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Page 105 text:
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,X 'r fi' . vi, Ii , .sa 1 - - , ,. I 0 555' '54 3 I . 'ff 1' ' I 1 Q if V I 'lvl f ' f N V typ.. ,,,.L, M 4 Y J . I .,V- X 6 F .1 5 5 X' Frank C. Dunham, Jr. COMMANDING OFFICER Commander F. C. DUNHAM, Ir., assumed command of the USS CONY CDDE 5085 on 8 August 1960. In addition to a rich back' ground of experience aboard destroyer-type ships CUSS C, P, CECIL, USS HAMBLETON. USS AULT, and USS CAMPP. Com- mander DUNHAM has served at the Naval Academy and has at- tended the General Line: School at Monterey and the Staff Line School. Prior to reporting to the CONY, Commander DUNHAM was a student at the Naval War College at Newport, R.I. Commander DUNHAM received his Navy Commission in 1943 after graduation from Harvard University and reported to the USS ARKANSAS KBB 337 of the Atlantic Fleet the same year. Following his tour of duty on the USS AULT, as Executive Officer, Commander DUNHAM was the Commanding Officer of the USS CAMP KDER 2515 from May 1956 until July 1957. Commander DUNHAM was horn in Portsmouth, New Hampshire on 26 February 1920, and is the son of RADM F.C. DUNHAM, Sr., USN, tRetiredJ of the Supply Corps. He is married to the former Doris Moore of Salisbury, Maryland, and has one son, Dale who is 9. N I John F. Drake, LIEUTENANT COMMANDER EXECUTIVE Orrlcsn Lieutenant Commander J ohn F. DRAKE, USN, Executive Officer of the CONY since 1 August 1959, has over 17 years naval experience in a variety of hillets afloat and ashore. He orginally enlisted in the U.S. Navy in July of 1943 and was commissioned ENSIGN on 5 J une 1946, after having attended Whitman College and the University of Washington under the Navy's V-12 and NROTC programs. From 1946 to 1952 SLCDR DRAKE serve.d in both Atlantic and Pacific in USS CHANDLER CDD 7171, USS FAIRVIEW KPCER- 8509, and USS FRASER CDM 241. He instructed in ASW and Emergency Shiphandling at Fleet Training Center Norfolk from 1952 to 1954, and commanded USS FORD COUNTY KLST 7721 in the Pacific from 1954- to 1956. In October 1956 het reported to duty in Norfolk as a member of the staff of the Commander in Chief, U.S. Atlantic Fleet, serving in that capacity until 1959. LCDR DRAKE is a graduate of the Armed Forces Staff College f 25th Classl, and of the Navy's General Line School at Monterey, California. He is a native of Dedham. Massachusetts, and resides with his wife and their seven children at 8651 Devon St., Norfoltk, Virginia. ABOARD THE USS CONY QDDE 5033 - The destroyer USS CONY of anti-submarine Task Group ALFA is truly a sub killer and now displays ,a pair of chromium plated hedgehogs as dramatic evidence of this fact. On two different occasions CONY ASW teams have made direct strikes with plaster-loaded hedgehogs on the decks of A.tlantic Fleet submarines during training exercises. The hedgehogs recovered from the respective submarines have been chrome-plated and are now in use as quarterdeck markers in lieu of the usual chrome-plated cartridge cases to symbolize the CONY's primary mission of anti-submarine warfare. The first CONY hedgehog to hit the mark was on 16 March 1959 when the USS BALAO fSS 2855 was the target. A more recent CONY 'ihit' was made May 23 when one of two hedgehogs fired landed on the deck of the USS COBBLER QSS 3445. COBBLER discovered the hedgehog on surfacing and immediately dispatched a message to inform Captain! G. M. Sloniln, Commander Destroyer Squadron 28, and to ask who-dun-it. The mystery was quickly solved by a dispatch from the CONY's Commanding Officer, Commander B. E. Glendinning, who said that the CONY had done it, wryly adding .that Hthe new ASW officer didn't 'know that both projectiles were supposed to land on the COBBLER's deckf' The discovery prompted a subsequent dispatch from Commodore Slonim to Rear Admiral John E. Clark, Commander Anti-submarine Task Group ALFA, in which he recommended -that a best cowboy sharp shooter medal be struck for USS CONY who demonstrated outstanding ASW readiness hy her plaster loaded hedgehogs repos- ing peacefully but convincingly on the deck of the USS COBBLER on surfacing. The CONY dead-eyes also provided a pleasant send off for Columbia Broadcasting System representatives who were aboard COBBLER completing the filming of Task Group ALFA operations for the television program Twentieth Centuryv when the hedgehog hit the submerged submarine.
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Page 104 text:
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fwng,,.' - ':, f A , dn , 'C .riff Q7 5 ' ' W ' . I 4 F CDR Dunham relieves CDR Glendinning at Change of Command Ceremonies aboard CONY. RADM Hilles, seated, listens attentively to CDR Dunham's remarks. CHANGE or COMMAND In ceremonies attended by RADIVI F. V. H. HILLES, USN, COMDESFLOT FOUR, and RADM .I. E. CLARK, USN, COMTASKGRUA-LEA, Comman'der Frank C. DUN- HAM, Jr., U.S. Navy, relieved Commander B. E. Glendin- ning, U.S. Navy, as Commanding Officer, USS CONY QDDE 5081 on 8 August 1960. Commander DUNHAM reported as Commanding Offic- er, USS CONY from the Naval War College at Newport, R.I., and Commander GLENDINNING departed for a course of instruction at the Armed Forces Staff College at Norfolk, Virgin-ia. 2 Bruce Edmond Glendinning UNITED STATES NAVY Commander Glendinning was born in Rahway, N. J. on March 7, 1921 and is the son of Mr. Sz Mrs. .Iohn Edmond Glendinning of Norwood, Ohio. He is married to the former Crissie Joyce Cannon of Monticello, Georgia. They have three children ages 11, 8, and 4. After graduating from Morristown High School, Mor- ristown, N. J. he attended Drew University for two years and entered the U.S. Naval Academy in 1940. He grad- uated in 1943 with a Bachelor of Science Degree and was commissioned an Ensign in the United States Navy. Sub- sequently he attended the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, and received his Master's Degree in Mechanical Engineering. Upon being commissioned in 1943 CDR Glendinning reported to the USS ANDERSON IDD 4111 in the Pacific Fleet. He served in various departments including assign- ments as Chief Engineer, Gunnery Officer and Executive Officer. During this period the ANDERSON participated in the amphibious landings at TARAWA and KWAJELEIN and operations in NEW GUINEA and the liberations of the PHILLIPINE ISLANDS as well as bombardments in the KURILE ISLANDS. For performance of duty in the Engineering Department when the ANDERSON was struck by a Kamikaze aircraft he was awarded the Navy Com- mendation Ribbon by Commander Seventh Fleet. He par- ticipated in Operation Crossroads as Executive Officer of the ANDERSON until that ship was destroyed in the first Atomic Bomb Test at BIKINI ATOLL. From 1946 to 194-9 CDR Glendinning was assigned to the staff of the Fleet Sonar School in Key West, Florida as an instructor in Anti-Submarine Warfare. He worked principally as an instructor in tactics for the C4O'fXO course in ASW. In 1949 and 1950 he served as Operation and ASW Officer on the staff Commander Destroyer Squadron 8 during which time the squadron was employed as part of a permanent Hunter Killer Group working in Anti-Sub- marine Warfare. After completing postgraduate work the served as ASW and Gunnery Officer for Commander Destroyer Flotilla Six from 1953 to 1955 conducting various Anti-Submarine and other destroyer type exercises. In 1955 he acted as Operation Officer during the planning and execution of several large scale intertype Air Defense Exercises. Prior to reporting to CONY CDR Glendinning was the Program Officer for Turbines and Gears at the Naval Boiler and Turbine Laboratories, Philadelphia, Pa. and was engaged in the full scale testing and development of main. propulsion machinery for all types of naval vessels.
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Page 106 text:
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SPECIAL EVENTS DURING YEAR... 1 fx .N QA. Visit by Admiral Knoll New chiefs 'A ffjll. A , C 1515. n '-'5.2lfzfrQ.1 'C 'F -tiff X M NX J, E-E W . '73 ij- .'.4 j 1 ' '-1:1 E f Xi 5' ,Z Retiring Chiefs
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