Harman Patil (Editor)

USS Drexler

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Namesake
  
Henry Clay Drexler

Commissioned
  
14 November 1944

Construction started
  
24 April 1944

Weight
  
2,235 tons

Beam
  
12 m

Laid down
  
24 April 1944

Honors and awards
  
One Battle star

Launched
  
3 September 1944

Displacement
  
1.996 million kg

Builder
  
Bath Iron Works

USS Drexler USS Pavlic APD70

Fate
  
Sunk by kamikaze 28 May 1945

Class and type
  
Allen M. Sumner-class destroyer

Uss drexler 741 reunion 051714 stories from three tin soldiers


USS Drexler (DD-741), an Allen M. Sumner-class destroyer, was named for Ensign Henry Clay Drexler, a Medal of Honor recipient.

Contents

USS Drexler Destroyer Photo Index DD741 USS DREXLER

The Drexler was launched on 3 September 1944 by Bath Iron Works Corp., in Bath, Maine; sponsored by Mrs. L. A. Drexler, the mother of Ensign Drexler; and commissioned on 14 November 1944, with Commander Ronald Lee Wilson in command.

USS Drexler Survival of Drexler Survivors Reunion Association

Service history

USS Drexler USS Drexler DD741 Print Destroyers AF PriorServicecom

Sailing from Norfolk on 23 January 1945 to escort Bon Homme Richard to Trinidad, Drexler then sailed on to reach San Diego on 10 February. Three days later she got underway for Pearl Harbor for antiaircraft and shore bombardment exercises until the 23rd, when she sailed on escort duty to Guadalcanal and Ulithi, the staging area for the Okinawa invasion.

USS Drexler World War II Veteran Who Survived 2 Ship Sinkings Shares Story

Drexler departed Ulithi 27 March 1945 bound for Okinawa and dangerous duty on a radar picket station. On 28 May at 07:00, two kamikazes attacked Drexler and Lowry. The first was downed by the combined fire of the two destroyers and planes from the combat air patrol. The second tried to crash onto Lowry but missed, hitting Drexler instead and cutting off all power and starting large gasoline fires. Despite the heavy damage, she kept firing, aiding in shooting down two planes which attacked immediately after the crash. At 07:03 she was hit by another aircraft, a twin-engined "Frances" P1Y1 bomber, and the "impact rolled her on to her beam ends, causing her to sink in less than 50 seconds" at 27°6′N 127°38′E. Because of the speed with which she sank, casualties were heavy: 158 dead and 52 wounded. The captain was one of the wounded. Few of the survivors are still alive. They honor their comrades every year at the annual Drexler Survivors reunion.

Awards

Drexler received one battle star for World War II service.

USS Drexler httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

USS Drexler FileUSS Drexler DD741 refueling Feb 1945jpg Wikimedia Commons

USS Drexler Historical Review USS Drexler DD741

References

USS Drexler Wikipedia