USS Charles R. Ware (DD-865)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

InsertAltTextHere
caption
Career (US) United States Navy Jack
Laid down: 1 November 1944
Launched: 12 April 1945
Commissioned: 21 July 1945
Decommissioned: unknown
Struck: 30 November 1974
Status: Sunk as a target 13 November 1981
General Characteristics
Displacement: 2,425 tons
Length: 390 ft 6 in (119 m)
Beam: 41 ft 1 in (12.5 m)
Draught: 18 ft 6 in (5.6 m)
Speed: 35 kt (65 km/h)
Complement: 367 officers and enlisted
Armament: 6 5", 5 21" tt., 6 dcp., 2 dct.

USS Charles R. Ware (DD-865), was a Gearing-class destroyer of the United States Navy, named for Lieutenant Charles R. Ware USN (19111942), who was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross for heroism in the Battle of Midway.

Charles R. Ware was laid down by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation at Staten Island in New York on 1 November 1944, launched on 12 April 1945 by Mrs. Z. Ware and commissioned on 21 July 1945.

From her home ports at Norfolk, Virginia, and after December 1950, Newport, Rhode Island, Charles R. Ware operated through 1960 with the Atlantic Fleet. Along with many deployments to the Mediterranean Sea and northern Europe, she carried out training and overhaul necessary. Her first major cruise, between 1 March and 9 April 1946, was to northern waters, where she aided in developing techniques for cold weather operations, crossing the Arctic Circle.

Shortly thereafter she served as target ship for submarines training off New London, Connecticut. The tenth of November 1947 found her underway for the Mediterranean, and her first tour of duty with the 6th Fleet. After exercising with this force, and calling at ports of northern Europe, she returned to Norfolk 11 March 1948. Her next tour of duty in the Mediterranean came in 1949, during which for 2 weeks she patrolled off the Levant Coast under the direction of the United Nations' Palestine Truce Commission.

Through two cruises to the Caribbean in the summer of 1949, Charles R. Ware aided in the training of members of the Naval Reserve, then took part in a large-scale Arctic operation before preparing for a 1950 tour with the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean. Her 1951 tour was highlighted by operations with ships of the Royal Hellenic Navy. Following her 1953 tour, she conducted antisubmarine warfare exercises with British ships off Northern Ireland, calling then at ports in Ireland, Germany, Norway, Denmark, and Belgium. Later that year she took part in exercises with the aircraft carrier HMCS Magnificent off Narragansett Bay.

Early in 1954 she returned to the Mediterranean once more, for a tour of duty which included participation in a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) operation. Her 1955 deployment began with antisubmarine warfare exercises with the Royal Navy off Northern Ireland, and was followed by her 6th Fleet duty. In summer 1956, she carried midshipmen on a summer training cruise to Northern Europe.

The year 1957 was marked by assignment to escort the ship carrying King Saud of Saudi Arabia into New York harbor for his state visit, and a European cruise during which she exercised with Spanish destroyers. That fall she put to sea for North Atlantic Treaty Organization exercises and on 20 January 1958, she rescued a downed pilot from Essex (CVA-9) while conducting air operations off the east coast. Shortly thereafter she cleared for the Mediterranean once more.

During the summer of 1959, Charles R. Ware took part in the historic Operation Inland Sea, the first passage of a naval force through the Saint Lawrence Seaway into the Great Lakes. She took part in the Naval Review in Lake Saint Louis on 26 June, which was taken by Queen Elizabeth II and President Dwight D. Eisenhower, and sailed on to call at a number of United States and Canadian ports. During her 1960 Mediterranean tour, she carried German naval observers during an exercise in the Ionian Sea.

Charles R. Ware was decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 30 November 1974 and sunk as a target in the Caribbean on 15 November 1981.

This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.


Gearing-class destroyer

Gearing | Eugene A. Greene | Gyatt | Kenneth D. Bailey | William R. Rush | William M. Wood | Wiltsie | Theodore E. Chandler | Hamner | Epperson | Frank Knox | Southerland | William C. Lawe Lloyd Thomas | Keppler | Lansdale | Seymour D. Owens | Rowan | Gurke | McKean | Henderson | Richard B. Anderson | James E. Kyes | Hollister | Eversole | Shelton | Seaman | Chevalier | Higbee | Benner | Dennis J. Buckley | Corry | New | Holder | Rich | Johnston | Robert H. McCard | Samuel B. Roberts | Basilone | Carpenter | Agerholm | Robert A. Owens | Timmerman | Myles C. Fox | Everett F. Larson | Goodrich | Hanson | Herbert J. Thomas | Turner | Charles P. Cecil | George K. MacKenzie | Sarsfield | Ernest G. Small | Power | Glennon | Noa | Fiske | Warrington | Perry | Bausell | Ozbourn | Robert L. Wilson | Witek | Richard E. Kraus | Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. | Rupertus | Leonard F. Mason | Charles H. Roan | Fred T. Berry | Norris | McCaffery | Harwood | Vogelgesang | Steinaker | Harold J. Ellison | Charles R. Ware | Cone | Stribling | Brownson | Arnold J. Isbell | Fechteler | Damato | Forrest Royal | Hawkins | Duncan | Henry W. Tucker | Rogers | Perkins | Vesole | Leary | Dyess | Bordelon | Furse | Newman K. Perry | Floyd B. Parks | John R. Craig | Orleck | Brinkley Bass | Stickell | O'Hare | Meredith

List of destroyers of the United States Navy
List of destroyer classes of the United States Navy