USS Spruance (DD-963) |
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Career (US) | |
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Namesake: | Raymond A. Spruance |
Ordered: | 23 June 1970 |
Builder: | Ingalls Shipbuilding |
Laid down: | 27 November 1972 |
Launched: | 10 November 1973 |
Acquired: | August 12, 1975 |
Commissioned: | 20 September 1975 |
Decommissioned: | 23 March 2005[1] |
Struck: | March 18, 2005 |
Fate: | Sunk as Target, 8 December 2006 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Spruance class destroyer |
Displacement: | 8,040 (long) tons full load |
Length: | 529 ft (161 m) waterline; 563 ft (172 m) overall |
Beam: | 55 ft (16.8 m) |
Draft: | 29 ft (8.8 m) |
Propulsion: | 4 × General Electric LM2500 gas turbines, 2 shafts, 80,000 shp (60 MW) |
Speed: | 32.5 knots (60 km/h) |
Range: | 6,000 nautical miles (11,000 km; 6,900 mi) at 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) 3,300 nautical miles (6,100 km; 3,800 mi) at 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph) |
Complement: | 19 officers, 315 enlisted |
Sensors and processing systems: |
AN/SPS-40 air search radar AN/SPG-60 fire control radar AN/SPS-55 surface search radar AN/SPQ-9 gun fire control radar Mk 23 TAS automatic detection and tracking radar AN/SPS-65 Missile fire control radar AN/SQS-53 bow mounted Active sonar AN/SQR-19 TACTAS towed array Passive sonar |
Electronic warfare and decoys: |
• AN/SLQ-32 Electronic Warfare System • AN/SLQ-25 Nixie Torpedo Countermeasures • Mark 36 SRBOC Decoy Launching System • AN/SLQ-49 Inflatable Decoys |
Armament: |
2 x 5 in (127 mm) 54 calibre Mark 45 dual purpose guns |
Aircraft carried: | 2 x Sikorsky SH-60 Seahawk LAMPS III helicopters. |
Motto: | "Wisdom, Fortitude, Reason" |
Nickname: | "The Spru-Can" |
Badge: |
USS Spruance (DD-963) was the lead ship of the Spruance-class of destroyers in the United States Navy. She was named for Admiral Raymond A. Spruance.
Spruance was built by the Ingalls Shipbuilding Division of Litton Industries at Pascagoula, Mississippi, and launched by Mrs. Raymond A. Spruance, Commander Raymond J. Harbrecht in command.[2]
Spruance served in the U.S. Atlantic Fleet, assigned to Destroyer Squadron 24 and operating out of NS Mayport, Florida.
She was decommissioned on 23 March 2005 and was sunk as a target on 8 December 2006.
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Spruance was the first of a highly successful class of anti-submarine warfare destroyers and the first gas turbine powered destroyer in the US Navy. Initially armed with an 8-cell NATO Sea Sparrow missile launcher for nominal air defense she received the VLS (Vertical Launch System) in the late 1980s; replacing the old Mk 16 ASROC launcher.
Spruance's first operational deployment was in October 1979 to the Mediterranean Sea, with Saratoga Battle Group. Other ships she sailed with included Biddle, Conyngham, Milwaukee, and Mount Baker. During this cruise, Spruance made a transit into the Black Sea to conduct surveillance on the new Soviet helicopter carrier, Moskva, as it sailed from its building shipyard to the Soviet Red Banner Northern Fleet. Spruance suffered a casualty to one of her LM-2500 Gas Turbine Main Engines and had to replace the engine while deployed. This was done successfully in port.
Spruance, being the first gas turbine powered ship in the operational fleet, had an underway replenishment breakaway flag (flown while pulling away from receiving supplies and fuel from a logistics ship at sea) that was a replication of the large yellow warning seen on the side of aircraft carrier superstructures, with red block letters saying "BEWARE JET BLAST" on a large yellow background. Upon "breaking" (unfurling) the flag on the halyards, they would play the theme from the movie "Superman" as they increased speed and sailed ahead of the logistics vessel.
Spruance entered her first major overhaul in 1980 at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. During a brief yard period in 1983, she received the CIWS and TAS Mk 23 radar system.
Spruance deployed to the Arabian Sea in 1982 including a port visit to Mombasa, Kenya in May 1982. She briefly took station off Beirut in June 1982 prior to being relieved. In 1982, she transited both the Suez Canal and the Panama Canal in the same summer.
Spruance deployed for a six month period in January 1983 to the Persian Gulf where she spent over four and a half months conducting observations in company with USS Oliver Hazard Perry (FFG-7) during the Iraq-Iran War. Also conducted operations with Teamwork '84 in northern Atlantic and an Arctic Sharem in the Arctic Ocean in 1984. She deployed to the Mediterranean Sea in November 1984 and conducted her second Black Sea Operations over Thanksgiving 1984. She returned from her deployment in May 1985 and shortly thereafter entered for her second overhaul during which she received VLS, Towed Array, and the SH 60. She deployed for a six month period on 26 May 1993 to the Red Sea where she spent over three and a half months conducting visit, board and search operations in support of United Nations sanctions against Iraq. While attached to U.S. 6th Fleet, Spruance conducted a brief stop for fuel in Rota, Spain, followed by a liberty port visit in Palma, Spain. Additional stops in the Mediterranean consisted of a brief stop in Augusta Bay, Sicily, then to Souda Bay, Crete, for a maintenance period (IMAV) with the Shenandoah. The Spruance passed through the Suez Canal on 29 June.
ADM Vern Clark and ADM Gary Roughead (27th and 29th Chiefs of Naval Operations) were the Commanding Officer and Executive Officer, respectively of the Spruance from 1984 to 1985.
Upon arrival in the Red Sea, under command of CTG 152.1, Commander Maritime Interdiction Forces, Spruance assumed the duties as flagship for the task force commander. While on station, Spruance was the flagship for three different task force commanders. While on station, Spruance conducted exercises with the Egyptian navy and the Jordanian navy. During Spruance's tenure in the Red Sea, Spruance conducted several port visits to Hurghada, Egypt for crew rest and relaxation. Other official port visits were conducted in Safaga, Egypt and Aqaba, Jordan, where Spruance hosted receptions for top military and embassy officials. On 10 September 1993, Spruance intercepted the 18,000th ship since sanctions were put into place in August 1990, as part of the multinational maritime interception effort enforcing United Nations sanctions against Iraq. The ship's crew intercepted the Maltese-flagged bulk carrier "Early Star" in the North Red Sea during normal intercept operations. The merchant ship was sailing from Massaua, Eritrea, to Aqaba. As the ship was empty, it was allowed to proceed toward its destination.
Spruance was relieved as flagship by Hayler on 9 October after having completed more than 170 boardings, and then started her transit homeward through the Suez Canal on 11 October. Once back in the Mediterranean Sea, the ship made port calls in Toulon, France; Alicante, Spain; and Rota, Spain. She returned home on 14 November.
In July 1994, as part of Operation Restore Democracy, U.S. Navy ships were tasked with helping to enforce the United Nations embargo of Haiti. However, so many Haitians were picked up from the sea that United States Coast Guard ships needed an assist from USN ships in the region to handle the volume. Among these was Spruance which took onboard nine hundred Haitians for the transit to Guantanamo Naval Station. Spruance transferred to Portsmouth VA and entered drydock after the deployment.
In mid-1996, Spruance took part in the 24th annual U.S. invitational maritime exercise in the Baltic Sea, the BALTOPS 96 exercise. Made up of air, surface and subsurface operations, the exercise involved 47 ships and aircraft from 12 different squadrons sent by 13 NATO-member and Partnership for Peace nations: Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Lithuania, Latvia, Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Sweden, United Kingdom and United States.
Spruance deployed to the Mediterranean from April through October 1997 with the carrier battle group supporting John F. Kennedy (CV-67). Serving as the Destroyer Squadron 24 flagship, Spruance made significant contributions throughout the deployment including: visiting thirteen foreign ports; participating in five multi-national naval exercises in the Mediterranean and Black Seas; serving as Presidential Support Ship in Rotterdam, Netherlands; representing the U.S. Navy in Thoule Sur Mer, France, in commemoration of the fifty-second anniversary of the Allied landings in southern France; and hosting Ukrainian military and diplomatic distinguished visitors during the 1997 Ukrainian Independence Day celebration. During that period, Spruance also took part in the Partnership For Peace Exercise "Sea Breeze 97" in the Black Sea. Sea Breeze 97 trained military forces on how to provide humanitarian relief for victims of a simulated earthquake in Southern Ukraine.
In the fall of 1999, the Spruance detached from the John F. Kennedy Battle Group to relieve Peterson (DD-969) as the United States' representative to the Standing Naval Forces Mediterranean (STANAVFORMED). After dealing with the effects of Hurricane Floyd and Hurricane Gert off the east coast of Florida, Spruance crossed the Atlantic and entered the Mediterranean with other ships from the John F. Kennedy Battle Group. STANAVFORMED is part of NATO's `Reaction Force' and as such was ready to respond to any crisis in NATO's area of interest, although its primary area of operations is the Mediterranean. Spruance was expected to remain assigned to STANAVFORMED through March 2000.
On 1 June 2000, Spruance became the first U.S. Navy ship to use the drydock in Jacksonville, Florida in over ten years. She left Mayport, Florida harbor early on 1 June, traveled up the St. John's River to the drydock facility, and remained there until early August. During the drydock, the ship was raised out of the water, her hull was cleaned and inspected, and corrective and preventative maintenance was performed. On 24 September 2001, as part of the John F. Kennedy Carrier Battle Group, Spruance commenced use of the Vieques Island inner range in conjunction with their Composite Unit Training Exercises (COMPUTEX). The exercise, which began the week prior, also utilized the northern and southern Puerto Rican operating areas, and involved complex battle group training events, naval surface fire-support training and air-to-ground bombing. COMPUTEX is an intermediate level battle group exercise designed to forge the battle group into a cohesive, fighting team, and is a critical step in the pre-deployment training cycle and prerequisite for the battle group's Joint Task Force Exercise (JTFEX) scheduled for early the following year. Successful completion of the COMPUTEX also certifies the carrier and its embarked air wing as qualified for open ocean operations.
Spruance, along with the John F. Kennedy Battle Group took part, from 19 January through 26 January 2002, in Phase I of Joint Task Force Exercise (JTFEX) 02-1; and from 7 February–14 February in Phase II of Joint Task Force Exercise (JTFEX) 02-1. The JTFEX is designed to meet the requirement for quality, realistic training to prepare U.S. forces for joint and combined operations and also provides the opportunity to certify the CVBG for deployment. That particular JTFEX was scheduled for two phases to accommodate recent repairs to the carrier, which required it to be pierside during Phase I. The exercise took place in the waters off the East Coast, as well as on training ranges in North Carolina and Florida.
Deploying with the John F. Kennedy battle group in June 2004, Spruance returned to Mayport, Florida on 7 December 2004. She decommissioned 23 March 2005. She was sunk as a target for aircraft launched Harpoon missiles on 8 December 2006.
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