UNDERWAY! 2025 Wall Calendar / W.W. II SPECIAL EDITION

NOW AVAILABLE -
CLICK HERE
For RATING SHIRTS - Click on your Rating Abbreviation below:
AB AC AD AE AG AK AM AO AQ AS AT AW AX AZ BM BT BU
CE CM CS CT DC DK DM DP DS DT EA EM EN EO ET EW
FC FT GM GS (53-61) GS (78-Now) HM HT IC IM IS IT JO LI LN LS
MA (48-67) MA (72-Now) ME ML MM MN MR MS MT MU NAVY NC ND OM OS OT
PC PH PM PN PR QM RD (WW2) RD (48-72) RM SD SF SH SK SM
SO ST SV SW TM UT WT YN NAVY DIVER
Click on your Rating abbreviation above:


U.S.S. RENSHAW

(DD-499)

READY RENSHAW

Click to view crew list
 

USS RENSHAW (DD-499) - a Fletcher-class destroyer

In Commission 1942 to 1970

DD-499 Deployments - Major Events

Add a DD-499 Shellback Initiation Add a DD-499 Deployment - Major Event
Month Year to Month Year Deployment / Event
MAY1942-Keel Date: 7 MAY 1942
at Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Company Kearny NJ
OCT1942-Launch Date: 13 OCT 1942
DEC1942-Commissioned: 5 DEC 1942
MAR1958-Shellback Initiation - 15 MAR 1958 - Pacific Ocean
OCT1958- Shellback Initiation - 15 OCT 1958 - Pacific Ocean
NOV1958-Shellback Initiation - 3 NOV 1958 - Pacific Ocean
APR1959-Shellback Initiation - 9 APR 1959 - Pacific Ocean
FEB1962-AUG1962Wes-pac Criuse
SEP1963-APR1964West Pac
JAN1965-JUN1967West Pac-Viet Nam
MAR1965-SEP1965West Pac-Viet Nam
MAR1965-OCT1965West Pac-Viet Nam
JUL1966-DEC1966West Pac
APR1968-DEC1968West Pac-Viet Nam
APR1968-SEP1968West Pac-Viet Nam
JUL1969-DEC1969West Pac
FEB1970-Decommissioned: 14 FEB 1970

DD-499 General Specifications

Class: Fletcher-class destroyer

Named for: William B. Renshaw

Complement: 336 Officers and Enlisted

Displacement: 2050 tons

Length: 376 feet 6 inches

Beam: 39 feet 8 inches

Flank Speed: 35 knots

Range: 6500 Nautical Miles

Final Disposition:Sold for scrap October 1970



USS RENSHAW (DD-499)



The third Renshaw (DD-499) was laid down 7 May 1942 by the Federal Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. Kearny N.J. launched 13 October 1942 sponsored by Miss Dorothy Lillian Renshaw and commissioned 5 December 1942 Lt. Comdr. C. F. Chillingworth in command.


Following shakedown Renshaw reported to the Pacific Fleet in the spring of 1943 and protected transports in the Solomon Islands area. On 2 July 1943 she participated in the bombardment of the Vila Stanmore and Shortland Island areas in Kula Gulf coming under the fire of enemy shore batteries.


From 21 to 25 November she pounded East Island in Empress Augusta Bay with 200 rounds of 5-inch ammunition. Sorum and Makatawa on northeast Bougainville next felt her blows and she then proceeded north of Buka Island for an offensive sweep between Buka and Green Islands. On the morning of 20 January she retired southward with her task unit to give fire support to the landings on Bougainville Island itself.


During landings in the New Britain-New Ireland area Renshaw dealt considerable damage to enemy airfield installations while coming under the fire of shore batteries. On 13 March the ship was in the Empress Augusta Bay area where she bombarded enemy positions in the jungles east of the beachhead held by Allied forces


After a short period of amphibious training at Pearl Harbor Renshaw led a force of LST's to the Marianas Islands. At first assigned to the outer destroyer screen she later closed the Tinian beach to provide star shell illumination and fire support for troops ashore who were undergoing a heavy counterattack.


In November 1944 while operating with a destroyer division bombarding enemy installations in the Ormoc Bay area and conducting antishipping sweeps in the waters westward of Leyte Renshaw spotted a Japanese submarine on the surface. Renshaw and accompanying destroyers immediately opened fire and after a brief one-sided duel during which the submarine returned fire with small caliber weapons the enemy vessel was destroyed.


After a turnaround in San Pedro Bay Renshaw and other units of her task group made a high-speed run to Ormoc Bay in an effort to intercept enemy transports reported unloading there. However only a single Japanese vessel was found a large wooden barge which Renshaw took under fire and destroyed while she came under air attack.


On 31 December 1944 Renshaw sortied with a task unit en route to screen a large transport formation assigned to land troops in the Lingayen Gulf area 9 January 1945. Despite repeated air attacks during the voyage through the Sulu and South China Seas the powerful invasion armada reached its objective without serious damage.


While in the Mindanao Sea on 91 February 1945 Renshaw was struck by a torpedo from an enemy submarine. The torpedo exploded on contact about 10 feet below the waterline flooding the firerooms. The ship lost all power a large section of the hull was warped by the explosion and bulkheads and decks were fractured. Even though 19 men were killed and 20 injured within a matter of minutes damage control parties had the flooding reduced by half and through their efforts the main propulsion machinery suffered no damage.


Temporary repairs were made in April by the ship's crew and men from the destroyer tender Whitney and the repair ship Prometheus. Renshaw then proceeded under her own power from the forward area to the Todd Pacific Shipyards Inc. Tacoma Wash. where permanent repairs were completed early in October 1945.


On Navy Day 27 October 1945 in New York Harbor President Harry S. Truman reviewed the greatest victory parade in naval history from Renshaw.


Renshaw decommissioned in February 1947 and was attached to the U.S. Atlantic Reserve Fleet. During 1949 and 1950 she was converted to a specialized antisubmarine vessel and recommissioned in June 1950 as DDE-499.


During the Korean Conflict Renshaw had two tours of duty in the Far East May to November 1951 and November 1952 to June 1953 in which she served as an escort patrol search and rescue and bombardment vessel. Subsequently Renshaw served in the Pacific Proving Grounds February to May 1954 during Operation "Castle " rendering patrol and air control services for Joint Task Force


This was followed by a short tour in the Far East from June to August 1954 where Renshaw rescued a British airman from the sea while acting as plane guard for the British carrier HMS Warrior and also participated in a hunter-killer exercise with a force composed of United States and Canadian ships. On 8 August 1955 Renshaw sailed for her fourth tour in the Far East spending most of her time in hunter-killer exercises and task force operations. She subsequently made additional Far Eastern deployments from Pearl Harbor October 1956 to May 1957 December 1957 to May 1958 February 1959 to July 1959 and April 1960 to October 1960.


In 1960 Renshaw received Weapon Alpha; and on 17 December 1961 she recovered the nose-cone of Discoverer 36. She made a further WestPac deployment in 1962. On 7 August 1962 she was redesignated a destroyer and resumed the hull number DD 499. On 3 October Renshaw Participated in the recovery of Project Mercury Astronaut Comdr. Walter M Schirra. Spending most of 1963 operating out of Pearl Harbor; Renshaw deployed to WestPac again in November 1963 returning 6 months later.


On 3 March 1965 Renshaw in company with other units of Destroyer Division 252 departed Pearl Harbor on short notice to augment destroyer forces for the rapidly expanding naval commitments in the South China Sea. During April and May she served in surveillance roles and in support of carrier striking force operations. In June she was on Taiwan patrol returning to Vietnamese waters in July where she remained until September before steaming via Japan for Pearl Harbor.


In October and December Renshaw served as an alternate recovery ship in Project Gemini. Her 11th WestPac tour began 5 .July 1966. She participated in antisubmarine operations as an aircraft carrier rescue destroyer in special operations with Chicago (CG-11) in the Tonkin Gulf and in special operations and patrol duties in the Taiwan Strait.


Renshaw remained in the Hawaiian area throughout 1967. She departed Pearl Harbor 8 April 1968 for WestPac where she provided escort services for the fast carrier attack forces on Yankee Station in the Tonkin Gulf. In September Renshaw returned to Pearl Harbor. In June 1969 she sailed for WestPac and Yankee Station where she rescued one pilot from the water. In December 1969 she returned from the Far East to Pearl Harbor. Renshaw decommissioned 14 February and was struck from the Navy list the same day. She was sold for scrapping in October 1970 to Zidell Explorations Inc.


Renshaw earned eight battle stars for World War II service five battle stars for Korean Conflict service and six battle stars for Vietnam service.

[Note: The above USS RENSHAW (DD-499) history may or may not contain text provided by crew members of the USS RENSHAW (DD-499) or by other non-crew members and text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]