USS Vammen (DE-644)
From the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
USS Vammen (DE-644) was a
Buckley-class destroyer escort of the United States Navy,
named in honor of Ensign Clarence E. Vammen, Jr.
(1919–1942), a naval aviator who died in the Battle
of Midway.
Vammen was laid down on 1 August 1943 at San Francisco,
Calif., by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation; launched on 21
May 1944, sponsored by Mrs. Earle Morgan, aunt of the late
Ensign Vammen; and commissioned on 27 July 1944, with
Lieutenant Commander L. M. King, Jr., USNR, in command.
World War II
Following commissioning, Vammen fitted out through
mid-August 1944 and later conducted her shakedown out of
San Diego, California, into late September before
undergoing a post-shakedown availability at her builder's
yard. Underway for Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii, on 13
October, the new destroyer escort convoyed SS Phillipa to
the Hawaiian Islands before reporting for duty to
Commander, Service Force, Pacific Fleet, on 21 October.
For the remainder of October and all of November, the
destroyer escort trained out of Pearl Harbor, operating in
company with various submarines and aircraft carriers,
perfecting techniques of anti-submarine warfare and escort
duty. She then escorted SS Cushman Davis via Funafuti in
the Ellice Islands to Espiritu Santo, before she steamed
independently to Pearl Harbor, arriving at the Pacific
Fleet's main base three days after Christmas 1944.
Vammen plane-guarded for Bataan (CVL-29) early in
January 1945 before escorting the merchantman SS Exira to
Eniwetok in the Marshalls from 9 to 16 January. While
returning to Pearl Harbor, Vammen responded to a radio
request for assistance from LST-598 which had an ill
crewman. The destroyer escort rendezvoused with the landing
ship at sea on 20 January and took the sick man on board.
The following day, off Johnston Island, Vammen transferred
the man to a hospital boat, sent from that outpost, for
medical treatment ashore. The destroyer escort arrived back
at Pearl Harbor on the 23 January.
At the end of the month, Vammen sailed for the Marshall
Islands, escorting Convoy PD-278-T, consisting of the
attack transports Montrose (APA-212) and
Mountrail (APA-213). Departing Pearl Harbor on 30
January, PD-278-T arrived at Eniwetok on 7 February. Vammen
then headed for Hawaii the next day and, on the 10th,
relieved Witter (DE-636) as escort for the escort
carriers Kitkun Bay (CVE-71) and
Salamaua (CVE-96) en route. They subsequently reached
Pearl Harbor on the 17 February.
The destroyer escort conducted one more convoy escort run
to the Marshalls before she participated in her first major
action. She shepherded PD-310-T, which consisted of the
attack transports Meriwether (APA-203),
Menard (APA-201), and Allendale (APA-127), from
22 February to 2 March, the day of their arrival at
Eniwetok.
Three days later, she (as one of nine escorts) sortied with
a 10-ship convoy bound for Ulithi and Kossol Roads.
Detached on 9 March, she escorted the merchantman SS
Westward Ho to Kossol Roads, and, two days later, departed
the Palaus and proceeded to the Philippines in company with
the landing ship Ozark (LSV-2) and Westward Ho,
reaching Rizal, Leyte, on the 13 March.
After patrolling the entrance to Leyte Gulf from 14 to 18
March, Vammen underwent an availability at San Pedro Bay
alongside tender Markab (AD-21). With those repairs
completed within a week's time, the destroyer escort
sortied on 25 March, bound for Okinawa and her baptism of
fire.
Okinawa
Steaming as part of the screen for Tractor Group "Easy",
Vammen reached the Ryukyus on 1 April, the day of the
initial landings on Okinawa. Detached from duty with Task
Unit 51.14.2 (TU 51.14.2), for which the ship's commanding
officer had been screen commander, Vammen was assigned to
the western half of screening station A-39. Later that day,
she received orders to screen LST Group "Dog" during its
night retirement. While maneuvering at 15 knots through the
congested transport area under poor visibility conditions,
the destroyer escort struck a heavy floating object with
her bow at 21:00. A few seconds later, an explosion
occurred beneath her stern, as though a depth charge had
exploded under the ship.
After noticing marked vibrations, Vammen reduced speed to
10 knots. Repair parties reported no evident damage,
but the vibrations indicated damage to shafts or
propellers. As it turned out, the ship's starboard
propeller had been damaged and required replacement.
Nevertheless, she completed her assigned mission proceeding
to rendezvous with the LST group on its night retirement.
At 06:45 the next day, she resumed her screening station,
A-39, but because of her reduced speed capacity, was
ordered to take station A-50. Fortunately for Vammen, she
was never attacked by enemy aircraft.
Vammen remained on station off Okinawa until 8 April. Due
to the frequent enemy air raids, her crew spent an average
of 10 to 12 hours a day at their general quarters stations,
but as Commander King noted in his report of the ship's
operations, "no undue fatigue or effect on morale or
efficiency" resulted. Offered no opportunity to fire at
enemy aircraft during her time off Okinawa, Vammen
conducted two "hedgehog" attacks on suspected submarine
contacts, neither with observable results.
With the additional problem of a burnt-out drive motor in
her surface-search (SL) radar, Vammen departed Okinawa on 8
April, screening LST Group 17 to Leyte. Arriving at San
Pedro Bay on 14 April, she underwent repairs alongside
Markab before she was drydocked in ARD-16 to have the
damaged starboard propeller replaced. Undocking on the
17th, Vammen returned to Okinawa at the end of April,
screening LST Group 41.
Detached from that escort duty on 2 May, Vammen received
orders to head for the scene of a submarine sighting at
15:14 on the 5th. She arrived on the scene at 17:23, and
commenced a search plan in company with
Halloran (DE-305), but found nothing. The ships
abandoned the search at 11:00 the following day, and Vammen
soon resumed her screening role off Okinawa.
The destroyer escort remained off Okinawa, screening
incoming ships and off transport areas, for the rest of
May. On 28 May, while anchored at the northern end of the
transport area in Hagushi Bay, Vammen picked up
Talk-Between-Ships (TBS) reports of incoming aircraft,
"bogies", commencing beyond 50 miles (90 km). A
short while later, the destroyer escort's radar picked up
one enemy plane, a Kawasaki Ki-61 "Tony", first at
10 miles (20 km) and then one mile away as it
circled across the ship's bow.
The "Tony" suddenly emerged from the low clouds on the
escort's starboard quarter, and all of Vammen's 20-mm
Oerlikons that could bear opened up, joining the other
ships nearby in putting up a fierce barrage of fire. The
"Tony" strafed a tug nearby but, hit in the tail and right
wing, burst into flame, lost altitude, and crashed into the
water without exploding, clear of any ships.
Underway on 3 June, Vammen, awarded an "assist" in the
downing of the plane on 28 May, escorted an
Okinawa-to-Leyte convoy between 3 and 8 June, sinking a
Japanese mine with gunfire en route. After repairs
alongside Markab and a docking in USS ARD-18 for
repairs to her sound gear—which had been inoperative
since 22 May—the destroyer escort sailed for Lingayen
in company with sistership Cole (DE-641), on her way
back to Okinawa.
For the remainder of June, Vammen performed the unglamorous
but vital duty of screening transports and of providing
local escort services to incoming convoys. She ultimately
departed the Ryukyus in early July and steamed to Ulithi
before returning once more to Okinawa on the 15 July,
commencing patrol at station D-l, off Buckner Bay, on the
22 July.
Subsequently returning to Ulithi in early August, the
destroyer escort returned to Okinawa on 12 August and,
after fueling, got underway on 13 August as part of the
screen for an Okinawa-to-Ulithi convoy. It was while
underway with that convoy two days later that the ship
received the welcome news of Japan's capitulation. Vammen's
commanding officer recorded the event: "1745, On basis of
communique No. 467, all offensive action against Japanese
ceased."
Vammen reached Ulithi on 18 August and, after escorting
Convoy UOK (Ulithi to Okinawa) 52 to Okinawa from 27 August
to 31 August, returned to Ulithi at the beginning of
September. Subsequently visiting Guam and Saipan, Vammen
reached Pearl Harbor on 9 November on her way back to the
west coast of the United States.
The ship underwent a lengthy availability at the Puget
Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Washington, that lasted
into 1946. She shifted southward to San Diego and departed
that port on 20 February, bound for the Hawaiian Islands,
reaching Pearl Harbor on 27 February. She sailed from Oahu
on 4 March, and proceeded via Guam to China.
Vammen supported the American occupation forces in their
operations from the spring of 1946 into the autumn,
touching at ports such as Tsingtao and Shanghai, China; and
Kowloon. Departing Shanghai on 1 July 1946, the destroyer
escort reached Pearl Harbor on 16 July via Guam and
Eniwetok. She then set out for the west coast, reaching San
Diego on 28 July.
The destroyer escort next underwent an availability at
Terminal Island, California, and San Pedro in early
September, and shifted to San Diego in mid-month. Vammen
was subsequently decommissioned at San Diego on 3 February
1947 and placed in reserve. She was inactivated on 2 April
1947.
Korean War
The Korean War meant a new lease on life for Vammen; she
was reactivated and heavily modified to enable her to
perform a specialized anti-submarine warfare (ASW) role.
With a redesigned bridge, trainable forward-firing ASW
projectors ("hedgehogs"), and improved sonar capabilities,
Vammen thus became one of the most modern ASW vessels in
the fleet.
Recommissioned at Mare Island Naval Shipyard, California,
on 15 February 1952, Vammen operated off the west coast,
out of San Diego and in the southern California area, into
the summer of the following year, training. On 19 July
1953, she left San Diego behind, bound for her first
deployment to the Western Pacific (WestPac) since her
re-commissioning.
After proceeding via Pearl Harbor, Midway, and Yokosuka,
Vammen arrived at Sasebo, Japan, on 23 August but got
underway the next morning for the key port of Wonsan on the
eastern coast of North Korea. She operated off Wonsan,
performing patrol and gunfire support duties, from 25
August to 17 September before she returned to Sasebo.
Vammen returned to Wonsan at the end of October, and, after
performing a second tour of gunfire support and patrol
there, returned to the west coast of the United States.
Departing Wonsan on 11 November, the destroyer escort
reached San Diego on 2 December via the Shimonoseki
Straits, Yokosuka, Midway, and Pearl Harbor.
1953 – 1961
Over the next six years, Vammen alternated in training
operations off the coast of California, operating primarily
out of San Diego, and conducting regular WestPac
deployments. In 1956, while in San Diego, Vammen was used
in filming a TV drama, and in 1959 the Vammen and crew were
also used in filming the Jerry Lewis comedy Don't Give Up
the Ship.
The latter provided her with excellent training
opportunities. In 1955 and again in 1958, she made cruises
through the Western and Central Carolines, the Bonins, the
northern Marianas, and the Volcano Islands, parts of the
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands administered by the
Navy. She kept a figurative "eye" on local conditions on
the various atolls and islands, keeping a lookout for
illegal activities in trading and shipping. Her
surveillance missions varied in format. On some occasions,
she would send a landing party ashore via motor whaleboat
or outboard motor-powered rubber raft; and, on other
occasions, Vammen would remain offshore while her men
scanned the island with binoculars. During the former, a
pharmacist's mate (the ship's doctor) would accompany the
landing party to provide medical care and advice for the
sick.
On another occasion, while en route to WestPac in company
with LeRay Wilson (DE-414), Vammen visited Lyttelton,
New Zealand, the port of Christchurch. The two destroyer
escorts remained there from 3 to 8 February 1958, while
Vammen transferred 51 sacks of mail destined for Operation
Deep Freeze personnel in Antarctica.
In April 1960, Vammen was selected as a Group I Naval
Reserve Training (NRT) ship; on 21 May, she was
redesignated a Group II NRT ship. On 18 June 1960, the
destroyer escort was de-commissioned and placed "in
service".
After becoming an NRT ship, Vammen soon began to provide
training for reserve surface divisions of the 11th Naval
District. Those men came on board for both dockside and
underway training. On the third weekend of each month and
for two weeks each summer, Vammen embarked her selected
reserve crew. She then conducted anti-submarine warfare
(ASW), gunnery, and other shipboard training drills off the
coast of California between Long Beach and San Diego. In
August 1960, Vammen conducted her first annual two-week
training cruise with her selected reserve crew embarked.
For her performance during those evolutions, the destroyer
escort received the highest grade assigned to an NRT ship
of her type.
1961 – 1971
She subsequently conducted her second two-week cruise the
following summer, 1961, ready for instant mobilization that
came sooner than anyone in her crew probably realized. That
autumn, the Cold War tensions that escalated over Berlin
and in the Far East resulted in the reactivation of 40 NRT
ships for active duty. Accordingly, on 2 October 1961,
Vammen was recommissioned at Long Beach, Commander Charlie
S. Nelson, USNR, in command.
Following her recommissioning, Vammen underwent her
regularly scheduled overhaul at the Todd Shipyard.
Transferred to Pearl Harbor as her new home on 15 December
1961, Vammen sailed for another WestPac deployment on 6
January 1962. She deployed with a hunter-killer group and
arrived at Pearl on 12 January. She began refresher
training soon thereafter.
Assigned to Escort Division 72 (CortDiv 72), Vammen sailed
for the Philippines on 24 February. After logistics stops
at Midway and Guam for fuel and minor voyage repairs, the
destroyer escort reached Subic Bay on 11 March. After a
brief period of upkeep, Vammen visited Manila in company
with Marsh (DE-699) and Charles E.
Brannon (DE-446) from 16 to 18 March. On the 19th, the
three ships got underway for the Gulf of Siam.
Arriving off the southern tip of South Vietnam on 21 March,
Vammen and Charles E. Brannon relieved
Wiseman (DE-667) and Edmonds (DE-406) on the
following day and assumed the duties of training units of
the small South Vietnamese Navy in that area. From that day
until 9 April, Vammen remained on station in the Gulf of
Siam, off the coast of South Vietnam, maintaining American
presence in that area. Heavy pressure from Communist Viet
Cong forces inside South Vietnam had brought about a
commitment of force there as the United States sought to
bolster the American-backed regime. After visiting Subic
Bay for a week of upkeep and conducting a port visit to
Hong Kong, Vammen returned to her station in the Gulf of
Siam. Originally, the ship's schedule had called for the
ship to visit Japan and return to Pearl Harbor after
visiting Hong Kong, but, as Vammen's commanding officer
reported "... the efforts of Vammen and the other ex-NRT
ships on the South Vietnam training mission were apparently
of such value that it was decided to retain Escort Division
72 on the mission through mid-May."
There were further changes of plan afoot for Vammen, as was
evidenced during the second deployment in the Gulf of Siam.
On 13 May, Vammen and Charles E. Brannon were diverted from
their training duties under Task Force 72 and were ordered
to report for duty to commander, Task Group 76.5
(TG 76.5). Complying, the two destroyer escorts
subsequently screened Valley Forge (LPH-8),
Navarro (APA-215), and Point Defiance (LSD-31)
while that group took a Marine Corps expeditionary force to
Bangkok, Thailand. The 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines, embarked
in the amphibious group were sent to Thailand in an effort
to provide the friendly regime with troops to deter any
Communist moves across the Mekong River. Following that
operation, Vammen and her sistership escorted TG 76.5
back to Subic Bay, arriving there on 23 May.
Vammen subsequently visited Yokosuka, Japan, and
participated in Exercise Powerdive, with 7th Fleet units in
the Japan area, before she returned via Midway Island to
her home port, Pearl Harbor, on 18 June. At Pearl from 18
June to 11 July, Vammen enjoyed the longest consecutive
in-port period since February of that year, undergoing
much-needed repairs and maintenance. On 11 July, Vammen, in
company with Colahan (DD-658), Marsh (DE-699),
and Wiseman, sailed for the west coast of the United
States.
After her arrival at Long Beach on 17 July, Vammen was
de-commissioned on 1 August, resuming her role as an NRT
ship. For the next seven years, Vammen continued her duties
as an 11th Naval District NRT ship, based at Long Beach,
and operating primarily in the Long Beach-Los Angeles-San
Pedro area. During that time, she ranged as far north as
British Columbia and as far south as Ensenada, Mexico. Age
ultimately caught up with the veteran destroyer escort;
and, in the summer of 1969, she was adjudged unfit for
further service.
Placed out of service on 12 July 1969, Vammen 's NRT crew
was transferred to Maddox (DD-731); and the ship
herself was turned over to the Naval Inactive Ship
Maintenance Facility, San Diego. Struck from the Navy List
on 12 July 1969, Vammen's stripped hulk was utilized in a
Condor missile test on 4 February 1971 and, as a result of
the damage suffered on that date, sank on 18 February.
Awards
Vammen (DE-644) earned one battle star for her World War II
service and one engagement star for her Korean War
service.