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More Turner Joy History as forwarded by:
VADM Edward S. Briggs, USN Retired
(The Ship's 5th Captain)
Admiral Chester W. Nimitz once said: "Of all the
tools the Navy will employ to control the seas, in any future war, the most
useful of the small types of combatant ships -- the destroyer -- will be sure
to be there. It's appearance may be altered ... but no type, not even the
carrier or the submarine, has such an assured place in future Navies."
USS Turner Joy (DD-951) is just
such a destroyer, a general purpose ship of the line, named in honor of the
late Vice Admiral Charles Turner Joy whose distinguished career by every
measure marked him a naval leader. A "fast ship" in the John Paul Jones
tradition, at 3,900 tons she was capable of a broad range of combat operations.
Her weapons array of torpedoes, 3" - 50 and 5" - 54 naval guns, search and
detection radars, sonar, fire control systems, and electronic suites enabled
mission assignments including anti-air as well as anti-surface and
anti-submarine warfare, battle force screening, intelligence gathering,
long-range shore bombardment, and naval gunfire support of land troops.
Indeed, her most unique and
extensive naval employment came during the Vietnam conflict when, assigned to
the U.S. Seventh Fleet in the western Pacific Ocean, Turner Joy continually
engaged from coastal waters tactical targets ashore and close-in enemy maritime
logistic support traffic. Her three 5" - 54 dual purpose naval guns, capable of
extended ranges to 12 miles, suited her well for such assignments. At
decommissioning in late 1982 the Commander-in-Chief U.S. Pacific Fleet summed
up her service: "USS Turner Joy has played a significant role in the success
story of the U.S. Pacific Fleet. A veteran of many deployments -- both in war
and peace -- Turner Joy will long be remembered for her heroic actions off the
coast of Vietnam. She was there in the beginning when she sank two attacking
North Vietnamese torpedo boats ... and in the closing chapter ... is reported
to have fired the Navy's last round in the Vietnam conflict."
USS Turner Joy was built by Puget
Sound Bridge and Dredging Company, Seattle, Washington. Christened by Mrs. C.
Turner Joy, May 5, 1958 and placed in commission August 3, 1959, the ship
became an active unit of First, Third and Seventh Fleet Task Forces, conducting
training exercises and executing tasks associated with the forward deployment
and presence of both carrier and surface battle groups in the Western Pacific.
During the period 1960-1964 she won both Commander Cruiser-Destroyer Force and
Flotilla Battle Efficiency awards for excellence in performance and deployed
three times to western Pacific waters.

Midway through the third
deployment in 1964 Turner Joy joined the Ticonderoga (CVA-14) carrier task
group, part of Fast Carrier Striking Force, Seventh Fleet (TF-77) operating in
the South China Sea approaches to the Gulf of Tonkin. She and US Maddox
(DD-731) found themselves on "watchdog" patrols in international waters
southwest of the Communist Chinese island of Hainan and along the coast of
South and North Vietnam. Such reconnaissance patrols were common practice in
troubled times, conducted for the purposes of observing naval activity,
assisting South Vietnam naval patrol intercepts of enemy infiltration attempts,
and in gathering necessary intelligence on North Vietnamese forces. On August
2, 1964, Maddox was attacked in international waters by North Vietnamese
torpedo boats. Maddox sank or damaged two of the Russian-built PT boats; a
third and fourth suffered similar fates at the hands of jet fighter aircraft
from Ticonderoga. Turner Joy joined Maddox after that sea engagement concluded,
and the two ship unit remained on patrol in the Gulf. On the evening of August
4, 1964, after earlier indications of impending attack, the two-ship patrol
unit was again engaged by as many as six North Vietnamese PT boats in a
prolonged sea battle lasting more than two hours. The enemy reportedly fired
torpedoes and their rapid-fire guns in a series of attacks against both ships.
Once again jet fighter and attack aircraft of the carrier task group joined the
fight and coordinated their efforts with those defensive measures of the two
ships. In the end, two PT boats were believed sunk and two badly damaged.
Maddox and Turner Joy gave a good account of themselves.
It was, then, the beginning of a
period of distinguished combat service for the Turner Joy. Over the next
eight-plus years of the Vietnam war she earned nine separate battle stars on
her Vietnam Service Medal. Including the "Gulf of Tonkin incident", she
deployed to the Vietnam war zone during a part of each year from 1964 through
1973. Her principal tasks in each of those deployments were long-range shore
bombardment and naval gunfire support during long periods of Task Group 70.8
"gunline" operations off the coast of South Vietnam. These tasks included
destruction of fixed elements of Viet Cong infrastructure, logistic targets of
opportunity, enemy troop and weapons concentrations, close support of friendly
troops, and night harassing fire. When assigned to "Sea Dragon" operations
under Task Force 77, primary tasks included shore bombardment against North
Vietnamese strategic targets, maritime logistic traffic, and counterbattery
fire against coastal artillery and air defense batteries located proximate to
the coastline.
Some examples illustrative of
these missions help tell the story. In 1965, Turner Joy conducted the first
ever naval gunfire support mission of South Vietnam's west coast, while
operating in the Gulf of Thailand. During some 100 missions of the 1966/67
deployment the ship fired over 9,000 rounds of 5"/54 and 3" 50 ammunition at
targets located in both South and North Vietnam. During Sea Dragon operations
the ship received counterbattery fire from coastal defense batteries, suffering
minor damage to the superstructure and several spaces below the main deck. In
the six months of Gulf of Tonkin operations during 1968, Turner Joy expended
nearly 24,000 rounds of 5" and 3" gun ammunition during some 200 assigned
missions accomplishing a variety of tasks in both South and North Vietnam.
Regunned in 1972 with the first
5"/54 Mod 10 mounts in the Pacific Fleet, Turner Joy was there at the end of
the Vietnam conflict. During the last month of the war, the ship fired over
10,000 rounds from the new rapid fire mounts supporting the combined military
effort in South Vietnam at the DMZ and conducting Sea Dragon naval gunfire
strike operations against enemy targets and shore batteries in North Vietnam.
Turner Joy fired the last naval gunfire against opposing forces as the
ceasefire began on January 27, 1973.
She steamed on as part of the
Seventh Fleet for two additional deployments during the years 1974-1976,
participating in a succession of fleet operations and exercises as well as
combined operations from the Sea of Japan to the Tasman Sea, into the Indian
Ocean and Persian Gulf. Even as the newer, more capable Sprunce class
destroyers entered the fleet in 1975, Turner Joy remained a Battle Group
mainstay in both Third and Seventh Fleets.

During the years 1977-1979 the
ship underwent extensive overhaul and repair to rehabilitate primarily the 1200
lb steam propulsion system. In 1980 she was once again an active element of
both Fleets of the Pacific, exercising in joint and combined operations from
California waters to the South China Sea. In 1982 the Navy decided to
decommission the Forrest Sherman class ships. It marked the end of an era --
the end of the sleek "gunships" that performed so well in open ocean combat as
well as providing naval gunfire support and long-range bombardment in the war
years. In November 1982 her commissioning pennant was hauled down. She had
earned her place in history, and performed with distinction. During her 23
years of service she earned the Navy Unit Commendation, three Battle Efficiency
"E's", numerous Force and Flotilla departmental awards, and the respect of
those who served her so well -- the destroyermen who made her heart beat in the
face of wartime challenges and peacetime naval operations in the troubled
waters of the world.
And she lives on, as the Flagship
of the Bremerton Historic Ships Association, and a permanent educational Navy
memorial. She honors now not only the men and women of our modern U.S. Navy,
but also recognizes the accomplishments of those who help to build and maintain
the Navy's ships as well. She took her place in the long line of destroyers
characterized by Admiral Nimitz -- from Bambridge (DD-1) in 1902 to Arleigh
Burke (DDG-51) in 1991. Turner Joy (DD-951) was sure to be there when called
upon to serve.
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