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 A Tin Can Sailors
Destroyer History

USS ABERCROMBIE
(DE-343)

The USS ABERCROMBIE (DE‑343), a John C. BUTLER-class destroyer escort, was launched on 14 January 1944 at Orange, Texas, by the Consolidated Steel Corporation and was commissioned on 1 May 1944. Shakedown behind her, the warship headed to Norfolk en route to Aruba, a transhipment and refining center for Venezuelan crude oil. She and the WALTER. C. WANN (DE‑412) escorted the oilers CHEPACHET (AO‑78) and I. SALAMONIE (AO‑26) into Aruba on 15 July and, after the oilers loaded cargo, conducted them to the Panama Canal. By August, the ABERCROMBIE was underway for the Pacific where in September she escorted the GENERAL W. F. HASE  (AP‑146) to Manus in the Admiralty Islands.

 On 14 October, the DE joined the screen of an escort carrier task group to escort a large convoy of amphibious ships and merchantmen bound for the amphibious landings at Leyte in the Philippines. Leaving the reinforcement convoy in the Leyte Gulf, the ABERCROMBIE escorted the small carriers to their operating area east of the Philippines. For the next five days, the destroyer escort screened the carriers against submarine and air attack while their aviators supported the troops on Leyte. By the end of November, she was preparing for the invasion of Luzon.

On 27 December, the destroyer escort put to sea in company with a large group of amphibious ships. During the invasion of Luzon, she served as the flagship for TG 79.9, Control Group Able, of the Lingayen attack force. En route to the Lingayen Gulf, her group was on guard against Japanese aircraft and midget submarines. In the Lingayen Gulf early on the morning of 9 January, the ABERCROMBIE steamed in close to shore as a control ship for the amphibious craft. She anchored about 4,500 yards off the main assault beaches near Lingayen. During the final pre-invasion bombardment, her guns opened fire on the enemy for the first time when a kamikaze dived on the COLUMBIA (CL‑56). In spite of the defensive efforts of the ships around the cruiser, the suicider succeeded in crashing the COLUMBIA, the third enemy plane to do so in as many days.

Subsequently, the ABERCROMBIE turned to her primary mission leading the first assault waves for their run to the beaches. Resistance was light and the ABERCROMBIE left the assault area to join the antiaircraft screen of  transports returning to rear area bases. Following their safe delivery, the warship carried out another convoy escort mission, seeing troops and equipment safely to Mindoro. Following a brief period of R & R, the DE returned to Leyte to prepare for the invasion of the Ryukyu Islands.

In March, the ABERCROMBIE left Leyte with TG 51.1 as part of the screen for the Western Islands Attack Group to secure Kerama Retto as a fleet anchorage for the main assault on Okinawa. On 1 April, the landing force stormed ashore on Okinawa, and the ABERCROMBIE spent five days guarding the supporting ships against attack by Japanese submarines and planes.

She cleared the Ryukyu Islands on 5 April and, with the MUSTIN (DD-413), was bound for Ulithi. On 13 April she was again en route to Okinawa. The destroyer escort spent the next two months performing a variety of services in support of the Okinawa campaign. During that period, she assumed radar picket duty off Okinawa where she fought off attackers on at least 16 separate occasions, claiming two definite kills and two assists. When not standing watch on a radar picket station, the ABERCROMBIE conducted antisubmarine searches, rescued downed American airmen, and provided escort services to a variety of ships.

On 14 June, she left the Ryukyus bound for the Marianas and routine maintenance until the end of the month when she returned to Okinawa. On 6 July, she cleared the Ryukyus and joined the screen of the larger ships of the Third Fleet but was back off Okinawa by months’ end. She shunted between the Ryukyus and the Philippines through the end of hostilities, then escorted  occupation forces to Korea in September before heading for occupation duty in Japan. On 4 November, the destroyer escort ended her assignment in Japan and steamed for the United States.

On 15 June 1946, the ABERCROMBIE was placed out of commission in San Diego. She remained in the reserve fleet until the mid 1950s when she was moved to Bremerton, Washington. There, on 1 May 1967, her name was struck from the navy list. In November, she was towed back to San Diego and, on 7 January 1968, the ABERCROMBIE  was sunk as a target by ships and aircraft that made up the task group of the BON HOMME RICHARD (CVA‑31).

 

From The Tin Can Sailor, July 2009


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