Quote:
Originally Posted by NoBozo
trfour": Is that a "Helopad on the back of that "Destroyer"..?? We didn't have Helopads on ships until the sixties. I think you have a wrong picture.
PS: I also see the "DASH" hanger. I was there.  NB
PPS: DASH: Drone Anti Submarine Helicopter....1961....
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Yes, More Info;
Hazelwood recommissioned at San Diego 12 September 1951, Cmdr.
R. M. Niles in command, to participate in the
Korean War. After shakedown she departed San Diego 4 January 1952, and reached
Newport, Rhode Island, 21 January to join Destroyer Forces, Atlantic Fleet. Operations and exercises along the East Coast and in the
Caribbean, as well as hunter-killer training with carrier groups, occupied
Hazelwood until she departed Newport for the Far East 7 December 1953.
She reached
Tokyo 12 January 1954, via Pearl Harbor and spent the next few months operating with a fast carrier task force and patrolling along the Korean coast to enforce an uneasy armistice. The far-ranging destroyer returned to the States the long way, departing
Hong Kong 28 May 1954 and sailing through the
Suez Canal to reach Newport 17 July.
During the next few years,
Hazelwood maintained a pattern of training and readiness operations along the East Coast and in the Caribbean interspersed with deployments to the
Mediterranean. During the
Suez Crisis in the fall of 1956 she served with the mighty 6th Fleet, patrolling the eastern Mediterranean and helping to stabilize a tense international situation.

A DASH-drone over
Hazelwoodīs flight deck.
In 1958,
Hazelwood began extensive testing of helicopters for antisubmarine warfare both in
Narragansett Bay and out of the Naval Ordnance Laboratory in
Maryland. Assigned to the Destroyer Development Division, she participated in tests on equipment used with radar and electronic counter-measure systems. Her primary research and development work involved the testing of the Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter (DASH).
Hazelwood provided on board testing facilities, and helped make possible the perfection of DASH, an advanced and vital ASW weapons system. In August 1963 alone, the drone helicopter made 1,000 landings on the versatile destroyer's flight deck.
In addition to experimental developments,
Hazelwood continued to engage in the many duties assigned to a destroyer. As America confronted
Russia over the
introduction of offensive missiles into Cuba in October 1962, she steamed again to the troubled Caribbean for antisubmarine and surveillance patrols.
Hazelwood arrived
Guantanamo Naval Base 5 November, just after the quarantine of
Cuba had gone into effect and remained on guard during the crisis, serving as a Gun Fire Support Ship for Task Force 84. When the nuclear submarine
Thresher failed to surface 10 April 1963,
Hazelwood immediately deployed to the scene of the tragedy with scientists from the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution to begin a systematic search for the missing ship.
Hazelwood resumed testing of DASH during June and later in the year conducted on board trials of the Shipboard Landing Assist Device (SLAD). She continued both developmental and tactical operations along the East Coast during the next year. She decommissioned 19 March 1965, and entered the
Atlantic Reserve Fleet.
Hazelwood was struck from the
Naval Vessel Register 1 December 1974 and sold 14 April 1976.
Terry
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