USS Steinaker (DD-863)

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Career United States Navy Jack
Ordered:
Laid down: 1 September 1944
Launched: 13 February 1945
Commissioned: 26 May 1945
Decommissioned:
Fate: Sold to Mexican Navy, 24 February 1982, still active as of Jun 2005 as ARM Netzahualcoyotl
Struck: 24 February 1982
General Characteristics
Displacement: 3,460 tons (full)
Length: 390 ft 6 in
Beam: 40 ft 10 in
Draft: 14 ft 4 in
Propulsion: 2-screw General Electric geared turbines, 60,000 shp
Speed: 36.8 knots
Range: 4500 nm @ 20 knots
Complement: 336
Armament: 6 5", 12 40 mm., 11 20 mm., 10 21" tt
Nickname: Stinky

USS Steinaker (DD/DDR-863) was a Gearing-class destroyer of the United States Navy, named for Private First Class Donald Baur Steinaker USMCR (19221942) who was killed in action on Guadalcanal and posthumously awarded the Navy Cross.

Steinaker was laid down by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation at Staten Island in New York on 1 September 1944, launched on 13 February 1945 by Miss Carol Steinaker and commissioned on 26 May 1945.

Steinaker alternated operations along the east coast and in the Caribbean with the 2nd Fleet with deployments to the Mediterranean with the 6th Fleet, underwent conversion to a radar picket destroyer at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard between 1 July 1952 and 28 February 1953, underwent an extensive Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization (FRAM) overhaul at the Boston Naval Shipyard, and served as plane guard for carriers on Yankee Station in the Tonkin Gulf, participated in Sea Dragon operations, patrolled on search and rescue duties and carried out Naval Gunfire Support missions during the conflict in Vietnam. Steinaker received two battle stars for service in Vietnam.

Steinaker was decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 24 February 1982, transferred to Mexico and renamed Netzahualcoyotl.


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