USS Robison DDG 12 / Admiral Samuel
Shelburne Robison / Charles F. Adams class Guided Missile Destroyer – US Navy
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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 Destroyer
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DDG 12 - USS Robison
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USS Robison (DDG 12)
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US Navy photo
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Type,
Class:
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Guided Missile Destroyer; Charles F. Adams - class;
planned and built as DDG
12; |
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Builder:
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Defoe Shipbuilding Co., Bay
City, Michigan, USA |
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STATUS:
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Awarded: January 17, 1958 Laid down: April 28, 1959 Launched: April 27, 1960 Commissioned:
December 9, 1961 Decommissioned:
October 1, 1991 Fate: Stricken
November 20, 1992; Sold for scrap June 20, 1994. |
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Homeport:
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-
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Namesake:
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Named after and in honor of Rear Admiral Samuel Shelburne Robison (1867 – 1952); > see history, below; |
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Ship’s
Motto:
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> < |
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Technical Data:
(Measures, Propulsion, Armament,
Aviation, etc.)
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see: INFO
>> Guided
Missile Destroyer / Charles F. Adams – Class |
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Pictures,
photos & more ...
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Photo credits: US Navy, US Naval
Historical Center |
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Namesake
& History: |
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Rear Admiral Samuel
Shelburne Robison (10. Mai 1867 – 20. November 1952); |
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Commander, Submarine
Forces, Atlantic Fleet (COMSUBLANT) – 1917 – 1918; Commander, Navy Yard,
Boston, 1919 – 1921; Admiral in Command, Battle
Fleet, 1923 – 1925; Commander of the US Fleet,
1925, 1926; Commander, 13th Naval
Destrict, 1926 – 1928; Superintendent, US Naval
Academy, 1928; Samuel S. Robison was a U.S. Navy officer whose service extended from
the 1890s through the early 1930s. He held several major commands during
World War I, and from 1928-1931 served as Superintendent of the United States
Naval Academy. Early life and career Robison was born on 10 May
1867 in Juniata County, Pa. He entered the Naval Academy on 4 September 1884.
After finishing his academic studies at Annapolis he served the two years at
sea as a Passed Naval Cadet in USS Omaha on the Asiatic Station and
was commissioned ensign 1 July 1890. In 1891 he was transferred to USS
Boston, still on the Asiatic Station; and, from 1893, he served in USS
Thetis until ordered to the Mare Island Navy Yard in 1895. In 1896 he
returned to the Asiatic Station in Boston. In August 1899 he was
assigned to the League Island Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Pa. He joined Alabama
(BB-8) 15 September 1900, and two years later was transferred to Hull
(DD-7), a torpedo boat destroyer. From September 1904 to July 1906, he served
with the Bureau of Equipment at Washington, D.C., then he returned to sea,
serving first in Tennessee (CA-10) and later in Pennsylvania
(ACR-4). After a tour of duty in the
Bureau of Engineering, he assumed command of Cincinnati (C-7), a unit
of the Asiatic Fleet, on 25 October 1911. Upon his return to the United
States in April 1914, he became commanding officer of USS Jupiter (AC-3). He
held the rank of captain from 1 July 1914, and he remained with Jupiter
until 8 August. World War I service On 12 October 1915 he assumed
command of South Carolina (BB-26) and held that post until after the
United States entered World War I. From July 1917 until September 1918, he
commanded the Atlantic Submarine Force with additional duty as General
Supervisor of all commissioned submarines in the Navy. For this duty he was
awarded the Navy Cross. He was also made a Companion of the Order of the Bath
for service to the British during the war. In October 1918 he assumed command
of Squadron 3, Patrol Force, and during the next month had additional duty as
District Commander, Brest, France. In November, he was appointed U.S. Naval
Representative on the Commission for executing the Naval Terms of the
Armistice with Germany. After his return to the United States in March 1919,
he commanded the Boston Navy Yard. In May 1921, he was sent to Santo Domingo
as Military Governor. Post-war service and
retirement A member of the General Board
of the Navy from December 1922 until June 1923, he was appointed Commander in
Chief, Battle Fleet, with the rank of admiral, from 30 June 1923. With Seattle
(CA-11) as his flagship, he commanded the U.S. Fleet during the year
commencing August 1925. He then became Commandant of the 13th Naval District
with the permanent rank of rear admiral. From June 1928 until his retirement
in June 1931, he served as Superintendent of the Naval Academy. For a number of years after
his retirement, Admiral Robison was Superintendent of the Admiral Farragut
Academy, Toms River, N.J. He died in Glendale, Calif.,
on 20 November 1952. He is buried in the Clark
gravesite in Section 2 of Arlington National Cemetery along with Admiral
Clark and his brother-in-law, Charles Frederick Hughes, Admiral, United
States Navy. |
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USS Robison (DDG
12): |
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USS Robison (DDG 12), a guided
missile destroyer, was laid down 28 April 1959 by Defoe Shipbuilding Co., Bay
City Mich., Launched 28 April 1960, sponsored by Mrs. John H. Sides, wife of the
Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Fleet; and commissioned 9 December 1961 at the
Boston Naval Shipyard, Comdr. D. V. Cox in command. Robison steamed for the west
coast 29 January 1962 via the Panama Canal. On 1 March she received a message
diverting her to Clipperton Island, to rescue 10 stranded seamen from the
tuna boat Monarch, which had capsized 20 days earlier. Arriving at San Diego on 7
March, Robison underwent shakedown and then post-shakedown availability 14 June
in San Francisco. Fleet Adm. Chester Nimitz, who had twice served on Admiral
Robison's staff, visited the ship on 25 June. Following completion of
availability 31 July, Robison proceeded to Mare Island for ammunition, took
on ASROC and Tartar missiles at Seal Beach, and then commenced 3 months of
local training operations out of San Diego. She got underway with
Cruiser-Destroyer Flotilla 11 on 13 November for her first WestPac tour of
duty. Upon completion of this deployment, Robison arrived San Diego 21 June
1963 for coastal operations. She departed San Diego 18
November in company with Parsons (DD-949) for escort duties. Calling at Pearl
Harbor 23 November, she departed 2 days later in company with Midway
(CVA-41). Upon detachment from Midway, she touched at Guam, and then escorted
Hancock (CVA-19) eastward. Following fueling stops at Midway and Pearl
Harbor, she arrived San Diego 19 December. In January 1964 Robison
entered Long Beach Naval Shipyard for regular overhaul. After missile
qualifications and refresher training, she steamed 14 August for her second
WestPac deployment. Following her successful participation in modern naval
warfare training exercises and calls at various Far Eastern ports, she
departed Yokosuka 24 January 1965 and arrived San Diego 6 February. Local spring operations were
followed by a midshipman training cruise from 10 June to 5 August. The latter
month also brought a call at Portland, Oreg., and a visit, on the 24th, by
the Chief of Naval Operations, Adm. David L. McDonald. In the fall she
sharpened her ASW, AAW, and shore bombardment techniques during coastal
operations. Early in the new year 1966, the destroyer prepared for her third
tour of duty in support of 7th Fleet operations in WestPac. That deployment ended with her
return to San Diego 18 July 1966. Overhaul in San Francisco took her through
the fall and into the winter months, culminating in her return to homeport on
3 February 1967. Refresher and type training filled the next 5 months, and 25
July saw Robison once again en route to the Orient. After calling at Pearl Harbor
31 July and Yokosuka, Japan 5 August, she commenced Tonkin Gulf operations 25
August in the screen for Coral Sea. In naval gunfire support and "Sea
Dragon" operations during the period from 26 August 1967 to 9 January
1968, Robison was credited with the destruction of 78 waterborne logistics
craft. Her remarkable degree of combat readiness during this period earned
for her the Meritorious Unit Commendation. Upkeep, availability,
training, and operating off the west coast maintained Robison's state of
readiness through the next 11 months. She steamed from San Diego for her
fifth WestPac deployment on 30 December 1968 in company with carrier Kitty
Hawk. The usual call at Pearl Harbor was followed by arrival at Subic Bay, 20
January 1969. After voyage repairs Robison joined Task C.roup 77 3 in Tonkin
Gulf. The destroyer, flagship of her division, served in the screen of both
Kitty Hawk and Bon Homme Richard. She also provided naval gunfire support to
troops ashore in the I Corps Zone. Robison returned to San Diego
on 6 July 1969, remaining there until 2 October, when she arrived at the San
Francisco Naval Shipyard, Hunters Point, for overhaul. Work was completed 4
1/2 months later, and Robison returned to her homeport of San Diego 27
February 1970, ready for refresher training and yet another WestPac
deployment. With the advent of 1970,
Robison began a cycle of deployments which endured for three years. She spent
the spring of each year on the west coast of the United States and then in
late spring or early summer, she deployed to WestPac. This cycle continued
until 1973. During that year she remained on the west coast, engaged in
normal operations out of San Diego, where she is berthed as of January 1974. Robison earned seven battle
stars for service off the Vietnamese coast. … more DDG 12
history wanted … |
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… and patches … |
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