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{{Short description|Wickes-class destroyer}}
{{wikify}}
{{other ships|USS Thatcher}}
{| border="1" align="right" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" width="300"
{{Use American English|date=October 2017}}
|colspan="2"|
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2017}}
|-
{|{{Infobox ship begin}}
!align ="center" style="color: white; height: 30px; background: navy no-repeat scroll top left;"|Career
{{Infobox ship image
!align ="center" style="color: white; height: 30px; background: navy no-repeat scroll top left;"|[[image:usnjack.png|USN Jack]] [[image:rnensign.png|Royal Navy Jack]]
|Ship image=[[File:USS Thatcher (DD-162) underway c1920.jpg|300px|USS Thatcher (DD-162) underway c1920]]
|-
|Ship caption=USS ''Thatcher'' underway, circa 1920
|Ordered:
}}
|
{{Infobox ship career
|-
|Ship country=United States
|Laid down:
|Ship flag={{USN flag|1940}}
|
|Ship name=USS ''Thatcher''
|-
|Ship namesake=[[Henry K. Thatcher]]
|Launched:
|Ship ordered=
|
|Ship builder=[[Fore River Shipyard]], [[Quincy, Massachusetts]]
|-
|Ship laid down=8 June 1918
|Commissioned (USN):
|Ship launched=31 August 1918
|
|Ship acquired=
|-
|Ship commissioned=14 January 1919
|Decommissioned (USN):
|Ship decommissioned=7 June 1922
|
}}
|-
{{Infobox ship career
|Commissioned (RN):
|Hide header=yes
|
|Ship recommissioned=18 December 1939
|-
|Ship decommissioned=24 September 1940
|Decommissioned (RN):
|Ship in service=
|
|Ship out of service=
|-
|Ship struck=8 January 1941
|Fate:
|Ship reinstated=
|
|Ship honors=
|-
|Ship identification=DD-162
|Struck:
|Ship fate=Transferred to United Kingdom, 24 September 1940
|
|Ship notes=
|-
}}
!colspan="2" align="center" style="color: white; height: 30px; background: navy no-repeat scroll top left;"|General Characteristics
{{Infobox ship career
|-
|Hide header=title
|Displacement:
|Ship country=Canada
|1191 tons
|Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Canada|naval-1911}}
|-
|Ship name=HMCS ''Niagara''
|Length:
|Ship namesake=[[Niagara River]]
|314 ft 4 1/2 in
|Ship acquired=24 September 1940
|-
|Ship commissioned=
|Beam:
|Ship decommissioned=27 May 1946
|30 ft 11 1/4 in
|Ship in service=
|-
|Ship out of service=
|Draft:
|Ship struck=
|9 ft 2 in
|Ship reinstated=
|-
|Ship identification=[[Pennant number]]: I57
|Propulsion:
|Ship honours=Atlantic 1940-44
|
|Ship fate=Scrapped 1946
|-
|Ship notes=
|Speed:
}}
|34.9 knots
{{Infobox ship characteristics
|-
|Hide header=
|Complement:
|Header caption=
|122 officers and enlisted
|Ship class={{sclass|Wickes|destroyer}}
|-
|Ship displacement=1,191 tons
|Armament:
|Ship length={{convert|314|ft|4+1/2|in|m|abbr=on}}
|4 4", 2 3", 12 21" tt.
|Ship beam={{convert|30|ft|11+1/4|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship draft={{convert|9|ft|2|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship propulsion=
|Ship speed={{convert|35|kn|abbr=on}}
|Ship range=
|Ship complement=122 officers and enlisted
|Ship sensors=
|Ship EW=
|Ship armament=*4 × [[4"/50 caliber gun|{{convert|4|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}/50]] guns
* 2 × [[3"/23 caliber gun|{{convert|3|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}/23]] guns
* 12 × [[American 21 inch torpedo|21 inch (533 mm)]] [[torpedo tube]]s
|Ship armor=
|Ship notes=
}}
|}
|}
[[File:Hmcs Niagara, Town Class Destroyer, One of the Fifty Destroyers Handed Over by the United States of America in Exchange For the USE of the Bases. 1941, on Board the Destroyer, She Has An Entirely Canadian Crew, Some of W A3292.jpg|thumb|Wardroom of HMCS ''Niagara''.]]
The first '''USS ''Thatcher'' (DD–162)''' was a {{sclass|Wickes|destroyer}} in the [[United States Navy]], later transferred to the [[Royal Canadian Navy]] as '''HMCS ''Niagara'''''.


==Construction and career==
The first '''USS ''Thatcher'' (DD–162)''' was a [[Wickes class destroyer|''Wickes'' class]] [[destroyer]] in the [[United States Navy]], later transferred to the [[Royal Canadian Navy]] as '''HMCS ''Niagara'' (I-57)'''.


==As USS ''Thatcher''==
=== United States Navy===


Named for Admiral [[Henry K. Thatcher]], she was laid down on 8 June 1918 at Quincy, Mass., by the Fore River Plant of the Bethelehem Shipbuilding Corp.; launched on 31 August 1918; sponsored by Miss Doris Bentley, the grandniece of Rear Admiral ''Thatcher''; and commissioned on 14 January 1919, Lt. Comdr. Henry M. Kieffer in temporary command. On 25 January, Lt. Comdr. Francis W. Rockwell—who later commanded the 16th Naval District in the Philippines at the outbreak of World War II in the Pacific—assumed command.
Named for Admiral [[Henry K. Thatcher]], she was [[Keel laying|laid down]] on 8 June 1918 at [[Quincy, Massachusetts]], by the [[Fore River Ship and Engine Company|Fore River Plant]] of the [[Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation]]. The ship was [[Ship naming and launching|launched]] on 31 August 1918; sponsored by Miss Doris Bentley, the grandniece of Rear Admiral Thatcher. ''Thatcher'' was [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] on 14 January 1919. On 25 January, [[Lieutenant Commander (United States)|Lieutenant Commander]] [[Francis W. Rockwell (admiral)|Francis W. Rockwell]] assumed command.


Following shakedown, ''Thatcher'' operated with the Atlantic Fleet into the autumn of 1919. During the transatlantic NC-boat flights in May 1919, the destroyer operated on picket station number 9—one of 21 stations strung out from Newfoundland to the Azores—between her sister ships Walker (Destroyer No. 163) and Crosby (Destroyer No. 164). Underway at sea, she provided visual and radio bearings for the flying boats as they passed overhead on their way toward Lisbon, Portugal.
Following shakedown, ''Thatcher'' operated with the [[U.S. Atlantic Fleet|Atlantic Fleet]] into the autumn of 1919. During the transatlantic [[NC-4|NC-boat]] flights in May 1919, the destroyer operated on picket station number 9—one of 21 stations strung out from [[Dominion of Newfoundland|Newfoundland]] to the [[Azores]]—between her [[sister ship]]s {{USS|Walker|DD-163|2}} and {{USS|Crosby|DD-164|2}}. Underway at sea, she provided visual and radio bearings for the flying boats as they passed overhead on their way toward [[Lisbon]], Portugal.


Upon completion of this duty, the destroyer—reclassified as DD-162 on 17 July 1920—resumed her routine training operations off the eastern seaboard before heading west in the autumn of 1921 to join the Pacific Fleet. She operated out of San Diego, conducting exercises and training cruises off the west coast until decommissioned at San Diego on 7 June 1922.
Upon completion of this duty, the destroyer—reclassified as DD-162 on 17 July 1920—resumed her routine training operations off the eastern seaboard before heading west in the autumn of 1921 to join the [[U.S. Pacific Fleet|Pacific Fleet]]. She operated out of [[San Diego]], conducting exercises and training cruises off the west coast until decommissioned at San Diego on 7 June 1922.


''Thatcher'' remained laid-up at San Diego through the summer of 1939. War broke out in Europe on 1 September 1939, when German troops invaded Poland. ''Thatcher'' was recommissioned at San Diego on 18 December 1939, Lt. Comdr. Henry E. Richter in command, and conducted shakedown and training evolutions off the west coast until transferred to the Atlantic the following spring. Transiting the Panama Canal on 1 April 1940, a month before the situation in Europe became critical when Germany began her blitzkrieg against France and the Low Countries, ''Thatcher'' subsequently conducted neutrality patrols and training cruises off the east coast and in the Gulf of Mexico through the summer of 1940.
''Thatcher'' remained laid-up at San Diego through the summer of 1939. War broke out in Europe on 1 September 1939, when German troops invaded [[Poland]]. ''Thatcher'' was recommissioned at San Diego on 18 December 1939 and conducted shakedown and training evolutions off the west coast until transferred to the Atlantic the following spring. Transiting the [[Panama Canal]] on 1 April 1940, a month before the situation in Europe became critical when Germany began her blitzkrieg against France and the [[Low Countries]], ''Thatcher'' subsequently conducted [[Neutrality Patrol|neutrality patrols]] and training cruises off the east coast and in the [[Gulf of Mexico]] through the summer of 1940.


The European situation took a drastic turn with the fall of France in June 1940. British destroyer forces in the wake of the disastrous Norwegian campaign and the evacuation of Dunkirk found themselves thinly spread—especially after Italy entered the war on Germany's side. Prime Minister Winston Churchill appealed to the United States for help.
The European situation took a drastic turn with the fall of France in June 1940. British destroyer forces in the wake of the Norwegian campaign and the evacuation of [[Battle of Dunkirk|Dunkirk]] found themselves thinly spread—especially after Italy entered the war on Germany's side. Prime Minister [[Winston Churchill]] appealed to the United States for help.


In response, Roosevelt issued an executive order authorizing the transfer of 50 "over age" destroyers to the British in return for 99-year leases on strategic base sites in the western hemisphere. ''Thatcher'' was accordingly withdrawn from the Atlantic Squadron and her operations with Destroyer Division 69 for transfer to the Royal Canadian Navy, which had been allocated six of the "50 ships that saved the world," as these vessels came to be known.
In response, [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] issued an executive order authorizing the transfer of 50 over-aged destroyers to the British in [[Destroyers for Bases Agreement|return for 99-year leases]] on strategic base sites in the [[Western Hemisphere]]. ''Thatcher'' was accordingly withdrawn from the [[Atlantic Squadron]] and her operations with Destroyer Division 69 for transfer to the Royal Canadian Navy, which had been allocated six of the "50 ships that saved the world," as these vessels came to be known.


As such, ''Thatcher'' and her five sisters arrived at Halifax, Nova Scotia, on 20 September—the third group of the "flush deckers" transferred. Decommissioned on 24 September 1940, ''Thatcher'' was struck from the Navy list on 8 January 1941.
As such, ''Thatcher'' and her five sisters arrived at [[City of Halifax|Halifax, Nova Scotia]], on 20 September—the third group of the "flush deckers" transferred. [[Ship decommissioning|Decommissioned]] on 24 September 1940, ''Thatcher'' was struck from the Navy list on 8 January 1941.


===Royal Canadian Navy===
See [[USS Thatcher|USS ''Thatcher'']] for other ships of this name.


Renamed '''HMCS ''Niagara''''' following the Canadian practice of naming destroyers after Canadian rivers (but with deference to the U.S. origin), after the [[Niagara River]] forming the border between New York and [[Ontario]].<ref>Milner 1985 p.23</ref> ''Niagara'' departed Halifax on 30 November; proceeded eastward via [[St. John's, Newfoundland]]; and arrived in the [[British Isles]] on 11 December. Early in 1941, the destroyer was allocated to the 4th Escort Group, Western Approaches Command, and based at [[Greenock]], Scotland. Subsequently transferred to the Newfoundland escort force, ''Niagara'' operated on convoy escort duties into the summer of 1941. While she was operating with this force, she took part in the capture of a German [[U-boat]], ''[[HMS Graph (P715)|U-570]]''.
==As HMCS ''Niagara''==


A [[Lockheed Hudson]] bomber, flying from [[Kaldaðarnes]], {{convert|30|mi|km}} southeast of [[Reykjavík]], [[Iceland]], located ''U-570'' running on the surface off the Icelandic coast on 27 August 1941. The Hudson attacked the U-boat with [[depth charge]]s, damaging the enemy craft so severely that she could not submerge. Soon, some of the German crew appeared on deck displaying a large white cloth — possibly a bed sheet — indicating that they had surrendered. Patently unable to capture the submarine herself, the Hudson radioed for help.
Renamed HMCS ''Niagara'' (I-57), the destroyer departed Halifax on 30 November; proceeded eastward via St. John's, Newfoundland; and arrived in the British Isles on 11 December. Early in 1941, the destroyer was allocated to the 4th Escort Group, Western Approaches Command, and based at Greenock, Scotland. Subsequently transferred to the Newfoundland escort force, ''Niagara'' operated on convoy escort duties into the summer of 1941. While she was operating with this force, she took part in the capture of a German U-boat, U-570.


''Niagara'' sped to the scene and arrived at 08:20 on 28 August 1941. Rough weather initially hampered the operation but eventually, by 18:00, ''Niagara'' had placed a prize crew aboard the submarine and had taken ''U-570'' in tow. During the operation, she also took the 43-man crew of the enemy craft on board. Towed to [[Þorlákshöfn]], Iceland, the U-boat eventually served in the Royal Navy as {{HMS|Graph|P715|6}}.
A Lockheed "Hudson" bomber, flying from Kaldadharnes, 30 miles southeast of Rekyavik, Iceland, located U-570 running on the surface off the Icelandic coast on 27 August 1941. The "Hudson" attacked the U-boat with depth charges, damaging the enemy craft so severely that she could not submerge. Soon, some of the German crew appeared on deck displaying a large white cloth—possibly a bed sheet—indicating that they had surrendered. Patently unable to capture the submarine herself, the Hudson radioed for help.


In January 1942, ''Niagara'' escorted the tempest-battered Danish merchantman ''Triton'' into [[Belfast]], [[Northern Ireland]], after the freighter had been severely mauled in a storm at sea. In March the destroyer rescued the survivors from the US merchantman SS ''Independence Hall'', which had run aground off [[Sable Island]], Nova Scotia, and had broken in half. The next month, she picked up two boatloads of survivors from the sunken steamer SS ''Rio Blanco'', which had been torpedoed by {{GS|U-160|1941|2}} on 1 April 1942, {{convert|40|nmi|km}} east of [[Cape Hatteras, North Carolina]].
''Niagara'' sped to the scene and arrived at 0820 on 28 August. Rough weather initially hampered the operation but eventually, by 1800, ''Niagara'' had placed a prize crew aboard the submarine and had taken U-570 in tow. During the operation, she also took the 43-man crew of the enemy craft on board. Towed to Thorlak-shafn, Iceland, the U-boat eventually served in the Royal Navy as HMS Graph.


The destroyer subsequently underwent boiler repairs at [[Pictou, Nova Scotia]] from May to August 1942 before resuming coastwise convoy operations between Halifax and New York and escort duty in the western Atlantic. Another refit at Pictou came in June and October 1943, before she continued her coastwise convoy escort missions through 1944.
In January 1942, ''Niagara'' escorted the tempest-battered Danish merchantman Triton into Belfast, Northern Ireland, after the freighter had been severely mauled in a storm at sea. In March the destroyer rescued the survivors from the American merchantman SS Independence Hall, which had run aground off Sable Island, Nova Scotia, and had broken in half. The next month, she picked up two boatloads of survivors from the sunken steamer SS Rio Blanco, which had been torpedoed by U-160 on 1 April, 40 miles east of Cape Hatteras, N.C.


''Niagara'' became a torpedo-firing ship — first at Halifax and later at [[Saint John, New Brunswick]] — from the spring of 1945 until the end of World War II in mid-August 1945, training torpedomen. Decommissioned on 15 September 1945, ''Niagara'' was turned over to the [[War Assets Corporation]] on 27 May 1946 and broken up for scrap soon thereafter.
The destroyer subsequently underwent boiler repairs at Pictou from May to August 1942 before resuming coastwise convoy operations between Halifax and New York and escort duty in the western Atlantic. Another refit at Pictou came in June and October 1943, before she continued her coastwise convoy escort missions through 1944.


==Notes==
''Niagara'' became a torpedo-firing ship—first at Halifax and later at St. John, New Brunswick—from the spring of 1945 until the end of World War II in mid-August 1945, training torpedomen. Decommissioned on 15 September 1945, ''Niagara'' was turned over to the War Assets Corp. on 27 May 1946 and ultimately broken up for scrap soon thereafter.
{{reflist}}


==References==
* {{cite book| title=North Atlantic Run |author=Milner, Marc |publisher=Naval Institute Press |year=1985 |isbn=0-87021-450-0}}
*{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/t/thatcher-i.html}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/162.htm NavSource Photos]
*[http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/162.htm NavSource.org DD-162]


{{Wickes-class destroyer}}
{{Town class destroyers}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Thatcher (DD-162)}}
{{DANFS}}
[[Category:Ships of the Royal Canadian Navy]]

{{Wickes class destroyer}}
[[Category:Wickes-class destroyers]]
[[Category:Ships built in Quincy, Massachusetts]]

[[Category:Wickes class destroyers|Thatcher]]
[[Category:1918 ships]]
[[Category:Town-class destroyers converted from Wickes-class destroyers]]

Latest revision as of 16:17, 23 September 2024

USS Thatcher (DD-162) underway c1920
USS Thatcher underway, circa 1920
History
United States
NameUSS Thatcher
NamesakeHenry K. Thatcher
BuilderFore River Shipyard, Quincy, Massachusetts
Laid down8 June 1918
Launched31 August 1918
Commissioned14 January 1919
Decommissioned7 June 1922
Recommissioned18 December 1939
Decommissioned24 September 1940
Stricken8 January 1941
IdentificationDD-162
FateTransferred to United Kingdom, 24 September 1940
Canada
NameHMCS Niagara
NamesakeNiagara River
Acquired24 September 1940
Decommissioned27 May 1946
IdentificationPennant number: I57
Honours and
awards
Atlantic 1940-44
FateScrapped 1946
General characteristics
Class and typeWickes-class destroyer
Displacement1,191 tons
Length314 ft 4+12 in (95.822 m)
Beam30 ft 11+14 in (9.430 m)
Draft9 ft 2 in (2.79 m)
Speed35 kn (65 km/h; 40 mph)
Complement122 officers and enlisted
Armament
Wardroom of HMCS Niagara.

The first USS Thatcher (DD–162) was a Wickes-class destroyer in the United States Navy, later transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy as HMCS Niagara.

Construction and career

[edit]

United States Navy

[edit]

Named for Admiral Henry K. Thatcher, she was laid down on 8 June 1918 at Quincy, Massachusetts, by the Fore River Plant of the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation. The ship was launched on 31 August 1918; sponsored by Miss Doris Bentley, the grandniece of Rear Admiral Thatcher. Thatcher was commissioned on 14 January 1919. On 25 January, Lieutenant Commander Francis W. Rockwell assumed command.

Following shakedown, Thatcher operated with the Atlantic Fleet into the autumn of 1919. During the transatlantic NC-boat flights in May 1919, the destroyer operated on picket station number 9—one of 21 stations strung out from Newfoundland to the Azores—between her sister ships Walker and Crosby. Underway at sea, she provided visual and radio bearings for the flying boats as they passed overhead on their way toward Lisbon, Portugal.

Upon completion of this duty, the destroyer—reclassified as DD-162 on 17 July 1920—resumed her routine training operations off the eastern seaboard before heading west in the autumn of 1921 to join the Pacific Fleet. She operated out of San Diego, conducting exercises and training cruises off the west coast until decommissioned at San Diego on 7 June 1922.

Thatcher remained laid-up at San Diego through the summer of 1939. War broke out in Europe on 1 September 1939, when German troops invaded Poland. Thatcher was recommissioned at San Diego on 18 December 1939 and conducted shakedown and training evolutions off the west coast until transferred to the Atlantic the following spring. Transiting the Panama Canal on 1 April 1940, a month before the situation in Europe became critical when Germany began her blitzkrieg against France and the Low Countries, Thatcher subsequently conducted neutrality patrols and training cruises off the east coast and in the Gulf of Mexico through the summer of 1940.

The European situation took a drastic turn with the fall of France in June 1940. British destroyer forces in the wake of the Norwegian campaign and the evacuation of Dunkirk found themselves thinly spread—especially after Italy entered the war on Germany's side. Prime Minister Winston Churchill appealed to the United States for help.

In response, Franklin D. Roosevelt issued an executive order authorizing the transfer of 50 over-aged destroyers to the British in return for 99-year leases on strategic base sites in the Western Hemisphere. Thatcher was accordingly withdrawn from the Atlantic Squadron and her operations with Destroyer Division 69 for transfer to the Royal Canadian Navy, which had been allocated six of the "50 ships that saved the world," as these vessels came to be known.

As such, Thatcher and her five sisters arrived at Halifax, Nova Scotia, on 20 September—the third group of the "flush deckers" transferred. Decommissioned on 24 September 1940, Thatcher was struck from the Navy list on 8 January 1941.

Royal Canadian Navy

[edit]

Renamed HMCS Niagara following the Canadian practice of naming destroyers after Canadian rivers (but with deference to the U.S. origin), after the Niagara River forming the border between New York and Ontario.[1] Niagara departed Halifax on 30 November; proceeded eastward via St. John's, Newfoundland; and arrived in the British Isles on 11 December. Early in 1941, the destroyer was allocated to the 4th Escort Group, Western Approaches Command, and based at Greenock, Scotland. Subsequently transferred to the Newfoundland escort force, Niagara operated on convoy escort duties into the summer of 1941. While she was operating with this force, she took part in the capture of a German U-boat, U-570.

A Lockheed Hudson bomber, flying from Kaldaðarnes, 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Reykjavík, Iceland, located U-570 running on the surface off the Icelandic coast on 27 August 1941. The Hudson attacked the U-boat with depth charges, damaging the enemy craft so severely that she could not submerge. Soon, some of the German crew appeared on deck displaying a large white cloth — possibly a bed sheet — indicating that they had surrendered. Patently unable to capture the submarine herself, the Hudson radioed for help.

Niagara sped to the scene and arrived at 08:20 on 28 August 1941. Rough weather initially hampered the operation but eventually, by 18:00, Niagara had placed a prize crew aboard the submarine and had taken U-570 in tow. During the operation, she also took the 43-man crew of the enemy craft on board. Towed to Þorlákshöfn, Iceland, the U-boat eventually served in the Royal Navy as HMS Graph.

In January 1942, Niagara escorted the tempest-battered Danish merchantman Triton into Belfast, Northern Ireland, after the freighter had been severely mauled in a storm at sea. In March the destroyer rescued the survivors from the US merchantman SS Independence Hall, which had run aground off Sable Island, Nova Scotia, and had broken in half. The next month, she picked up two boatloads of survivors from the sunken steamer SS Rio Blanco, which had been torpedoed by U-160 on 1 April 1942, 40 nautical miles (74 km) east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.

The destroyer subsequently underwent boiler repairs at Pictou, Nova Scotia from May to August 1942 before resuming coastwise convoy operations between Halifax and New York and escort duty in the western Atlantic. Another refit at Pictou came in June and October 1943, before she continued her coastwise convoy escort missions through 1944.

Niagara became a torpedo-firing ship — first at Halifax and later at Saint John, New Brunswick — from the spring of 1945 until the end of World War II in mid-August 1945, training torpedomen. Decommissioned on 15 September 1945, Niagara was turned over to the War Assets Corporation on 27 May 1946 and broken up for scrap soon thereafter.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Milner 1985 p.23

References

[edit]
  • Milner, Marc (1985). North Atlantic Run. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-450-0.
  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.
[edit]