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U.S.S. PORTER

(DD-356)


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DD-356 USS PORTER

USS Porter received its name in honor of Commodore David Porter and his son Admiral David Dixon Porter. The Navy brought her into service upon her commission in August 1936. Her shakedown occurred in the waters off of Northern Europe. She reported for duty in the Pacific in August 1937. For the next few years, she participated in operations with the Pacific Fleet. On December 5, 1941, she sailed out of Pearl Harbor. In doing so, she missed the Japanese attack by two days. For the next couple of months, she patrolled around Hawaii before setting sail with other ships to the West Coast in March 1942.

Through summer 1942, USS Porter patrolled along the West Coast. In August, she sailed back to Hawaiian waters to participate in training exercises. On October 16, she took off with Task Force 16 and headed towards the Solomon Islands. The Task Force encountered Japanese forces on October 26 1942 near Guadalcanal. During the ensuing Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands, USS Porter received damage from a torpedo. The damage was fatal. After the crew left, USS Shaw fired on her. She sunk to the depths. The origin of the torpedo is controversial. Some credit the Japanese sub I-21, while others believe it was from a ditching US plane.

DD-356 Deployments - Major Events

Add a DD-356 Shellback Initiation Add a DD-356 Deployment - Major Event
Month Year to Month Year Deployment / Event
DEC1933-Keel Date: 18 DEC 1933
at New York Shipbuilding Corporation
DEC1935-Launch Date: 12 DEC 1935
AUG1936-Commissioned: 25 AUG 1936

DD-356 General Specifications

Class: Porter-class destroyer

Complement: 194 Officers and Enlisted

Displacement: 1850 tons

Length: 381 feet

Beam: 36 feet 2 inches

Draft: 10 feet 5 in

Range: 6 500 Nautical Miles

Final Disposition: Sunk in action 1 February 1943