USS Furse (DD-882)

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USS Furse (DD-882)
Career (U.S.) United States Navy Jack
Ordered:
Laid down: 23 September 1944
Launched: 9 March 1945
Commissioned: 10 July 1945
Decommissioned: 31 August 1972
Struck: 2 June 1975
Career (Spain) Spanish Navy Ensign
Commissioned: 1975
Fate: scrapped 1991
General Characteristics
Displacement: 3460 tons (Full)
Length: 390 ft 6 in
Beam: 40 ft 10 in
Draft: 14 ft 4 in (Max)
Propulsion: 60,000 shp; General Electric Geared Turbines, 2 screws
Speed: 36.8 knots
Range: 4500 nm @ 20 knots
Complement: Crew 336
Armament: 6 x 5"/38 DP (3x2), 12 x 40 mm AA, 11 x 20 mm AA, 10 x 21" tt.(2x5)

USS Furse (DD-882/DDR-882) was a Gearing-class destroyer of the United States Navy, named for Lieutenant John H. Furse USN (18861907).

Furse was laid down by the Consolidated Steel Corporation at Orange, Texas on 23 September 1944, launched on 9 March 1945 by Miss Eugenia A. Furse, sister of Lieutenant Furse and commissioned on 10 July 1945.

Furse sailed from Norfolk, Virginia 7 November 1945 for occupation duty in the Far East, calling at San Diego, California and Pearl Harbor en route to Tokyo Bay, where she arrived 22 December. After acting as courier between Nagoya and Wakayama, she conducted training operations out of Kobe, then sailed back to Pearl Harbor to prepare for participation in Operation Crossroads. In this operation, atomic weapons tests in the Marshall Islands during the summer of 1946, Furse acted as plane guard to carriers of JTF 1.

The destroyer returned to San Diego 12 August 1946, and until her transfer to the Atlantic Fleet in April 1949, operated on training along the west coast, and completed another tour of duty in the Far East. She was reclassified DDR-882 on 18 March 1949. She arrived at Newport, Rhode Island, 21 April 1949. On 10 September, she sailed on the first of her tours of duty with the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean Sea, which were annual, aside from 1951 and 1959, through 1960. From January 1951, Furse was homeported at Norfolk.

Among the highlights of the destroyer's operations were visits to ports of northern Europe between September 1950 and December, during which she represented the United States at the funeral of King Gustav V of Sweden. From 1952 onward, she often served with the Operational Development Force, perfecting techniques in antisubmarine warfare. A midshipman summer cruise in 1952 again took her to ports of northern Europe. Marking her 1956 tour of duty in the Mediterranean was her participation in the evacuation of Americans from Israel and Egypt during the Suez Crisis, and lengthy patrol duty in the eastern Mediterranean. The next year, she made two tours of duty in the Mediterranean because of the tense political situation prevailing, and in the summer of 1958, she sailed for NATO operations in northern waters, visiting Santander, Spain; Stavanger, Norway; and Ghent, Belgium.

In the periods between her deployments, Furse carried out the intensive training schedule of Destroyer Force, Atlantic Fleet, cruising the east coast and the Caribbean in operations with ships of all types and major fleet exercises.

Furse was decommissioned on 31 August 1972, and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 2 June 1975. She was transferred to Spain and renamed Gravina. Gravina was scrapped in 1991.


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

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