History of USS Stribling DD867

The second Stribling (DD-867) was laid down on 15
January 1945 by the Bethlehem Steel Co., at Staten
Island, N.Y.; launched on 8 June 1945; sponsored by
Mrs. W. Hunter Powell; and commissioned on 29 September
1945, Comdr. J. D. Buckeley in command.
Stribling shook down out of Guantanamo Bay
Cuba; then reported for duty at the Fleet Sonar
School at Key West, Fla. In 1948, she embarked upon
the first of a career-long series of deployments to the
Mediterranean Sea. Between 1948 and 1953, Stribling
spent a portion of each year in the "middle sea."
During the 1948 cruise, she flew the United Nations
flag while on Palestine Patrol. In 1949, she became the
first American ship to visit a Spanish port since the
outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936. While
deployed with the 6th Fleet again in 1950, she visited
a number of northern European ports.
On 23 August 1953, Stribling set sail from Norfolk
for the Panama Canal and duty with the Pacific Fleet.
She reached Yokosuka on 3 October and, after a brief
upkeep period, commenced Korean War operations.
The destroyer operated intermittently with the carriers
of Task Force (TF) 77 in the Sea of Japan and with
TF 95, the United Nations Escort and Blockading
Force, along the west coast of Korea and in the
Yellow Sea. When not patrolling with TF 95 or TF 77
Stribling trained and visited Far Eastern ports for
liberty. In March 1954, she continued her voyage
around the world. On the 19th, she put into Port Said,
Egypt, and then sailed through the Mediterranean, visiting
the sunny liberty ports along the way. On 10
April, she completed her circumnavigation of the globe
at Norfolk.
Over the next six years, Stribling resumed her
schedule of 6th Fleet deployments alternated with
tours of duty with the 2d Fleet in the western Atlantic
and Caribbean Sea. Constant training and exercises,
both American and NATO, characterized the
bulk of her activities during that period. She was in
the Mediterranean in 1958 during the Lebanon crisis
and stood by to lend a hand until it was resolved.
The period from June 1960 to April 1966 brought
significant changes to Stribling. From June 1960 until
April 1966, she was modified extensively at the
Charleston Naval Shipyard under the Fleet Rehabilitation
and Modernization (FRAM) program. After
refresher training out of Guantanamo Bay and participation
in NATO exercise "Lime Jug," Stribling stood
watch during the recovery of astronaut, John Glenn, in
February of 1962. In August, she deployed to the 6th
Fleet, but spent at least a third of that tour in the
vicinity of the Persian Gulf, operating with the Middle
East Force. She exercised with units of the Saudi
Arabian and Iranian navies and visited many new
ports, notably Djibouti in French Somaliland, Kharg
Island in Iran, and Aden. Stribling's next two deployments
were also with the Middle East Force. In the
spring of 1966, the destroyer received a Drone Antisubmarine
Helicopter (DASH) system and, by 4 May
1966, completed DASH qualification.
Stribling continued alternating between 6th and 2nd
Fleet assignments until 1968. In February and March
of 1967, she participated in Polaris missile firing tests
on the Atlantic test range. On 29 Sept 1968, Stribling
put to sea from Mayport, Fla., to make her
second voyage to the Far East. Heading via the
Panama Canal, San Diego, and Pearl Harbor, the
destroyer made for Yokosuka, Japan, and then operations
off the coast of Vietnam. Stribling's duties
included bombardments on the gunline, search and
rescue missions usually for downed carrier pilots, and
Positive Identification Radar Advisory Zone (PIRAZ)
duty. The latter assignment involved riding "shotgun"
for larger PIRAZ ships armed with more
sophisticated radar and target designation systems.
That summer, Stribling plane-guarded for the carriers operating
on Yankee Station in the Gulf of Tonkin. When not operating in
the combat zone, she put into Kaohsiung, Taiwan, Hong Kong;
and Subic Bay in the Philippines for liberty, upkeep, and
provisions. On 2 August 1969 Stribling cleared the combat zone
to return home. On her way, she stopped at Kure and Yokosuka,
Japan; Pearl Harbor, San Diego; and Panama. On 17 September
1969, she reentered Mayport.
Upon her return from Vietnam, Stribling resumed her routine
of Mediterranean deployments and Atlantic seaboard duty. She
made two deployments to the 6th Fleet, one from August 1970 to
March 1971 and the other from February until September 1972.
The first was an active tour of duty, encompassing as it did the
Jordanian crisis of 1970. With Syrian elements and left-wing
Jordanians attempting to topple King Hussein from his throne,
the 6th Fleet was mobilized to maintain a striking force poised in
the eastern Mediterranean. Operating in much the same manner
as she did in Vietnam in 1969, she cruised along the coast of
Syria on Bravo Station in the antiaircraft screen for the 6th Fleet
until the crisis abated. On 22 October Stribling pursued an
unidentified nuclear submarine, stalking her quarry for almost 48
hours.
Stribling's second deployment since returning from Vietnam
was far more routine. It was given over to normal operations and
exercises with other units of the fleet and with units of foreign
navies. In March of 1973, she sailed around the Cape of Good
Hope and up through the Indian Ocean to rejoin the Middle East
Force. Since her return to the United States from that last
deployment, Stribling has operated with the 2d Fleet in the
western Atlantic. She has left the area only once in that time,
during September and October 1974, to participate in exercise
"Northern Merger." That cruise took her to the Netherlands and
England for port visits. In mid-October 1974, she resumed her
eastern seaboard operations and, as of March 1975, was still so
employed.
Stricken July 1 1976 and sunk as target off Puerto Rico July 27 1980.
Stribling earned two battle stars during the Vietnam War.
Related information:
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