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USS Henry R. Kenyon (DE-683)
USS Henry R
Career US flag 48 stars
Laid down: 29 September 1943
Launched: 30 October 1943
Commissioned: 30 November 1943
Decommissioned: 3 February 1947
Struck: 1 December 1969
Fate: Sold for scrap, 22 October 1970
General characteristics
Displacement: 1,740 long ton full
1,400 tons, standard
Length: 306 ft (93 m)
Beam:   36 ft 9 in (11.20 m)
Draft:   13 ft 6 in (4.11 m)
Propulsion: GE turbo-electric drive,
12,000 hp (8.9 MW)
two propellers
Speed: 23 knots (43 km/h)
Range: 4,940 nautical miles at 12 knots
  (9,200 km at 22 km/h)
Complement: 15 officers, 198 men
Armament: 3 × 3 in (76 mm) DP guns,
3 × 21 in (53 cm) torpedo tubes,
1 × 1.1 in (28 mm) quad AA gun,
8 × 20 mm AA cannon,
1 × hedgehog projector,
2 × depth charge tracks,
8 × K-gun depth charge projectors

USS Henry R. Kenyon (DE-683) was a Buckley-class destroyer escort of the United States Navy in World War II. The ship was named in honor of Ensign Henry R. Kenyon, Jr. (1916–1942), a naval aviator in squadron VT-8, who was killed in action in the Battle of Midway.

Henry R. Kenyon was launched by Bethlehem Steel Co.'s Fore River Shipyard, Quincy, Massachusetts, on 30 October 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Verna Markham Kenyon, widow; and commissioned on 30 November 1943, Commander C. M. Lyons, Jr., in command.

After her shakedown cruise off Bermuda, Henry R. Kenyon returned to Boston. She was underway on 26 January 1944 on a tour of convoy escort duty in the Caribbean, a fertile field for German submarines. Returning to Boston again on 6 June, the ship underwent training in Casco Bay, Maine, and had her torpedo tubes replaced by additional antiaircraft guns. Assigned to an Atlantic escort group, she made five transatlantic voyages between 4 July 1944 and 30 August 1945, providing antisubmarine and antiaircraft protection in the Atlantic and eastern Mediterranean.

With the Battle of the Atlantic won, the destroyer escort proceeded on 15 May from Norfolk, Virginia through the Panama Canal and into the western Pacific theater. Arriving off Leyte on 7 July, she spent the remainder of the war escorting ships in the Philippines and to New Guinea and Okinawa. After the surrender of Japan in August, Henry R. Kenyon continued to operate in the Philippines and off the coast of Japan until departing Manila for the United States on 26 November.

Arriving at San Diego, California on 17 December, she remained in that port except for periodic training cruises until decommissioning on 3 February 1947. She joined the Pacific Reserve Fleet and berthed at Mare Island, Calif., later to be moved to Stockton, Calif. — still a part of the nation's "Reserve Sea Power".

Henry R. Kenyon was stricken from the Navy Register on 1 December 1969. The ship was sold on 22 October 1970.[1]

References[]

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.

  1. K. Jack Bauer and Stephen S. Roberts, Register of Ships of the U. S. Navy, 1775–1990, p. 231.

External links[]


All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at USS Henry R. Kenyon (DE-683) and the edit history here.
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