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{{Short description|Benson-class destroyer}}
{|{{Infobox Ship Begin}}
{{other ships|USS Kalk}}
{{Infobox Ship Image
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|Ship image=[[Image:USS Kalk (DD-611).jpg|300px|''Kalk'' in 1942]]
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|Ship image=[[File:USS Kalk (DD-611) off Mare Island in December 1942.jpg|300px|USS Kalk (DD-611) off Mare Island in December 1942]]
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{{Infobox Ship Career
{{Infobox ship career
|Ship country=United States
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|Ship flag={{USN flag|1946}}
|Ship name=USS ''Kalk'' (DD-611)
|Ship flag=[[Image:US Naval Jack.svg|48px|United States Navy Jack]]
|Ship namesake=[[Stanton Frederick Kalk]]
|Ship name=
|Ship namesake=
|Ship owner=
|Ship operator=
|Ship registry=
|Ship route=
|Ship ordered=
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|Ship awarded=
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|Ship builder=[[Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation]], [[San Francisco]], [[California]]
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|Ship original cost=
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|Ship yard number=
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|Ship way number=
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|Ship laid down=[[30 June]] [[1941]]
|Ship laid down=30 June 1941
|Ship launched=[[18 July]] [[1942]]
|Ship launched=18 July 1942
|Ship sponsor=
|Ship sponsor=
|Ship christened=[[17 October]] 1942
|Ship christened=
|Ship completed=
|Ship completed=
|Ship acquired=
|Ship acquired=
|Ship commissioned=
|Ship commissioned=17 October 1942
|Ship recommissioned=
|Ship recommissioned=
|Ship decommissioned=[[3 May]] [[1946]]
|Ship decommissioned=3 May 1946
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|Ship refit=
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|Ship struck=June [[1968]]
|Ship struck=June 1968
|Ship reinstated=
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|Ship honors=
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|Ship captured=
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|Ship fate=sunk as a target in March [[1969]]
|Ship fate=Sunk as a target in March 1969
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}}
{{Infobox Ship Characteristics
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|Ship class=
|Ship class={{sclass|Benson|destroyer}}
|Ship type=
|Ship tonnage=
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|Ship displacement=1620 tons
|Ship displacement=1,620 tons
|Ship length={{convert|348|ft|4|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship tons burthen=
|Ship length={{convert|348|ft|4|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship beam={{convert|36|ft|1|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship beam={{convert|36|ft|1|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship height=
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|Ship draught={{convert|11|ft|9|in|m|abbr=on}}
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|Ship speed=37.5 [[knot (speed)|knot]]s
|Ship speed=37.5 [[knot (unit)|knot]]s (69.5 km/h)
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|Ship armament=4 5", 4 40mm., 7 20mm., 5 21" tt, 6 dcp., 2 dct.
|Ship armament=4 x [[5"/38 caliber gun|{{convert|5|in|mm|abbr=on}}]]/38 guns, 4 x [[Bofors 40 mm Automatic Gun L/60|40 mm]]., 7 x [[Oerlikon 20 mm cannon|20 mm]]., 5 x [[American 21 inch torpedo|21 inch (533 mm)]] tt, 6 dcp., 2 dct.
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'''USS ''Kalk'' (DD-611)''' was a [[Benson-class destroyer|''Benson''-class]] [[destroyer]] in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. She was the second ship named for [[Lieutenant (naval)|Lieutenant]] [[Stanton Frederick Kalk]].
{{otherships|USS Kalk}}


''Kalk'' was laid down 30 June 1941 by the [[Bethlehem Steel Corporation]], [[San Francisco, California]]; launched 18 July 1942; sponsored by Mrs. Flora Stanton Kalk, mother of Lieutenant Kalk; and commissioned 17 October.
'''USS ''Kalk'' (DD-611)''' was a [[Benson class destroyer|''Benson''-class]] [[destroyer]] in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. She was the second ship named for [[Lieutenant]] [[Stanton Frederick Kalk]].


==Service history==
''Kalk'' was laid down [[30 June]] [[1941]] by the [[Bethlehem Steel Corporation]], [[San Francisco, California]]; launched [[18 July]] [[1942]]; sponsored by Mrs. Flora Stanton Kalk, mother of Lieutenant Kalk; and commissioned [[17 October]], [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[C. T. Singleton, Jr.]], in command.
Following shakedown along the [[California]] coast, ''Kalk'' departed San Francisco 28 December for patrol and escort duty in the [[Aleutian Islands]]. Steaming via [[Dutch Harbor]], she arrived [[Adak, Alaska|Adak]] 9 January and patrolled from Adak to [[Amchitka Island]]. On the 16th, she embarked 185 survivors of {{SS|Arthur Middleton||2}} and {{USS|Worden|DD-352|2}} which had foundered in an Arctic storm. She transported them to Adak, then continued intermittent patrols until she sailed 26 February for home, arriving San Francisco 4 March.


After repairs, ''Kalk'' steamed from San Francisco 7 April and proceeded via the [[Panama Canal]] to [[New York City|New York]], where she arrived a fortnight later for Atlantic convoy escort duty. She cleared New York 28 April, and the next day joined a 35-ship convoy, UGF-8, headed for [[Oran, Algeria]]. Arriving 12 May, she searched for a suspected [[U-boat]]. The destroyer departed [[Casablanca]], [[French Morocco]], 19 May escorting a westbound convoy. Arriving New York 31 May, she sailed 13 June via [[Casco Bay]], [[Maine]], and [[Naval Station Argentia|NS Argentia]], [[Dominion of Newfoundland|Newfoundland]], to [[Norfolk, Virginia|Norfolk]] for further convoy-escort duty. From 27 June to 6 December she escorted three convoys between the United States and [[North Africa]]. After overhaul at New York and [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]], she arrived Norfolk 29 December and then sailed 2 January 1944 for the Pacific.
==Service History==
Following shakedown along the [[California]] coast, ''Kalk'' departed San Francisco 28 December for patrol and escort duty in the [[Aleutian Islands]]. Steaming via [[Dutch Harbor]], she arrived [[Adak, Alaska|Adak]] 9 January and patrolled from Adak to [[Amchitka Island]]. On the 16th, she embarked 185 survivors of {{SS|Arthur Middleton||2}} and {{USS|Worden|DD-352|2}} which had foundered in an Arctic storm. She transported them to Adak, then continued intermittent patrols until she sailed 26 February for home, arriving San Francisco 4 March.


She departed [[Balboa, Panama|Balboa]], Canal Zone, 8 January with DesDiv 38, escorting {{USS|New Jersey|BB-62|2}} and {{USS|Iowa|BB-61|2}}. Reaching [[Funafuti]], [[Ellice Islands]] 27 January, ''Kalk'' searched for downed fighter planes before sailing for [[New Guinea]] 31 January to join the [[United States Seventh Fleet|7th Fleet]] at [[Milne Bay]] 7 February. She operated in the New Guinea area, primarily on patrol and convoy escort duty, until 12 June. During the protracted struggle for New Guinea, she also covered amphibious invasions, bombarding [[Manus Island|Manus]], [[Pityilu]], [[Los Negros]], and [[Rambutye Islands]], Admiralties: Tanahmerah Bay and Wakde-Sarmi, New Guinea; and Biak and Owi, [[Schouten Islands]].
After repairs, ''Kalk'' steamed from San Francisco 7 April and proceeded via the [[Panama Canal]] to [[New York]], where she arrived a fortnight later for Atlantic convoy escort duty. She cleared New York 28 April, and the next day joined a 35-ship convoy, UGF-8, headed for [[Oran, Algeria]]. Arriving 12 May, she searched for a suspected [[U-boat]]. The destroyer departed [[Casablanca]], [[French Morocco]], 19 May escorting a westbound convoy. Arriving New York 31 May, she sailed 13 June via [[Casco Bay]], [[Maine]], and [[Naval Station Argentia|NS Argentia]], [[Dominion of Newfoundland|Newfoundland]], to [[Norfolk, Virginia|Norfolk]] for further convoy-escort duty. From 27 June to 6 December she escorted three convoys between the United States and [[North Africa]]. After overhaul at New York and [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]], she arrived Norfolk 29 December and then sailed 2 January 1944 for the Pacific.


After providing fire support during the invasion of [[Biak Island]] 27 May, ''Kalk'' continued escort and picket duty between Biak and [[Teluk Yos Sudarso|Humboldt Bay]]. While on patrol 12 June off the southern coast of Biak, an enemy plane dived out of the sun and released a bomb which struck abaft her forward stack at the base of her starboard [[torpedo tube]]s. As ''Kalk''{{'}}s 20 mm gunfire downed the attacker, the bomb exploded the air flasks of her torpedoes, destroying several 20 mm guns, showering her crew with shrapnel, and damaging her superstructure amidships. Though suffering 70 casualties, her crew rallied to save the destroyer. Firefighters extinguished each blaze; and, while other hands tended the wounded, volunteers detached the warheads from torpedoes scattered about the deck.
She departed [[Balboa, Panama|Balboa]], Canal Zone, 8 January with DesDiv 38, escorting {{USS|New Jersey|BB-62|2}} and {{USS|Iowa|BB-61|2}}. Reaching [[Funafuti]], [[Ellice Islands]] 27 January, ''Kalk'' searched for downed fighter planes before sailing for [[New Guinea]] 31 January to join the [[United States Seventh Fleet|7th Fleet]] at [[Milne Bay]] 7 February. She operated in the New Guinea area, primarily on patrol and convoy escort duty, until 12 June. During the protracted struggle for New Guinea, she also covered amphibious invasions, bombarding [[Manus Island|Manus]], [[Pityilu]], [[Los Negros]], and [[Rambutye Islands]], Admiralties: Tanahmerah Bay and Wakde-Sarmi, New Guinea; and Biak and Owi, [[Schouten Islands]].


The only Allied ship seriously damaged in more than 2 weeks of repeated air attacks at and near Biak, ''Kalk'' retired to [[Jayapura|Hollandia]], New Guinea, for emergency repairs and sailed 20 June via the Admiralties and [[Pearl Harbor]] for the United States. Reaching San Francisco 31 July, she received complete repairs and underwent alteration at [[Mare Island Naval Shipyard]].
After providing fire support during the invasion of [[Biak Island]] 27 May, ''Kalk'' continued escort and picket duty between Biak and [[Teluk Yos Sudarso|Humboldt Bay]]. While on patrol 12 June off the southern coast of Biak, an enemy plane dived out of the sun and released a bomb which struck abaft her forward stack at the base of her starboard torpedo tubes. As ''Kalk''{{'}}s 20 mm gunfire downed the attacker, the bomb exploded the air flasks of her torpedoes, destroying several 20 mm guns, showering her crew with shrapnel, and damaging her superstructure amidships. Though suffering 70 casualties, her crew rallied to save the destroyer. Firefighters extinguished each blaze; and, while other hands tended the wounded, volunteers detached the warheads from torpedoes scattered about the deck.

The only Allied ship seriously damaged in more than 2 weeks of repeated air attacks at and near Biak, ''Kalk'' retired to [[Hollandia]], New Guinea, for emergency repairs and sailed 20 June via the Admiralties and [[Pearl Harbor]] for the United States. Reaching San Francisco 31 July, she received complete repairs and underwent alteration at [[Mare Island Naval Shipyard]].


Then the destroyer departed 26 October for Pearl Harbor, arriving 1 November. On 12 November she headed via [[Eniwetok]] to [[Ulithi]], Western Carolines, where she arrived 26 November to resume her duty in the western Pacific.
Then the destroyer departed 26 October for Pearl Harbor, arriving 1 November. On 12 November she headed via [[Eniwetok]] to [[Ulithi]], Western Carolines, where she arrived 26 November to resume her duty in the western Pacific.
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As a unit of DesDiv 38, ''Kalk'' rendezvoused with TG 50.8 on 18 February for refueling and replenishment operations of TF 58 during the campaign on [[Iwo Jima]]. Returning to Ulithi 6 March, she sailed northward 13 March with TG 50.8 to screen logistic support for the 5th Fleet which was then clearing [[Ryūkyū]] waters of [[Japan]]ese shipping and aircraft in preparation for the invasion of Okinawa 1 April. From then to the end of the war, ''Kalk'' operated with the [[United States Fifth Fleet|5th]] and 3rd Fleets off the Ryūkyūs as escort, plane guard, and ASW screen. Concerned primarily with screening supply ships between Ulithi and Okinawa, she destroyed numerous Japanese mines during patrols. While steaming for Okinawa 5 June with logistic support group TG 30.8, she passed through a raging [[typhoon]] with destructive winds of more than 90 knots. Suffering only minor damage, ''Kalk'' continued screening patrols. When the war ended 15 August, she was steaming from Okinawa to Ulithi.
As a unit of DesDiv 38, ''Kalk'' rendezvoused with TG 50.8 on 18 February for refueling and replenishment operations of TF 58 during the campaign on [[Iwo Jima]]. Returning to Ulithi 6 March, she sailed northward 13 March with TG 50.8 to screen logistic support for the 5th Fleet which was then clearing [[Ryūkyū]] waters of [[Japan]]ese shipping and aircraft in preparation for the invasion of Okinawa 1 April. From then to the end of the war, ''Kalk'' operated with the [[United States Fifth Fleet|5th]] and 3rd Fleets off the Ryūkyūs as escort, plane guard, and ASW screen. Concerned primarily with screening supply ships between Ulithi and Okinawa, she destroyed numerous Japanese mines during patrols. While steaming for Okinawa 5 June with logistic support group TG 30.8, she passed through a raging [[typhoon]] with destructive winds of more than 90 knots. Suffering only minor damage, ''Kalk'' continued screening patrols. When the war ended 15 August, she was steaming from Okinawa to Ulithi.


Departing Ulithi 20 August, ''Kalk'' sailed via [[Saipan]] and Okinawa to Japan, arriving [[Tokyo Bay]] 1 September escorting {{USS|Detroit|CL-8|2}}. Present at the formal Japanese surrender 2 September, she departed the 3rd on an escort run to Eniwetok. After returning to Tokyo Bay 16 September, she departed for the United States 12 October via the Philippines, Eniwetok, and Pearl Harbor. Reaching [[San Diego, California|San Diego]] 17 November, she proceeded on the 17th for the East Coast, arriving Boston 11 December. After overhaul, she departed Boston 18 January 1946 and arrived [[Charleston, South Carolina]] on the 20th. ''Kalk'' decommissioned at Charleston [[3 May]] [[1946]], entered the [[Atlantic Reserve Fleet]] at [[Orange, Texas]]. ''Kalk'' was stricken from the [[Naval Vessel Register]] in June [[1968]]. She was sunk as a target in March [[1969]].
Departing Ulithi 20 August, ''Kalk'' sailed via [[Saipan]] and Okinawa to Japan, arriving [[Tokyo Bay]] 1 September escorting {{USS|Detroit|CL-8|2}}. Present at the formal Japanese surrender 2 September, she departed the 3rd on an escort run to Eniwetok. After returning to Tokyo Bay 16 September, she departed for the United States 12 October via the Philippines, Eniwetok, and Pearl Harbor. Reaching [[San Diego, California|San Diego]] 17 November, she proceeded on the 17th for the East Coast, arriving Boston 11 December. After overhaul, she departed Boston 18 January 1946 and arrived [[Charleston, South Carolina]] on the 20th. ''Kalk'' decommissioned at Charleston 3 May 1946, entered the [[Atlantic Reserve Fleet]] at [[Orange, Texas]]. ''Kalk'' was stricken from the [[Naval Vessel Register]] in June 1968. She was sunk as a target in March 1969.


==Awards==
==Awards==
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==References==
==References==
*{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/k1/kalk-ii.htm}}
*{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/k/kalk-ii.html}}
*{{NHC}}
*{{NHC}}

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{{Benson class destroyer}}
{{Benson class destroyer}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Kalk}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kalk (Dd-611)}}
[[Category:Benson class destroyers|Kalk (DD-611)]]
[[Category:Benson-class destroyers]]
[[Category:World War II destroyers of the United States|Kalk (DD-611)]]
[[Category:Ships built in San Francisco]]
[[Category:Ships at the Japanese Instrument of Surrender|Kalk (DD-611)]]
[[Category:Ships built in San Francisco, California]]
[[Category:1942 ships]]
[[Category:1942 ships]]
[[Category:World War II destroyers of the United States]]

[[ru:USS Kalk (DD-611)]]

Latest revision as of 13:25, 15 February 2022

USS Kalk (DD-611) off Mare Island in December 1942
History
United States
NameUSS Kalk (DD-611)
NamesakeStanton Frederick Kalk
BuilderBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, San Francisco, California
Laid down30 June 1941
Launched18 July 1942
Commissioned17 October 1942
Decommissioned3 May 1946
StrickenJune 1968
FateSunk as a target in March 1969
General characteristics
Class and typeBenson-class destroyer
Displacement1,620 tons
Length348 ft 4 in (106.17 m)
Beam36 ft 1 in (11.00 m)
Draught11 ft 9 in (3.58 m)
Speed37.5 knots (69.5 km/h)
Complement258
Armament4 x 5 in (130 mm)/38 guns, 4 x 40 mm., 7 x 20 mm., 5 x 21 inch (533 mm) tt, 6 dcp., 2 dct.

USS Kalk (DD-611) was a Benson-class destroyer in the United States Navy during World War II. She was the second ship named for Lieutenant Stanton Frederick Kalk.

Kalk was laid down 30 June 1941 by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, San Francisco, California; launched 18 July 1942; sponsored by Mrs. Flora Stanton Kalk, mother of Lieutenant Kalk; and commissioned 17 October.

Service history[edit]

Following shakedown along the California coast, Kalk departed San Francisco 28 December for patrol and escort duty in the Aleutian Islands. Steaming via Dutch Harbor, she arrived Adak 9 January and patrolled from Adak to Amchitka Island. On the 16th, she embarked 185 survivors of Arthur Middleton and Worden which had foundered in an Arctic storm. She transported them to Adak, then continued intermittent patrols until she sailed 26 February for home, arriving San Francisco 4 March.

After repairs, Kalk steamed from San Francisco 7 April and proceeded via the Panama Canal to New York, where she arrived a fortnight later for Atlantic convoy escort duty. She cleared New York 28 April, and the next day joined a 35-ship convoy, UGF-8, headed for Oran, Algeria. Arriving 12 May, she searched for a suspected U-boat. The destroyer departed Casablanca, French Morocco, 19 May escorting a westbound convoy. Arriving New York 31 May, she sailed 13 June via Casco Bay, Maine, and NS Argentia, Newfoundland, to Norfolk for further convoy-escort duty. From 27 June to 6 December she escorted three convoys between the United States and North Africa. After overhaul at New York and Boston, she arrived Norfolk 29 December and then sailed 2 January 1944 for the Pacific.

She departed Balboa, Canal Zone, 8 January with DesDiv 38, escorting New Jersey and Iowa. Reaching Funafuti, Ellice Islands 27 January, Kalk searched for downed fighter planes before sailing for New Guinea 31 January to join the 7th Fleet at Milne Bay 7 February. She operated in the New Guinea area, primarily on patrol and convoy escort duty, until 12 June. During the protracted struggle for New Guinea, she also covered amphibious invasions, bombarding Manus, Pityilu, Los Negros, and Rambutye Islands, Admiralties: Tanahmerah Bay and Wakde-Sarmi, New Guinea; and Biak and Owi, Schouten Islands.

After providing fire support during the invasion of Biak Island 27 May, Kalk continued escort and picket duty between Biak and Humboldt Bay. While on patrol 12 June off the southern coast of Biak, an enemy plane dived out of the sun and released a bomb which struck abaft her forward stack at the base of her starboard torpedo tubes. As Kalk's 20 mm gunfire downed the attacker, the bomb exploded the air flasks of her torpedoes, destroying several 20 mm guns, showering her crew with shrapnel, and damaging her superstructure amidships. Though suffering 70 casualties, her crew rallied to save the destroyer. Firefighters extinguished each blaze; and, while other hands tended the wounded, volunteers detached the warheads from torpedoes scattered about the deck.

The only Allied ship seriously damaged in more than 2 weeks of repeated air attacks at and near Biak, Kalk retired to Hollandia, New Guinea, for emergency repairs and sailed 20 June via the Admiralties and Pearl Harbor for the United States. Reaching San Francisco 31 July, she received complete repairs and underwent alteration at Mare Island Naval Shipyard.

Then the destroyer departed 26 October for Pearl Harbor, arriving 1 November. On 12 November she headed via Eniwetok to Ulithi, Western Carolines, where she arrived 26 November to resume her duty in the western Pacific.

For more than 8 months Kalk operated out of Ulithi on anti-submarine warfare patrols screening sea logistics forces during offensive operations from Luzon to Okinawa. From 16 to 23 December she patrolled northeast of Luzon during replenishment of the 3rd Fleet. Sailing from Ulithi 29 December, she screened supply units which supported TF 38 during the crucial Lingayen Gulf operations on western Luzon. She continued this duty until returning to Ulithi 27 January 1945.

As a unit of DesDiv 38, Kalk rendezvoused with TG 50.8 on 18 February for refueling and replenishment operations of TF 58 during the campaign on Iwo Jima. Returning to Ulithi 6 March, she sailed northward 13 March with TG 50.8 to screen logistic support for the 5th Fleet which was then clearing Ryūkyū waters of Japanese shipping and aircraft in preparation for the invasion of Okinawa 1 April. From then to the end of the war, Kalk operated with the 5th and 3rd Fleets off the Ryūkyūs as escort, plane guard, and ASW screen. Concerned primarily with screening supply ships between Ulithi and Okinawa, she destroyed numerous Japanese mines during patrols. While steaming for Okinawa 5 June with logistic support group TG 30.8, she passed through a raging typhoon with destructive winds of more than 90 knots. Suffering only minor damage, Kalk continued screening patrols. When the war ended 15 August, she was steaming from Okinawa to Ulithi.

Departing Ulithi 20 August, Kalk sailed via Saipan and Okinawa to Japan, arriving Tokyo Bay 1 September escorting Detroit. Present at the formal Japanese surrender 2 September, she departed the 3rd on an escort run to Eniwetok. After returning to Tokyo Bay 16 September, she departed for the United States 12 October via the Philippines, Eniwetok, and Pearl Harbor. Reaching San Diego 17 November, she proceeded on the 17th for the East Coast, arriving Boston 11 December. After overhaul, she departed Boston 18 January 1946 and arrived Charleston, South Carolina on the 20th. Kalk decommissioned at Charleston 3 May 1946, entered the Atlantic Reserve Fleet at Orange, Texas. Kalk was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register in June 1968. She was sunk as a target in March 1969.

Awards[edit]

Kalk received eight battle stars for World War II service.

References[edit]