< Paul G. Paker DE-642

Paul G. Paker DE-642

 


Paul G. Paker
(DE-642: dp. 1,400, 1. 306'; b. 37'; dr. 9'5"; s. 23 k., epl. 186; a. 3 3", 10 20mm, 3 21" tt., 2 dct., 8 dcp., 1 dcp. (hh.); cl. Buckley)

Paul G. Baker (D~642) was laid down 26 September 1943 by Bethlehem Steel Co., San Francisco, Calif.; launched 12 March 1944, sponsored by Mrs. Katherine E. Baker; and commissioned 25 May 1944, Lt. Comdr. W. Gordon Cornell, USNR, in command.

Steaming to San Diego 18 June 1944 for shakedown, Paul G. Baker returned to San Francisco 20 July for post-shakedown repairs and alterations. She departed 11 August for Seattle, Wash., arriving two days later. After picking up a convoy at Port Angeles, she set course for Pearl Harbor on the 19th and arrived on the 27th.

Paul G. Baker cleared Pearl Harbor 8 September 1944 as part of an escort carrier task unit which called at Emirau Island enroute Manus, Admiralties, where she arrived 19 September for escort duty under Task Force 11. On the 24th she headed for Port Purvis, Florida Island, arriving three days later.

Her duty in the Solomons was largely escort work. She steamed from Purvis Bay 11 October to piek up merchantman Mormaesea at Empress Augusta Bay, Bougainville, for escort to Munda, returning to her base on the 15th.She made a similar voyage 19-24 October, escorting SS Santa Monica from Lunga Point, Guadalcanal, to Treasury Island and Sasavelle Harbor, Munda, before returning alone to Purvis Bay. From late November through most of December, she shuttled from Purvis Bas to Espiritu Santo, New Hebrides. From 12 January 1945 she trained for the invasion of Ryukyus. Departing the Russell Islands, 15 March, she steamed via Saipan to Ulithi departing that port 27 March to escort troop laden transports for the landings on Okinawa.

The task unit arrived off Okinawa on the day of the initial landings, 1 April 1945, and Paul G. Baker took station on the inner transport screen off Hagushi Beach. Her first taste of enemy air activity eame at dusk that day when she opened fire on a plane which crossed astern. She protected the transports during unloading by day and retirement by night until she departed the invasion area 5 April guarding empty transports to Guam, arriving on the 9th thence to Ulithi to join a convoy for Okinawa.

Arriving off Okinawa 18 April 1945, Paul G. Baker joined the dangerous but vital patrol screen which protected allied forces fighting to capture the island stronghold. On the 22nd at 1745, enemy planes attacked without warning. One aireraft crashed into nearby Isherwood (DD-520) and at 1847 another closed Paul G. Baker The plane swerved away and crashed into Swallow (AM-65) which capsized in about four minutes. Baker picked up nine officers and 69 men. Other ships also steamed to aid the stricken minesweeper, rescuing all but one of Swallow's crew.

The air attacks continued to be heavy and frequent for patrol vessels off Okinawa. On 12 May 1945 Paul G. Baker opened fire on two suicide planes attacking New Merico (BB 40) and although she aided in splashing one of the kamikazes the other hit the battleship. On the 24th Baker joined the fire on a single plane which had wandered into the area. On 11 June, a low flying airplane made a dive on LSD-G, shifted the attack to Paul G. Baker, then swerved toward a merehantship. Paul G. Baker's gunners splashed this enemy fifty feet from its intended target.

On 20 June 1945 she sailed in the screen of a battleship and cruiser force to patrol southeast of Okinawa. She returned to Kerama Retto 1 July to commence a series of five escort voyages between Okinawa and Saipan, lasting till 30 August.

She steamed from Saipan 11 September 1945 to escort

Mallabar (AF-37) to Tokyo Bay, arriving at Yokosuka Naval Base on the 17th. Five days later she sailed singly for Saipan,

arriving on the 25th. On 4 November 1945 she got underway for the United States arriving at Astoria, Oreg., on the 21st. After overhaul at Portland, Oreg. and Bremerton, Wash. she returned to to Guam arriving 23 May 1946.

Departing Guam 26 June, she sailed to Buckner Bay, Okinawa before arriving in Tsingtao, China, 2 July. She exercised off the China coast with destroyers, then sailed 3 August to visit Hong Kong. She paid another visit to Sasabo, Japan before departing 10 September. She returned to Tsingtao 12 September, and for the next month conducted exercises with a small hunter-killer training group in the area.

Homeward bound for good, she departed Tsingtao 12 October, called at Guam 18 October, visited Pearl Harbor 27-28 October, and arrived San Diego 4 November. She decommissioned 3 February 1947, and was placed in reserve at San Diego. She was struck from the Naval Vessel Register 1 December 1969.

Paul G. Baker received one battle star for World War II service.