World War II After fitting out, the destroyer departed New York on 10 July 1944 for shakedown training in the Caribbean. She returned to New York for post-shakedown availability and to complete preparations for the long cruise to join the action in the
Pacific. Acting as an escort for the cruiser ,
Ault sailed on 6 September for
Trinidad. Detached from escort duty upon her arrival, she transited the
Panama Canal and proceeded independently via
San Diego to
Pearl Harbor where she arrived on 29 September. After three months of intensive training in
Hawaiian waters, the warship got underway on 18 December and headed west to join
Vice Admiral John S. McCain's
Fast Carrier Task Force. After a refueling stop at
Eniwetok on Christmas Day,
Ault entered
Ulithi Lagoon on 28 December 1944 and, along with her sister ships of
Destroyer Squadron 62 (DesRon 62), reported to
Rear Admiral Gerald F. Bogan for duty in the escort screen of Task Group 38.2 (TG 38.2). When
Ault reached the forward area,
Leyte was in American hands; but the
Philippines were still the focus of the
aircraft carrier's operations, and they were directed to strike targets on
Luzon and
Formosa early in January 1945.
Ault sortied on 30 December 1944 with TG 38.2 screening that task group. After the strike on Formosa on 9 January, the destroyer in company with , , and , swept
Bashi Channel ahead of
Task Force 38 (TF 38), while proceeding into the
South China Sea. Heavy weather as well as the proximity of the enemy created a tense atmosphere in which the carriers continued to mount strikes against the
Cam Ranh Bay area, Hong Kong,
Hainan,
Swatow, and the
Formosa Strait. Returning to the Pacific through the
Balintang Channel on the night of 20 January, the task force launched final strikes against Formosa and
Okinawa before returning to Ulithi on 25 January. Shortly before the assault on
Iwo Jima, TF 38 was reorganized as TF 58 under Vice Admiral
Marc Mitscher.
Ault was assigned to Rear Admiral
Forrest Sherman's Task Group 58.3, which launched diversionary strikes against Formosa, Luzon, and the Japanese mainland on 16 and 17 February. The carriers provided air cover for the
operations on Iwo Jima on 19 February and raided the Tokyo area on the 25th and Okinawa on 1 March before retiring to Ulithi on 4 March. The destroyer returned to the action with TG 58.3 on 14 March for operations to neutralize Japanese air power during the forthcoming Okinawa campaign. In response to strikes against
Kyūshū and
Honshū, the Japanese retaliated with air strikes against the task group; and, on 20 March,
Ault splashed her first two enemy planes. On 23 and 24 March, the task group launched preinvasion strikes against Okinawa; and, on 27 March,
Ault assisted the ships of DesRon 62 and four
cruisers in shore bombardment of
Minami Daito Shima. The warship's next two months were enlivened by days and nights of continuous general quarters.
Kamikaze attacks on 6 and 7 April damaged and . On 11 April, a suicide plane that missed
Essex came perilously close to
Ault; but her gunners splashed the plane close aboard her starboard quarter. was badly hit that day.
Ault again participated in the bombardment of Minami Daito Shima on 10 May, then rejoined the task force to assist in repelling heavy enemy air attack. While screening on the morning of 11 May,
Ault splashed one kamikaze, but two others hit the carrier. After rescuing 29 men from the stricken ship, the destroyer escorted her to the replenishment group and rejoined the action on the 13th. During attacks on 13 and 14 May, she succeeded in splashing three more planes. On 1 June,
Ault put into
San Pedro Bay, Leyte, after 80 days at sea.
Task Force 58 was redesignated TF 38; and, on 1 July,
Ault sortied for strikes against the Japanese home islands. On 18 and 19 July, the ship joined with Cruiser Division 18 and other destroyers in an antishipping sweep of
Sagami Wan and a bombardment of
Nojima Saki. The following day, she rejoined the task group and continued to support the carriers until Japan capitulated on 15 August.
Ault operated off the coast of Honshū on patrol until 2 September when she entered
Tokyo Bay and anchored near during the
formal surrender ceremony on board that battleship. The destroyer soon resumed patrol with the task group out of Tokyo and continued that duty until 30 October, when she steamed for
Sasebo, Japan, to perform more carrier and escort duties. On 31 December 1945, the destroyer departed Japan, bound for the United States, and arrived at San Francisco on 20 January 1946. After a short respite, she was underway again and headed via the Panama Canal for
Boston. Following brief stops along the east coast, the vessel entered the
Boston Navy Yard on 26 April 1946 for a well-deserved overhaul.
1947–50 The yard work was completed on 15 March 1947, and
Ault steamed to
Charleston, South Carolina, her base for local operations and training exercises until 12 July, when she sailed for
New Orleans and two years there as a
Naval Reserve training ship. During her operations in the
Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean, she visited such ports as
Guantanamo Bay Naval Base,
Cuba;
Kingston, Jamaica;
Coco Solo,
Canal Zone;
Port-au-Prince,
Haiti;
Veracruz,
Mexico; and
Puerto Cabezas,
Nicaragua. During this period, she also performed planeguard duties for carriers operating out of Pensacola, Florida, and underwent an overhaul in Charleston from 24 February to 11 May 1948. On 21 August 1949, after a month of intensive training in Guantanamo Bay,
Ault put into
Norfolk to fit out for her first Mediterranean cruise. From 6 to 16 September, the warship steamed across the Atlantic to join
6th Fleet tactical exercises and maneuvers, including a simulated assault on
Cyprus. Her ports of call included
Aranci Bay,
Sardinia;
Cannes, France;
Argostoli and
Piraeus, Greece; and
Famagusta, Cyprus.
Ault departed
Gibraltar on 16 November; headed for the British Isles; and put into
Plymouth, England, on 19 November. Prior to leaving Europe, she called at
Antwerp, Belgium;
Rouen, France; the
Isle of Portland, England; and
Leith, Scotland. She moored in Norfolk on 26 January 1950 and prepared for inactivation. She was placed out of commission, in reserve, on 31 May and was towed to the
Charleston Naval Shipyard for berthing in the Inactive
Reserve Fleet.
1950–53 However, her respite was brief. With the outbreak of the
Korean War, the Navy needed more active destroyers. On 15 November 1950,
Ault was recommissioned at Charleston under the command of Comdr. Harry Marvin-Smith. She steamed to her home port, Norfolk, for the Christmas holidays and to Guantanamo Bay for refresher training in March. After a post-shakedown overhaul in Charleston, the ship returned to her home port, sortied with her sister ships of
DesRon 22, and carried out
antisubmarine warfare exercises in Cuban waters. She returned to Norfolk on 13 August for upkeep.
Ault sailed for the Mediterranean on 3 September for another tour with the 6th Fleet and stopped for liberty calls in ports in
Sicily, Italy, France, Greece, and Portugal. On 30 January 1952, she departed Gibraltar in Destroyer Division 222 (DesDiv 222) and steamed via
Bermuda to Norfolk where she arrived on 10 February. The warship's activities during the first few months of 1952 consisted of training exercises in the
Virginia Capes, Caribbean operations, and an upkeep period in Charleston. On 4 June, she embarked
midshipmen for a training cruise that took them to
Torbay, England;
Le Havre, France; and Guantanamo Bay. Upon her arrival back at Norfolk on 4 August,
Ault conducted local type training into the new year. During February 1953, the ship participated in drills in the Caribbean while operating out of
St. Thomas and
St. Croix, Virgin Islands. On 11 March, she commenced an overhaul in the Charleston Naval Shipyard. Upon completion of the yard work, she steamed back via her home port to
Guantanamo Bay where she arrived on 31 July for refresher training. Following two months training and one month loading supplies,
Ault departed Norfolk on 2 November with DesDiv 222 for an around-the-world cruise. After transiting the Panama Canal and stopping at San Diego, Pearl Harbor, and
Midway, she arrived at
Yokosuka, Japan, on 6 December and reported for duty with the
7th Fleet. On 20 December 1953,
Ault collided with during antisubmarine warfare (ASW) exercises in the
Sea of Japan. The former's bow was torn off at frame eight. There was one casualty, 20 year old Eugene Merril Whittington of Buffalo, West Virginia, who died of head injuries sustained during the collision. The damaged destroyer was towed to Yokosuka for repairs by .
1954–66 On 14 March 1954,
Ault once again got underway for training and a subsequent voyage westward through the Indian Ocean, the Mediterranean, across the Atlantic Ocean, to arrive home at Norfolk on 4 June. She operated with various warships along the way and made port calls at Hong Kong, Singapore;
Colombo,
Ceylon;
Port Said,
Egypt;
Athens;
Naples;
Villefranche-sur-Mer, France;
Barcelona, Spain; and Gibraltar. For the remainder of 1954, she operated along the east coast. For the first six months of 1955, the destroyer conducted Caribbean exercises and local operations, including plane guard duty off
Jacksonville, Florida, with carrier . She entered the
Norfolk Naval Shipyard on 1 July for a three-month overhaul which was followed by one month of refresher training at Guantanamo Bay. The warship returned to her home port on 26 November and commenced type training and local operations along the east coast. On 1 May 1956,
Ault sailed for the Mediterranean where she participated in
Kiel Week ceremonies in
Kiel, Germany; 6th Fleet exercises; and a month and one-half in the
Red Sea and the
Persian Gulf. The cruise ended with her arrival in Norfolk on 17 September. On 28 January 1957,
Ault got underway again with DesRon 22 for a five-month tour of duty overseas. The destroyer exercised with the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean and called at ports in Italy, Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, and Sicily before returning to Norfolk in June. After three months of local operations along the east coast,
Ault sortied with on 3 September to join other destroyers in North Atlantic and Arctic waters for
Operation Strikeback. Upon completion of the exercise, she put into
Cherbourg, France, on 30 September for a short leave period before heading home. She moored in Norfolk on 21 October and resumed local operations. On 19 November she entered the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. After a four-month overhaul, refresher training, and upkeep, the destroyer got underway on 17 June 1958 for hunter-killer operations in the Atlantic with . On 2 September, she steamed in company with DesDiv 222 to the Mediterranean for another six-month deployment before resuming local operations out of Norfolk in March 1959. In June, the ship entered the
Great Lakes for
Operation Inland Seas, a celebration honoring the opening of the
St. Lawrence Seaway. Later in the year, she assisted the Fleet Sonar School in
Key West,
Florida, and participated in Atlantic coast exercises. With the beginning of 1960,
Ault was again deployed to the Mediterranean. On 9 March 1960, the destroyer, in company with
John W. Weeks, transited the
Bosporus and the two became the first U.S. warships to enter the
Black Sea since 1945. The destroyer was decommissioned on 16 July 1973, ending a career of 29 years service. Struck from the Navy List on 1 September 1973,
Ault was sold to the Boston Metals Company, Baltimore, Maryland, and subsequently scrapped. ==Awards==