USS White Plains (CVE-66)

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USS White Plains at San Diego

Career Missing image
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United States Navy Jack

Ordered:
Laid down: 11 February 1943
Launched: 27 September 1943
Commissioned: 15 November 1943
Decommissioned: 10 July 1946
Fate: sold for scrap
Struck: 1 July 1958
General Characteristics
Displacement: 10,400 tons
Length: 512 ft 3 in
Beam: 65 ft 2 in
Draught: 22 ft 6 in
Propulsion:
Speed: 19.3 kts
Range:
Complement: 860 officers and men
Armament: 1 × 5-inch, 12 × 40mm, 20 × 20mm
Aircraft: 24 aircraft
Motto:

USS White Plains (CVE-66) was laid down on 11 February 1943 at Vancouver, Washington, by the Kaiser Shipbuilding Company, Inc., under a Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 1103) as Elbour Bay (ACV-66); renamed White Plains on 3 April 1943; redesignated CVE-66 on 15 July 1943; launched on 27 September 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Marc A. Mitscher; delivered to the Navy on 15 November 1943 at Astoria, Oregon; and commissioned that same day, Capt. Oscar A. Weller in command.

Early Career

The escort aircraft carrier completed outfitting at Astoria on 4 December 1943 and began shakedown training on the 8 December. At the conclusion of her initial cruise, the warship entered San Diego on 21 December. On the 30 December, she returned to sea, bound via Pearl Harbor for the Gilbert Islands. She arrived at Tarawa Atoll on 11 January 1944 and unloaded the aircraft she had transported. On the 17 January, the ship headed back to Oahu, arriving in Pearl Harbor six days later. Following a four-day turnaround period, White Plains again set course for the Central Pacific to provide aircraft logistics support for the Marshall Islands operation. By the time she reached Tarawa on 3 February, Majuro Atoll had been taken unopposed, and Kwajalein's Japanese garrison had been all but subdued. The next day, she got underway for Majuro where she arrived on 5 February. From there, the escort carrier moved on to Kwajalein for a brief visit before heading back to Hawaii. White Plains stopped briefly at Oahu before continuing on toward the west coast on 23 February. She arrived in Alameda, California, on 3 March.

While on the west coast, White Plains conducted operational training for her own ship's company and carrier qualifications for three air squadrons. In April, she embarked her own permanently assigned air unit, Composite Squadron (VC) 4, composed of 16 F4F Wildcat fighters and 12 TBM Avenger torpedo bombers. She departed the west coast at San Diego on 24 April and arrived in Pearl Harbor on 1 May. During the next month, she conducted air operations and amphibious support training out of Pearl Harbor.

At the end of May, she stood out of port in company with units of the task force assembled to invade the Marianas Islands. White Plains' portion of the Fleet sortied from Eniwetok Atoll and, during the voyage from there to the Marianas, her aircraft provided antisubmarine and combat air patrol. During the assault on Saipan, her planes continued to cover the Fleet against submarine and air attack, strafed the beaches, and spotted for gunfire support ships. They helped repulse at least three major enemy air attacks. On 17 June, while helping to fight off those raids, her antiaircraft gunners earned their first definite kill. Later VC-4 Avengers successfully torpedoed an enemy transport during a sweep of the island of Rota.

White Plains departed the combat zone on 2 July but, after a week at Eniwetok, returned to the Marianas with her air squadron upgraded to a total of 28 aircraft. During her second tour of duty in the Marianas, the escort carrier supported the Tinian assault late in July. Her planes carried out sortie after sortie in support of the troops ashore and over the ships assembled, but White Plains herself suffered no enemy attacks. Her heavy flight schedule proved grueling to air squadron and ship's company alike.

She completed her participation during the first week in August and departed the Marianas and headed for Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides. She arrived in Segond Channel on 16 August and began preparations for the invasion of the Palau Islands. Those preparations included amphibious support training in the Solomon Islands. White Plains and 10 of her sister escort carriers moved into the vicinity of the Palaus during the second week of September. Their planes provided a portion of the prelanding bombardment and support for the troops after the 15 September assault. In contrast to the Marianas campaign and later operations, the Palaus, though extremely difficult on the troops ashore, brought little opposition to the ships in the waters surrounding the islands. No enemy air attacks developed because the Japanese were husbanding their aircraft for the defense of the Philippines, and—as a result of Japan's new strategic concept of defense in depth at some distance from the beaches—few shore batteries were sited near enough to the coast to fire upon ships. On 21 September, White Plains joined the forces detached from the Palau operation for the occupation of Ulithi Atoll which, happily, was undefended.

Battle of Leyte Gulf

In October, after repairs at Manus in the Admiralty Islands, White Plains headed for the invasion of the Philippines at Leyte. The initial assault went forward on 20 October. Aircraft from White Plains provided air support for the troops and ASW and combat air patrols for the ships assembled in Leyte Gulf. However, because of the strategic importance of the Philippines which lay athwart their lines of communication with the East Indies, the Japanese chose to oppose the landings with their surface fleet. They launched their surface counterattack in three distinct phases. While a decoy force of planeless carriers under Admiral Ozawa moved south from Japan in an attempt to draw off Halsey's 3d Fleet and the large carriers, the forces under Vice Admirals Nishimura and Shima attempted to force the Surigao Strait from the south, and Vice Admiral Kurita's Center Force tried to sneak through the Central Philippines and transit the hopefully unguarded San Bernardino Strait. The Center Force, by far the strongest of the enemy fleets involved, consisted of five battleships—including the mammoth men-of-war Yamato and Musashi—11 heavy cruisers, two light cruisers, and 19 destroyers. By the time Kurita's Center Force cleared the San Bernardino Strait on 25 October, it had been reduced by four heavy cruisers and one battleship, Musashi. Three cruisers fell prey to submarine attacks in Palawan Passage on 23 October, and Musashi and heavy cruiser Myoko succumbed to TF 38's air attacks in the Sibuyan Sea the following day. The battlewagon sank while Myoko headed back to Brunei Bay, heavily damaged. In addition, on the night of 24 October and 25 October, Vice Admiral Oldendorf's old battleships in Leyte Gulf obliterated Nishimura's force and sent Shima's packing.

In the meantime, after Admiral Halsey received information indicating that a battered Center Force had begun retirement, Ozawa's decoy force finally managed to draw the American carriers off to the north. However, Kurita's retrograde movement proved to be only temporary; and he once again reversed course and headed back toward San Bernardino Strait. With Oldendorf regrouping in Leyte Gulf and Halsey off chasing the Japanese carriers, only three task groups— composed of escort carriers, destroyers, and destroyer escorts—remained off Samar between Kurita and Leyte Gulf. White Plains was an element of "Taffy 3," the northernmost of the three units and the one which bore the brunt of Kurita's surface onslaught. Rear Admiral Clifton A. F. Sprague's "Taffy 3" first learned of Kurita's presence when, at 0637, a pilot on routine patrol spotted the force and attacked with depth charges. Rear Admiral Sprague was incredulous and demanded identification verification which came disconcertingly enough when the enemy battleships' pagoda masts—unmistakable indicators—loomed over the horizon.

For the next two and one-half hours, the Japanese force chased "Taffy 3" southward and subjected the escort carriers and their counterattacking screen to a murderous, but mercifully and frequently inaccurate, heavy-caliber cannonade. The carriers' aircraft fearlessly fought back, making dummy runs on the Japanese ships to slow their speed of advance after expending all their bombs, torpedoes, and ammunition. During their own suicidal counterattacks, three of the escorts, USS Johnston (DD-557), USS Hoel (DD-533), and USS Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413) were sunk by heavy caliber gunfire. Later, USS Gambier Bay (CVE-73) succumbed to the same fate while USS Fanshaw Bay (CVE-70), USS Kalinin Bay (CVE-68), USS Dennis (DE-405), and USS Heermann (DD-532) suffered heavy damage from the same source. Throughout the surface phase of the action, the leading position of the White Plains in the disposition protected her from any gunfire damage; but, the ship still had an aerial ordeal to endure.

Miraculously, the Japanese surface force broke off its pursuit between 0912 and 0917, and, after milling around in apparent confusion for a time, retired northward to San Bernardino Strait. The retreat by Kurita's surface force, however, did not end the ordeal for White Plains and her colleagues. After a 90-minute respite, they suffered harassment from a different quarter. At 1050, a formation of six enemy fighters appeared and began simultaneous kamikaze attacks. Two of them singled out White Plains as their victim. Her antiaircraft gunners responded with a hail of gunfire. They scored a hit on one of the intruders, and he immediately changed course and succeeded in fatally crashing into USS St. Lo (CVE-63). His comrade continued on toward White Plains, but her antiaircraft guns finally brought him down mere yards astern. His explosion scattered debris all over her deck and sides but caused only 11 relatively minor casualties. In the meantime, USS Kitkun Bay (CVE-71) and Kalinin Bay also suffered kamikaze crashes, but neither proved fatal. That attack proved to be her final combat action, not only of the Battle off Samar but also of the war. She steamed to Manus with the other surviving carriers and arrived there on 31 October. After an inspection of the damage, it was decided that the battered escort carrier should return to the United States for complete repairs. Accordingly, she departed Manus on 6 November and headed—via Pearl Harbor—to the west coast. She arrived in San Diego on 27 November and immediately began repairs.

Late Career

Ready for action once more, White Plains stood out of San Diego on 19 January 1945. However, for the remainder of the war, she carried out the relatively tame assignment of ferrying replacement aircraft from the United States to bases in the western Pacific. During the last months of the war, she visited such places as Kwajalein, Hollandia, Ulithi, Saipan, Guam, Leyte, and Pearl Harbor. All had been scenes of major combat actions, but, by that time, all had become rear areas. Her closest approach to the fighting after Leyte Gulf came just after the Okinawa landings in April when she steamed to within 100 miles of the island to launch two squadrons of Marine Corps F4U Corsairs for duty there.

The end of hostilities in mid-August found her en route from Pearl Harbor to the west coast. She arrived at San Pedro, California, on 22 August but soon moved to San Diego. From there, she headed back to the western Pacific on 6 September to begin Operation Magic Carpet duty bringing American fighting men home from the Orient. Twenty days later, she arrived in Buckner Bay, Okinawa, where she embarked more than 800 passengers for the voyage to the United States. On 28 September, she pointed her bow eastward and set a course, via Pearl Harbor, for San Diego. The escort carrier entered San Diego on 16 October and disembarked her passengers. After nine days in port, she got underway for Pearl Harbor and stopped there only briefly on 1 November before setting out on the return voyage to the west coast. The warship visited San Francisco for five days from 7 November to 12 November and then headed across the Pacific once more. She entered port at Guam in the Marianas on 27 November, embarked passengers, and then began the return voyage on 30 November. White Plains arrived in Seattle, Washington, on 14 December 1945. She remained there until 30 January 1946, when she embarked upon the voyage, via the Panama Canal and Norfolk, Virginia, to Boston, Massachusetts. The carrier entered Boston on 17 February 1946 and began preparations for decommissioning.

White Plains was decommissioned on 10 July 1946 and was berthed with the Boston Group, Atlantic Reserve Fleet. She remained with the reserve fleet for 12 years. On 12 June 1955, she was redesignated a utility aircraft carrier (CVU-66). Finally, her name was struck from the Navy List on 1 July 1958. She was sold on 29 July to the Hyman Michaels Company, of Chicago, Illinois, for scrapping.

White Plains (CVE-66) earned five battle stars during World War II as well as the Presidential Unit Citation for her part in the Battle off Samar.

See USS White Plains for other ships of the same name.

This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.


Casablanca-class escort carrier
Casablanca | Liscome Bay | Anzio | Corregidor | Mission Bay | Guadalcanal | Manila Bay | Natoma Bay | St. Lo | Tripoli | Wake Island | White Plains | Solomons | Kalinin Bay | Kasaan Bay | Fanshaw Bay | Kitkun Bay | Tulagi | Gambier Bay | Nehenta Bay | Hoggatt Bay | Kadasahan Bay | Marcus Island | Savo Island | Ommaney Bay | Petrof Bay | Rudyerd Bay | Saginaw Bay | Sargent Bay | Shamrock Bay | Shipley Bay | Sitkoh Bay | Steamer Bay | Cape Esperance | Takanis Bay | Thetis Bay | Makassar Strait | Windham Bay | Makin Island | Lunga Point | Bismarck Sea | Salamaua | Hollandia | Kwajalein | Admiralty Islands | Bougainville | Matanikau | Attu | Roi | Munda

List of escort aircraft carriers of the United States Navy
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