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The eighteen destroyers of the Mahan class were fairly small (341
feet) ships with tall twin stacks, and five 5-inch guns. After three
years of ar, she was lost
to a kamikaze attack off Leyte on December 7, 1944.
The
second Mahan (DD‑364) was laid down by United Dry Docks,
Inc.,
Staten Island, N.Y., 12 June 1934; launched 15 October 1935; sponsored
by Miss Kathleen H. Mahan, great‑granddaughter of Rear Adm. A. T.
Mahan; and commissioned 18 September 1936, Comdr. J. B. Waller in
command.
(DD‑364: displaced 1,450 tons; length 341'4"; beam 34'8"; draft 9'8";
crew 204; guns 5 5", 12 21" torpedo tubes; cl. Mahan)
Combining initial training operations with a good will tour, Mahan
departed New York 16 November 1936 for a 2‑month cruise to Caribbean
and South American ports. She returned in January 1937 and operated
along the east coast until July, when she sailed for the Pacific.
Arriving on the west coast in mid‑August, she participated in fleet
training operations off the southern California coast before proceeding
to her new station at Pearl Harbor. Until December 1941, periodic
visits to the west coast and a cruise to the Caribbean for fleet
problems in February 1939 varied a busy schedule of training exercises
and patrols in Hawaiian waters.
On patrol 7 December 1941, Mahan, with TF 12, was ordered to
set course
for the Japanese forces, thought to be headed for Jaluit from a
position 200 miles south of Pearl Harbor, and “intercept and destroy.”
Unable to locate the enemy, Mahan returned to Pearl Harbor on
the 12th.
In late December she carried reinforcements to the marine detachment at
Johnston Island and evacuated the civilians to Hawaii. Mahan
then
conducted screening activities for inter‑island and transoceanic
convoys until 24 February, when she was assigned to a patrol station
off Canton Island. Departing Canton Island 24 March, she returned to
Hawaii thence proceeded to the west coast for overhaul. She next
conducted patrols in Hawaiian and west coast waters until departing for
the South Pacific 16 October 1942. En route on the 22d, with Lamson,
she conducted a raid on Japanese patrol boats south of the Gilbert
Islands, sinking two. Steaming with TF 61 north of the Santa Cruz
Islands by the 27th, she was attacked by Japanese aircraft and splashed
four. That same day, following her fine performance in the Battle of
the Santa Cruz Islands, Mahan collided with South Dakota.
Damage to
both ships was severe. Following temporary repairs at Noumea, New
Caledonia, Mahan proceeded to Pearl Harbor where has was
quickly given
a new bow.

Mahan returned to the South Pacific 9 January 1943 and
escorted convoys
between the New Hebrides, New Caledonia, and the Fiji Islands before
establishing a patrol off New Caledonia in March. Resuming escort
duties in April, she made one trip to Guadalcanal and back and then
commenced operations in Australian waters. Moving to New Guinea, she
began basing at Milne Bay 2 July. Continuously in action for the next 3
months, she participated in the landings at Nassau Bay 9 August; the
bombardment of Finschhafen on the 22d and 23d; the preparations and
covering force actions for the landings at Lae, 4 to 8 September; and
the landing of Australian troops at Finschhafen on the 22d, when her
well‑served guns splashed three enemy planes.
Through October and November, she operated out of Buna, patrolling
around New Guinea. In December, Mahan bombarded Japanese
installations
in New Britain and on the 26th provided effective fire support for the
landings at Cape Gloucester on that island. Shore bombardment of Gali,
New Guinea, a short stay in Sydney, Australia, and escort duties
between New Guinea and New Britain followed. On 28 February 1944,
before commencing convoy activities in the Admiralties, she turned her
guns on Los Negros Island.
After more than 2 busy years in the war zone, in the spring of 1944 the
veteran destroyer proceeded to San Francisco for overhaul. Early in
July she returned to Pearl Harbor and participated in exercises there
until 15 August. Steaming via Eniwetok, Jaluit, Guam, Saipan, and
Ulithi, Mahan returned to New Guinea 20 October. She then
escorted
convoys between Hollandia and Leyte until taking up antisubmarine
patrol duties off Leyte at the end of November.

On 7 December, while patrolling between Leyte and Ponson Island, the
destroyer was attacked by a swarm of Japanese aircraft. In the ensuing
engagement, she shot down three of the attacking planes but three of
the remainder crashed into her. The resultant fires soon spread out of
control to the ship’s magazines. The ship was abandoned and the
survivors picked up by nearby vessels. An hour later Walke sank Mahan
by gunfire and torpedoes.
Mahan received five battle stars for World War II service.
Sources: Public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
and pictures from my father's 1943 Naval Recognition Manual
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