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Morning, 6 November 1941, destroyers Somers and Omaha,
patrolling the mid-Atlantic between South America and Africa, hailed a
merchant ship. The
merchantman was ordered to heave to while Omaha went to General
Quarters and dispatched a boarding party. On
the stern of the merchant ship was the name Willmotto, of Philadelphia;
and she flew the colors of the United States. Just before the boarding
party came alongside the merchant, she hoisted the international flag
signal, "Fox Mike," indicating that she was sinking and in need of
lifeboats to pick up her passengers and crew who were already
abandoning ship.
The detonation of explosions in the ship aroused the suspicions of
the
already wary boarding party. Upon boarding, they soon discovered that
their quarry was the German blockade runner Odenwald. Only one
of the
ship's generators was operating and selected watertight doors were
open. All this clearly indicated that an attempt was being made to
scuttle her. The skill and determination of the American sailors,
however, saved Odenwald and she was brought into San Juan,
P.R., for
disposition. In 1947, the crews of Somers and Omaha were
awarded
salvage money by the United States District Court for Puerto Rico.
The fifth Somers, a destroyer, was laid down on 27 June 1935 by the Federal Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., Kearny, New Jersey; launched on 13 March 1937; co-sponsored by Miss Marie Somers and Miss Suzanne Somers; and commissioned at the New York Navy Yard on 1 December 1937, Comdr. James E. Maher in command. (DD-381: dp. 1,850; l. 381'0"; b. 36'11"; dr. 18'0"; s, 39.0 k. (tl.) ; a. 8 5", 8 1.1", 12 tt.; cl. Somers)
Somers sailed on 11 February 1938 for her shakedown cruise
and visited
a number of ports on the Gulf of Mexico and along the eastern coast of
South America. After some 20 months of peacetime operations with the
Atlantic Fleet, Somers began a new type of assignment in the
fall of
1939. With the outbreak of war in Europe on 1 September, the United
States reacted quickly to protect her rights as a neutral power and
remain outside the newest European imbroglio. Thus, Somers
joined the
Neutrality Patrol ordered by President Roosevelt on 5 September and for
over two years patrolled the western Atlantic.
Throughout 1942, Somers cruised the South Atlantic between
Brazil and
Trinidad, patrolling and escorting convoys to rendezvous points off
Trinidad. On 21 November 1942, Somers had her second encounter
with a
German blockade runner. Early that morning, Cincinnati (CL-6) contacted
an unidentified merchantman. The group changed course to intercept her,
and Somers was dispatched to investigate personally. The
mystery ship
identified herself as the Norwegian merchantship SS Skjilbred, but gave
no further information. Somers closed the suspicious ship and
made
fruitless attempts to communicate with her. When Somers had
closed to
about 1900 yards, fires broke out on Skjilbred's bridge and boats were
lowered. Somers immediately called a boarding party away, but
before
they could reach Skjilbred, three heavy explosions rocked the
merchantman. The boarding party clambered aboard, but the fire and
flooding were beyond control, so they left the stricken ship taking
only some evidence indicating that she was the German merchantman
Anneliese Essberger. At 0711, the blockade runner slipped beneath the
waves, and the survivors were taken on board Milwaukee (CL-5).

In January 1943, Somers left her patrols in the South
Atlantic to
perform a special mission. On the 5th, she got underway from Recife,
Brazil, in company with Memphis (CL-13) and headed for Bathurst,
Gambia. There, Memphis served as flagship for President Roosevelt
during the Casablanca Conference between Churchill and Roosevelt; and
Somers provided screening and escort services for the flagship. Somers
remained at Bathurst from 10 to 27 January 1943; then moved on to
Dakar, Senegal, where she rendezvoused with the task group escorting
the French ships, Richelieu and Montcalm, to the United States. This
task group stood out of Dakar on 30 January 1943 and headed west.
During the evening of 8 February, Somers and Montcalm were
detached
from the main group and headed for Philadelphia. They anchored in
Delaware Bay on the evening of the 10th and moored at Philadelphia the
next day.
On 13 February, the destroyer departed Philadelphia and steamed
independently to Charleston, S.C., for two weeks of availability at the
navy yard. On the 28th, she got underway to return to South Atlantic
patrol duty, this time out of Trinidad, B.W.I. Throughout 1943, Somers
patrolled the South Atlantic for German blockade runners and guarded
the sea lanes from German submarines. She also escorted convoys from
the Caribbean area to Bahia and Recife, in Brazil.
On New Years Day 1944, Somers was steaming independently of
Task Force
41 when she was ordered to intercept a suspicious ship being shadowed
by patrol planes. She made contact with her target in the late evening
hours of 2 January and, in response to the hostile action of that ship,
open fire with her main battery. Her first salvo hit the mark and
forced the crew to abandon ship. The ship, later identified as the
German blockage runner Westerland, did not return fire and was soon
lying dead in the water. Somers opened fire again and after
several
explosions-probably from scuttling charges-Westerland sank. The next
day, Somers picked up survivors, 17 officers and 116 men, and
took them
to Recife.
Somers continued patrolling the South Atlantic through early
February,
then made for Charleston and six weeks at the navy yard for overhaul.
On 2 April, she headed farther north to Casco Bay, Maine, where she
conducted training until 14 May. On that date, she rendezvoused with a
convoy bound for Plymouth, England, arriving there on the 25th. During
the last week in May and the first week in June, England was a hotbed
of rumor and speculation. Somers' crew hoped for an active role
in the
upcoming Normandy invasion, but had to content themselves with the
necessary, but much less exciting, duty of escorting convoys. She
shuttled back and forth across the English Channel, escorting convoys
to the landing beaches and screening amphibious operations until
mid-July. During that time, the excitement had somewhat subsided, but
Axis air raids kept Somers' sailors on their toes.
On 12 July, the destroyer departed Plymouth for North Africa and
arrived at Mers-el-Kebir, Algeria, on 21 July. After some brief
training there, she joined Task Force 86 at Naples, Italy, on the 31st.
She stood out of Naples on 12 August en route to the Sitka assault area
off the lies d'Hyeres on the southern coast of France. Again, she
patrolled and screened for the invasion forces as she had done at
Normandy. On the morning of 15 August, while she was conducting
antisubmarine and antisurface patrol south of Port Cros and the He du
Levant, Somers picked up two ships on her radar screen. She
challenged
them and received no response; however, since they were not threatening
the transport area, she merely tracked them on radar and maintained
position to intercept should they move toward the assault area. At
0440, the unidentified ships came into range, and Somers sent a
second
challenge.
When the intruders failed to respond a second time and they began to
maneuver, Somers unleashed a salvo from her main battery. She
scored a
hit on the first target, later identified as the German corvette
Comascio; but while turning to keep abreast of Comascio's evasive
action, contacted the larerer corvette Escabort. The destroyer
immediately shifted fire to the new target, striking home again on the
first salvo. Escabort flamed from stem to stern as ammunition exploded.
Leaving Escabort in a sinking condition, Somers turned once
again to
Comascio, now fleeing to the southeast. She poured salvo after
salvo into the hopelessly out-gunned German, receiving only two feeble,
small-caliber bursts in return. At 0518, Comascio slowed down and began
to circle to the right. Somers finished her off with four more
salvoes
and moved in at daylight to pick up survivors. Her boarding party
salvaged Comaseio's ensign and some charts just before she sank.

Following this action, the destroyer moved inshore to give fire
support
to the invasion. For two days, she showered enemy strong points south
of He de Port Cros with 5-inch shells. She remained in the Sitka
assault area for another week; then moved to a position seven miles off
the coast and to the east of Marseille. There she continued screening
and relieved Rodman (DD-456) as fire support ship for minesweeping
operations in the vicinity of Port de Bouc. On 22 August, she dueled
with enemy shore batteries for half an hour. She emerged the undisputed
victor, but the enemy gunners gave almost as well as they took. Somers
sustained many shrapnel hits about her decks during the action.
For the next month, the destroyer operated in the Mediterranean,
visiting ports on the southern coast of France; Ajaccio, Corsica; and
Oran, Algeria. She steamed out of Oran on 28 September and arrived in
New York on 8 October. Somers was overhauled at the Brooklyn
Navy Yard
until 8 November; then moved to Casco Bay, Maine, for training. On 23
November, she joined the screen of a Britain-bound convoy for the first
of four transatlantic voyages which closed Somers' combat
service. She
returned to the United States on 12 May 1945 at the end of her last
voyage to the United Kingdom. For the remainder of the war, Somers
operated along the eastern seaboard and, in July, made one summer
cruise to the Caribbean to train midshipmen.
On 4 August 1945, she put into Charleston, S.C., for overhaul and
remained until 11 September. Instead of returning to active duty,
Somers reported to the Commandant, 6th Naval District, for
decommissioning and disposal. She decommissioned at Charleston on 28
October 1945 and was retained there until removed by her purchaser,
Boston Metals of Baltimore, Md., on 16 May 1947. Somers was
struck from
the Navy list on 28 January 1947.
Somers (DD-381) earned two battle stars during World War II.
Sources: Public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
and pictures from my father's 1943 Naval Recognition Manual
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