USS Barry DDG 52 / Commodore John Barry /
Arleigh Burke class Guided Missile Destroyer – US Navy
|
|
s e a f o r c e s – online
|
Naval Forces
Technology, History & Information
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
Guided Missile Destroyer
|
|
|||||||||
DDG 52 -
USS Barry
|
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||
USS Barry (DDG 52)
|
US Navy photo
|
|
||||||||
Type,
Class:
|
|
Guided Missile Destroyer; Arleigh Burke – class / Flight
I;
planned and built as DDG
52; |
|
|||||||
Builder:
|
|
Ingalls Shipbuilding,
Pascagoula, Mississippi, USA |
|
|||||||
STATUS:
|
|
Awarded: May 26, 1987; Laid down: February 26, 1990; Launched: May 10, 1991; Commissioned:
December 12, 1992; ACTIVE UNIT/ in
commission (Atlantic Fleet) |
|
|||||||
Homeport:
|
|
Norfolk, Virginia, USA
|
|
|||||||
Namesake:
|
|
Named after and in honor of Commodore John Barry (1745 – 1803); > see history, below; |
|
|||||||
Ship's
Motto:
|
|
> STRENGHT AND DIVERSITY
< |
|
|||||||
Technical Data:
(Measures, Propulsion, Armament,
Aviation, etc.)
|
|
see: INFO > Guided
Missile Destroyer / Arleigh Burke - class. … see also: USS
Barry (DD 933); |
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
Pictures,
photos & more ...
|
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||
|
John
Barry |
|
|||||||||
|
|
John Barry |
|
||||||||
|
Photo credits: US Navy, US Naval
Historical Center, |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
Namesake
& History: |
||||||||||
|
Commodore John Barry (1745
– September 13, 1803); |
||||||||||
|
Born in Tacumshane, County
Wexford, Ireland in 1745, John Barry, a man of large stature at six feet four
inches, settled in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the American Colonies of
England in 1760. There he served as a popular and successful merchant ship
Captain for many shipping houses. When the American Revolution began the
connections he gained through his popularity paid off and he was assigned to
outfit the first ships of the Continental Navy for the rebelling Americans.
In early 1776, commanding the brig Lexington, he defeated the tender H.M.S.
Edward and took her into Philadelphia. She was the first English prize taken
to that city in the war. Barry was then given the command of a new frigate
Effingham, 36 guns, being built in Philadelphia. While she was building Barry
offered to serve in the Army. He was taken as aide-de-camp to General John
Calawader, a former business associate, taking part as a result in the
Trenton and Princeton operations. After the port of Philadelphia was taken by
the British, requiring the scuttling of the not yet complete Effingham, Barry
commanded a flotilla of small craft and gunboats in the Delaware River.
During the winter of 1777-1778, that flotilla raided British shipping from
Philadelphia in an effort to disrupt and blockade British supply and
communication capturing numerous vessels and supplies. Captain Barry returned to sea as commander of the frigate Raleigh in 1778. In an action at the mouth of the Penobscot River that year he lost the Raleigh in a gallant action against the British razee ship of the line Experiment, 54 guns, and the frigate Unicorn. Barry, together with a third of his crew, reached shore and escaped. On February 11, 1781 Barry
sailed from Boston in command of the frigate Alliance, 36 guns, having taken
command from the Frenchman Pierre Landais, whose failure to aggressively
support John Paul Jones against the Serapis in the Battle of Flamborough Head
cost him his command. The purpose of this cruise was to transport John
Laurens, Washington's aide, to France. Enroute to France two privateers were
separately sighted, engaged and taken as prizes, depleting Barry's crew. No
further action was sought out as no more men could be spared for prizecrews.
Upon arrival in Lorient, France Barry recruited additional men and soon set
sail for America. Shortly after sailing, his
new crewmen, disreputable rogues with no allegiance to America, mutinied.
They were put down and after flogging them into submission Barry continued
West. Two more British privateers were taken in due course, those being the
Mars and Minerva. On May 29, 1781, Barry spotted two British Sloops, the
Atalanta of 16 guns and the Trepassy, 14 guns off Cape Sable, Nova Scotia.
Initially the Sloops pummeled the Alliance, wounding Barry in the process,
when their sweeps gave them advantage in a calm. However the wind came up as
did the wounded Captain and shortly Barry persevered, taking both Sloops as
prizes into Boston. Barry engaged the British
once more on March 10, 1783 when his Alliance briefly exchanged broadsides
with the frigate Sybil in the Gulf of Mexico. Although the Englishman
escaped, she did so badly damaged and without taking the valuable transport
Barry was escorting, the Duc de Lauzon out of Havana with silver bullion for
Congress's coffers. After the Revolution, Barry
was chosen to convey Lafayette and Noailles to France. After a brief return
to sailing as a merchant Captain, in 1794 he reentered the Navy obtaining the
title Commodore by which he would be known to posterity. As Captain of the
frigate United States, 44 guns, he captured French merchant vessels during
naval conflict with France of 1798-1800. He also engaged in the training of
many American Naval officers, men who would in a short while become the
heroes of naval actions in the Barbary Wars and the War of 1812, including
Stephen Decatur and Richard Somers. Commodore John Barry passed
away on September 13, 1803 in his adopted home of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Barry's remains are interred in the small cemetery, open to the public,
behind Old St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church in Philadelphia. For all of his
exploits, Barry is known as the Father of the American Navy. A statue stands
in his honor immediately in front of Independence Hall in Philadelphia, as
does one in Washington D.C. and another in his Irish home of County Wexford.
Also four naval ships have carried his name, including a World War Two
destroyer which earned four battle stars, the U.S.S. Barry DD933 a Forest
Sherman class destroyer launched in 1955 and now a museum in Washington, D.C.
and the DDG52, an Arliegh Burke Missile Destroyer currently in service.
September 13, 1981 was declared John Barry Day by President Reagan, an act
repeated by President Bush in 1991. The N.R.O.T.C. hall at Villanova bears
his name as does the Annapolis Ancient Order of Hibernians organization, a
New York Park in Fort Green and many more sites such as schools and
organizations. A more recent memorial is the Commodore John Barry Bridge
which carries travelers of Route 322 between Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
The bridge spans the waters of the Delaware River South of
Philadelphia, waters once ruled by Barry's brave flotilla of gunboats. |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
USS Barry (DDG
52): |
||||||||||
|
Barry (DDG-52) was laid down 26 February 1990 at Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula MS; launched 10 May 1991, and commissioned 12 December 1992. She is homeported at Norfolk VA. Barry has received many
awards, including the Battenberg Cup for the years 1994, 1996, and 1998,
earning her the nickname "Battenberg Barry" in the late 1990s. She
has also been awarded the Battle E award 4 times, and received the Golden
Anchor and Silver Anchor Awards for retention. In 2004, Barry
participated at the annual Fleet Week in New York City. |
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||
|
… and patches … |
||||||||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||||