![]() ![]() There were no personnel casualties and the flood was contained by a key bulkhead which held fast. The stem of the stranger cut through the destroyer's keel and caused extensive damage forward. At 2110, only six minutes after the initial sighting, the unidentified ship's bow smashed into Wickes port billboard. When the oncoming ship failed to give way, the destroyer ordered full speed astern and went to general quarters. She immediately changed her course and switched on her lights. At 2104, Wickes sighted an unidentified ship to port on a collision course. She departed New York at 1748 on 23 October, screening ahead of the armored cruiser Pueblo and escorting a convoy of merchant vessels. Soon the outbreak of flu in Wickes abated, but bad luck seemed to dog the destroyer. Soon after the ship's arrival at Halifax, 30 men-including the commanding officer-were hospitalized ashore. She departed New York on 7 October, bound for Nova Scotia but, during the voyage north, her crew was hit by influenza. Wickes subsequently escorted convoys off the northeast coast of the United States. ![]() Underway again the following day, the warship sailed for the Azores to pick up passengers and United States-bound mail at Ponta Delgada before continuing on to New York. After shepherding her charges across the Atlantic, Wickes was detached from the convoy to make a brief stop at Queenstown, Ireland, on 19 August. Later that day, she sailed for the British Isles, escorting a convoy of a dozen merchantmen. The destroyer was commissioned on 31 July 1918.Īfter an abbreviated shakedown, Wickes departed Boston on 5 August and arrived at New York City on 8 August. Walter Wickes, a descendant of Lambert Wickes. The ship was launched on 25 June 1918 sponsored by Miss Ann Elizabeth Young Wickes, the daughter of Dr. Wickes was laid down on 26 June 1917 at Bath, Maine, by the Bath Iron Works. She has been the only ship of the Royal Navy to bear the name Montgomery. The first USS Wickes (DD-75) was the lead ship of her class of destroyers in the United States Navy during World War I, later transferred to the Royal Navy as HMS Montgomery. Transferred to Royal Navy 23 October 1940 ![]()
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