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Hull Number: DD-715

Launch Date: 07/29/1945

Commissioned Date: 11/24/1945

Decommissioned Date: 12/01/1976

Call Sign: NKLF

Voice Call Sign: ARIES (59), GRAB BAG (64-67)

Other Designations: DDR-715


Class: GEARING

GEARING Class

Data for USS Gearing (DD-710) as of 1945


Length Overall: 390’ 6"

Beam: 40’ 10"

Draft: 14’ 4"

Standard Displacement: 2,425 tons

Full Load Displacement: 3,479 tons

Fuel capacity: 4,647 barrels

Armament:

Six 5″/38 caliber guns
Two 40mm twin anti-aircraft mounts
Two 40mm quadruple anti-aircraft mounts
Two 21″ quintuple torpedo tubes

Complement:

20 Officers
325 Enlisted

Propulsion:

4 Boilers
2 General Electric Turbines: 60,000 horsepower

Highest speed on trials: 34.6 knots

Namesake: WILLIAM MAXWELL WOOD

WILLIAM MAXWELL WOOD

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, February 2016

William Maxwell Wood, born in about 1809 in Baltimore, Md., was appointed assistant surgeon on 16 May 1829 and, between 1830 and 1838, served with the West Indies and Home Squadrons, as well as with the Army during the Seminole wars.

He became fleet surgeon with the Pacific Squadron in 1844 and, upon completion of his tour, was about to return to the United States when relations between that country and Mexico became decidedly strained. The commander of the Navy’s Pacific Squadron, Commodore John D. Sloat, consequently entrusted certain dispatches to Wood to carry back to the United States with him. Wood volunteered to travel through Mexico and report upon conditions there. Accompanied by the American consul from Mazatlan, Mexico, the former fleet surgeon commenced his journey across Mexico.

Arriving at Guadalajara on 10 May, Wood and his companion found the town “in a high state of agitation” owing to the reception there of the news of the battles between American and Mexican forces at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma, on the Rio Grande River. The surgeon immediately wrote a dispatch to Sloat at Mazatlan, and it was delivered in five days, an exceptional occurrence in those days. His message that hostilities with Mexico had actually commenced was the first tidings of that nature that Sloat had received.

Wood meanwhile continued on his journey across Mexico and subsequently arrived at Mexico City to be “startled and shocked by hearing newsboys crying through the streets ‘Grand victory over the North Americans.’ ” He later learned through a trusted friend of the Mexican minister of war that General Zachary Taylor’s men had, in fact, annihilated the Mexican Army’s choice regiment. Surgeon Wood remained in Mexico City not less than a week and gathered moreinformation which he sent off to Commodore Sloat, apprising him of the situation, via Guadalajara.

Wood continued his mission, as he had since the beginning of it, in civilian clothes, running the risk of being apprehended as a spy, and, while posing as an Englishman, inspected the defenses of the castle at Chapultepec. Continuing on to Veracruz, the surgeon carefully took notes on Mexico, its condition and resources. Ultimately, the physician reached a neutral man-of-war and was taken to the flagship of the American blockading squadron. Sailing on a vessel especiallydetached for the purpose, Wood carried the vital intelligence information to Washington.

Meanwhile, Commodore Sloat took action. As he later recorded in a letter to Wood, “The information you furnished me at Mazatlan from the City of Mexico, via Guadalajara, (at the risk of your life) was the only reliable information I received of that event, and which induced me to proceed immediately to California, and upon my own responsibility to take possession of that country, which I did on the 7th of July, 1846.”

Sloat considered the performance of Wood’s journey through Mexico “as an extraordinary feat, requiring great courage, presence of mind, and address. How you escaped from the heart of an enemy’s country . . . has always been a wonder to me.”

Following the Mexican War, Wood served in the receiving ship at Baltimore and later went to the steamer Michigan, operating on the Great Lakes. He again served as fleet surgeon, this time with the East India Squadron, from 1856 to 1858, and took part in Commodore Andrew H. Foote’s attack upon the Chinese Barrier Forts of “enormous strength . . . built of large blocks of granite . . . heavily armed.” at Canton, China, in response to Chinese attacks upon American shipping.

Wood subsequently served a second tour in Michigan before he became fleet surgeon for the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron. While thus serving, Wood witnessed the historic battle of the ironclads USS Monitor and CSS Virginia (the former USS Merrimack) in Hampton Roads; and later took part in the assault and capture of Sewall’s Point.

After the Civil War, Wood served at Baltimore in 1866 and 1867 and was President of the Naval Examining Board in 1868 before he became Chief of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery in 1870. Appointed medical director on 3 March 1871, Wood retired later that same year and died in Baltimore on 1 March 1880.

I


Disposition:

Stricken 12/1/1976. Stripped at Norfolk and sold for scrap in 1977. Sunk as target 3/1983.


A Tin Can Sailors Destroyer History

USS WILLIAM M. WOOD DD-715

The Tin Can Sailor, January 1999

Launched on 29 July 1945, the WILLIAM M. WOOD, was named for a fleet surgeon turned spy during the Mexican War. Wood risked his life traveling through Mexico gathering invaluable intelligence for the U.S. government. Following service with the North Atlantic Squadron during the Civil War, Wood retired as chief of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery in the Pacific Fleet and homeported at San Diego.

During the first of two deployments to the Western Pacific in 1946 and 1947, the WOOD patrolled the Yellow Sea between northern China and Korea to stem postwar smuggling. Her second deployment was a seven-month mission with Destroyer Division 131. Following her return to San Diego, she was reassigned to the Destroyer Force, Atlantic Fleet, and reported to her new home port, Newport, Rhode Island, in October 1949. At Newport, the WOOD’s crew schooled junior officers in gunnery and engineering. They embarked on their first deployment with the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean in September 1950.

Returning to Newport, she engaged in local operations and steamed south for plane-guard duty out of Pensacola, Florida. Following a second Mediterranean cruise, and a voyage to Nova Scotia, she entered the Boston Naval Shipyard in September 1952. The WOOD emerged on 3 June 1953 as a radar picket destroyer, redesignated as DDR-715. Subsequent operations along the U.S. coast, as well as in the Caribbean, included plane guarding and training operations. Overseas, she served as a radar picket with NATO forces in the Mediterranean. In April 1955, she was in the port of Volos, Greece, when the city suffered a series of earthquakes. She remained after the disaster and her crew rendered much needed aid to the quake’s victims.

Mounting tensions in the Middle East precipitated an Israeli invasion of the Egyptian Sinai on 29 October 1956. In response, the WOOD hastened to the eastern Mediterranean in November to join Task Force 26 in helping to restore peace and order. The crisis eased, and the destroyer and her crew were back home for Christmas. They enjoyed relatively normal duty with the Atlantic Fleet until June 1958 and deployment in the Mediterranean. When fighting erupted in Lebanon, President Eisenhower sent U.S. Marines ashore and stationed Sixth Fleet ships offshore to support them. The men of the WOOD spent forty days from July to September patrolling the Lebanese coast.

Over the next decade, the WOOD continued to alternate Sixth Fleet deployments with duty along the Atlantic coast and in the Caribbean. She had just returned from her tenth Mediterranean assignment in October 1962 when she was ordered to the Caribbean as part of the blockade of Cuba following the discovery of Soviet missile sites on the island. The WOOD was back in southern waters in February 1963 when Venezuelan communist insurgents hijacked the Venezuelan freighter, SS ANZOATEGUI. She joined ships from several navies in searching for the ship, but the terrorists eluded capture, gaining political asylum in a Brazilian port.

The WOOD underwent her FRAM conversion in the spring of 1964 at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. On 1 March 1965, she was redesignated DD-715 and headed back to Norfolk as an all-purpose destroyer. Her post-overhaul refresher training was interrupted by the call to duty when a revolution broke out in the Dominican Republic on 24 April 1965. She hastened to the scene of the conflict to protect foreign nationals caught in the middle and to support the multinational expeditionary force dispatched to the island by the Organization of American States. During her coastal patrol, the WOOD evacuated thirteen foreigners, including some Americans, and transferred them to the PAWCATUCK (AO-108) for transport to safety. The following day, she was relieved from patrol duty and returned to her training.

Over the next eight years, the WOOD alternated deployments with the Sixth Fleet and normal duty sailing out of Norfolk with the Atlantic Fleet. Operating with the antisubmarine warfare forced in 1968, she joined the unsuccessful search for the nuclear attack submarine SCORPION. In 1969 and 1970, she was in the Mediterranean, shadowing two Soviet ships, MOSKVA and LENINGRAD, to gather intelligence on the new hermaphrodite cruiser/ASW carrier. In 1972, the destroyer embarked on an extended assignment with the Sixth Fleet. She was home ported in Athens, Greece, for nearly three years. In addition to routine training operations, in 1974, she was on continuous patrol in the waters around Crete during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus.

The WILLIAM M. WOOD’s career ended on 1 December 1976 when she was placed out of commission at Norfolk. Stripped of all usable equipment and materials, she was sold for scrap in 1977.

USS WILLIAM M. WOOD DD-715 Ship History

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016

William M. Wood (DD-715) was laid down on 2 November 1944 at Newark, N.J., by the Federal Shipbuilding & Drydock Co.; launched on 29 July 1945; sponsored by Mrs. Joseph P. Tracy; and commissioned at the New York Naval Shipyard on 24 November 1945, Comdr. George R. Wilson in command.

Following shakedown out of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and type training in the Norfolk area, William M. Wood operated in the Caribbean Sea from April to June 1946. In June, she was reassigned to the Pacific Fleet. She arrived in San Diego during the first week in July but departed there a week later, bound for Hawaii. The destroyer operated out of Pearl Harbor from mid-July to late September, when she received orders to duty along the coast of China. The warship arrived in Tsingtao, China, near the middle of October and began patrolling the Yellow Sea between northern China and Korea in an effort to stem postwar smuggling. That task lasted until February 1947 when she headed back to the United States, arriving in San Diego early in March.

During the following six months, William M. Wood conducted type training along the Pacific coast and underwent a three-month overhaul. In October 1947, the destroyer joined Destroyer Division (DesDiv) 131 in screening Valley Forge (CV-45) on an extended voyage to the western Pacific. In the ensuing seven months, the ships called at Sydney, Australia; Hong Kong; Shanghai and Tsingtao in China; and Yokosuka, Japan. She returned to San Diego with the unit in May 1948 and resumed normal training and upkeep operations which were broken once by a two-month overhaul at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard.

On 1 April 1949, a new fleet organization was promulgated reassigning William M. Wood to the Atlantic Fleet. The destroyer, however, remained on the west coast until 5 October, when she finally sailed for her new home port, Newport, R.I. She reported for duty with the Destroyer Force, Atlantic Fleet (DesLant) on 21 October. The warship served DesLant as a school ship training junior officers in gunnery and engineering. In May 1950, the warship participated in a Navy-Marine Corps amphibious exercise conducted on the North Carolina coast. During the following month, she conducted underway training out of Newport. July brought a brief tour of duty in Caribbean waters with a hunter/killer group and a quick visit to Iceland.

The destroyer returned to Newport in August but put to sea the next month for the first of many deployments with the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean Sea. After two months of duty, however, William M. Wood left the 6th Fleet to resume operations out of United States ports. Following a brief leave and upkeep period at Newport, the destroyer moved south to Pensacola, Fla., where she served for a time as plane guard for Monterey (CVL-26) during carrier qualifications.

At the conclusion of that assignment, she returned to normal duty out of Newport. In January 1952, she embarked upon her second Mediterranean cruise. That tour of duty lasted seven months during which time she participated in several NATO multinational exercises. That tour of duty also included visits to ports in the United Kingdom, Belgium, and Germany. She returned to Newport in July and, after a voyage to Halifax in company with Midway (CVB-41) late in September, entered the Boston Naval Shipyard to begin conversion to a radar picket destroyer. She was placed out of commission on 2 October 1952 and redesignated DRR-715.

William M. Wood completed her conversion to a radar picket destroyer during the summer of 1953 and wasrecommissioned on 6 June 1953, Comdr. J. S. Slaughter in command. Following a shakedown cruise to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, that fall, she began her third tour of duty with the 6th Fleet in November. At the end of several weeks of operations with the 6th Fleet, the radar picket destroyer returned to Norfolk early in February 1954.

The following month, she journeyed south to Pensacola, Fla., where she once again planeguarded for Monterey during carrier qualifications. The summer of 1954 brought the ship a two-month midshipman cruise to European waters where she made port calls at Cadiz, Spain, and Rotterdam in the Netherlands. She returned to Norfolk in August and spent the remainder of 1954 engaged in training operations. In January of 1955, she embarked upon her fourth deployment to the Mediterranean. Again, NATO exercises and port visits at various points along the Mediterranean littoral kept the ship busy. She was in port at Voles, Greece, between 19 and 21 April, during which time the city suffered a series of severe earthquakes. She remained there after the disaster and rendered all possible aid to the victims.

Returning to the United States that summer, she entered the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard for a major overhaul. That fall, the warship conducted refresher training and then returned to Norfolk to prepare for her upcoming Mediterranean deployment. That tour of duty began in February 1956 and ended the following June. Between June and October, she operated out of Norfolk along the coasts of the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida conducting air defense exercises. Mounting tensions in the Middle East precipitated an Israeli invasion of the Egyptian Sinai on 29 October, and William M. Wood hastened to the eastern Mediterranean in November to join Task Force (TF) 26 in helping to restore peace and order in that chronically troubled sector of the world. The crisis cooled quickly enabling the warship to return home in time to celebrate the Christmas holidays.

The warship began 1957 with Operation “Springboard,” conducted in the West Indies in January and February. In March, she escorted Canberra (CA-70) when that cruiser carried President Eisenhower to Bermuda to confer with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. William M. Wood provided transportation for the members of the press who covered the President’s visit. In June, she entered the Norfolk Naval Shipyard for a three-month overhaul.

Following that, she conducted refresher training out of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for six weeks. In November, the destroyer resumed normal duty out of Norfolk with the Atlantic Fleet. She began 1958 the same way she began 1957, with “Springboard” exercises in the Caribbean during January and February. Then in June, at the conclusion of three months of normal Atlantic Fleet duty, the warship embarked upon a Mediterranean cruise.

Not long after her arrival in the Mediterranean, fighting erupted in Lebanon. The intensification of the strife prompted the pro-western Lebanese President Chamoun to seek military help from the United States. President Eisenhower responded immediately by sending Marine Corps units ashore in the troubled country and stationing 6th Fleet ships offshore to support them. During the period 14 July and 3 September, William, M. Wood spent 40 days on station patrolling off the Lebanese coast. Following brief visits to Izmir, Turkey; Naples, Italy; and Gibraltar, she headed back to Norfolk and arrived there on 30 September. Normal Atlantic Fleet operations, including exercises along the coast and in the Caribbean, ensued.

Over the next decade, William M. Wood continued to alternate 6th Fleet deployments with duty along the Atlantic coast and in the Caribbean area. In August 1962, she returned to the United States from her 10th Mediterranean assignment and resumed operations out of Norfolk.

That employment, however, was interrupted in October when President John F. Kennedy declared the “quarantine” of Cuba in response to the siting of offensive, nuclear missiles on the island. For 57 days, William M. Wood participated in the quasi-blockade patrols conducted around Cuba to prevent the importation of further missiles and to ensure the removal of those already there.

At the successful conclusion of that mission, the warship resumed normal east coast operations. In February 1963, members of Venezuela’s communist insurgent group, the FALN, hijacked the Venezuelan freighter, SS Anzoategui, and William M. Wood joined ships from several navies in an international search for the merchant ship. Their efforts proved to be in vain for the terrorists eluded capture, entered the Brazilian port of Belem, and received political asylum.

Following her return from her llth Mediterranean deployment in the spring of 1964, William M. Wood entered the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard on 18 May 1964 to begin a Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization (FRAM) overhaul. During that period, she was converted from a radar picket destroyer back to an all-purpose destroyer. She was redesignated DD-715 on 1 July 1964 and completed her FRAM conversion on 11 March 1965 when she headed back to Norfolk to rejoin the Atlantic Fleet.

In the midst of her post-overhaul refresher training, a revolution broke out in the Dominican Republic on 24 April. On the 29th, the destroyer received orders interrupting her refresher training, and she hastened to the scene of the conflict to protect foreign nationals caught in the middle and to support an American, and later, multinational expeditionary force dispatched to the island by the Organization of American States. The situation was soon stabilized, and William M. Wood began a coastal patrol and surveillance assignment. While so engaged, she picked up 13 foreigners, including some American citizens, who requested evacuation. These people were transferred to Pawcatuck (AO-108) on 7 May; and, the following day, O’Hare (DD-889) relieved her on station off the Dominican Republic. William M. Wood then resumed refresher training and completed it on 20 May.

On 18 June, after post-refresher availability at Norfolk, the destroyer embarked upon another tour of duty in the Mediterranean with the 6th Fleet and continued alternating such deployments with normal duty out of Norfolk with the Atlantic Fleet. During 1968, she operated with the antisubmarine warfare (ASW) forces attached to the Atlantic Fleet. In May and June of 1968, she participated in the unsuccessful search for the nuclear attack submarine Scorpion (SSN-589) reported missing on 27 May. She closed the year in overhaul at Norfolk.

During her last eight years of active service, William M. Wood made two more routine Mediterranean cruises and then served there on a three-year extended deployment. During the first of her last two normal Mediterranean deployments, which lasted from 12 November 1969 to 22 May 1970, she shadowed two new Soviet ships, Moskva and Leningrad, to gather intelligence on the new hermaphrodite cruisers/ASW carriers. The second of the two cruises lasted from 8 February to 23 July 1971 and consisted of more routine 6th Fleet operations, mostly training exercises both multinational and unilateral.

Following almost 13 months of 2d Fleet operations during late 1971 and early 1972, the warship embarked upon an extended assignment to the 6th Fleet on 18 August. Her home port was officially changed to Athens, Greece, from which port she operated for almost three years. The warship spent most of her time during that period engaged in training operations with other units of the 6th Fleet and with elements of Allied navies. She also made several forays into the Black Sea for special operations there. In July and August of 1974, she conducted continuous patrols in the vicinity of Crete during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus.

Her extended deployment with the 6th Fleet ended in June of 1975 when she began a long voyage home. Thedestroyer visited ports in France, Germany, Denmark, England, and Bermuda before arriving back in Norfolk on 23 July. After six months of normal operations out of Norfolk, William, M. Wood deployed to the Mediterranean one final time in January of 1976. She returned to the United States that summer and resumed 2d Fleet operations. On 1 December 1976, she was placed out of commission at Norfolk, and her name was struck from the Navy list that same day. She was stripped at Norfolk and sold for scrap sometime in 1977.