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Pruitt (DD-347)

(DD-347: dp. 1,190; l. 314-5-; b. 31-8-; dr. 9-3-; s. 30 k.; cpl. 195; a. 4 4-, 1 3-, 12 21- tt.; cl. Clemson)

John H. Pruitt was born in Fadeville, Arkansas, 4 October 1896. A corporal in the Marine Corps, he attacked and captured two enemy machine guns, and later captured forty of the enemy. Killed by shell-fire, he was awarded the Medal of Honor for his bravery at Blanc Mont Ridge, France, 4 October 1918.

Pruitt (DD-347) was laid down 25 June 1919 by Bath Iron Works, Bath, Me.; launched 2 August 1920; sponsored by Mrs. Belle Pruitt; and commissioned 2 September 1920, Lt. M. R. Derx in command.

During the interwar period, Pruitt operated in the Western Pacific, protecting American interests in the Far East. A unit of MinDiv 1, she was undergoing overhaul at the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard on 7 December 1941. At 0753 low flying Japanese planes flew over the base and within minutes some of Pruitt's crew had sprinted to other ships and fired their first bullets under war conditions. Others manned fire hoses and helped distribute ammunition. At the end of January 1942, Pruitt completed overhaul and took up offshore patrol and minelaying duties with the Hawaiian Sea Frontier. Continuing operations there into June, she sailed, on the 19th, for Bremerton, whence she steamed to the Aleutians for minelaying operations and escort assignments out of Kodiak. Into the fall she continued operations in the Aleutians, interrupted by regular runs back to the Hawaiian Islands, then took up escort duties along the west coast.

With the new year, 1943, Pruitt shifted south and trained with the 4th Marine Raider Battalion off Southern California. Further escort assignments followed and on 24 April she departed San Francisco to return to the Aleutians. Sailing with TF 51, she steamed to Cold Bay, thence to Attu. On 11 May she arrived off the latter, escorted landing craft into Massacre Bay, then dispatched the boat waves. After the initial assault she took up antisubmarine and anti-aircraft patrols. Later shifting to Holtz Bay, she continued to perform patrol duties and to escort smaller craft from Amchitka and Adak until the end of the month.

On 6 June Pruitt returned to San Francisco and coastal escort duties. Through the summer she steamed along the coast from Alaska to Southern California and in September got underway for the Solomons. At the end of October she arrived at Purvis Bay, Florida Island, whence she steamed to Bougainville.

Taking on mines at Acre, New Hebrides, she planted mines along Bougainville's southern coast on the 2nd, 8th, and 24th of November in support of operations on Cape Torokina, then in December shifted to escort assignments between and among the Solomons, New Hebrides, New Caledonia, and the Societies.

Pruitt returned to San Francisco 18 July 1944, underwent overhaul, and in October sailed back to Pearl Harbor where she began submarine training operations. Detached toward the end of November, she patrolled off Midway 29 November1-5 January 1945. On 22 January she resumed operations with the Training Command, Submarine Force and for the remainder of World War II trained submarines southwest of Oahu. Redesignated AG-101, 5 June 1945, she was ordered inactivated three months later and on 21 September she sailed east, arriving at Philadelphia IS October. Decommissioning 16 November 1945, she was struck from the Navy List 5 December 1945. She was later scrapped at the Philadelphia Navy Yard.

Pruitt earned 3 battle stars during World War II.

Published: Thu Mar 03 12:50:35 EST 2016