William T. Powell
William Thomas Powell-born on 3 October 1918 in Cincinnati, Ohio-enlisted in the Navy on 4 October 1939 and received training at the Naval Training Station, Newport, R.I., before reporting to the heavy cruiser San Francisco (CA-39)-then a unit of the Atlantic Fleet's Neutrality Patrol-on 17 December 1939, at Norfolk, Va.
He advanced through the ranks to attain the rating of gunner's mate, 2d class, on 1 April 1942. San Francisco, while Powell served in her, took part in the war in the Pacific from the outset. The ship lay at Pearl Harbor during the Japanese attack of 7 December 1941 and participated in the ensuing operations: the abortive relief expedition to Wake Island, screening Task Force (TF) 17 during the Marshalls-Gilberts raids and Lexington (CV-2) in TF 11 during the raid on Rabaul.
San Francisco also took part in the initial American offensive in the South Pacific-the invasion of the Solomon Islands. Guadalcanal remained a bitter battleground from August 1942 to February 1943, and history records the many sharp battles fought in the hotly contested waters of the Solomons. On 12 November 1942, a large formation of Japanese bombers-twin-engined "Betties"-attacked a formation of American transports off Lunga Point. With ample warning, the vital ships got underway, screened by destroyers and cruisers-San Francisco included, and the intense antiaircraft fire and superb seamanship on the part of the Americans prevented the enemy from successfully pressing home his attack.
The victory had not been achieved without cost, however, as an already-damaged "Betty" loosed her torpedo off San Francisco's starboard quarter. The "fish" passed alongside, but the plane crashed into San Francisco's after control station. Gunner's Mate Powell was manning a 20-millimeter Oerlikon on the gun platform at the time. He courageously refused to abandon his post in the face of the oncoming plane, and with cool determination and utter disregard for his own personal safety, maintained a steady fire on the crippled "Betty" until she hit nearby, killing Powell in the fiery explosion that engulfed his position. Fifteen men, including the cruiser's executive officer, were killed and 29 wounded.
For his perseverance and relentless devotion to duty, Gunner's Mate 2d Class Powell received the Purple Heart and Navy Cross posthumously. He also received, posthumously, the Presidential Unit Citation awarded San Francisco for her performance at the Battle of Cape Esperance and the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal.
(DE-213: dp. 1,400; l. 306'0"; b. 36'10"; dr. 9'6" (mean); s. 23.7 k.; cpl. 186; a. 3 3", 5 1.1", 8 20mm., 3 21" tt., 2 dct., 8 dcp., 1 dcp. (hh.); cl. Buckley)
William T. Powell (DE-213) was laid down on 26 August 1943 at Charleston, S.C., by the Charleston Navy Yard; launched on 27 November 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Elsie V. Powell, mother of Gunner's Mate Powell, and commissioned on 28 March 1944, Lt. James L. Davenport, USNR, in command.
After fitting out, William T. Powell got underway from Charleston on 18 April, flying the command pennant of Comdr. George F. Adams, USNR, Commander Escort Division (CortDiv) 66, and bound for Bermuda.
At 1541 on 20 April, the ship's search radar disclosed a contact. Seven minutes later, William T. Powell went to general quarters as lookouts noted a submarine running on the surface. The destroyer escort charged ahead at flank speed and challenged the submarine, only to be informed that the stranger was Pomfret (SS-391), en route from New London, Conn., to Key West, Fla. "All hands very disappointed when sub turned out to be friendly," noted Comdr. Adams in the destroyer escort's war diary as the ship continued on toward Bermuda.
Upon her arrival on the 21st, William T. Powell moored alongside Hamul (AD-20) and got underway three days later to commence her shakedown. In the ensuing weeks, the new destroyer escort's operations ran the gamut of activities for the ships of her type: exercises with submerged submarines (in her case, the old "R" boat, R-7 (SS-84); torpedo attack practices; fueling at sea; simulated depth-charge and "hedgehog" attacks; shore bombardments, and the inevitable gunnery drills. She operated out of Great Sound, Bermuda, and normally returned to anchor each evening upon the completion of the day's slate of activities.
Her shakedown completed shortly after the middle of May, William T. Powell sailed for Charleston on the 18th. She met SS Willis A. Slater off the sea buoy to Great Sound that day and escorted the merchantman on her northward voyage, patrolling 2,000 yards ahead. Leaving Willis A. Slater off Charleston, William T. Powell put into port on the 23d and, from 24 May to 6 June 1944, underwent post-shakedown availability. During the overhaul, the ship received four 40-millimeter Bofors guns, replacing the bank of torpedo tubes, to give the ship a more potent antiaircraft battery.
Underway for the Canal Zone on 9 June, William T. Powell test-fired her new 40-millimeter battery en route and reached Cristobal, Canal Zone, at 1147 on 11 June. She transited the canal two days later and got underway again at 0627 on the 14th for exercises at sea near Taboga Island. She practiced repelling attacks by motor torpedo boats.
William T. Powell subsequently retransited the canal, eastbound on 15 June, and moored at Cristobal at 1818 that day. She joined Prince William (CVE-31) on the 17th and escorted the CVE as she headed, via Port Everglades, Fla., for Hampton Roads, Va.
Released from that escort duty on the 24th, William T. Powell then operated at Norfolk from 29 June to 9 July as a school ship for destroyer escort crew trainees before she sortied from Hampton Roads on 10 July in the screen of Convoy UGS-48.
At 0029 on 1 August 1944, William T. Powell received a TBS message from the task force commander, Capt. C. M. E. Hoffman, in Moffett (DD-362), to man battle stations in anticipation of an enemy air attack. The destroyer escort complied and soon, together with the other escorts of sector 3, began making funnel smoke
Radar picked up the enemy attackers at 90 miles away; William T. Powell and her sisters, meanwhile, continued steaming back and forth at the rear of the convoy, making smoke. The convoy received an additional alert from radio Algiers at 0037 and, 13 minutes later, detected many friendly and enemy planes. The escorts now began making chemical smoke from the CS canisters on the fantail of each ship; with visibility near zero, the ships commenced conning by radar.
HMS Delhi-a British antiaircraft cruiser-commenced the action at 0058, firing by radar control. At 0105, lookouts in William T. Powell spotted flares close aboard on the port side of the convoy; but the gunners were cautioned not to fire. Ten minutes later, however, with enemy planes within range, the convoy opened up; mount 21 in William T. Powell glimpsed an enemy bomber through the eerie murk and fired a four-round burst; the plane, obscured in smoke and clouds, soon disappeared. The firing lasted only a minute; William T. Powell ceased fire at 0116, feeling detonations from time to time-believed to be either bombs or torpedoes exploding at the end of their runs.
By 0153, the quartermaster on watch in William T. Powell could write: "Things cool off a bit and Condition Easy-One is set." At 0230, the convoy received a white alert (all clear), and the escorts ceased making smoke and took their normal screening stations. Seven minutes later, the destroyer escort secured from general quarters. The defense of UGS-48 was a successful one; the enemy did not claim any of the ships. As Lt. Davenport, the commanding officer of William T. Powell, wrote in his subsequent report of the action: "The value of smoke as a protection against Night Air Attack was proved. Visibility was absolutely zero, and flares were useless to the attacking planes."
After seeing all ships of UGS-48 safely to their Mediterranean destination, William T. Powell served with TF 62 as it escorted the homeward-bound group, GUS-48, back to the United States before heading north for training in the Casco Bay area. During the night of 14 and 15 September, while en route to Casco Bay, William T. Powell rode out a hurricane with no damage.
The destroyer escort shepherded Convoys UGS-55 and GUS-55 to their respective Mediterranean and east coast destinations in September and October, before she became a unit of Task Unit (TU) 27.1.2 based at Argentia, Newfoundland. She operated out of Argentia as part of that antisubmarine, hunter-killer group from 28 November to 24 December 1944 before shifting to Casco Bay and operating from that base from Christmas Eve to New Year's Day.
After TU 27.1.2 was redesignated TG 22.9, William T. Powell resumed operations from Argentia on 4 January 1945 and continued them through the end of the month. Following that stint of hunter-killer duty, the destroyer escort exercised with American submarines out of New London, Conn., for almost a month-4 February to 2 March 1945-and trained in Casco Bay from 18 to 21 March.
After the completion of that training period, William T. Powell proceeded with TG 22.9, via the Azores, to Liverpool, England. Upon arrival, TG 22.9 was redesignated and reconstituted as TG 120.1 on 4 April; William T. Powell operated as "flagship" for that unit's senior officer, Comdr. Vernon A. Isaacs, USNR.
TG 120.1-later redesignated Escort Group 32-subsequently performed antisubmarine hunter-killer group and support unit duties for convoys in the western approaches to the British Isles. During the closing weeks of the European war, William T. Powell patrolled shallow water approaches, sank floating and drifting mines, and supported the escorts for 12 convoys in submarine-infested waters. She based on Londonderry, Northern Ireland, from 5 April to 23 May,
through the cessation of hostilities with Germany and, after that enemy's capitulation, helped to accept the surrender of German U-boats.
Released from the 12th Fleet and the Western Approaches Command on 24 May 1945, the destroyer escort soon sailed for home, entering the Brown Shipbuilding Co., Inc., yard in Houston, Tex., on 15 June for conversion to a radar picket ship. However, while she was in the yard for alterations, Japan capitulated in mid-August.
She departed her conversion yard on 22 October 1945 and soon proceeded to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for refresher training. Following post-shakedown availability, William T Powell trained in Casco Bay into late January 1946 and underwent a logistics period at Boston. She then sailed to Miami, Fla., where she joined the presidential yacht, Williamsburg (AGC-369), from 8 to 13 February before sailing for Norfolk. She later pushed on for Quonset Point R.I., on 31 March and, in April, plane-guarded for Salerno Bay (CVE-110)-in company with Reuben James (DE-153)-in Narragansett Bay and off Norfolk and participated in fleet exercises at Guantanamo Bay and Culebra in May.
Departing the latter on 20 May, William T. Powell sailed for New York in company with Mindoro (CVE-120) and Reuben James. The destroyer escort subsequently returned to the Norfolk and Casco Bay operating areas in early June and July before visiting Bar Harbor, Maine, for 4th of July celebrations. Soon thereafter, she resumed training evolutions in Casco Bay before heading south on 19 July for Pensacola, Fla. She served there as temporary relief for William R. Rush (DD-714) and plane-guarded for Ranger (CV-4) while that venerable carrier was serving as a training vessel.
William T. Powell operated with one of her former World War II cohorts, Spangenburg (DE-223), in Casco Bay later that summer and off New London served as a target vessel for submarines from 13 to 30 September. She arrived at Newport, R.I., on 30 September, moored alongside Yellowstone (AD-27) for a three-week tender availability, and subsequently departed Newport on 22 October, bound for Casco Bay where she arrived the same day. She conducted Navy Day observances there on the 27th before she transited the Cape Cod canal and arrived at New London on 12 December. She spent the remainder of the year operating on training evolutions with submarines.
For the next 11 years, William T. Powell operated off the eastern seaboard of the United States ranging from Casco Bay to Cape Henry to Key West and into the West Indies and Guantanamo Bay. Her ports of call included Newport; Norfolk; Boston; New York City; Port-au-Prince, Haiti; Culebra and San Juan, Puerto Rico; Havana and Santiago, Cuba; St. Thomas, Virgin Islands; and Nassau, Bahamas.
During that period, the ship underwent several changes of status and two reclassifications. On 5 November 1948, she was assigned to the 4th Naval District and homeported at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard to serve as a Naval Reserve training (NRT) ship. On 18 March 1949, the warship was reclassified DER-213. Decommissioned on 9 December 1949, the vessel was reactivated on 28 November 1950 and resumed the role of an NRT ship. She was reclassified DE-213 on 1 December 1954 and continued training duty until September 1957. William T. Powell was placed out of commission, in reserve, at Philadelphia on 17 January 1958.
Struck from the Navy list on 1 November 1965 William T. Powell was sold on 3 October 1966 to the North American Smelting Co., Wilmington, Del., and was scrapped.
Although she participated in the defense of Convoy UGS-48 on 1 August 1944, and was in proximity to enemy forces, William T. Powell inexplicably received no battle star for that action.