Home
Naval Shopping
About MultiEducator
American History
World History
Election Central
NationbyNation
Primary Source Documents
20th Century Almanac
Aviation History
Navy History
Railroad History
America's Wars
Biographies

Amistadt

Civics

History of Israel
Other Links
About Historycentral
Advertise
Contact US

This Month in Naval History
USS Bennion DD 662

Bennion

(DD-662: dp. 2050- 1. 376'5"; b. 39'T"; dr. 17'9"; s.
35 k.; cpl 329; a. 5 5", 10 21" TT.; cl. Fletcher)

Bennion (DD-662) was launched 4 July 1943 by Boston Navy Yard; sponsored by Mrs. M. S. Bennion, Captain Bennionís widow; and commissioned 14 December 1943, Commander J. W. Cooper in command.

Bennion departed Philadelphia 3 March 1944 escorting Bataan (CV-29) to the Pacific. Arriving at Pearl Harbor 22 March, she trained and patrolled in Hawaiian waters until 29 May 1944. Moving westward she served as a fighter director and radar picket ship during the Saipan seizure (15 June 24 July 1944); Tinian occupation (24 July-2 August); Palaus occupation (2-29 Sep tember); Leyte invasion (18 October-18 November) during which she was slightly damaged by a shore battery; Mindoro landings ( 13-17 December ); Lingayen Gulf landings (7-20 January 1945), Iwo Jima invasion (18 February 12 March ) Okinawa seizure (26 March 1 June) during which the near miss of a suicide plane caused slight damage; and the 3rd Fleet raids against Japan (18 29 July). She returned to Puget Sound Navy Yard 21 October 1945 and went out of commission in reserve at Long Beach, Calif., 20 June 1946.

Bennion received the Presidential Unit Citation for her actions off Okinawa (1 April-1 June 1945) and eight battle stars.


 

© 1999  MultiEducator, Inc.  All rights reserved
Report Problems here.