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USS Muir, 1945

 Series

Scope and Content Note

The series contains two logbooks and a roll of fathometer data from a cruise on the USS Muir in November and December 1945.

Dates

  • 1945

Access

Open: materials are available for research.

Historical Note

Muir (DE-770) was laid down by Tampa Shipbuilding Co., Tampa, Fla., 1 June 1943; launched 4 June 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Witten H. McConnochie, sister of the late Lieutenant (jg.) Kenneth Hart Muir; and commissioned 30 August 1944, Lt. Comdr. Theodore A. O’Gorman, USNR, in command.

Following shakedown off Bermuda, British West Indies, Muir operated as schoolship in the Chesapeake Bay. She also served as part of a “Killer Group,” TG 22.13, so called because the primary duty was to hunt and destroy enemy submarines. Towards the end of the European war, Muir operated with TF 63 which stymied the German U-boats’ final thrust against Allied shipping in the North Atlantic.

When the news of Germany’s surrender was received 8 May 1945, Muir and her group began locating German submarines to accept their surrender. On 17 May Muir joined Sutton (DE-771) in escorting under guard publicized U-234, with high-ranking Luftwaffe officers and men German civilian technicians on board, to Portsmouth, N.H., arriving 2 days later. From 14 June Muir operated off Mayport, Fla., with Guadalcanal (CVE-60), training carrier pilots for Pacific duty until Japan surrendered in mid-August. On 27 August she departed Mayport for Charleston Navy Yard, Charleston, S.C., arriving a day later.

After visiting Houston, Tex., for Navy Day, 27 October, she devoted November and December to a cruise testing “SOFAR,” a new long-range, air-sea rescue method. She traveled 7,500 miles in the Atlantic dropping bombs for naval ships in the Bahamas to pick up the sound waves and plot the position of the DE as far away as Dakar, French West Africa (now Senegal).

In March 1946 Muir reactivated and was assigned to the Operational Development Force, with Norfolk, Va., as her homeport, for service into late 1947. In September 1947 she decommissioned and entered the Atlantic Reserve Fleet at Green Cove Spring until 2 February 1956 when she was delivered on loan under the Military Assistance Program to the Republic of Korea at Boston Naval Shipyard. Struck from the Navy list 1 July 1960, she continues into 1969 to serve the South Korean Navy on loan as Kyong-ki (DE-71).

[Taken from the entry on Muir in the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.]

Extent

3 items

Language

From the Collection: English

From the Collection: English

Arrangement

Arranged chronologically.

Repository Details

Part of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Data Library and Archives Repository

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