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Guided Missile Frigate
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FFG 29
- USS Stephen W. Groves
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Type,
Class:
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Guided Missile Frigate; Oliver Hazard Perry - class (long
hull)
planned and built
as FFG 29 |
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Builder:
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STATUS:
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Awarded:
January 23,
1978 Laid
down: September 16,
1980 Launched: April 4, 1981 Commissioned: April 17, 1982 ACTIVE
UNIT / in commission (Atlantic Fleet) |
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Homeport:
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Mayport, Florida, USA
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Namesake:
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Named
after and in honor of Ensign Stephen W. Groves (1917 - 1945) >
see history, below; |
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Ship's
Motto:
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DIRIGO ‘I direct’ |
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Technical Data:
(Measures, Propulsion, Armament, Aviation, etc.)
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see: INFO
> Oliver Hazard Perry - class Guided Missile Frigate |
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ship
images
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Stephen W. Groves |
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Namesake & History: |
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Ensign
Stephen W. Groves (1917 – June 4, 1942): |
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Stephen W. Groves,
a 25 year-old Navy ensign from East Millinocket, Maine, was one of the
American flyers who did not return after the day-long Battle of Midway on
June 4, 1942. Ensign Stephen W. Groves took off nine times from his
carrier on that fateful day and that his was one of six American planes that
fought off a vastly superior Japanese force that was trying to finish off the
damaged carrier YORKTOWN. The small group was credited with shooting
down 14 enemy planes and causing six others to retreat. "He
fearlessly plunged into aerial combat against large formations of enemy
aircraft threatening the American carriers in the Battle of Midway. Contributing
decisively to the disruption of the enemy, he continued determined
counterattacks against desperate odds until, finally overcome by sheer aerial
superiority, he was shot down from the skies. He gallantly gave his
life to the fulfillment of a mission important to the great victory at Midway."
- Ensign Stephen W. Groves posthumously awarded Navy Cross citation. Ensign Groves was
a 1934 graduate of Schenck High School in East Millinocket and received a
mechanical engineering degree from the University of Maine in 1939. He
joined the Navy in December of 1940 and was commissioned in August of
1941. He boarded the carrier USS HORNET in December of that year. The
HORNET began to transport Doolittle's Bombers to Japanese waters in April
1942, setting the stage for the Battle of Midway, considered one of the most
crucial allied victories of the war. Ensign Groves was
the first East Millinocket serviceman to be killed in World War II. Today the
American Legion Post in that town is named the Feeney-Groves Post, partially
in his memory. The Navy didn't forget, either, and the good people of
East Millinocket kept the memory alive during the long interim. Groves' Navy Cross
citation reads: |
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USS
Stephen W. Groves (FFG 29): |
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As of 2006, she
remains active, assigned to Destroyer Squadron 14 and homeported at NS
Mayport, Florida. On August 28, 2005, she sailed from her then home port of
Pascagoula, MS along with sister ship John L. Hall under threat from
Hurricane Katrina. Naval Station Pascagoula is now closed as a result of
Hurricane Katrina. |
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patches |
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