34), and Australian Canberra were sunk. Providentially for the Americans, the Japanese commander inexplicably decided not to press further on down the strait, where he might have caught the anchored American transports, some still heavily laden with supplies for the marines ashore. On 9 August, Trever helped to screen the transports as they retired to Noumea, New Caledonia.

After various escort assignments, Trever joined TF 65 on 14 September and departed Espiritu Santo for a run to Guadalcanal with reinforcements and supplies for the hard-pressed marines. TF 66 arrived off the island on the 17th and hastily unloaded before retiring toward Noumea, where it arrived on the 22d.

On 10 October Trever, as part of Mine Squadron 2, escorted McCawley (AP-10) and Zeilin (AP-9) from Espiritu Santo to the Solomons. Upon their arrival on 13 October, Trever and Hovey received orders to search for survivors of the Battle of Cape Esperance, fought on the night of 12 October.

During the day's search, Trever took on board 34 enemy survivors, including three officers. One raft of eight refused to surrender but put up a fight, giving Trever no recourse but to destroy it and its occupants. Returning to the transport area, Trever transferred her prisoners to McCawley and headed back to Espiritu Santo with the returning transports.

Trever next headed back to the Solomons with Zane and arrived at Tulagi on 26 October 1942 with torpedoes, ammunition, and aviation fuel for Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron 3. After unloading, they remained there, expecting orders to bombard Japanese positions along Guadalcanal's coast. The directive did not come, but something else did a message intercepted at 1000, telling that three Japanese destroyers were standing down the strait, apparently to bombard the airstrip at Henderson Field.

Two choices were open to Lt. Comdr. Agnew of Trever, who was in command of the task unit. One was to head for the Maliala River to join Jamestown (PG-55) and the damaged McFarland (AVD-14) which were both well camouflaged. By following this plan, Zane and Trever, both un camouflaged, might attract the Japanese into the area, thus assuring the destruction of all four highly vulnerable American ships. Not wishing to be thus caught like "rats in a trap," Agnew decided on the second alternative, a dash for safety.

Shaping course for Sealark Channel, the two old minecraft got underway and bent on speed to clear the area. At 1014, three distinctive silhouettes came over the horizon into view, hull-down and "bones-in-their-teeth ."

The "black gangs" on the American ships were able to pound and cajole 29 knots from the old machinery. however the Japanese, making 36 knots, gained rapidly and opened fire with their 6.6-inch guns while still out of range of the Americans' 3 inchers. The first enemy shells whistled overhead and sent up fountains of water several hundred yards beyond the minecraft, and the next salvo fell some 300 yards astern.

Trever and Zane dodged nimbly and kept up a steady fire from their 3-inch guns as exploding shells drenched their decks with spray. The Japanese then drew blood by hitting Zane amidships and killing three men.

Agnew now decided that his ships could not make Sealark Channel and chose instead to attempt a high speed transit of shoal-studded Niella Channel. Just as the Americans were changing course, the Japanese broke off the action, perhaps remembering their primary mission.

Three days later, Trever and Zane once again conducted a resupply run to Tulagi, each carrying 176 drums of gasoline lashed to her deck. Continuing such runs through January 1943, Trever then steamed to Australia for overhaul, arriving at Sydney on 27 January. She returned to Espiritu Santo on 28 February before calling at Wellington, New Zealand, on 31 May.

Returning to escort duties, she accompanied LST-848 from Lunga Roads to the Russell Islands on 20 June 1943. After nightfall, a twin-float Japanese biplane "washing machine Charlie" came over and dropped bombs on the two ships, sending them to general quarters and provoking an angry return fire from Trever's 20-millimeter guns.

The old destroyer minesweeper next took part in operations in the New Georgia campaign. On the 29th Rear Admiral George H. Fort hoisted his flag to Trever's main as Commander, TG 31.3. That night, in company with Schley (APD-14), McKean (APD-6), and seven infantry landing craft (LCI's), Trever departed Wernham Cove, Russell Islands. At daybreak the next morning, the APD's launched their landing boats. The troops stormed ashore at Oliana Bay, taking the Japanese defenders by surprise. Later that day with the objective secured, Rear Admiral Fort disembarked at Renard Sound.

On 5 July, American forces struck hard at Kula Gulf to occupy Rice Anchorage and thus to prevent Japanese reinforcements from reaching Munda from Vila. Trever embarked 216 men of the Army's 3d Battalion, 148th Infantry Regiment, and joined bombardment and transport groups in the assault.

On 6 August, Trever joined Honolulu (CL-48) which had lost her bow to a "long lance" torpedo during the Battle of Kolombangara and escorted the damaged cruiser from Espiritu Santo to Pearl Harbor. On 19 August, Trever got underway to escort an eastbound convoy to San Francisco.

After a month's overhaul at Mare Island, Trever steamed for Pearl Harbor on 8 October and touched there briefly before heading for Guadalcanal. On Armistice Day, she joined the screen for American Legion (AP-35) and escorted her to Empress Augusta Bay. Later that month, Trever took part in the landings at Cape Torokina, Bougainville.

Trever devoted the next year to escort missions and target towing duty in the South and Central Pacific. Perhaps the highlight of this service came in October 1944 when she joined the screen for torpedoed cruisers Houston (CL-81) and Canberra (CA-70) and escorted them safely to Ulithi.

On 18 December, as Trever was escorting a convoy toward the Western Carolines, the wind velocity began to increase steadily, with the seas rising and the barometer falling. By 1440, typhoon conditions prevailed. Visibility dropped to zero, and torrential rains deluged the ship while mountainous waves and 90-knot winds threatened to tear her apart. Heavy seas carried away the two motor whaleboats and bent and twisted their davits. At 1630, a man making emergency repairs topside was washed overboard; and Trever immediately began a search for the missing sailor. Two hours later, she picked up her man: bruised, battered, and in shock but alive.

The following day, Trever put into Guam and transferred her injured seaman to the naval hospital on shore. On 22 December, she reached Eniwetok. On 24 December, she and Army transport Santa Isabel got underway for Hawaii, arriving at Pearl Harbor on the last day of 1944. Continuing her homeward journey, Trever moored alongside the Mole Pier at the Naval Repair Base, San Diego, and began overhaul on 9 January 1945.

Upon completion of her repairs, she headed for Oahu on 25 March 1945. For the remainder of the war, Trever operated out of Pearl Harbor, where she had entered the hostilities with Japan four years before. On 4 June 1945, she was reclassified as a miscellaneous auxiliary and designated as AG-110.

On 22 September 1945, she departed Pearl Harbor for the last time and steamed to San Diego. After repairs, she proceeded via the Canal Zone to Norfolk Va., where she arrived on 21 October 1945. She was decommissioned on 23 November 1945, struck from the Navy list on 5 December 1945, and sold for scrapping on 12 November 1946.

Trever received five battle stars for her World War II service.

21 posted on 09/05/2003 9:50:04 AM PDT by aomagrat (IYAOYAS)
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