USS Don O. Woods (APD-118)

USS Don O. Woods (APD-118) was a Crosley-class high-speed transport in service with the United States Navy from 1945 to 1946. In 1963, she was transferred to Mexico, where she served as ARM Usumacinta/Miguel Hidalgo (B-06) until 2001.

History
United States
Name: USS Don O. Woods (DE-674)
Namesake: Don O. Woods
Awarded: 13 June 1943
Builder: Dravo Corporation, Pittsburgh
Laid down: 1 December 1943
Launched: 9 February 1944
Reclassified: APD-118, before commissioning
Acquired: 26 May 1945
Commissioned: 28 May 1945
Decommissioned: 18 June 1946
Stricken: 12 December 1963
Fate: transferred to Mexican Navy, 12 December 1963
History
Mexico
Name: ARM Usumacinta (B06)[1]
Namesake: Usumacinta River
Acquired: 12 December 1963
Renamed: ARM Miguel Hidalgo (B-06), 1994[1]
Namesake: Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla
Renamed: ARM Usumacinta (E-20)[1]
Stricken: 16 July 2001[1]
Fate: scrapped 2002
General characteristics
Class and type: Rudderow-class destroyer escort, as ordered
Class and type: Crosley-class high speed transport, as completed
Displacement: 1,450 tons
Length: 306 ft (93 m)
Beam: 36 ft 10 in (11.23 m)
Draft: 13 ft (4.0 m)
Speed: 24 knots
Complement: 256
Armament: 1 × 5 in (130 mm)/38 guns

History

U.S. Navy (1945–1946)

Don O. Woods keel was laid at the Dravo Corporation, Neville Island, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on 1 December 1944. the ship was launched on 9 February 1944, sponsored by Mrs. H. R. Woods (mother of Hospital Apprentice Woods). Don O. Woods was reclassified APD-118 on 17 July 1944 and floated to Orange, Texas for completion as a high speed transport by the Consolidated Steel Corporation. She was commissioned there on 28 May 1945 with Lieutenant Commander L. H. Crosby, USNR, in command.

Don O. Woods sailed from Norfolk 9 August 1945 and was making her transit of the Panama Canal on the day hostilities ended between Japan and the United States. She called at San Diego and proceeded to Pearl Harbor, arriving 7 September. Five days later she got underway with US Army and US Navy passengers for Saipan, continuing to Leyte, where she arrived 7 October. She served in the Philippines until 23 January 1946 when she departed Manila for the west coast. Arriving at San Pedro, California on 13 February. She was placed out of commission in reserve 18 June 1946.

Mexican Navy (1963–2001)

Don O. Woods was sold and transferred to the custody of Mexico in December 1963 and renamed Usumacinta (H-06), then redesignated (B-06) and renamed Miguel Hidalgo, her speed being reduced to 13 knots. Miguel Hidalgo was decommissioned from the Mexican Navy in 2001. She was scrapped afterward.

Namesake

Don O. Woods is named in honor of Hospital Apprentice First Class Don Otis Woods. He was born on 19 May 1922 in Kearney, Nebraska and enlisted in the Navy on 12 June 1940.

Hospital Apprentice Woods died of wounds received in enemy action on 8 August 1942 while serving with the Marines against Japanese forces on Gavutu, Solomon Islands. On his own courageous initiative, Woods, in an effort to rescue several injured Marines, waded into the sea near a rock cliff where numerous hostile snipers were menacing troops. Although repeatedly warned of his imminent peril, he refused to abandon his heroic work but continued, less than twenty-five yards from the enemy position, to render medical assistance to the helpless men until he himself was mortally wounded. He gallantly gave his life in the service of his country. As a result of his exceptional courage he was posthumously presented the Silver Star.

Awards

American Campaign Medal
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal
Philippine Liberation Medal

Notes

  1. Wertheim, Eric, ed. (2007). "Mexico". The Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World: Their Ships, Aircraft, and Systems (15th ed.). Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. p. 472. ISBN 978-1-59114-955-2. OCLC 140283156.
gollark: You don't need HURD for this.
gollark: > @coral sounds like a job for GNU/HURD translatorsOr just FUSE?
gollark: Except it does actually finish, which was quite foolish of me.
gollark: PotatOS has a technically-not-infinite progress bar thing like that.
gollark: Or undocumented ones.

References


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