Named after Quartermaster James Miller, who was awarded the Medal of
Honor for his gallant actions on board the gunboat USS Marblehead during
the Civil War, the 2,050-ton USS Miller (DD-535) was a Fletcher
class destroyer that was built by the Bethlehem Steel Company at San Francisco,
California, and was commissioned on 31 August 1943. The ship was approximately
376 feet long and 39 feet wide, had a top speed of 37 knots, and had a crew of
314 officers and men. Miller was armed with five 5-inch guns, ten 40-mm guns,
seven 20-mm guns, ten 21-inch torpedo tubes, and depth charges.
Miller conducted
initial training operations along America’s west coast and off the Hawaiian
Islands before arriving in the Pacific combat area in January 1944. For the
next several weeks, the destroyer participated in the invasion of the Marshall
Islands, performing escort and gunfire support duties. In late February 1944, Miller
began escorting aircraft carriers. While escorting carriers from March to May,
she participated in the carrier raids which took place in the central Pacific
and on northern New Guinea. For the rest of 1944, Miller took part in
the conquest of the Marianas Islands (which included the Battle of the
Philippine Sea in June), the assault on the Palau Islands in September, raids
against Japanese positions in the western Pacific and in the South China Sea,
and, in October, the Battle of Leyte Gulf off the coast of the Philippines. On
26 October 1944, during the Battle of Leyte Gulf, Miller used her guns
to assist her sister ship, the destroyer USS Owen (DD-536), in sinking
the Japanese destroyer Nowaki.
Miller continued
escorting aircraft carriers for the first half of 1945 as they supported
campaigns to capture Luzon in the Philippines and the Japanese islands of Iwo
Jima and Okinawa. Miller also provided desperately needed assistance to
the carrier USS Franklin (CV-13) after that ship was badly damaged by an
enemy air attack on 19 March 1945. Miller went alongside Franklin
to aid in rescue and firefighting operations and then covered the carrier’s
withdrawal, for which actions she was awarded the Navy Unit Commendation.
On 20 April 1945, Miller was detached from escort duties and
ordered to steam back to the United States for an overhaul. She arrived at the
Mare Island Navy Yard, California, on 9 July and was still there when the war
in the Pacific ended. Not needed in the greatly reduced post-war active fleet, Miller
was decommissioned on 19 December 1945 and placed in the Pacific Reserve Fleet
at San Diego, California.
The increased need for warships during both the Korean War and the Cold
War brought Miller back to active duty.
She was re-commissioned on 19 May 1951, was assigned to the Atlantic
Fleet, and was based at Newport, Rhode Island. Just prior to being
re-commissioned, Miller was modernized, losing one 5-inch gun and
receiving in its place a new battery of twin 40-mm guns. The ship also was
provided with new electronic equipment. Miller then went on to make one
combat deployment from 1952 to 1953. During this cruise, which eventually took
her around the world, the destroyer completed numerous gunfire support missions
against communist positions in Korea. Miller also served with Task Force
77, escorting aircraft carriers as they conducted air operations against North
Korean ground forces. Miller
returned to Newport on 11 February 1953.
After her return to the United States, Miller resumed operations
along America’s east coast with periodic deployments to the Mediterranean Sea.
In 1958, while serving with the US Navy’s Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean, Miller
participated in the famous “Lebanon Crisis,” providing military assistance to
the pro-Western Lebanese
government of President Camille Chamoun against internal communist opposition
and threats from Syria and Egypt.
In 1959, Miller became a Naval Reserve training
ship based at Boston, Massachusetts. As a training ship, Miller conducted cruises for more than 11,000 reservists. After serving
in this role for five years, Miller
was decommissioned at the end of 1964. In August 1971, while in “mothballs” as
part of the Atlantic Reserve Fleet, the destroyer was re-named James Miller to free up her original
name for assignment to a new escort ship. But USS James Miller had no active service under that name. The ship was stricken
from the Naval Vessel Register in December 1974 and was sold for scrapping in
July 1975.