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USSThornton (DD-270)

Coordinates:24°24′N128°58′E / 24.400°N 128.967°E /24.400; 128.967
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tender of the United States Navy
For other ships with the same name, seeUSS Thornton.

USSThornton (AVD-11) in port, c. 1944.
History
United States
NameUSSThornton
NamesakeJames and Ryan Thornton
BuilderBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation,Squantum Victory Yard
Laid down3 June 1918
Launched2 March 1919
Commissioned15 July 1919
Decommissioned2 May 1945
Stricken13 August 1945
Honours and
awards
3 ×battle stars
Fate
  • Beached following collision 2 May 1945
  • Hull abandoned and donated to the government of theRyukyu Islands July 1957
General characteristics
Class & typeClemson-classdestroyer
Displacement1,215 tons
Length314 ft4+12 in (95.8 m)
Beam30 ft11+12 in (9.44 m)
Draft9 ft9+34 in (2.99 m)
Propulsiongeared turbines
Speed34.72 kn (64.30 km/h)
Complement122 officers and enlisted
Armament4 ×4 in (100 mm) guns, 1 ×3 in (76 mm) gun, 4 × 3 x21 inch (533 mm)torpedo tubes.

USSThornton (DD-270/AVD-11) was aClemson-classdestroyer in theUnited States Navy duringWorld War II. She was named forJames and Ryan Thornton, naval officers during theAmerican Civil War, and was the second ship to bear this name.

History

[edit]

Thornton was laid down on 3 June 1918 and launched on 2 March 1919 by theBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation; sponsored by Miss Marcia Thornton Davis; and placed in commission atBoston, Massachusetts, on 15 July 1919.

On 26 August,Thornton sailed for Europe. Following a port call in theAzores, the destroyer reached theStrait of Gibraltar on 15 September. For the remainder of 1919, she visited a number of ports, both in theMediterranean and along the Atlantic coast of Europe.

The ship returned to Boston on 12 February 1920 and remained there until 27 March, when she weighed anchor for the Pacific. After calls at several ports on the Gulf of Mexico, the destroyer transited thePanama Canal on 30 April. She then steamed slowly up the western coast ofMexico, stopping along the way atSalina Cruz,Manzanillo andGuaymas to show the flag. On 27 MayThornton reachedSan Diego, California and, for the next two years, conducted operations along theCalifornia coast. On 24 May 1922,Thornton was placed out of commission and laid up at the Destroyer Base, San Diego.

Thornton remained in reserve throughout the 1920s and 1930s.

World War II

[edit]

On 25 May 1940, she was ordered recommissioned for conversion to aseaplane tender. Accordingly, she was recommissioned, in ordinary, on 24 June 1940 and moved to the San Francisco yard of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation for conversion. On 2 August 1940,Thornton was officially redesignated a seaplane tender (destroyer),AVD-11. Her alterations were completed early in 1941, and she was placed in full commission on 5 March 1941.

On 8 April, she reported for duty to the Commander-in-Chief of,Pacific Fleet, atSan Pedro. Ten days later, the seaplane tender arrived inPearl Harbor, and she operated in theHawaiian Islands until August 1942. During her 16 months in the islands, she made frequent voyages toMidway,Wake Island,Palmyra and other outlying islands of the 14th Naval District.

On the morning of 7 December 1941, she was moored at the Submarine Base at Pearl Harbor. Her action report for that day states that the Japanese opened theirattack on Pearl Harbor at 0756 and thatThornton's crew, led by four reserve ensigns, was at action stations two minutes later. They fought back with every available weapon: four .50-cal. machine guns, three Lewis guns, three Browning automatic rifles, and twelve .30-cal., bolt-action Springfields. The combined fire ofThornton andHulbert (AVD-6) accounted for at least one Japanese torpedo bomber and probably discouraged two more from making a run onNeosho (AO-23) as the oiler changed berths during the second dive-bombing attack between 0910 and 0917.Thornton suffered no casualties during the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Following the Pearl Harbor attack, she was stationed atFrench Frigate Shoals withBallard (AVD-10) as aircraft rescue ships for the planes engaged in the expanded air searches. Coincidentally, the Japanese had planned to use theFrench Frigate Shoals as a rendezvous point for the second half ofOperation K, the reconnaissance of Pearl Harbor. The Japanese subsequently cancelled the remainder ofOperation K after the Japanese submarine I-123, sent to scout the area, was forced to depart.[1][2] After the victory at Midway, she resumed her runs between the outlying islands of the 14th Naval District, though the Japanese occupation had removed Wake Island from her itinerary, until August 1942. On the 25th,Thornton steamed out of Pearl Harbor, headed north, and arrived atKodiak, Alaska, on the 30th. For the next two months, the seaplane tender cruised the icyAlaskan seas as a part of Task Force 8. She visited Kodiak,Attu, andChernofski before departing Kodiak for Pearl Harbor on 21 October.

Thornton stopped at Pearl Harbor from 30 October to 10 November, then headed for duty in the South Pacific. After short periods of duty atSuva in theFiji Islands,Funafuti in theEllice Islands, and atVanikoro in theSanta Cruz Islands, she moved toEspiritu Santo in theNew Hebrides, arriving on 18 July 1943. The seaplane tender remained at Espiritu Santo until 11 November, when she put to sea forGuadalcanal in the Solomons. Between 13 November and 15 November, she made a round-trip run between Guadalcanal and Espiritu Santo to escortChandeleur (AV-10) from the latter to the former.

Following duty in the Solomons and a stop at Pearl Harbor from 5 February to 8 February,Thornton returned to the west coast atMare Island on 17 February 1944. She stayed on the west coast for the next 10 months, conducting routine operations and undergoing extensive repairs. On December 3, 1944, the warship left San Pedro to return to the western Pacific.

Fate

[edit]

From mid-December 1944 until late February 1945,Thornton was at Pearl Harbor. On the 22d, she got underway for operations to prepare for the assault on Okinawa. She stopped at Eniwetok early in March, and then moved on to Ulithi, the staging area for Okinawa. On 5 April 1945, while operating in the Ryūkyūs as part of the Search and Reconnaissance Group of the Southern Attack Force,Thornton collided withAshtabula (AO-51) andEscalante (AO-70). Her starboard side was severely damaged and open to the sea. On 14 April, she was towed intoKerama Retto. On the 29th, a board of inspection and survey recommended thatThornton be decommissioned, beached, stripped of all useful materiel as needed, and then abandoned. She was beached and decommissioned on 2 May 1945. Her name was struck from theNavy List on 13 August 1945. In July 1957,Thornton's hull was abandoned and donated to the government of theRyukyu Islands.

Honors and awards

[edit]

References

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  1. ^Cressman, Robert. The Official Chronology of the US Navy in World War II. Pg.99
  2. ^Costello, John. The Pacific War 1941-1945. Pg.281
 United States Navy
 United States Coast Guard
World War II operators
 Royal Navy
Part ofTown class
 Royal Canadian Navy
Part ofTown class
 Soviet Navy
Part ofTown class
 Imperial Japanese Navy
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in April 1945
Shipwrecks
Other incidents
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in May 1945
Shipwrecks
Other incidents

24°24′N128°58′E / 24.400°N 128.967°E /24.400; 128.967

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