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Van Buren II (PF-42)

1943-1946

Named for the city in the state of Arkansas.

II

(PF-42: displacement 2,100; length 303'11"; beam 37'6"; draft 13'8"; speed 20 knots; complement 190; armament 2 3-inch, 4 40 millimeter, 9 20 millimeter, 2 depth charge tracks, 8 depth charge projectors, 1 depth charge projector (Hedgehog); class Tacoma; type S2-S2-AQ1)

The second Van Buren (PF-42) was laid down under a Maritime Commission contract (M.C. Hull 1453) on 24 June 1943 at Los Angeles, Calif., by the Consolidated Steel Corp.; launched on 27 July 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Edward J. O'Hara; and commissioned at Terminal Island, Calif., on 17 December 1943, Lt. Cmdr. Charles B. Arrington, USCG, in command.

Van Buren conducted shakedown off the west coast before departing San Pedro, Calif., on 9 March 1944, bound for the western Pacific. She sailed in company with sister ship Ogden (PF-39) and escorted the merchant tanker Fort Erie to Espiritu Santo, New Hebrides, from 23 to 29 March. Departing that port on the 30th, the frigate arrived at Milne Bay, New Guinea, on 2 April.

On 21 April 1944, Vice Adm. Marc Mitscher's task force of carriers, battleships, cruisers, and destroyers began pounding Japanese airfields and defensive positions on Hollandia, Wakde, Sawar, and Sarmi, New Guinea, to neutralize them during an impending amphibious operation under the command of Rear Adm. Daniel E. Barbey. The next day, Army troops began splashing ashore at Aitape and Humboldt Bay. Van Buren escorted convoys supporting this operation into May and June.

As Army forces encountered stiff enemy resistance ashore, naval units were often called upon to render gunfire support. Van Buren received such a request on the afternoon of 9 June 1944. At 1740, the patrol frigate opened with her main battery, firing salvoes at Japanese troop concentrations near a road in the Sarmi-Sawar sector. Ten days later, the warship again conducted a gunfire support mission for the Army, this time near Maffin Village. The following day, Van Buren lobbed 150 rounds of 3-inch and 180 of 40-millimeter into the troublesome Maffin Village sector. Directions from an Army spotting plane provided information on enemy positions. Lying to off the beach, Van Buren soon demolished her targets and started many fires. An Army plane again provided call-fire guidance on the 23rd, when Van Buren once more supported Army troops struggling against the Japanese defenders ashore, breaking up troop concentrations and destroying communications and supplies.

Van Buren subsequently screened the ships supporting the Cape Sansapor operations in August 1944 and continued escort operations into the autumn. On 10 November 1944, Van Buren departed Humboldt Bay, bound for Cape Sansapor with a convoy of four tank landing ships (LST-654. LST-465, LST-471, and LST-697). En route on 16 November, the frigate saw an Army plane crash four miles away and altered course to close. The ship's motor whaleboat soon rescued the aircraft's crew unhurt.

One week later, while participating in operations in the Philippines, Van Buren went to general quarters when El Paso (PF-41) radioed a contact report of an unidentified plane closing their vicinity. Van Buren's SA radar picked up the enemy at 18 miles; her SL receivers picked up the contact at 6 miles. Although ready for action, the frigate did not get a chance to engage, as the plane veered away and passed along the opposite side of the convoy, well beyond the U.S. warship's gun range.

Van Buren continued her convoy escort and screening duties with the Seventh Amphibious Force, in the Philippines, into late 1944. After escorting a convoy to Leyte in mid-December, Van Buren sailed via Manus, in the Admiralties, to Hawaii. Arriving at Pearl Harbor on 2 January 1945, Van Buren operated as a training ship attached to the Pacific Fleet's destroyer forces through the spring of 1945. Shifting to the west coast of the United States soon thereafter, the patrol vessel arrived at San Francisco on 2 July. Assigned to Commander, Western Sea Frontier, the warship was fitted out as a weather ship and operated as such through the end of hostilities with Japan and into the year 1946.

Departing San Francisco on 13 March 1946, Van Buren transited the Panama Canal and arrived at Charleston, S.C., on 3 April. Decommissioned on 6 May 1946, Van Buren was stricken from the Navy Register on 19 June 1946 and sold soon thereafter to the Sun Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., of Chester, Pa., for scrapping.

Van Buren received three battle stars for her World War II service.

Updated, Robert J. Cressman

11 April 2022

Published: Mon Apr 11 11:36:03 EDT 2022