High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 39 text:
“
Dixie ' s Decorations USS DIXIE (AD- 1 4) has earned five battle stars and other awards for the operations listed below. I star FIRST U.N. COUNTER OFFENSIVE: 30 January - 3 February 1951 I star SECOND KOREAN WINTER: 25-27 February 1952; 24-27 March 1952 I star KOREAN DEFENSIVE, SUMMER FALL 1952: 2-5 May I952-, 25-26 June 1952; 7-8 July 1952 I star THIRD KOREAN WINTER: 20-23 March 1953, 11-13 April 1953 I star KOREA, SUMMER FALL 1953: I May 1953 - 27 July 1953 NAVY OCCUPATION SERVICE MEDAL (Asia): 8-20 September 1945; 26 May-21 June 1959 CHINA SERVICE MEDAL: 21 September - 10 December 1945; 23 March - 14 September 1947, 8 March - 25 May 1949; 26 June - I July 1952; 13 August - II September 1953 KOREAN PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION BADGE: I August 1950 - 9 February 1951, 10 February 1952 - 27 July I952-, 9 March 1953 - 27 July 1953 Original Statistics For USS Dixie AD-14 LENGTH OVERALL: EXTREME BEAM: FULL LOAD DISPLACEMENT: Tons: Mean Draft: DESIGNED SPEED: TOTAL ACCOMMODATIONS: Officers: Enlisted: ARMAMENT: 530 feet 6 inches 73 feet 3 inches 17,176 24 feet 5 inches 18 knots 56 1,206 (4) 5-inch .38 caliber }
”
Page 38 text:
“
DIXIE arrived in Yokosuka on 27 July 1950, then shifted to Sasebo, Japan where she remained tending destroyers until 27 January 1951. On that day she departed in company with battleship MISSOURI, cruiser MANCHESTER and seventeen destroyers to take part in the bombardment of the east coast of Korea. This bombardment was carried out on 31 January 1951 when DIXIE let go with rounds of five-inch shells on a railway installations at Kosong, Korea where she completely destroyed a warehouse full of explosive materials and devastated other industrial targets. She visited Pusan, Korea (4-5 February) and was relieved of duty in the Far East by tender PRAIRIE on the 5th when she departed for return to the United States. She reached San Diego on 20 February 1951 and again served as Flagship of Cruiser-Destroyer Forces of the Pacific Fleet as she Continued tender duties in that port. A second cruise was made to the Far East in support of the United Nations Forces in Korea, (21 January-14 August 1952) and she sailed from San Diego on 17 February 1953 for a third cruise from which she returned to San Diego on 17 October 1953. During her service for the United Nations Forces in Korea, she repaired a total of 226 warships representing seven nations. She also rendered medical and dental attention, supplies and provisions, ammunition and disbursing facilities, as well as numerous other services to these and other ships returning from combat patrols and missions along the Korean coast.
”
Page 40 text:
“
Other Dixie Cruises DIXIE left San Diego on 9 November 1954 for a tour in the Western Pacific and while at sea on 30 November she received a message request from Naval Forces in the Philippines to answer the SOS of the Philippine motor ship NAGA reported aground off Oot Point in Bantayan Bay, Philippine Islands. She altered her course and dispatched a search and rescue team to assist the stricken ship. All passengers and crew members were safely debarked from MAGA. except for one member of DIXIE ' S search and rescue team who lost his life by drowning. The destroyer tender arrived in Subic Bay on 2 December 1954 and visited Manila before sailing for Hong Kong where she arrived on the 22nd. She arrived in Sasebo from the Philippines on 5 March 1955 and supported SEVENTH Fleet units in the Far East until 15 April when she departed Yokosuka for return to San Diego on 3 May 1955. DIXIE earned the Battle Efficiency Competition Award in 1955. In the following years she continued to alternate her flagship and tender duties at San Diego with tours of service in support of the SEVENTH FLEET in the Far East, where she served as the flagship of Commander Destroyer Flotilla ONE, Departing San Diego on 17 January 1956, she spent the greater part of her time in Subic Bay in the Philippine Islands with a brief stay at Sasebo and Yokosuka before her return to San Diego on 15 August 1956. She underwent overhaul in Mare Island Naval Shipyard, followed by another cruise to the Far East and returned 31 January 1958. DIXIE again sailed to support the SEVENTH FLEET on 27 December 1958 and returned home to San Diego on 7 August 1959. She celebrated her 20th anniversacy of commissioning on 25 April I960 and was underway from San Diego on 7 July to base her tender service to the SEVENTH FLEET at Yokosuka, where she again was flagship for Commander Destroyer Flotilla ONE and staff. The DIXIE Basketball team ushered in the new year by defeating the team of the USS ST. PAUL (CA-73) to win the Seventh Fleet Basketball Championship in January of 1961. On 24 January she departed Yokosuka for her home port in San Diego, arriving there on 6 February. After a short stay she sailed for the Mare Island Naval Shipyards to commence FRAM MK II conversion. She celebrated her 21st birthday by undergoing a complete facelifting, including the addition of a new helicopter flight deck and hangar which necessitated the removal of mounts 53 and 54. Her modernization gave her capabilities for maintenance and repair for the latest weapons systems, including DASH and ASROC, as well as increased efficiency and habitability. With her conversion c ompleted, she sailed from Vallejo on 27 June, arriving in San Diego on 5 July to assume duties as flagship for Commander Cruiser Destroyer Force U.S. Pacific Fleet and tending the FIRST FLEET destroyers. DIXIE spent the remainder of 1961 performing these duties and preparing for deployment with the SEVENTH FLEET early in 1962.
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.