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U.S.S. ESSEX

(CV-9)

FIGHTINIST SHIP IN THE FLEET
OLDEST AND THE BOLDEST

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USS Essex (CV-9) was a highly decorated aircraft carrier used in World War II and the Korean War. She was built in 1942 and was a key player in many victorious battles. She was the first carrier in her class, the Essex class.

World War II Highlights:

  • Carrier operations and attacks against Marcus Island, Wake Island, the Gilbert Islands, Kwajalein, the Marshall Islands, Truk, Saipan, Tinian, and Guam. These successful operations took place in less than one year, from August 1943 to February 1944.
  • She and her force were attacked from above by Japanese airplanes without sustaining notable damage during their operations in February 1944.
  • During the rest of that year, she was active in attacks against/occupation of: the Marianas, Palau Islands, Mindanao, and struggles with Japanese over strategic locations such as the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Formosa (Taiwan), and various points in the Philippine Islands.
  • November 25, 1944: Essex received a kamikaze hit to her port side flight deck; 15 were killed and 44 injured.
  • Withstood several typhoons.
  • Essex played a major role in the fall of Okinawa and missions against Iwo Jima.

Korean War Highlights:

Essex was modernized and readied to support US and UN troops in the Korean War. She toured the West Pacific and supported missions as far as the Yalu River on the border of China and Korea.

Essex received an extraordinary 17 battle stars, Presidential Unit Citation, and Navy Unit Commendation.

CV-9 Deployments - Major Events

Add a CV-9 Shellback Initiation Add a CV-9 Deployment - Major Event
Month Year to Month Year Deployment / Event
APR1941-Keel Date: 28 APR 1941
at Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. Newport News VA
JUL1942-Launch Date: 31 JUL 1942
DEC1942-Commissioned: 31 DEC 1942
OCT1943-Shellback Initiation - 25 OCT 1943 - Pacific Ocean
JAN1950-JAN1969Inchon Landing
JAN1951-JAN1951Middle Pacific
JAN1952-JAN1956Middle Pacific
NOV1953-JUN1954queamoie island
NOV1953-JUN1954china service un
FEB1956-MAR1956West Pac
JUL1956-JAN1957West Pac
JUL1957-Shellback Initiation - 2 JUL 1957 - Pacific Ocean
FEB1958-Shellback Initiation - 2 FEB 1958 - Indian Ocean
JUL1958-NOV1958Mediterranean-Lebanon
OCT1958-Shellback Initiation - 15 OCT 1958 - Pacific Ocean
OCT1958-Shellback Initiation - 15 OCT 1958 - Indian Ocean
AUG1959-JAN1960Mediterranean
AUG1959-FEB1960Mediterranean
APR1960-JUL1960Blue Nose - Arctic Circle
SEP1960-DEC1960Mediterranean-Indian Ocean-Persian Gulf
MAR1961-APR1961Cuban Bay of Pig's Invasion
OCT1961-FEB1962Western Europe/NATO Cruise
JAN1962-JAN1964Mediterranean
MAR1962-SEP1962Brooklyn Navy Yard Brooklyn NY
MAR1962-APR1962Cuban Missle Blockade
OCT1962-OCT1962Cuban Missle Blockade
JAN1963-JAN1963Caribbean
JUL1963-SEP1963Midshipmen Cruise
OCT1963-DEC1963Midlink VI Cruise 1963
OCT1963-DEC1963Mediterranean-Indian Ocean
JAN1966-APR1967Lost helo and 3 men major event occur about 72 hours later.
NOV1966-DEC1966Dry Dock
MAY1967-AUG1967North Atlantic-Med-Indian Ocean
JUN1967-SEP1967North Atlantic-Med-Indian Ocean
JUL1967-SEP1967North Atlantic-Med-Indian Ocean
AUG1967-SEP1967North Atlantic-Med-Indian Ocean
MAR1968-SEP1968North Atlantic
MAY1968-MAY1968North Atlantic
OCT1968-OCT1968Apollo 7 Recovery
JUN1969-Decommissioned: 30 JUN 1969

CV-9 General Specifications

Class: Essex-class aircraft carrier

Complement: built:2600 Officers and Enlisted

Length: 820 feet

Draft: 28 feet 5 inches

Flank Speed: 33 knots

Range: 20 000 nautical miles



USS ESSEX (CV-9)



The fourth Essex (CV-9) was launched 31 July 1942 by Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co. sponsored by Mrs. Artemus L. Gates wife of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air; and commissioned 31 December 1942 Captain D. B. Duncan command ing. She was reclassified (CVA-9) on 1 October 1952 and (CVS-9) on 8 March 1960.


Following her shakedown cruise Essex sailed to the Pacific in May 1943 to begin a succession of victories which would bring her to Tokyo Bay. Departing Pearl Harbor she participated with TF 16 in carrier operations against Marcus Island (31 Aug ust 1943); was designated flagship of TF 14 and struck Wake Island (5-6 October); launched an attack with TG 50.3 against the Gilbert Islands where she also took part in her first amphibious assault the landing on Tarawa (18-23 November). Refueling at se a she cruised as [367] flagship of TG 50.3 to attack Kwajalein (4 December). Her second amphibious assault delivered in company with TG 58.2 was against the Marshalls (29 January-2 February 1944).


Essex in TG 68.2 now joined with TG 58.1 and 58.3 to constitute the most formidable carrier striking force to date in launching an attack against Truk (17-18 February) during which eight Japanese ships weresunk. En route to the Marianas to sev er Japanese supply lines the carrier force was detected and received a prolonged aerial attack which it repelled in a businesslike manner and then continued with the scheduled attack upon Saipan Tinian and Guam (23 February).


After this operation Essex proceeded to San Francisco for her single wartime overhaul. She then joined carriers Wasp (CV-18) and San Jacinto (CVL-30) in TG 12.1 to strike Marcus Island (19-20 May) and Wake(23 May). She deployed wit h TF 58 to support the occupation of the Marianas (12 June-10 August); sortied with TG 38.3 to lead an attack against the Palau Islands (6-8 September) and Mindanao (9-10 September) with enemy shipping as the main target and remained in the area to supp ort landings on Peleliu. On 2 October she weathered a typhoon and 4 days later departed with TF 38 for the Ryukyus.


For the remainder of 1944 she continued her frontline action participating in strikes against Okinawa (10 October) and Formosa (12-14 October) covering the Leyte landings taking part in the battle for Leyte Gulf (24-25 October) and continuing the search for enemy fleet units until 30 October when she returned to Ulithi Caroline Islands for replenishment. She resumed the offensive and delivered attacks on Manila and the northern Philippine Islands during November. On 25 November for the first ti me in her far-ranging operations and destruction to the enemy Essex received injury. A kamikaze hit the port edge of her flight deck landing among planes gassed for takeoff causing extensive damage killing 15 and wounding 44.


This "cramped her style" very little. Following quick repairs we find her with 3d Fleet off Luzon supporting the occupation of Mindoro (14-16 December). She rode out the typhoon of 18 December and made special search for survivors afterwards. With TG 3 8.3 she participated in the Lingayen Gulf operations launched strikes against Formosa Sakishima Okinawa and Luzon. Entering the South China Sea in search of enemy surface forces the task force pounded shipping and conducted strikes on Formosa the Ch ina coast Hainan and Hong Kong. Essex withstood the onslaught of the third typhoon in 4 months (20-21 January 1945) before striking again at Formosa Miyako Shima and Okinawa (26-27 January).


During the remainder of the war she operated with TF 58 conducting attacks against the Tokyo area (16-17 and 25 February) both to neutralize the enemy's airpower before the landings on Iwo Jima and to cripple the aircraft manufacturing industry. She sent support missions against Iwo Jima and neighboring islands but from 23 March to 28 May was employed primarily to support the conquest of Okinawa.


In the closing days of the war Essex took part in the final telling raids against the Japanese home islands (10 July-15 August). Following the surrender she continued defensive combat air patrols until 3 September when she was ordered to Breme rton Wash. for inactivation. On 9 January 1947 she was placed out of commission in reserve.


Modernization endowed Essex with a new flight deck and a streamlined island superstructure on 16 January 1951 when recommissioned Captain A. W. Wheelock commanding.


After a brief cruise in Hawaiian waters she began the first of three tours in Far Eastern waters during the Korean war. She served as flagship for Carrier Division 1 and TF 77. She was the first carrier to launch F2H "Banshee" twinjet fighters on comba t missions; on 16 September 1951 one of these planes damaged in combat crashed into aircraft parked on the forward flight deck causing an explosion and fire which killed seven. After repairs at Yokosuka she returned to frontline action on 3 October to l aunch strikes up to the Yalu River and provide close air support for U.N. troops.


On 1 December 1953 she started her final tour of the war sailing the China Sea with the Peace Patrol. From November 1954 to June 1955 she engaged in training exercises operated for 3 months with the 7th Fleet assisted in the Tachen Islands evacuatio n and engaged in air operations and fleet manuevers off Okinawa.


In July 1955 Essex entered Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for repairs and extensive alterations including installation of an angled flight deck. Modernization completed she rejoined the Pacific Fleet in March 1956. For the next 14 months the carri er operated off the west coast except for a 6-month cruise with the 7th Fleet in the Far East. Ordered to join the Atlantic Fleet for the first time in her long career she sailed from San Diego on 21 June 1957 rounded Cape Horn and arrived in Mayport Fla. on 1 August.


In the fall of 1957 Essex participated as an anti-submarine carrier in the NATO exercises "Strike Back " and in February 1968 deployed with the 6th Fleet until May when she shifted to the eastern Mediterranean. Alerted to the Middle East crisis on 14 July 1958 she sped to support the U.S. Peace Force landing in Beirut Lebanon launching reconnaissance and patrol missions until 20 August. Once again she was ordered to proceed to Asian waters and transmitted the Suez Canal to arrive in the Taiw an operational area where she joined TF 77 in conducting flight operations before rounding the Horn and proceeding back to Mayport.


Essex joined with the 2d Fleet and British ships in Atlantic exercises and with NATO forces in the eastern Mediterranean during the fall of 1959. In December she aided victims of a disastrous flood at Frejus France.


In the spring of 1960 she was converted into an ASW Support Carrier and was thereafter homeported at Quonset Point R.I. Since that time she has operated as flagship of Carrier Division 18 and Antisubmarine Carrier Group Three. She conducted rescue and salvage operations off the New Jersey coast for a downed blimp; cruised with midshipmen and was deployed on NATO and CENTO exercises. In November she joined the French navy in Operation "Jet Stream" and since that time has continued her widespread activ ities in protection of freedom and peace.


Essex received the Presidential Unit Citation and 13 battle stars for World War II service; 4 battle stars and the Navy Unit Commendation for Korean war service.

[Note: The above USS ESSEX (CV-9) history may or may not contain text provided by crew members of the USS ESSEX (CV-9) or by other non-crew members and text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]