USS Momsen DDG 92 / Vice Admiral Charles
Bowers 'Swede' Momsen / 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 92 -
USS Momsen
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USS Momsen (DDG 92)
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US Navy photo
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Type,
Class:
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Guided Missile Destroyer; Arleigh Burke – class / Flight
IIA;
planned and built as DDG
92; |
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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: March 6, 1998; Laid down: November 16, 2001; Launched: July 19, 2003; Commissioned:
August 28, 2004; ACTIVE UNIT/ in
commission (Pacific Fleet) |
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Homeport:
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Everett, Washington, USA
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Namesake:
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Named
after and in honor of Vice Admiral Charles B.
“Swede” Momsen (1896 – 1967);
> see history, below;
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Ship's
Motto:
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> RISE ABOVE <
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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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Charles
Bowers 'Swede' Momsen |
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Photo credits: US Navy, US Naval
Historical Center |
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Namesake
& History: |
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Vice Admiral Charles Bowers
“Swede” Momsen (June 21, 1896 – May 25, 1967);
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Charles Bowers Momsen was
born in Flushing, Long Island, New York, on 21 June 1896, son of Hart and
Susie (Bowers) Momsen. Nicknamed "The Swede," Momsen was in reality
of Danish descent. He attended public schools in Washington, DC and St. Paul,
Minnesota, before his appointment in 1916 to the US Naval Academy, Annapolis,
Maryland, from the Fourth District of Minnesota. As a midshipman he played
football and baseball, and during the summer of 1918, served in USS Kansas (Battleship No.21) on Atlantic escort duty during World
War I. He was graduated and commissioned ensign on 7 June 1919. He remained in Annapolis
under instruction until September, when he joined USS Oklahoma (Battleship No.37), operating with Division Seven,
Battleship Squadron Three, Atlantic Fleet. Detached in June 1921, he reported
to the Newport News (Virginia) Shipbuilding Company where USS Maryland (Battleship No.46) was fitting out. He served aboard
that battleship from her commissioning on 21 July 1921 until September 1921.
Following submarine training at the Naval Submarine Base, New London,
Connecticut, he reported in January 1922 as Executive Officer of the
submarine USS O-13 (SS-74), based at Coco Solo in the Panama Canal
Zone. From June 1923 to June 1927 he successfully commanded the submarines 0-15 (SS-76), R-24 (SS-101)
and S-1 (SS-105). He then served a tour of
duty at the Design Division of the Bureau of Construction and Repair, Navy
Department, Washington, DC. Detached in June 1929, he was ordered to the
Submarine Safety Test Unit, aboard USS S-4 (SS-109),
a floating laboratory. During this period, which ended in September 1932, he
was engaged in the design of a submarine escape breathing apparatus, later
known as the "Momsen Lung." For this development, he was awarded
the Distinguished Service Medal, with citation which states in part: "During the early
stages of its (the Lung's) design and development (he)...courageously,
repeatedly and voluntarily risked his life in conducting experiments of a
nature such that there was little or no information available as to their
probable results. In the later tests of the device, when escapes were made
from USS S-4 submerged to depths as much as 206 feet, he was not
only the first person to venture the escape but also the leading and guiding
spirit in all subsequent ones..." Between September 1932 and
March 1934 he was assigned to the Submarine Base, Pearl Harbor, and for ten
months thereafter he had sea duty as Engineering Officer of USS Oglala (CM-4). Detached from that minelayer in January 1935,
he reported the following month as Executive Officer of submarine tender USS Canopus (AS-9), a unit of Submarine Squadron Five. In
February 1936 he was transferred to the light cruiser USS Augusta (CL-31) for services first as Engineer Officer, and
later, as First Lieutenant and Damage Control Officer. In August 1937 he reported
as Officer in Charge of Experimental Diving at the Navy Yard, Washington,
D.C. While there, he helped develop a new set of decompression tables and supported
proposals for the use of a helium and oxygen air mixture in deep diving
operations. He also assisted in the successful salvage and rescue of crew
members from the submarine Squalus after
she sank in approximately two hundred and forty feet of water off the Isle of
Shoals in May 1939. For especially creditable and outstanding performance of
duty during this operation, he was commended by the President of the United
States and the Secretary of the Navy. After assuming command of
the cargo ship USS Sirius (AK-15) in September 1939
he remained there until October 1941 when he was detached for duty in the
Fourteenth Naval District, Pearl Harbor, T. H. Momsen remained there in
connection with war operations after the Japanese attack on 7 December 1941,
and in July 1942 was designated as Assistant Chief of Staff and War Plans
Officer, to the Commander Hawaiian Sea Frontier. In February 1943 he reported
as Commander Submarine Squadron Two, and in November of the same year
transferred in like capacity, to Submarine Squadron Four. For his special
contributions to submarine warfare from February 1943 to June 1944, he was
awarded the Navy Cross, the Legion of Merit, and a Gold Star in lieu of a
second Legion of Merit, with Combat "V." The citations follow, in part:
Navy Cross: "For
extraordinary heroism as Commander of a Coordinated Attack Group of
Submarines operating in the enemy Japanese-controlled waters of the East
China Sea. A master of submarine warfare, (he) evolved a doctrine of attack
whereby submarines could be organized into an attack group capable of
operating deep in enemy-controlled waters while maintaining full striking
power...The submarines under his command sank five Japanese ships totaling
over 38,000 tons and damaged eight ships totaling 63,000 tons..." Legion of Merit: "For
exceptionally meritorious conduct...as Commander Submarine Squadron
Two...With unfailing patience and a careful analysis of the faulty
performance of submarine torpedo exploders which resulted in an alarming
number of duds occurring in attacks by submarines of this force, (he)
personally supervised an investigation to determine the weaknesses of the
exploder then in use and, correlating his own ideas with those submitted by
others, succeeded in developing a vastly improved exploder which insured
efficiency of our submarines in subsequent actions. During one experimental
phase of the program when a war shot torpedo fired into a cliff failed to
explode, he unhesitatingly, and at great risk of life, entered the water and
assisted in the recovery of this live torpedo for further
examination..." Gold Star in lieu of Second
Legion of Merit: "For...outstanding services...as Commander Submarine
Squadron Two from February to November 1943, and as Commander Submarine
Squadron Four from November 1943 to May 1944, with additional duty as Chief
of Staff, Commander Training Command, Submarine Forces, United States Pacific
Fleet, from November 1943 to April 1944...(He) was responsible in a large way
for the success of Squadron Two and Four in completing many war patrols in
enemy waters and in sinking many thousands of tons of hostile
shipping..." Between June and December
1944, he had duty in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Navy
Department, and when detached he assumed command of USS South Dakota (BB-57). Under his command, that battleship took
part in operations against Japan, attacking enemy installations in the area
of Tokyo. "For exceptionally meritorious conduct...as Commanding Officer
of USS South Dakota... from December 1944 to August 1945..." he was
awarded a Gold Star in lieu of the Third Legion of Merit, with Combat
"V." The citation states that he "contributed in a large
measure to the infliction of serious damage upon enemy forces and shore
installations, and effectively directed his ship in numerous air actions and
several bombardments of enemy shore defenses including the first Naval
bombardment of the Japanese main island of Honshu." He also received a letter
of commendation from the Commander Fifth Fleet, with authorization to wear
the Commendation Ribbon and Combat "V," for outstanding service
while in command of USS South Dakota during
the support of the assault operations on Okinawa from 14 March to 14 May
1945. When relieved of the
command of South Dakota in July 1945, he was assigned to Headquarters,
Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, at the Navy Department, Washington,
DC, to prepare for the invasion of Japan, scheduled for April 1946. After the
Japanese surrender on 2 September 1945, he was ordered to duty as
Administrator, US Naval Shipping Control Authority for Japanese Merchant
Marine, concerned with repatriation of Japanese civilian and military
personnel. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal by the War
Department, and cited as follows: "(He) performed
exceptionally meritorious and distinguished service in Japan from November
1945 to October 1946. He directed the shipping of the Japanese Civilian
Merchant Marine in repatriating nearly six million people. He provided for
the proficient training of Japanese crews, and resourcefully integrated
United States and Japanese shipping into an effective organization which
insured the safe and expeditious return of millions of displaced persons to
their homes..." On 15 October 1946, he became
Commandant of the Naval Operating Base, Guam, Marianas Islands, continuing to
serve as such until January 1947, when he joined the staff of Commander,
Marianas Islands as Chief of Staff and Aide. After his return to the United
States, he was a member of the General Board, Navy Department, from June 1947
to May 1948, and for three years thereafter served as Assistant Chief of
Naval Operations for Undersea Warfare, Navy Department. On 21 May 1951 he reported
as Commander Submarine Force, Pacific Fleet, in which assignment he served
for two years. On 2 June 1953 he was sent to Boston, Massachusetts to be
Commandant of the First Naval District, with additional duty as Commander
Naval Base, Boston, and Commander Naval Base, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. In April
1945 he was designated Commander Joint Task Force Seven, and continued to
serve as such until relieved of all active duty pending his retirement,
effective 1 September 1955. In addition to the Navy
Cross, the Distinguished Service Medal (Navy), the Distinguished Service
Medal (Army), the Legion of Merit with two Gold Stars and Combat
"V," and the Commendation Ribbon with Combat "V," Vice
Admiral Momsen received the World War I Victory Medal, Escort Clasp; the
American Defense Service Medal, Fleet Clasp; the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign
Medal; the American Campaign Medal; the World War II Victory Medal; Navy
Occupation Service Medal (Asia Clasp); National Defense Service Medal; and
the Philippine Liberation Ribbon with one bronze star. Vice Admiral Momsen was
married on 18 December 1953, to Mrs. Anne I. Schmidt of St. Petersburg,
Florida. He has two children by a former marriage, Commander Charles B.
Momsen, Jr., USN (US Naval Academy Class of 1942); and Mrs. Evelyn Momsen
Hailey. On 1 September 1955 he was
transferred to the Retired List of the US Navy, and was advanced to the rank
of Vice Admiral on the basis of combat awards. After retirement, he served
as a consultant to several corporations including General Dynamics, Raytheon,
and US Rubber.
He is buried in
section 9 / site 5993 at the Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington,
Virginia. |
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USS Momsen (DDG
92): |
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… DDG 92 history
wanted … |
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… and patches … |
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