USS Fairfax (DD-93)

For other ships of the same name, see HMS Richmond.
Career (United States)
Name: USS Fairfax (DD-93)
Namesake: Donald Fairfax
Builder: Mare Island Navy Yard
Laid down: 10 July 1917
Launched: 15 December 1917
Commissioned: 6 April 1918
Decommissioned: 26 November 1940
Struck: 8 January 1941
Fate: Transferred UK, 26 November 1940
Career (United Kingdom)
Name: HMS Richmond (G88)
Namesake: Richmond, North Yorkshire
Acquired: 26 November 1940
Commissioned: 5 December 1940
Fate: Transferred to USSR, 16 July 1944
Career (Soviet Union)
Name: Zhivuchiy (Tenacious)
Acquired: 16 July 1944
Fate: Returned to UK for scrapping, 23 June 1949
General characteristics
Class and type:Wickes class destroyer
Displacement:1,090 tons
Length:314 ft 5 in (95.8 m)
Beam:31 ft 8 in (9.7 m)
Draft:9 ft (2.7 m)
Speed:35 knots (65 km/h)
Complement:100 officers and enlisted
Armament:4 × 4 in. (102 mm) guns,
2 × 3 in. (76 mm) guns,
12 × 21 in. (533 mm) torpedo tubes

USS Fairfax (DD-93) was a Wickes-class destroyer in the United States Navy during World War I, later transferred to the Royal Navy as HMS Richmond (G88), as a Town class destroyer.

USS Fairfax

Named in honor of Rear Admiral Donald Fairfax, she was launched 15 December 1917 by Mare Island Navy Yard; sponsored by Mrs. H. George; and commissioned 6 April 1918, Lieutenant Commander Stanford Caldwell Hooper in command.

Fairfax arrived at Hampton Roads 6 June 1918 for convoy escort duty out of Newport News. She guarded convoys of troop transports to midocean meeting points with escorts who had come out of English and French ports to meet them. Fairfax also guarded convoys moving between coastal ports, and patrolled off the coast until 16 October, when she stood down Hampton Roads bound for Brest, France, escorting a troop convoy. On 18 October, she left her convoy to rescue 86 survivors of torpedoed USS Lucia, an NOTS ship, and on 27 October, arrived at Brest for patrol and escort duty in European waters.

On 3 December 1918, Fairfax arrived in the Azores to meet and escort to Brest, the transport George Washington carrying President Woodrow Wilson to the Peace Conference. She sailed for home 21 December, reaching Norfolk 8 January 1919. Her post war operations along the east coast and in the Caribbean were broken in May 1919, when she sailed to the Azores to take up station as an observer of the historic first aerial crossing of the Atlantic made by Navy seaplanes. On 19 June 1922, she was decommissioned at Philadelphia, and placed in reserve.

Recommissioned 1 May 1930, Fairfax operated primarily on training cruises for members of the Naval Reserve during the following 2 years, based at Newport, Rhode Island, and Camden, New Jersey. On 12 March 1932 she sailed from Hampton Roads for San Diego, California, arriving 26 March. On the west coast, too, her primary duty was training reservists, but she also took part in gunnery exercises and fleet problems off Mexico, Central America, and the Panama Canal Zone.

Fairfax took part in the Presidential Review taken by Franklin D. Roosevelt in San Diego in March 1933, and then sailed for the East coast, where she continued her reserve training duty. She also patrolled in Cuban waters, and in the summers of 1935, 1937, 1938, 1939, and 1940 sailed out of Annapolis training midshipmen of the Naval Academy. Between October 1935 and March 1937, she served with the Special Service Squadron out of Coco Solo and Balboa, Canal Zone, operating primarily on the Atlantic side of the Canal Zone.

The destroyer joined in representing the United States Navy at the opening of the New York City World's Fair in April 1939, and after World War II broke out in Europe that fall, operated on neutrality patrol along with her training duties. On 21 November 1940, she arrived at Halifax, Nova Scotia, where she was decommissioned 26 November, and transferred to Great Britain under the destroyers for-land-bases exchange agreement.

See USS Fairfax County (LST-1193) for that ship.

HMS Richmond

The former Fairfax was commissioned in the Royal Navy as HMS Richmond, with the pennant number G88, on 5 December 1940. She arrived at Plymouth, England, on 1 February 1941, undergoing a refit to better suit her for escort work. This refit was completed in March, but Richmond ran aground at Holyhead on 23 March while on passage to Liverpool, and was under repair at Southampton until June.[1][2][3]

Following repair, Richmond joined the Newfoundland Escort Force, responsible for escorting transatlantic convoys between Newfoundland and mid-Atlantic, when British based ships took over the escort.[1][4] In October 1941, the ship returned across the Atlantic for refit at Cardiff, this continuing until December that year. Richmond then joined the 27th Escort Group based at Greenock on the Clyde. On 26 March Richmond formed part of the escort for the Arctic convoy PQ 14 on the initial leg from Scotland to Iceland, but was badly damaged in collision with the merchant ship Francis Scott Key and was under repair at Liverpool until July.[5][2] In September 1942, Richmond joined the Halifax, Nova Scotia based Western Local Escort Force, escorting convoys from North American ports to off Newfoundland. In February 1943 Richmond was involved in another collision, this time with the merchant ship SS Reinholt, being sent to Liverpool for repair. In June 1943, she returned to Halifax, and convoy operations along the Canadian coast, serving as part of the Royal Canadian Navy from June until December 1943, when to free her crew for more modern escorts, she returned to the United Kingdom and was laid up on the Tyne. On 16 July 1944 she was transferred to the Soviet Navy.[6][2]

Zhivuchiy

The former Richmond was commissioned in the Soviet Navy as Zhivuchiy (rus. Живучий, "Survivable") on 24 August 1944. The Soviet Union returned her in June 1949 to Britain, which sold her for scrap in July of that year.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Hague 1988, p. 70.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Mason, Geoffrey B. (2005). "HMS, later HMCS RICHMOND (G 88), also Russian ZHIVUCHI - ex-US Destroyer including Convoy Escort Movements". Service Histories of Royal Navy Warships in World War 2. naval-history.net. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
  3. Kindell, Don. "Naval Events, March 1941 (Part 2 of 2): Saturday 15th - Monday 31st". British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day. naval-history.net. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
  4. Hague 1988, p. 19.
  5. Hague 1988, pp. 70–71.
  6. Hague 1988, p. 71.

External links

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