This bill
requires the Department of Defense to authorize inclusion on the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial Wall in the District of Columbia of the names of the 74 crew
members of the USS Frank E. Evans killed on June 3, 1969.
According to
the US Navy Awards file, Frank E. Evans served in the waters off Vietnam for 12
days from July to September 1965. Evans was again in the vicinity of Vietnam
for 61 days from August to November 1966. Evans returned to Vietnam and served
there for 66 days from October 1967 to 20 February 1968. During the Tet
Offensive, on 3 February 1968, Frank E. Evans provided naval gunfire support to
the 101st Airborne Division near Phan Thiết against the 840th VC Battalion. Evans also spent an additional 14 days in 1969 in the Vietnam war zone.
Collision with
HMAS Melbourne
USS Frank E.
Evans post collision
At around
3:00 a.m. on 3 June 1969, between Vietnam and Spratly Island, Frank E. Evans
was operating with the Royal Navy, Royal Australian Navy and Royal New Zealand
Navy in company with the aircraft carrier Melbourne which was in the process of
going to flying stations and all ships in the formation were running without
lights. Melbourne radioed Evans, then to port of the carrier, to take up the
rescue destroyer position. The logical movement would be to turn to port and
make a circle taking up station on the carrier's port quarter. However, since
the conning officer on Evans misunderstood the formation's base course and
believed they were starboard of Melbourne, they turned to starboard, cutting
across the carrier's bow twice in the process. Frank E. Evans was struck at a
point around 92 feet from her bow on her port side and was cut in two. Her bow
drifted off to the port side of Melbourne and sank in less than five minutes
taking 73 of her crew with it. One body was recovered from the water, making a
total of 74 dead. The stern scraped along the starboard side of Melbourne and
lines were able to be attached by the crew of Melbourne. Around 60–100 men were
also rescued from the water.
KEEP READING
KEEP READING
No comments:
Post a Comment