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s e a f o r c e s – online
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Naval Forces
Technology, History & Information
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Guided Missile Cruiser
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CG 71 -
USS Cape St. George
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USS Cape St. George (CG 71)
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US Navy photo
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Type,
Class:
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Guided Missile Cruiser; Ticonderoga (Baseline 4) - class;
planned and built as CG 71; |
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Builder:
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STATUS:
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Awarded: February 25, 1988 Laid down: November 19, 1990 Launched: January 10, 1992 Commissioned:
June 30, 1993 ACTIVE in
Service / ATLANTIC FLEET |
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Homeport:
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Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia
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Namesake:
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named after and in honor of
the Battle of Cape St.
George / Buka Island – 1943 |
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Ship’s
Motto:
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> ALWAYS VICTORIOUS <
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Technical Data:
(Measures, Propulsion, Armament,
Aviation, etc.)
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see: INFO
>> Guided
Missile Cruiser / Ticonderoga – Class |
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Pictures,
photos & more ...
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USS Cape St. George (front) and the
destroyer USS Deyo (DD 989) steam in formation – April 20, 2003 |
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USS Cape St. George (CG 71) underway in
the Mediterranean Sea – March 27, 2003 |
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USS Cape St. George – commissioning print |
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Arleigh Albert Burke - 1951 (October 19, 1901 - January 1, 1996) |
A Tomahawk Land Attack Missile (TLAM) is
launched from USS Cape St. George – March 23, 2003 |
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map of the Solomon Islands area with
Bougainville & Buka in the NW |
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Photo credits: US Navy, |
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Namesake
& History: |
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About the
Battle of Cape St. George / Buka Island (now a part of Papua New Guinea) –
1943: |
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In November 1943, U.S. Forces
were conducting an offensive island- hopping campaign in the Solomon Island
chain of the Southwest Pacific. The campaign objective was to recapture
territories taken by the Japanese in the early years of the war, and to
provide bases for further strikes against Japan. The offensive began in early
1943, with the fierce Battle of Guadalcanal, and had progressed farther
north, around New Georgia, Bougainville, Buka, and New Ireland Islands. U.S. Naval Forces operating
in the area included the ships of Destroyer Squadron 23, under the command of
Captain Arleigh "31-Knot" Burke. Burke assumed command of the
"Little Beavers" in October 1943, and the destroyers of
"23" immediately got busy. Their missions up The Slot were never
ending. They ran the mail, lobbed shells at enemy shore installations, and
their personnel learned to do without sleep. Reflecting their Commodore's
brashness, they did everything at high speed. In late November 1943,
South Pacific Intelligence suspected that the Japanese intended to evacuate
their technical aviation personnel from their air base in Buka. The base had
been knocked out by the bombardments of the THIRD fleet, and the personnel
were needed elsewhere. Since the 22nd of November,
Destroyer Squadron 23 had been operating at night off Bougainville Island,
retiring to Hathorn Sound at maximum speed for fuel during the day. On the
24th of November, while fueling at Hathorn Sound, the Squadron received
orders from Admiral William F. "Bull" Halsey, Commander THIRD Fleet,
to expedite fueling and return to point UNCLE, off Empress Augusta Bay.
Evacuation of aviation personnel from Buka Island was suspected and DESRON 23
was to "take care of it." En route, Captain Burke received these
orders from Admiral Halsey: "Thirty-One Knot Burke,
get athwart the Buka-Rabaul evacuation line about 35 miles west of Buka. If
no enemy contact by 0300...come south to refuel same place. If enemy
contacted, you know what to do." At about 1730, the Squadron
was steaming at 30 knots towards point UNCLE. Captain Burke's plan was to
place his ships near the St. George Channel, as far west as possible. He
intended to search the Rabaul-Buka line on the northern side so as to make
contact northwest of the enemy, the direction from which the enemy could least
expect interception. "It was," Burke wrote afterward, "an
ideal night for a nice quiet torpedo attack." At 0130, the Squadron
slowed to 23 knots to reduce their wake, and at 0140 changed course to the
north, DESDIV 46 taking line of bearing 225 degrees from DESDIV 45, distance
5000 yards. Only one minute later, at 0141, USS DYSON, USS SPENCE, and USS
CLAXTON made contact with the Imperial Japanese Navy, picking up the creening
destroyers ONAMI and MAKINAMI on radar, eleven miles to the east. At 0145,
Burke ordered DESDIV 45 to head directly for the enemy, who was steaming at
25 knots on a westerly course. According to the battle plan, DESDIV 46 would
cover DESDIV 45 in the torpedo attack, after which the two divisions would
change places. At 0156, DYSON, CLAXTON, and USS CHARLES AUSBURNE reached the
desired torpedo firing point on the enemy's port bow, launched 15 torpedoes,
and promptly turned 90 degrees right to avoid any fish the enemy might offer.
The torpedoes struck; ONAMI disintegrated in a ball of fire 300 feet high,
while KINAMI exploded, but stubbornly remained afloat. Just before the torpedoes
hit, CHARLES AUSBURNE made radar contact on the transport destroyers AMIGIRI,
YUGURI, and UZUKI. Burke headed after them, ordering USS CONVERSE and SPENCE
to finish off the MAKINAMI. Burke prepared his ships for a torpedo run on the
second group of ships, but the attack never came to pass. The second group of
enemy ships apparently caught sight of the burning hulks of the first group,
and turned tail to run. They changed course towards Rabaul, and backed their
throttles wide open, with CHARLES AUSBURNE, DYSON, and CLAXTON in hot
pursuit. The Japanese had a seven
mile head start, but DESDIV 45 gradually closed the enemy. At 0215, with the
chase little more than ten minutes old, Burke decided to change course on a
hunch that the enemy might be firing torpedoes. Just as the ships of DESDIV
45 completed a zig-zag maneuver, three heavy explosions rocked the ships.
Fortunately, the explosions were merely Japanese torpedoes exploding in the
turbulent wake of DESDIV 45. Apparently, the course change kept the ships out
of torpedo water. This was just one of many lucky breaks the Squadron
experienced that night. A stern chase is a long
chase, but by 0222, Burke's ships had closed the Japanese destroyers to 8000
yards, and opened fire with guns. Burke described the battle action as
follows: "The enemy from this time on made several changes of course and
also returned our fire... As soon as enemy fire was observed, the Division
started to fishtail, weaving back and forth within 30 degrees of the base
course. The enemy salvos were well grouped. Patterns were small, and they
came close, but for some unaccountable reason, there were no direct hits. The
nearness of the enemy projectiles is best demonstrated by the fact that there
were two inches of water on the CLAXTON's bridge caused by the splashes of
the shots..." At 0225, the three enemy targets separated on diverging
courses with YUGURI continuing north, while UZUKI and AMIGIRI turned
westward. As DYSON fired on UZUKI, CHARLES AUSBURNE and CLAXTON were ordered
to concentrate their fire on YUGURI. The ships pounded shell after shell into
their targets, with what seemed like minimal results. But after continued
relentless gunfire, the YUGURI sank at 0328. AMIGIRI and UZUKI managed to
escape, but not without absorbing some savage blows. A night fighter later
reported a ship burning and exploding 60 miles due east of Cape St. George,
which was probably one of the fleeing ships. Meanwhile, CONVERSE and
SPENCE were finishing off MAKINAMI, the remaining destroyer afloat from the
first group. They sank her with torpedoes and gunfire at 0254, and reported
to Burke, "One more rising sun has set." During the attack,
CONVERSE was hit by an enemy torpedo, but the warhead, fortunately, turned
out to be a dud. With MAKINAMI on the bottom, DESDIV 46 set out, rejoining
DESDIV 45 in pursuit of the fleeing Japanese ships. The Squadron headed
towards St. George's Channel in an attempt to intercept the damaged ships.
This action was in itself most daring, for Burke pursued the enemy to within
easy range of Japanese air cover at Rabaul. The search, however, was in vain,
and the Squadron broke off the search at 0405. Burke expected furious
retaliation from enemy aircraft come daybreak; however, enemy planes never
appeared. The first and only planes they saw were their fighter cover, which
arrived over them at 0648. "Never has the white star on a wing meant so
much to tired sailors as the one on those Lightnings," said Burke. Commending the Squadron
after the Battle, Captain Burke wrote: "The Navy stresses devotion to
duty, aggressiveness, boldness, determination, courage. The full realization
of exactly what these traits of character mean was brought out by the
officers and crews during this engagement. The universal desire of all hands
to do damage to the enemy regardless of consequences, is the greatest
exhilaration that any Commander can possibly have. The complete loyalty,
understanding and wholehearted desire to mutually support the operation,
coupled with the courage and valiant determination to do it, were the
outstanding characteristics of these ships." In this long fight, the Japanese were
outmaneuvered, outfought, and very probably taken by surprise. The "Bull
dog" tactics of Captain Burke in the Battle of Cape St. George earned
DESRON 23 the pride and admiration of the Pacific Fleet. The Squadron managed
to sink three enemy ships and heavily damaged a fourth, in a naval action fought
for the first time in waters so close to the enemy's naval and air fortress
of abaul. The Naval War College characterized the engagement as "the
almost prefect surface action," while Admiral Halsey called it the
"Trafalgar of the Pacific." Throughout World War II, no other U.S.
Naval Unit eclipsed the record of the Little Beavers at the Battle of Cape
St. George. |
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USS Cape St.
George (CG 71): |
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USS CAPE ST. GEORGE’s keel was
laid on November 10, 1990, and she was launched on January 10, 1992. CAPE ST.
GEORGE was christened on April 11, 1992 by her sponsor, Mrs. Doris Hekman,
the wife of VADM Peter M. Hekman, Jr., USN (Ret.). After commissioning on
June 12, 1993 at ceremonies in Norfolk,
Virginia, CAPE ST. GEORGE joined
the Atlantic Fleet, completed work-ups with the USS DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER Battle Group, and departed on her maiden deployment
on October 21, 1994. |
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… and patches … |
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last update: 19-03-2008 |
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