Robert A. Owens DD827

USS Robert A. Owens

(DD-827)

U.S. Navy      Combatant Ship    Insignia

Navy Medal of Honor: World War II 1941-1945

This individual earned the Navy Medal of Honor during the period specified.  His name is followed by his rank and rate, the date of the action and the vessel or unit on which he served.

U.S. Navy Recipient

OWENS, ROBERT ALLEN (posthumous), Sergeant, U.S. Marine Corps., Cape Torokina, Bougainville, Solomon Islands, on 1

November 1943

 

Robert A. Owens

(DDK-827: dp. 2,420,l. 391', b. 41'; dr. 19', s. 35 k.; cpl. 309; a. 4 3", 8 20mm., 2 dct. 4 dcp., 1 dcp. (hh.), 2 rock. launch., 4 21" tt.;

cl. Carpenter)

Robert A. Owens (DD-827) was laid down 29 October 1945 by the Bath Iron Works Corp., Bath, Maine; launched 15 July 1946;

sponsored by Miss Patricia Hannegan; reclassified DDK-827 on 28 January 1948; and commissioned at Boston 5 November 1949,

Comdr. Rexford V. Wheeler, Jr., in command.

Following shakedown in February 1950, Robert A. Owens, one of the first hunter-killer destroyers so designated, was reclassified

DDE-827 on 4 March 1950. She operated in the western Atlantic and the Caribbean until late 1952 when she deployed to the

Mediterranean. From that time into the 1960's, she operated with the 6th Fleet for 6 months out of every 18. During the remaining

12 months, she conducted antisubmarine patrols off the Atlantic coast and in the Caribbean. In the fall of 1957 she added the

North Sea to her operational area as she joined in NATO exercises.

In the 1960's Robert A. Owens continued to rotate between 2d and 6th Fleets. In November 1960 and February 1962, she assisted

in the recovery operations for Project Mercury space capsules, Mercury 2 and Mercury 6. After the latter, Robert A. Owens

sailed east to join TG Bravo for eastern Atlantic antisubmarine operations. Reclassified DD-827 on 7 August 1962, she was a unit

of the Cuban Quarantine Task Force 136 during October and November. In January and February 1963, she conducted ASW

operations in the Atlantic. March brought another period of patrol off Cuba; and, in April, Robert A. Owens again got underway

for extended deployment. Duty in the Mediterranean, the Red Sea, and the Indian Ocean followed and on 23 December she

entered the Norfolk Naval Shipyard for Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization overhaul.

Completing overhaul on 15 November 1964, Robert A. Owens served as schoolship for the Fleet Sonar School and, after

refresher training at Guantanamo Bay, joined the Recovery Force for Gemini-Titan (GT3) in March 1965 and Gemini-Titan (GT4)

in June. On 27 November, she sailed for an extended deployment to the 6th Fleet and Middle East Force, returning to Fleet Sonar

School ship duty in May 1966. She then operated in the Atlantic until deploying to the Mediterranean during the first 5 months of

1967. The balance of the year was spent in Atlantic operations, schoolship duties, and overhaul which was completed 11 March

1968.

Robert A. Owens then participated in the search for Scorpion 28 May to 13 June, and conducted ASW operations before

deploying to the 6th Fleet from 5 September 1968 to 27 January 1969. She then operated in the Atlantic and Caribbean without an

extended deployment for the balance of that year. Between 1 January 1970 and 31 December 1972, she has alternated two

Mediterranean deployments with normal operations in the Atlantic and Caribbean, out of her home port, Norfolk. The year 1973

has been taken up completely by Atlantic and Caribbean operations, as of January 1974, she is in port at Norfolk. In 1978 to 1980

I was on board, and she was stationed in Pensacola, Florida.

 

Hull #

Name

Type

Owner

Delivered Disposition

310

Robert A. Owens

Carpenter Class

Destroyer (DDK 827)

(Conversion) [1]

USN Redelivered

4 Nov 1949

To Turkey 1987