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{{Short description|Allen M. Sumner-class destroyer}}
{{Otherships|USS Putnam}}
{{Other ships|USS Putnam}}
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|Ship image=[[File:USS Putnam (DD-757).jpg|300px|USS Putnam]]
|Ship image=[[File:USS Putnam (DD-757) off San Francisco, California (USA), on 29 December 1944 (19-N-76730).jpg|300px|USS Putnam]]
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|Ship honours=
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|Ship fate=Sold 24 June 1974 for scrap
|Ship fate=Sold 24 June 1974 for scrap
|Ship status=
|Ship motto=''We've Been There''
|Ship motto=''We've Been There''
|Ship notes=
|Ship notes=
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|Ship class={{sclass-|Allen M. Sumner|destroyer}}
|Ship class={{sclass|Allen M. Sumner|destroyer}}
|Ship displacement=2,200 tons
|Ship displacement=2,200 tons
|Ship length={{convert|376|ft|6|in|m|abbr=on}}
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|Ship armament=*6 × [[5"/38 caliber gun|{{convert|5|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}/38 cal. guns]],
|Ship armament=*6 × [[5"/38 caliber gun|{{convert|5|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}/38 cal. guns]],
*12 × 40 mm AA guns,
*12 × [[Bofors 40 mm Automatic Gun L/60|40 mm]] AA guns,
*11 × 20 mm AA guns,
*11 × [[Oerlikon 20 mm cannon|20 mm]] AA guns,
*10 × {{convert|21|in|mm|abbr=on|0}} [[torpedo tube]]s,
*10 × [[American 21 inch torpedo|21 inch (533 mm)]] [[torpedo tube]]s,
*6 × [[depth charge]] projectors,
*6 × [[depth charge]] projectors,
*2 × depth charge tracks
*2 × depth charge tracks
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'''USS ''Putnam'' (DD-757)''', an {{Sclass-|Allen M. Sumner|destroyer}}, was the second ship of the [[United States Navy]] to be named for [[Charles Putnam]]. She was built and saw action in the Pacific during World War II. She was [[Keel laying|laid down]] on 11 July 1943 by [[Bethlehem Steel|Bethlehem Steel Co.]], Shipbuilding Division, [[San Francisco]], [[California]] and [[Ship launching and naming|launched]] on 26 March 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Doana Putnam Wheeler. The ship was [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] on 12 October 1944. Cdr. [[Frederick Hilles]] was in command.
'''USS ''Putnam'' (DD-757)''', an {{sclass|Allen M. Sumner|destroyer}}, was the second ship of the [[United States Navy]] to be named for [[Charles Putnam]]. She was built and saw action in the Pacific during World War II. She was [[Keel laying|laid down]] on 11 July 1943 by [[Bethlehem Steel]] Co., Shipbuilding Division, [[San Francisco]], [[California]] and [[Ship launching and naming|launched]] on 26 March 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Doana Putnam Wheeler. The ship was [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] on 12 October 1944. Cdr. [[Frederick V. H. Hilles]]<ref>Later RADM Frederick Vantyne Holbrook Hilles</ref> was in command.<ref name=DANFS>{{cite DANFS |url= http://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/p/putnam-ii.html |title= Putnam II (DD-757)}}</ref>


==Service history==
== Service history ==
===World War II===
=== World War II ===
Following shakedown off the Pacific Coast, ''Putnam'' glided beneath the [[Golden Gate Bridge]] on 30 December 1944 to take her place with the Pacific Fleet. Arriving [[Pearl Harbor]] 2 January 1945, the destroyer prepared for her first offensive operation, and got under way on 29 January for the [[Marianas Islands]], screening the transports carrying [[4th Marine Division (United States)|4th]] and [[5th Marine Division (United States)|5th]] Marine Divisions.
Following shakedown off the Pacific Coast, ''Putnam'' glided beneath the [[Golden Gate Bridge]] on 30 December 1944 to take her place with the Pacific Fleet. Arriving [[Pearl Harbor]] 2 January 1945, the destroyer prepared for her first offensive operation, and got under way on 29 January for the [[Marianas Islands]], screening the transports carrying [[4th Marine Division (United States)|4th]] and [[5th Marine Division (United States)|5th]] Marine Divisions.<ref name=DANFS />


Pausing briefly at [[Eniwetok]], [[Saipan]], and [[Tinian]], the destroyer steamed from [[Guam]] 17 February in convoy en route to [[Iwo Jima]]. She arrived off Iwo Jima on [[D-Day]] (19 February) with the [[amphibious landing]] and [[Battle of Iwo Jima|battle]] underway. Gunfire support ships lying off-shore kept a thunderous rain of destruction pouring on the island.
Pausing briefly at [[Eniwetok]], [[Saipan]], and [[Tinian]], the destroyer steamed from [[Guam]] 17 February in convoy en route to [[Iwo Jima]]. She arrived off Iwo Jima on [[D-Day]] (19 February) with the [[amphibious landing]] and [[Battle of Iwo Jima|battle]] underway. Gunfire support ships lying off-shore kept a thunderous rain of destruction pouring on the island.<ref name=DANFS />


''Putnam'' inched in dangerously close to attack shore installations in support of the invading Marines and illuminated Japanese troop concentrations at night with [[star shell]]s. On 23 February, [[Secretary of the Navy]] [[James Forrestal]] and a high-ranking Navy-Marine Corps party, after observing the initial phases of the landing, embarked in ''Putnam'' for transportation to Guam and a conference with Fleet Admiral [[Chester W. Nimitz]].
''Putnam'' inched in dangerously close to attack shore installations in support of the invading Marines and illuminated Japanese troop concentrations at night with [[star shell]]s. On 23 February, [[Secretary of the Navy]] [[James Forrestal]] and a high-ranking Navy-Marine Corps party, after observing the initial phases of the landing, embarked in ''Putnam'' for transportation to Guam and a conference with Fleet Admiral [[Chester W. Nimitz]].<ref name=DANFS />


''Putnam'' departed Guam 12 March and escorted logistics ships to [[Leyte Island|Leyte]] in the [[Philippine Islands]], arriving five days later. She stood out of [[San Pedro Bay (Philippines)|San Pedro Bay]], Philippines 27 March and escorted a transport group to [[Okinawa Island|Okinawa]]; arriving Easter Sunday, the destroyer immediately took up anti-aircraft screening duties. After escorting a convoy to [[Ulithi]], ''Putnam'' returned to Okinawa and was assigned a gunfire support station southwest of the island 16 April.
''Putnam'' departed Guam 12 March and escorted logistics ships to [[Leyte Island|Leyte]] in the [[Philippine Islands]], arriving five days later. She stood out of [[San Pedro Bay (Philippines)|San Pedro Bay]], Philippines 27 March and escorted a transport group to [[Okinawa Island|Okinawa]]; arriving Easter Sunday, the destroyer immediately took up anti-aircraft screening duties. After escorting a convoy to [[Ulithi]], ''Putnam'' returned to Okinawa and was assigned a gunfire support station southwest of the island 16 April.<ref name=DANFS />


Later assigned to a [[radar picket]] station, ''Putnam'' vectored Navy fighters against ''[[kamikaze]]''s. She remained unscathed only because an unidentified American pilot crashed into a ''kamikaze'' on 16 June just seconds before it would have hit the destroyer.
Later assigned to a [[radar picket]] station, ''Putnam'' vectored Navy fighters against ''[[kamikaze]]''s. She remained unscathed only because an unidentified American pilot crashed into a ''kamikaze'' on 16 June just seconds before it would have hit the destroyer.<ref name=DANFS />


Soon after sundown the same day, a [[torpedo]] dropped from a low-flying Japanese plane struck {{USS|Twiggs|DD-591|2}} to port and exploded her No. 2 magazine. Captain [[Glenn R. Hartwig]], the squadron commander in ''Putnam'', quickly closed. Exploding ammunition made rescue operations hazardous, but of 188 ''Twiggs'' survivors snatched from the sea, ''Putnam'' accounted for 114.
Soon after sundown the same day, a [[torpedo]] dropped from a low-flying Japanese plane struck {{USS|Twiggs|DD-591|2}} to port and exploded her No. 2 magazine. Captain [[Glenn R. Hartwig]], the squadron commander in ''Putnam'', quickly closed. Exploding ammunition made rescue operations hazardous, but of 188 ''Twiggs'' survivors snatched from the sea, ''Putnam'' accounted for 114.<ref name=DANFS />


''Putnam'' retired from Okinawa on 1 July 1945. Aircraft from the carriers of Task Force 38 were cutting Japanese supply lines in the East China Sea. Putnam's guns assisted in screening the carriers in these anti-shipping strikes, through 8 August 1945.<ref name=DANFS />
With the "cease hostilities" order of 15 August, the occupation of the Japanese home islands became the primary mission, and through the first week of September ''Putnam'' served as a guide and rescue destroyer for [[Tokyo]]-bound transport planes. She left her station, some 100 miles north of Okinawa, 13 September to serve in the escort for the [[battleship]] {{USS|New Jersey|BB-62|2}} as she steamed for [[Wakayama]], on the central island of [[Honshū]].


With the "cease hostilities" order of 15 August, the occupation of the Japanese home islands became the primary mission, and through the first week of September ''Putnam'' served as a guide and rescue destroyer for [[Tokyo]]-bound transport planes. She left her station, some 100 miles north of Okinawa, 13 September to serve in the escort for the [[battleship]] {{USS|New Jersey|BB-62|2}} as she steamed for [[Wakayama, Wakayama|Wakayama]], on the central island of [[Honshū]].<ref name=DANFS />
''Putnam'' stood into [[Tokyo Bay]] 17 September, where she rode out a howling [[typhoon]]. She then made a return to Wakayama 25 September, thence to Okinawa 1 October, and then back to Wakayama. Steaming via Eniwetok 5 December, the destroyer touched at Pearl Harbor on 10 December for fuel, and dropped her hook at [[San Diego]] on 22 December.


''Putnam'' stood into [[Tokyo Bay]] 17 September, where she rode out a howling [[typhoon]]. She then made a return to Wakayama 25 September, thence to Okinawa 1 October, and then back to Wakayama. Steaming via Eniwetok 5 December, the destroyer touched at Pearl Harbor on 10 December for fuel, and dropped her hook at [[San Diego]] on 22 December.<ref name=DANFS />
''Putnam'' received three [[battle star]]s for World War II service.


''Putnam'' received three [[battle star]]s for World War II service.<ref name=DANFS />
===Post-war===
Standing out of San Diego 3 January 1946, ''Putnam'' steamed for the [[New York Naval Shipyard]], [[Brooklyn]], for availability. She subsequently operated out of [[Newport, Rhode Island]] until the beginning of 1947, when she made [[Pensacola, Florida]], her base. Late April 1947, ''Putnam'' called at [[Norfolk, Virginia]], to be readied for a peacetime cruise to European waters.


=== Post-war ===
''Putnam'' was one of three destroyers assigned 19–25 April 1948 to the [[United Nations]] mediator, Count [[Folke Bernadotte]], to attempt to maintain peace between [[Arab]] and [[Israel]]i forces during the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]]. When the truce temporarily broke down ''Putnam'' stood into [[Haifa]] 23 July to evacuate the UN team from that port. She was thus the first U.S. Navy ship to fly the [[United Nations]] flag.
Standing out of San Diego 3 January 1946, ''Putnam'' steamed for the [[New York Naval Shipyard]], [[Brooklyn]], for availability. She subsequently operated out of [[Newport, Rhode Island]] until the beginning of 1947, when she made [[Pensacola, Florida]], her base. Late April 1947, ''Putnam'' called at [[Norfolk, Virginia]], to be readied for a peacetime cruise to European waters.<ref name=DANFS />


''Putnam'' was one of three destroyers assigned 19–25 April 1948 to the [[United Nations]] mediator, Count [[Folke Bernadotte]], to attempt to maintain peace between [[Arab]] and [[Israel]]i forces during the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]]. When the truce temporarily broke down ''Putnam'' stood into [[Haifa]] 23 July to evacuate the UN team from that port. She was thus the first U.S. Navy ship to fly the [[United Nations]] flag.<ref name=DANFS />
After a brief period of decommissioned reserve status with the Atlantic Reserve Fleet, ''Putnam'' reactivated in October 1950. A [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] cruise took her away from Norfolk from October 1951 through 4 June 1952. Local operations and overhaul were followed by [[Caribbean Sea|Caribbean]] refresher training 21 May through 10 July 1953. ''Putnam'' departed Norfolk 25 September and transited the [[Suez Canal]] 15 October, arriving [[United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka|Yokosuka]] 10 November. She operated in the [[Sea of Japan]] and the [[East China Sea]] through 11 March 1954. Departing [[Midway Atoll|Midway]] 17 March, she touched at Pearl Harbor 21 March, called at various [[West Coast of the United States|West Coast]] ports, then transited the [[Panama Canal]] and arrived Norfolk 1 May.


After a brief period of decommissioned reserve status with the Atlantic Reserve Fleet, ''Putnam'' reactivated in October 1950. A [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] cruise took her away from Norfolk from October 1951 through 4 June 1952. Local operations and overhaul were followed by [[Caribbean Sea|Caribbean]] refresher training 21 May through 10 July 1953. ''Putnam'' departed Norfolk 25 September and transited the [[Suez Canal]] 15 October, arriving [[United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka|Yokosuka]] 10 November. She operated in the [[Sea of Japan]] and the [[East China Sea]] through 11 March 1954. Departing [[Midway Atoll|Midway]] 17 March, she touched at Pearl Harbor 21 March, called at various [[West Coast of the United States|West Coast]] ports.
[[File:USS Putnam (DD-757) underway in October 1964.jpg|thumb|''Putnam'' underway in 1964.]]


''Putnam'', in late 1954, had a prominent role in the movie [[The Bridges at Toko-Ri]] filmed on the West Coast, as the destroyer steaming alongside the [[USS Oriskany]], receiving via transfer lines disciplinary-transferred helicopter pilot [[Mickey Rooney]] and aircrewman [[Earl Holliman]]. ''Putnam'' then transited the [[Panama Canal]] and arrived Norfolk 1 May.<ref name=DANFS />
A round of training cruises and deployments ("Lantflex" 1–55) took ''Putnam'' from the [[East Coast of the United States|East Coast]] to the Mediterranean and the Caribbean. Her 1955 and 1956 Mediterranean deployments were followed by [[NATO]] North Atlantic exercises late 1957. A September 1958 Mediterranean deployment was followed by overhaul at the [[Philadelphia Naval Shipyard]].


[[File:USS Putnam (DD-757) underway in the Atlantic Ocean on 12 October 1964 (NH 107151).jpg|thumb|''Putnam'' underway in 1964.]]
Summer 1959 found ''Putnam'' participating in the first operation "Inland Seas" during which she steamed in all five of the [[Great Lakes]]. Between 1960 and 1969 the destroyer made nine annual deployments to the Mediterranean, interspersed with northern European operations, coast-wise trips, and visits to the Caribbean. In June 1962 she entered the New York Naval Shipyard for a [[FRAM II]] conversion, which was completed in March 1963.


A round of training cruises and deployments ("Lantflex" 1–55) took ''Putnam'' from the [[East Coast of the United States|East Coast]] to the Mediterranean and the Caribbean. Her 1955 and 1956 Mediterranean deployments were followed by [[NATO]] North Atlantic exercises late 1957. A September 1958 Mediterranean deployment was followed by overhaul at the [[Philadelphia Naval Shipyard]].<ref name=DANFS />
Into 1970 she continued active in the best traditions of the destroyer force providing an American presence during her deployments and always exercising and refining her multifaceted capabilities in ASW, AAW, surface gunnery, shore bombardment, and the multitudinous assignments that have traditionally been the lot of the all purpose destroyer.

Summer 1959 found ''Putnam'' participating in the first operation "Inland Seas" during which she steamed in all five of the [[Great Lakes]]. Between 1960 and 1969 the destroyer made nine annual deployments to the Mediterranean, interspersed with northern European operations, coast-wise trips, and visits to the Caribbean. In June 1962 she entered the New York Naval Shipyard for a [[FRAM II]] conversion, which was completed in March 1963.<ref name=DANFS />

''Putnam'' continued active deployments to 1970.<ref name=DANFS />

After a short repair availability in Baltimore in mid-1970, USS Putnam was reassigned to New Orleans, Louisiana where she finished out her days performing the duties of a Reserve Trainer.(Crew member 1968-1970 )


On 6 August 1973, ''Putnam'' was decommissioned and struck from the Navy List. Within a year she was sold for scrapping.
On 6 August 1973, ''Putnam'' was decommissioned and struck from the Navy List. Within a year she was sold for scrapping.


Noted in the movie The Bridges of Toko-Ri used for under way replenishment with USS Oriskany (CV/CVA-34). The Bridges at Toko-Ri is a 1954 American war film about the Korean War and stars William Holden, Grace Kelly, Fredric March, Mickey Rooney, and Robert Straus
==References==

== References ==
*{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/p/putnam-ii.html}}
*{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/p/putnam-ii.html}}
{{reflist|30em}}


==External links==
== External links ==
*[http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/757.htm navsource.org: USS ''Putnam'']
*[http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/757.htm navsource.org: USS ''Putnam'']
*[http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd757txt.htm hazegray.org: USS ''Putnam'']
*[http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/destroy/dd757txt.htm hazegray.org: USS ''Putnam'']


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{{Allen M. Sumner class destroyer}}
{{Allen M. Sumner class destroyer}}


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[[Category:World War II destroyers of the United States]]
[[Category:World War II destroyers of the United States]]
[[Category:Cold War destroyers of the United States]]
[[Category:Cold War destroyers of the United States]]
[[Category:United States Navy Illinois-related ships]]
[[Category:Ships built in San Francisco]]
[[Category:Ships built in San Francisco, California]]
[[Category:1944 ships]]
[[Category:1944 ships]]
[[Category:Allen M. Sumner-class destroyers of the United States Navy]]
[[Category:Allen M. Sumner-class destroyers of the United States Navy]]

Latest revision as of 03:03, 12 July 2023

USS Putnam
History
United States
NamePutnam
NamesakeCharles Putnam
BuilderBethlehem Steel, San Francisco
Laid down11 July 1943
Launched26 March 1944
Commissioned12 October 1944
Decommissioned6 August 1973
Stricken6 August 1973
MottoWe've Been There
FateSold 24 June 1974 for scrap
General characteristics
Class and typeAllen M. Sumner-class destroyer
Displacement2,200 tons
Length376 ft 6 in (114.76 m)
Beam40 ft (12 m)
Draft15 ft 8 in (4.78 m)
Propulsion
  • 60,000 shp (45,000 kW);
  • 2 propellers
Speed34 knots (63 km/h; 39 mph)
Range6,500 nmi (12,000 km; 7,500 mi) at 15 kn (28 km/h; 17 mph)
Complement336
Armament

USS Putnam (DD-757), an Allen M. Sumner-class destroyer, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for Charles Putnam. She was built and saw action in the Pacific during World War II. She was laid down on 11 July 1943 by Bethlehem Steel Co., Shipbuilding Division, San Francisco, California and launched on 26 March 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Doana Putnam Wheeler. The ship was commissioned on 12 October 1944. Cdr. Frederick V. H. Hilles[1] was in command.[2]

Service history[edit]

World War II[edit]

Following shakedown off the Pacific Coast, Putnam glided beneath the Golden Gate Bridge on 30 December 1944 to take her place with the Pacific Fleet. Arriving Pearl Harbor 2 January 1945, the destroyer prepared for her first offensive operation, and got under way on 29 January for the Marianas Islands, screening the transports carrying 4th and 5th Marine Divisions.[2]

Pausing briefly at Eniwetok, Saipan, and Tinian, the destroyer steamed from Guam 17 February in convoy en route to Iwo Jima. She arrived off Iwo Jima on D-Day (19 February) with the amphibious landing and battle underway. Gunfire support ships lying off-shore kept a thunderous rain of destruction pouring on the island.[2]

Putnam inched in dangerously close to attack shore installations in support of the invading Marines and illuminated Japanese troop concentrations at night with star shells. On 23 February, Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal and a high-ranking Navy-Marine Corps party, after observing the initial phases of the landing, embarked in Putnam for transportation to Guam and a conference with Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz.[2]

Putnam departed Guam 12 March and escorted logistics ships to Leyte in the Philippine Islands, arriving five days later. She stood out of San Pedro Bay, Philippines 27 March and escorted a transport group to Okinawa; arriving Easter Sunday, the destroyer immediately took up anti-aircraft screening duties. After escorting a convoy to Ulithi, Putnam returned to Okinawa and was assigned a gunfire support station southwest of the island 16 April.[2]

Later assigned to a radar picket station, Putnam vectored Navy fighters against kamikazes. She remained unscathed only because an unidentified American pilot crashed into a kamikaze on 16 June just seconds before it would have hit the destroyer.[2]

Soon after sundown the same day, a torpedo dropped from a low-flying Japanese plane struck Twiggs to port and exploded her No. 2 magazine. Captain Glenn R. Hartwig, the squadron commander in Putnam, quickly closed. Exploding ammunition made rescue operations hazardous, but of 188 Twiggs survivors snatched from the sea, Putnam accounted for 114.[2]

Putnam retired from Okinawa on 1 July 1945. Aircraft from the carriers of Task Force 38 were cutting Japanese supply lines in the East China Sea. Putnam's guns assisted in screening the carriers in these anti-shipping strikes, through 8 August 1945.[2]

With the "cease hostilities" order of 15 August, the occupation of the Japanese home islands became the primary mission, and through the first week of September Putnam served as a guide and rescue destroyer for Tokyo-bound transport planes. She left her station, some 100 miles north of Okinawa, 13 September to serve in the escort for the battleship New Jersey as she steamed for Wakayama, on the central island of Honshū.[2]

Putnam stood into Tokyo Bay 17 September, where she rode out a howling typhoon. She then made a return to Wakayama 25 September, thence to Okinawa 1 October, and then back to Wakayama. Steaming via Eniwetok 5 December, the destroyer touched at Pearl Harbor on 10 December for fuel, and dropped her hook at San Diego on 22 December.[2]

Putnam received three battle stars for World War II service.[2]

Post-war[edit]

Standing out of San Diego 3 January 1946, Putnam steamed for the New York Naval Shipyard, Brooklyn, for availability. She subsequently operated out of Newport, Rhode Island until the beginning of 1947, when she made Pensacola, Florida, her base. Late April 1947, Putnam called at Norfolk, Virginia, to be readied for a peacetime cruise to European waters.[2]

Putnam was one of three destroyers assigned 19–25 April 1948 to the United Nations mediator, Count Folke Bernadotte, to attempt to maintain peace between Arab and Israeli forces during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. When the truce temporarily broke down Putnam stood into Haifa 23 July to evacuate the UN team from that port. She was thus the first U.S. Navy ship to fly the United Nations flag.[2]

After a brief period of decommissioned reserve status with the Atlantic Reserve Fleet, Putnam reactivated in October 1950. A Mediterranean cruise took her away from Norfolk from October 1951 through 4 June 1952. Local operations and overhaul were followed by Caribbean refresher training 21 May through 10 July 1953. Putnam departed Norfolk 25 September and transited the Suez Canal 15 October, arriving Yokosuka 10 November. She operated in the Sea of Japan and the East China Sea through 11 March 1954. Departing Midway 17 March, she touched at Pearl Harbor 21 March, called at various West Coast ports.

Putnam, in late 1954, had a prominent role in the movie The Bridges at Toko-Ri filmed on the West Coast, as the destroyer steaming alongside the USS Oriskany, receiving via transfer lines disciplinary-transferred helicopter pilot Mickey Rooney and aircrewman Earl Holliman. Putnam then transited the Panama Canal and arrived Norfolk 1 May.[2]

Putnam underway in 1964.

A round of training cruises and deployments ("Lantflex" 1–55) took Putnam from the East Coast to the Mediterranean and the Caribbean. Her 1955 and 1956 Mediterranean deployments were followed by NATO North Atlantic exercises late 1957. A September 1958 Mediterranean deployment was followed by overhaul at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard.[2]

Summer 1959 found Putnam participating in the first operation "Inland Seas" during which she steamed in all five of the Great Lakes. Between 1960 and 1969 the destroyer made nine annual deployments to the Mediterranean, interspersed with northern European operations, coast-wise trips, and visits to the Caribbean. In June 1962 she entered the New York Naval Shipyard for a FRAM II conversion, which was completed in March 1963.[2]

Putnam continued active deployments to 1970.[2]

After a short repair availability in Baltimore in mid-1970, USS Putnam was reassigned to New Orleans, Louisiana where she finished out her days performing the duties of a Reserve Trainer.(Crew member 1968-1970 )

On 6 August 1973, Putnam was decommissioned and struck from the Navy List. Within a year she was sold for scrapping.

Noted in the movie The Bridges of Toko-Ri used for under way replenishment with USS Oriskany (CV/CVA-34). The Bridges at Toko-Ri is a 1954 American war film about the Korean War and stars William Holden, Grace Kelly, Fredric March, Mickey Rooney, and Robert Straus

References[edit]

  1. ^ Later RADM Frederick Vantyne Holbrook Hilles
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Putnam II (DD-757)". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command.

External links[edit]