USS Donald Cook DDG 75 / Colonel Donald
Gilbert Cook, USMC / Arleigh Burke 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 75 -
USS Donald Cook
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USS Donald Cook (DDG 75)
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US Navy photo
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Type,
Class:
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Guided Missile Destroyer; Arleigh Burke – class / Flight
II;
planned and built as DDG
75; |
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Builder:
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Bath Iron Works, Bath,
Maine, USA |
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STATUS:
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Awarded: January 19, 1993; Laid down: July 7, 1996; Launched: May 3, 1997; Commissioned:
December 4, 1998; ACTIVE UNIT/ in
commission (Atlantic Fleet) |
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Homeport:
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Norfolk, Virginia, USA
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Namesake:
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Named after and in honor of Colonel Donald Gilbert Cook, USMC (1934 – 1967); > see history, below; |
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Ship's
Motto:
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> FAITH WITHOUT FEAR
< |
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Technical Data:
(Measures, Propulsion, Armament,
Aviation, etc.)
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see: INFO > Guided
Missile Destroyer / Arleigh Burke - class. |
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Pictures,
photos & more ...
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Donald
Gilbert Cook |
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Photo credits: US Navy, US Naval
Historical Center, |
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Namesake
& History: |
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Colonel Donald Gilbert Cook, USMC
(August 9, 1934 – December 8, 1967); |
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Donald Cook was the son of
Walter and Helen Cook and the brother of Walter and Irene (Walter passed away
in 1960 and Irene Coleman still lives in N.Y.). They grew up in a strong
Catholic family in Brooklyn attending Jesuit primary and secondary schools.
He excelled at sports and his exploits on the gridiron earned him the
nickname, "Bayridge Bomber." Upon graduation from Xavier High
School, Col. Cook enrolled at St. Michael's College in Winooski, Vermont,
where his academic standing was well above average. Col. Cook enrolled in the
Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps but was subsequently discharged for
non-attendance because he had met a beautiful young woman destined to become
his wife, Laurette Giroux of Burlington, Vermont. Upon graduation in 1956,
Col. Cook joined the Marine Corps Reserve as a private after receiving a
special waiver for his lack of attendance at ROTC and completed Marine Corps
Officer's Candidate School at Quantico, Virginia in 1957. He then attended
Communications Officer School and subsequently served in various
communications roles at Camp Pendleton with the 1st Marine Division earning
the respect of his superior officers and a regular commission in the Marine
Corps. Col. Cook then attended the Chinese Mandarin Language Course at
Monterey, California and the Army Intelligence School at Fort Holabird,
Maryland graduating first in a class of 25. The next three years found him
serving as the Officer-in-Charge of the 1st Interrogator-Translator Team with
the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing in Hawaii. It was during this time that Col.
Cook displayed a remarkable fascination with prisoners of war. He wrote a
pamphlet based on the experiences of American POWs in Korea detailing the
Communist interrogation techniques and he applied those techniques in
realistic training scenarios for Marines. Col. Cook would dress in a
Communist uniform made by his wife and Laurette would use her eyeliner to
make Don appear oriental. He was an imposing spectacle to the
"captured" Marines. On 11 December 1964, Col.
Cook was reassigned to the Communications Company, Headquarters Battalion,
3rd Marine Division. That same day, he and eight other Marines were issued
orders to proceed to Saigon, Republic of Vietnam, and report to the Senior
Marine Advisor. On December 31st, Col. Cook volunteered to conduct a search
and recovery mission for a downed American helicopter and set off with the
4th Battalion of Vietnamese Marines. Ambushed on their arrival at the crash site,
Col. Cook rallied the Vietnamese Marines who accompanied him, tended to the
wounded and was attempting to drag others to safety when he was wounded in
the leg and captured. Col. Cook was taken to a Viet Cong POW camp in the
jungles of South Vietnam near the Cambodian border where he quickly
established himself as the senior American (even though he was not) and
provided guidance and strength to his fellow prisoners. Col. Cook's actions
were in direct defiance of his captors who attempted to remove all semblance
of military rank and structure among the POWs. He impressed upon the Viet
Cong that he was senior among the POWs and therefore spokesman for the group,
fully aware that his actions would lead to harsh treatment for himself. Col.
Cook was subjected to physical abuse and isolation but he resisted his
captor's efforts to break his will and was used as a "bad" example
by his Communist guards. Surviving on limited rations, Col. Cook tried to
maintain his health in his ten foot square cage. He could be seen by other
prisoners exercising and running for hours. Once, while assigned to a work
detail with a VC guard, Col. Cook stepped up the pace to embarrass his
captors. Still, the jungle prison took its toll on Col. Cook's health and he
and the other prisoners found themselves in a weakened state. Perhaps due to
this weakened condition, Col. Cook contracted malaria shortly before moving
to a new camp. He was so weak that he staggered when he walked, could not
traverse log bridges, and lost his night vision due to vitamin deficiency.
Still, he persevered refusing to allow anyone to carry his pack or otherwise
put a strain on themselves to help him. By the time the new camp
was reached, even the camp commander complemented Col. Cook on his courage.
Although he regained some of his strength at the new camp, Col. Cook still
suffered from the effects of malaria. As illness struck the other prisoners,
Col. Cook unhesitatingly took on the bulk of their workloads in order that
they might have time to recover. His knowledge of first aid prompted him to
nurse the severely sick by administering heart massage, moving limbs, and
keeping men's tongues from blocking their air passages. He was instrumental
in saving the lives of several POWs who were convulsing with severe malaria
attacks. Even though he was on half-rations, Col. Cook shared his food with
the weaker POWs even giving up his allowance of penicillin. Because he was
isolated, Col. Cook devised a drop off point for communications, instructing
his fellow POWs to continue resistance and offering the means to do so. Time
and again he refused to negotiate for his own release knowing full well it
would mean his imprisonment for the entire war. After a failed escape
attempt, a gun was held to his head and Col. Cook calmly recited the pistol's
nomenclature showing no fear whatsoever. Surely he knew that in his
deteriorated condition that he would not survive a long imprisonment yet he
continued to offer food and badly needed medicine to other POWs. In this
respect, he went far above and beyond the call of duty by risking his life to
inspire other POWs to survive. Col. Donald G. Cook was
last seen on a jungle trail by a fellow American prisoner, Douglas Ramsey, in
November 1967. When Mr. Ramsey was released in 1973, he was told that Cook
had died from malaria on 8 December 1967 while still in captivity. No remains
were ever returned by the Vietnamese government. On 26 February 1980, Col.
Cook was declared dead under the Missing Service Persons Act of 1942. On 15
May 1980, a memorial stone was placed in Arlington National Cemetary and the
flag from the empty grave presented to his wife, Laurette. The following day
Colonel Donald G. Cook was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. The
ship's motto, "Faith Without Fear" epitomizes his courage and faith
in God and country. |
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USS Donald Cook
(DDG 75): |
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… DDG 75 history
wanted … |
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… and patches … |
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