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USS Mayrant (DD-402)

USS Mayrant (DD-402)
History
United States
Name: USS Mayrant
Namesake: John Mayrant
Builder: Boston Navy Yard
Laid down: 15 April 1937
Launched: 14 May 1938
Sponsored by: Mrs. E. Sheely
Commissioned: 13 September 1939
Decommissioned: 28 August 1946
Struck: 30 April 1948
Fate: Scuttled off Kwajalein 4 April 1948
General characteristics
Class and type: Benham-class destroyer
Displacement: 1,725 long tons (1,753 t)
Length: 431 ft 1 in (131.39 m)
Beam: 35 ft 5 in (10.80 m)
Draft: 14 ft 4 in (4.37 m)
Speed: 38.5 kn (71.3 km/h; 44.3 mph)
Complement: 184 officers and enlisted
Armament: 4 × 5 in (130 mm)
16 × 21 mm (0.83 in)

The second USS Mayrant (DD-402) was a Benham-class destroyer in the United States Navy, the second ship named for John Mayrant. Commissioned shortly before World War II, she was primarily active in the Atlantic theater of the war, and was decommissioned after being used as a target in the Operation Crossroads atomic weapons tests.

Mayrant was laid down 15 April 1937 at the Boston Navy Yard, Boston, Massachusetts; launched 14 May 1938; sponsored by Mrs. E. Sheely, a descendant of Capt. John Mayrant; and commissioned 19 September 1939, LCDR E. A. Taylor in command.

During the summer of 1940, after shakedown and an extended training period, Mayrant escorted her Commander in Chief, Franklin D. Roosevelt, on a tour of east coast defenses. Later on in the year, again escorting the President, she visited island bases newly acquired from Great Britain under the "destroyers for bases" agreement.

The following spring, 1941, as U.S. involvement in European hostilities increased, the Navy expanded its efforts to keep the sealanes open. In May, the limits of the neutrality patrol were extended and the Navy gradually expanded its responsibilities for transatlantic convoys. By September, it was officially responsible for protecting them as far as Iceland, lengthening the patrols of the Support Force, Atlantic Fleet, which had been assigned the task.

Mayrant, on duty with that force, operated off Newfoundland during the spring and summer. In August she stood-by during the Atlantic Charter Conferences and, at their conclusion, escorted HMS Prince of Wales, carrying Prime Minister Winston Churchill, to Great Britain.


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