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USS King (DDG 41)

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Name
  
King

Laid down
  
1 March 1957

Decommissioned
  
28 March 1991

Launched
  
6 December 1958

Namesake
  
Ernest Joseph King

Commissioned
  
17 November 1960

Construction started
  
1 March 1957

USS King (DDG-41) MaritimeQuest USS King DL10 DLG10 DDG41 Page 1

Ordered
  
18 November 1955, as DL-10 (Destroyer Leader)

Builder
  
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility

USS King (DL-10/DLG-10/DDG-41) was a Farragut-class guided missile destroyer in the United States Navy. She was named for Fleet Admiral Ernest Joseph King (1878-1956),

USS King (DDG-41) My ship USS King DDG41 Members Gallery Vapor Talk Forum

King was laid down by the Puget Sound Navy Yard at Bremerton in Washington on 1 March 1957, launched on 6 December 1958 and commissioned on 17 November 1960.

USS King (DDG-41) MaritimeQuest USS King DL10 DLG10 DDG41 Page 2

King was reclassified as a destroyer leader on 14 November 1956 and designated DLG-10. King was again reclassified as a guided missile destroyer on 30 June 1975 and designated DDG-41.

USS King (DDG-41) MaritimeQuest USS King DL10 DLG10 DDG41 Page 1

Service history

USS King (DDG-41) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

After shakedown along the coast, and in Hawaiian waters, King continued training out of San Diego for the remainder of 1961. Following extensive preparations the guided-missile frigate sailed on her first WestPac cruise, 7 June 1962, strengthening the 7th Fleet with her Terrier missile arsenal. Operating with this peacekeeping force, King helped to check Communist aggression in Southeast Asia.

USS King (DDG-41) FileUSS King DDG41 underway in 1987jpg Wikimedia Commons

Upon returning San Diego on 31 December, she resumed tactical exercises off the West Coast until 1 August 1963 when she departed on her second WestPac cruise. Once again her operations with the 7th Fleet helped maintain stability in the Far East. King returned San Diego 10 March 1964 and conducted operations along the coast, for the rest of the year constantly perfecting her fighting skills and increasing the peacekeeping ability of the Navy.

USS King (DDG-41) FileUSS King DDG41 stern with RIM67 missile launcher 1983jpeg

King headed back for the Far East 5 April 1965 escorting the aircraft carrier USS Oriskany. She operated from the South China Sea during May screening carriers and participating in air-sea rescue work. She continued to serve off Vietnam until returning to San Diego on 2 November.

The guided missile destroyer operated off the West Coast until heading back for the Western Pacific 26 May 1966. On this cruise she carried a helicopter for search and rescue missions to save American pilots during strikes against North Vietnam. She arrived at Da Nang, South Vietnam, on 27 June. During July she saved five downed aviators, including one who was rescued from deep within North Vietnam by the ship's helicopter crew. In August the ship was stationed in a positive identification and radar advisory zone (PIRAZ) in the Gulf of Tonkin to help protect American ships from enemy aircraft. Before she was relieved, she had checked over 15,000 aircraft. During this duty she also rescued seven pilots whose planes had gone down during strikes against enemy targets. She continued this duty, except for brief runs to Hong Kong and Subic Bay, until relieved by USS Long Beach on 29 November.

In February 1980, three crew members were lost at sea in the Atlantic 50 miles (80 km) northeast of Cape Hatteras during a snowstorm. A fourth crew member was also washed overboard, but was rescued.

She won the 1982 Marjorie Sterrett Battleship Fund Award for the Atlantic Fleet.

King was sold on 15 April 1994, and broken up for scrap by J&L Metals, Wilmington, North Carolina during 1995.

References

USS King (DDG-41) Wikipedia


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