Sederstorm DE-31
Sederstrom
(DE-31: dp. 1,140; 1. 289'5"; b. 35'1"; dr. 8'3", s. 21 k.; cpl. 156, a. 3 3", 4 1.1", 9 20mm., 2 dct., 8 dcp.,1 dcp.(hh.), cl. Evarts)
Originally designated for transfer to the United Kingdom, Sederstrom was laid down as BDE-31 on 24 December 1942 at the Mare Island Navy Yard, Vallejo Calif., redesignated for use by the United States Navy on 4 June 1943; launched as Gillette (DE-31) on 15 June 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Thomas D. O'Dea renamed Sederstrom on 30 July 1943, and commissioned on 11 September 1943, Lt. Comdr. Lyman M. King, Jr. USNR, in command.
Following shakedown out of San Diego, Sederstrom a unit of Escort Division (CortDiv) 31, commenced her escort career with a convoy run to Pearl Harbor. Arriving on 1 December' she participated in further training exercises and conducted inter-island escort runs for most of the month; then, on the 24th, the new DE got underway for the Gilberts as a unit of TU 16.25.9. Three days later, she was diverted to Funa Futi, whence she escorted an AK and an LCT as they delivered cargo to various islands in the Ellice group. In mid-January 1944, she proceeded to Samoa for a run to the Wallis Islands after which she escorted merchant ships into the Gilberts. On 4 February, she delivered her charges to Makin; and, on the 5th, she departed for the Marshalls. From the 7th to the 25th, she patrolled the approaches to Kwajalein lagoon, then screened the transport, Prince Georges, back to the Gilberts and Hawaii.
Arriving at Pearl Harbor on 10 March, Sederstrom was underway again on the 25th with a convoy bound for Majuro. During April, she provided escort services in the Marshalls, and, in May, she returned to Pearl Harbor. On the 29th, she departed again to escort reserves of the Saipan invasion force into the Marianas. The force, Reserve Group 2 arrived off Saipan on 16 June, the day after the invasion, and cruised to the east of the island until after the battle of the Philippine Sea. On the 20th, the Army troops were landed south of Charan Kanoa, and, on the 22d, Sederstrom got underway to escort LST's and LCI's back to Eniwetok.
On 16 July, the escort arrived back off Saipan. Screening and patrol duties occupied the next week then, on the 24th, she shifted to Tinian to cover the initial landings and subsequent offloading there. On the 29th, she returned to Saipan; thence continued on to Eniwetok, providing plane guard services for Midway (CVE-63). On 10 August, she returned to the Marianas for brief duty in the Guam Patrol and Escort Group, serving as flagship of the group when ComCortDiv 31, embarked in Sederstrom, assumed command of the group. On the 22d, however, she departed the Marianas again and returned to Pearl Harbor for navy yard repairs.
On 8 October, Sederstrom resumed her escort mission. Initially screening a Pearl Harbor-Ulithi convoy, she spent the period November 1944 to mid-February 1945 screening naval auxiliaries, escort carriers, and merchant ships between Eniwetok and Ulithi. In late February, she made a run into the Marianas, and, in March, she escorted reinforcements and supplies to Iwo Jima. From the 5th to the 11th, she patrolled off that island; and, on the 12th, she joined TU 51.29.19 and returned to Ulithi to stage for the Okinawa campaign.
On 21 March, Sederstrom departed the Western Carolines for the Ryukus in the screen of the escort carriers of Support Carrier Unit 1 and arrived off the southern tip of Okinawa early on the afternoon of the 24th. For the next three weeks, she screened and provided plane guard services for the CVE's as they supported the landings on Kerama Retto and on Okinawa. By mid-April, however, Japanese aerial resistance, particularly the kamikazes, had taken enough of a toll among the destroyer types providing antisubmarine and antiaircraft screens for the beachhead area to necessitate replacements, and Sederstrom was reassigned to this duty. On the 22d, she was targeted by a kamikaze, but her antiaircraft guns damaged the plane sufficiently to cause it to crash into the water about 10 feet off the starboard bow. Gasoline and pieces of metal showered the bridge and forecastle, but major damage was avoided. One man, forced overboard during the action, was quickly recovered.
In early May, the DE escorted Arkansas out of the combat area; and, on the 18th, Sederstrom herself left the Ryukyus area. Escorting Eldorado, she arrived at Guam on the 22d. From the Marianas, she returned to the Western Carolines, whence she escorted convoy WOK-27 to Okinawa. From 24 June to 4 July, she patrolled off the Hagushi anchorage, then, on the 5th she got underway to return to the United States for overhaul. She arrived in Puget Sound on the 26th, offloaded ammunition; and entered the Todd Shipyard at Seattle. The war ended prior to the completion of her yard period, and she was ordered to prepare for inactivation. Decommissioned on 15 November 1945, her name was struck from the Navy list on the 28th; and, two years later, on 24 November 1947, her hulk was sold for scrapping to A.G. Schoonmaker Co., Inc., New York.
Sederstrom (DE-31) earned five battle stars during World War II.