USS O'Brien

USS O’Brien, DD 415, was built at Boston Navy Yard in the same drydock with Walke. She was commissioned 2 March 1940 and operated in the Atlantic area for nearly two years.

O'Brien torpedoed
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   In January 1942, soon after the United States was brought into World War II, O’Brien was sent to join the Pacific Fleet. She was employed on patrol and convoy escort duties out of Pearl Harbor during March and April, then shifted to Samoa for more than a month of service in the south Pacific before returning to Hawaii. The destroyer began operations in support of the campaign to hold Guadalcanal, in the southern Solomon Islands, in mid-August 1942.
   On 15 September, while serving with a carrier task force in the Guadalcanal area, O’Brien was hit in the extreme bow by a torpedo from the Japanese submarine I-19, only a few minutes after the same submarine had torpedoed the carrier Wasp (CV 7). While the damage appeared modest, the

Captain Jeremiah O'Brien and his five brothers, Gideon, John, William, Dennis and Joseph, were crewmembers of the sloop Unity which captured HMS Margaretta at the entrance to the harbor at Machias, Massachusetts (now Maine), 12 June 1775. Under the command of Jeremiah O'Brien, thirty-one townsmen armed with guns, swords, axes, and pitch forks captured the British armed schooner in an hour-long battle after Margaretta had threatened to bombard the town for interference with the shipment of lumber to British troops in Boston.

shock of the explosion had severely flexed the ship's lightly-constructed hull, much weakening her structure amidships.
   After emergency repairs at Espiritu Santo, New Hebrides, and Nouméa, New Caledonia, she began the long transit back to the United States for permanent restoration, stopping at Suva, Fiji, in mid-October. However, while at sea off Samoa on 19 October 1942, O’Brien’s hull failed amidships. She began to break in two, sinking after her crew had abandoned ship. From her loss, the Navy learned important damage control and repair lessons that proved invaluable during the rest of the Pacific war.


Source: Naval Historical Center including Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.


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