History of USS McKean DD784

The second MCKEAN (DD-784) was laid down by Todd Pacific Shipyards,
Inc., Seattle, Wash., 15 September 1944; launched 31 March 1945;
sponsored by Mrs. Thomas G. Peyton; and commissioned at Seattle 9 June
1945, Comdr. William D. Kelly in command.
After shakedown along the Pacific coast, MCKEAN departed for the Far
East 22 September and during the next 3 months operated in support of
occupation operations off Japan. Although peace had come to the once
turbulent waters of the western Pacific, MCKEAN maintained a pattern of
readiness and alert operations in response to the emerging menace of
communism which threatened not only Asia and the blue Pacific but the
entire free world.
Following the outbreak of Communist aggression against the Republic of
South Korea in June 1950, MCKEAN joined the mighty 7th Fleet to suppress
the overt threat to world peace. She participated in the brilliant
Inchon invasion which spearheaded the ground offensive operations
against the North Korean Communists. Later, while steaming on patrol off
the Chinnampo River, she discovered the first minefield reported during
the police action in Korea. From November 1950 to January 1951, she
joined patrolling destroyers in the Straits of Taiwan; thence, after
rejoining TF 77 briefly, she began shore bombardment and blockade
operations with TF 95 at Wonsan, Songjin, and Chinjou. She completed her
deployment in the Far East in the spring of 1951 and turned to Long
Beach in April.
For more than a year MCKEAN operated out of Long Beach while training
men of the modern Navy. She entered Long Beach Naval Shipyard 20 June
1962; was reclassified DDR-784 on 18 July 1952; and during the next 7
months underwent conversion to a radar picket destroyer. Following
shakedown, she joined Destroyer Division 131 and prepared for "keeping-
the-peace" duty wherever she might be needed.
MCKEAN returned to the Far East in June 1953 and carried out patrols and
readiness exercises from Japan to the coast of Asia. Another WestPac
deployment in 1956 sent her to the southwest Pacific and to Australia,
and during the latter half of the following year she completed another
cruise to the "land down under." WestPac duty in 1959 sent her to the
Straits of Taiwan where she resumed patrols of vigilance to protect
Nationalist China from invasion by the Chinese Communists. And in 1960
she deployed to the restless waters of Southeast Asia and gave visible
meaning to U.S. determination to protect and defend that troubled area
of the world from the clutches of Asian communism.
Following 2 years of duty at Long Beach, MCKEAN returned to the Far East
in January 1962. Operating out of the Philippines, she conducted AAW and
ASW exercises with HANCOCK, after which she rejoined the Taiwan Patrol
in June. She completed her deployment and returned to Long Beach 17
July. Less than a year later, on 18 May 1963, she again deployed to
WestPac. During the next several months she ranged the Pacific from the
Aleutians and Japan to the Philippines and Hong Kong; thence, she
returned to Long Beach 9 September.
Between 7 February and 9 November 1964 MCKEAN underwent FRAM I
conversion at Long Beach Naval Shipyard. She reclassified to DD-784 on 1
Dec. 1963. She joined DesRon 19 1 July 1964; operated along the west
coast and in EastPac during the next year, thence deployed to the waters
off troubled Southeast Asia 10 July 1960.
MCKEAN began duty with the mighty 7th Fleet in the South China Sea 5
August and during the next 4 months screened ships of the Attack Carrier
Striking Group. She cruised off the troubled and inflamed Vietnamese
coast and bolstered the might of American seapower as the United States
increased the effort to protect and defend the independence and
integrity of South Vietnam from overt external aggression of the North
Vietnamese Communists. She cruised the coast of South Vietnam 7 December
to direct intensive, accurate shore bombardment against the invaders.
While patrolling the coast of I Corps area, MCKEAN delivered a timely,
effective shore bombardment 15 December during a night sneak attack by a
superior force of North Vietnamese regulars against an outnumbered South
Vietnamese Regional Force, gallantly defending an outpost at My Trang,
Quang Ngai Province. The well-equipped PAVN troops struck hard at the
outpost, and the defenders soon ran short of ammunition. However, within
20 minutes after the start of the attack, MCKEAN took position offshore
and delivered her first supporting fire. For 5 hours she accurately
blasted enemy positions with white phosphorus, illumination and high-
explosive fire; this devastating bombardment repulsed the attack, caused
heavy enemy losses, and saved the outpost.
Maj. Gen. Huang Xauw Lam, the commanding general of the 2d Vietnamese
Infantry, praised MCKEAN's decisive action and stated; "Naval gunfire in
this engagement was a major factor in defeating the enemy and making the
battlefield so untenable that he abandoned his dead and wounded as well
as arms and equipment."
MCKEAN continued her vital gunfire support missions until 20 December,
then steamed to Hong Kong and Yokosuka Departing Japan 31 December, she
returned to Long Beach 13 January 1966. After completing preparations
for further WestPac duty, she departed 18 November reached Subic Bay 8
December, and on 22 December began SAR duty in the northern station of
the Gulf of Tonkin.
Serving as a gun destroyer and helicopter in-flight refueling ship,
MCKEAN patrolled the Gulf of Tonkin until 23 January 1967 and again from
23 February until 12 March. In addition she steamed to the gun line on
four deployments between 17 February and 12 April to carry out gunfire
support missions. During these assignments she fired more than 4,090
rounds of 5-inch ammunition at the enemy.
MCKEAN departed the turbulent waters of Southeast Asia 24 April to visit
Australian and New Zealand ports until 22 May when she sailed for the
United States. Steaming via Samoa and Pearl Harbor, she arrived Long
Beach 8 June. Between 20 July and 10 November she underwent overhaul at
Mare Island, then resumed intensive training to keep her men and
equipment ready for additional WestPac duty. Into 1969, she continued to
prepare for "keeping-the-peace" missions. As both a weapon of war and an
instrument of peace, she remains vital to the defense of the Nation and
the free world and makes clear to friend and foe alike that the
influence of U.S. seapower rows instead of wanes.
MCKEAN received one battle star for Korean service. Stricken USN on October 1 1981 and sold to Turkey November 2 1982 and cannibalized for spare parts.
Related information:
USS McKean DD784 Association
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Richard Angelini. All Rights Reserved.
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