USS Frost DE 144

USS FROST DE 144

USN Presidential Citation Ribbon
Read the Presidential Unit Citation

 FROST DE-144 was launched 21 March 1943 by Consolidated Steel Corp., Orange, Tex.; sponsored by Mrs. Holloway H. Frost, widow of Commander Frost and commissioned 30 August 1943, Lieutenant Commander T. S. Lank in command.

FROST made one convoy escort voyage to Casablanca between 11 November 1943 and 25 December before taking up her primary wartime assignments, coastal escort and operations with the hunter-killer group built around escort carrier CROATAN CVE-25. Her first patrol with this group,
from 24 March 1944 to 11 May, found her helping in the search for U-856, sunk on 7 April by other escorts of the group, and joining in sinking U-488 on 26 April, when she and three other escorts attacked after the submarine had been spotted by an aircraft from CROATAN.

Again patrolling across the Atlantic to guard the movement of convoys to Casablanca between 3 June 1944 and 22 July, FROST made the initial contact with U-490 on 11 June. A lengthy attack followed, at the close of which the escorts drew the oxygen-exhausted submarine to the surface by feigning their departure from the area. She was sunk by gunfire, FROST taking 13 of her crew prisoner. A 2-hour attack on 3 July during which the target submarine attempted to torpedo FROST, resulted in the sinking of U-154.

During her third hunter-killer patrol from 20 August 1944 to 2 October, FROST rescued survivors of destroyer WARRINGTON DD-383 who had capsized in a hurricane during the night of 13-14 September. Training at Guantanamo Bay and Bermuda preceded the next patrol, from 23 January 1945 to 7 February, during which her task group formed a part of the escort for heavy cruiser QUINCY CA-71, carrying President Franklin D. Roosevelt toward the Yalta Conference.  Additional training in Narragansett and Casco Bays prepared her for her final antisubmarine patrol, during which she won
the Presidential Unit Citation, for her high achievement in joining in sinking two submarines on the night of 15-16 April. The first contact was made by destroyer escort STANTON DE-247 just before midnight, and FROST joined in the attack which produced a violent underwater explosion at 0114 on 16 April. This was U-880. At 0155, FROST picked up another target, and she and STANTON illuminated U-1235 and opened fire. They pressed home a depth charge attack when the submarine dived, and were rewarded at 0410 with another great underwater explosion.

FROST sailed from Boston 10 July 1945 for training in the Caribbean, and Pacific duty, reaching Pearl Harbor after the close of hostilities. She carried passengers back to San Diego, then sailed on to Norfolk and Green Cove Springs, Fla., where she was decommissioned and placed in reserve 18
June 1946.

In addition to the Presidential Unit Citation, FROST received seven battle stars for World War II service.

(DANFS Vol. II, 1963, p. 453)

 

Photo courtesy of Patrick Clancey - Hyperwar Web Site
 

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