USS Vicksburg (CL-86)

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Career USN Jack
Ordered:
Laid down: 26 October 1942
Launched: 14 December 1943
Commissioned: 12 June 1944
Decommissioned: 30 June 1947
Fate: Scrapped in 1964
Struck: 1 October 1962
General Characteristics
Displacement: 10,000 tons
Length: 610 ft 1 in
Beam: 66 ft 4 in
Draught: 25 ft
Propulsion:
Speed: 33 knots
Range:
Complement: 992 officers and enlisted
Armament: 12 x 6 in, 12 x 5 in, 28 x 40 mm, 10 x 20 mm guns
Aircraft:
Motto:

USS Vicksburg (CL-86) was first laid down as Cheyenne on 26 October 1942 at Newport News, Va., by the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Co., but, exactly one month later, was renamed Vicksburg. The light cruiser was launched on 14 December 1943; sponsored by Miss Muriel Hamilton, the daughter of Mayor J. C. Hamilton, of Vicksburg, Miss.; and commissioned at the Norfolk Navy Yard on 12 June 1944, Capt. William C. Vose in command.

The ship was fitted out for sea at Norfolk into July and conducted the preliminary phases of her shakedown in Chesapeake Bay prior to sailing for the British West Indies on 7 August. The light cruiser, then operating out of Trinidad, completed her shakedown training in the Gulf of Paria between 12 and 30 August; conducted shore bombardment exercises off Culebra, Puerto Rico, on 1 September and, on the following day, sailed for Hampton Roads in company with the old flush-decked destroyers Broome (DD-216) and Simpson (DD-221).

Returning to Hampton Roads soon thereafter, Vicksburg then conducted radar spotting practice at YAG-13 and at a battle raft on the 9th, and fired a drone practice off Cape May on the 10th. She underwent a post-shakedown overhaul at the Boston Navy Yard from 11 to 24 September; ran standardization trials off Rockand, Maine; and then took part in naval radiation laboratory tests in the vicinity of Deer Island in Boston harbor. After availability at Boston, Vicksburg operated in Narragansett Bay, Block Island Sound, and Long Island Sound, serving as a precommissioning training vessel for crews of large combatant warships between 5 October and 15 December.

Vicksburg returned to the Norfolk Navy Yard on 17 December and remained there until she ran her post-repair trials in the Chesapeake Bay on the last two days of 1944. The warship departed Hampton Roads on New Year's Day 1945 and rendezvoused with the destroyers Rodman (DD-456) and Emmons (DD-457) at the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay to form Task Group (TG) 21.12. Vicksburg and her escorts arrived at Cristobal, Canal Zone, four days later; transited the Panama Canal that afternoon; and moored at NOB Balboa where TG 21.12 was dissolved.

Vicksburg got underway for the Hawaiian Islands on 6 January 1945 and arrived at Pearl Harbor on the 17th. The light cruiser then conducted exercises off Oahu—aircraft tracking, firing at drones, fighter direction, radar calibration, and long and short range battle practices—through the end of January.

Vicksburg departed Pearl Harbor at 0800 on 5 February, and arrived at Saipan, in the Marianas, on the 13th. There, she was fueled from the fleet oiler Enoree (AO-69) and prepared for the ship's upcoming operation—and her baptism of fire—the bombardment of Iwo Jima.

The following day, Vicksburg left Saipan and joined other units of TG 52.19 at sea. On the 15th, the light cruiser became part of Task Unit (TU) 54.9.2, movement group "Baker"—consisting of herself; the battleships Nevada (BB-36) and Idaho (BB-42) ; the heavy crusiers Chester (CA-27) and Pensacola (CA-24); and screening destroyers. That force soon split into two fire support units. Vicksburg joined Chester and Pensacola and took station at 0651 to commence bombarding the shore. At 0709, Vicksburg catapult-launched the first of her plane sorties and commenced fire. Directed by the ship's spotter in a Vought OS2U Kingfisher, the light cruiser's 6-inch guns opened up from a range of 12,000 yards, shelling enemy installations on the northern end of the island of Iwo Jima.

Squalls cut down the visibility for the spotting aircraft; but, occasionally, the aircrew managed to glimpse the target area. At 0808, Vicksburg completed the first phase of her bombardment mission and recovered her plane to refuel it. At 0947, the light cruiser commenced the second phase of her assigned mission. Still hampered by bad weather over the target, the spotters doggedly remained airborne and directed gunfire as well as they could through the spotty cloud cover. By afternoon, however, visibility had increased markedly, allowing the ship to assess her gunfire as landing "on target," in the third phase.

Vicksburg had launched her Kingfisher at 1249, piloted by Lt. J. B. Nabors, Jr. At 1414, listeners on the radio circuit heard Nabors report that his aircraft was being fired upon by Japanese antiaircraft guns. Shortly thereafter, a Japanese A6M5 "Zeke" fighter attacked the slower, more vulnerable Kingfisher. The ensuing air battle did not last long, however, and ended happily for the American side, when another Kingfisher—from Pensacola—bagged the "Zeke," enabling Vicksburg's plane to resume her air spotting activities unhindered by enemy interference in the air.

One-half hour later, Vicksburg completed Phase III of her gunfire assignment and recovered the Kingfisher. Shortly before 1600, the light cruiser again launched one of her brood of floatplanes and, at 1618, commenced Phase IV from a range of 10,000 yards. After completing the firing at 1727 and subsequently recovering her aircraft, Vicksburg and her consorts were joined by the other fire support ships in retiring for the night at 14 knots.

Vicksburg remained off Iwo Jima, providing gunfire support for the landings, into March and headed for Ulithi on the 5th to replenish and provision before putting to sea again on the 14th in TG 58.1, part of the 5th Fleet's fast carrier striking arm, which was then undertaking air strikes to neutralize Japanese air power as the Allies prepared to invade Okinawa.

Vicksburg's first brush with the Japanese while engaged in that screening duty came on 18 March, 100 miles east of the Japanese home island of Kyushu. A "Betty" made a torpedo attack on the cruiser, dropping her "fish" while the ship was in the middle of a tight emergency turn. The torpedo churned by the bow, some 35 yards ahead of the ship, and proceeded parallel to the cruiser's port side. Within 20 minutes, another enemy plane closed, dropped flares, and departed— hurried along on its way by antiaircraft fire from the ships of TG 58.1.

Soon thereafter, Vicksburg—already at general quarters—opened fire with her 40-millimeter battery. The plane came in through the formation, and Vicksburg's Bofors guns began blasting the plane after it had already been set ablaze by fire from other ships. Moments later, it splashed.

At 0600, a "Frances" closed the formation and approached one of the carriers in the group from astern. It soon executed a wingover and dived on the carrier through a curtain of flak. The enemy never reached his destination, however, for the heavy wall of gunfire— probably from the carrier herself—knocked the "Frances" into the water.

Slightly less than two hours later, a "Judy" bored in for a surprise attack and passed over Vicksburg. The light cruiser's battery blasted away at the intruder and scored three definite hits before 5-inch gunfire (probably from either the destroyer Harrison (DD-573) or light cruiser Miami (CL-89)) blasted the enemy from the sky.

Meanwhile, the carriers' planes battered Japanese targets ashore on the Japanese home islands. The cruisers and destroyers in the screen had no rest, for the Japanese came back again on the next day. At 0715, a Japanese plane dived toward Wasp (CV-18) and scored one bomb hit. Vicksburg soon opened fire on the enemy plane. As it turned, either to make another attack or to escape the American fighters from the combat air patrol, the Japanese plane was rocked by a proximity burst from one of Vicksburg's shells. The blast knocked off a wing and set the plane afire. It then spun into the sea—a confirmed "kill."

While she was supporting strikes against Japanese targets to weaken the enemy's ability to defend against the impending invasion of the Ryukyus, Vicksburg destroyed eight Japanese planes. In addition, one of the ship's Kingfishers rescued a Marine aviator from the waters off the Japanese home islands.

Later detached from service with TG 58.1, Vicksburg shifted to a position off Okinawa for shore bombardment and close support duties. Highlighting the operation for the light cruiser was firing nearly 2,300 rounds of 6-inch and 5-inch projectiles in a six-hour time span, supporting an Army advance up the southern part of the island. Some of her targets were only a few hundred yards ahead of the advancing troops—a situation that required accurate shooting. Vicksburg's guns blasted Japanese gun positions, caves, and strong-points during the ship's long hours of firing and loading ammunition on the veritable "front lines."

After leaving the Ryukyus late in the Okinawa campaign, Vicksburg supported a minesweeping operation in the China Sea until 24 June, when she sailed for the Philippine Islands.

Vicksburg remained in Philippine waters through the Japanese capitulation on 15 August 1945. Five days later, on the 20th, the light cruiser departed San Pedro Bay, Leyte, as part of TU 30.3.7, in company with the destroyers Moale (DD-693), Rowe (DD-564), and Lowry (DD-770). While the ships proceeded toward a point off the Japanese home islands—where they would rendezvous with a fast carrier striking force—Lowry sighted and exploded a drifting mine.

Vicksburg joined TG 38.2 on 24 August—part of Vice Admiral John S. McCain's task force—and was replenished and provisioned at sea. TG 38.2 covered the approaches to Tokyo Bay prior to, and during, the formal Japanese surrender on 2 September 1945. Three days later, Vicksburg entered Tokyo Bay.

There, Rear Admiral I. J. Wiltse, Commander, Cruiser Division 10, shifted his flag to Vicksburg; and, on 20 September, the light cruiser departed Tokyo Bay as part of a 3d Fleet task group under the command of Rear Admiral John F. Shafroth and proceeded to Okinawa, where she anchored at Buckner Bay, on the 23d. There, 2,200 passengers came on board for transportation back to the United States.

Five days after arrival in Pearl Harbor on 4 October, Vicksburg led the sortie of the 3d Fleet for the United States. On the 15th, the Fleet passed in review in San Francisco Bay, Calif. Vicksburg remained in that port until 26 October when she got underway to shift to Monterey Bay, Calif., to take part in Navy Day observances there on the 27th. The ship reached Long Beach on 31 October but shifted to Portland, Oreg., on 6 November to participate in Armistice Day services before returning to Long Beach on the 16th.

Placed in the Terminal Island Naval Shipyard in San Francisco Bay on 17 January 1946 for availability, Vicksburg emerged from the overhaul and modernization as perhaps the most modern ship of her class. On 20 May 1946, Vicksburg became the flagship for Vice Admiral Frederick C. Sherman, Commander, 3d Fleet, who shifted his flag from Iowa (BB-61) on that date. Two days later, the ship moved to San Diego, where she moored at the Naval Air Station (NAS). She remained there into September, when she became the temporary flagship of Vice Admiral A. E. Montgomery.

Vicksburg was ultimately decommissioned on 30 June 1947 at San Francisco, Calif. She remained "mothballed" until struck from the Navy list on 1 October 1962. Sold to the National Metal and Steep Corp., Terminal Island, Calif., on 25 August 1964, she was then scrapped.

Vicksburg received two battle stars for her World War II service.

See USS Vicksburg for other ships of the same name.

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


Cleveland-class cruiser
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List of cruisers of the United States Navy
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