Wet a summer

Kendall Raine at the base of the main mast of USS
Vammen (DE-644).
Photo by John Walker
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USS Vammen (DE-644)
Buckley Class Destroyer Escort
Found off San Clemente Island
Dive Report
by Kendall Raine
Diving a newly discovered wreck is a special feeling.
When the wreck is deep and remote, the thrill of
adventure is that much greater.
On Sunday August
1st, John Walker and I had just such an opportunity.
With the help of Scott Brooks, who generously elected
to give up his chance to dive the wreck so he could
act as our safety diver, we dove the wreck of the USS
Vammen (DE-644), a Buckley Class Destroyer Escort
which saw service in WWII, Korea and Vietnam before
ending her career as a target vessel off San Clemente
Island in 1971 as part of the Navy’s Condor Missile
testing program.
In December, Gary Fabian located a
possible wreck site with the aid of multibeam sonar
data for San Clemente Island, CA. The following month
Capt. Ray Arntz confirmed the existence of a large
wreck at this location with side scan sonar. From
Ray’s side scan images, we knew the wreck was
completely intact and upright. The side scan
indicated approximately 300-310 feet LOA with
superstructure and deck features clearly discernible.
Several months of archival research was required to
positively determine the identity of this ship. The
documentation is very specific and we believe without
question that the wreck is the USS Vammen. Physical
inspection of the site confirms the wreck as a
Buckley Class DE.
Side scan sonar image of USS Vammen (DE-644) at San
Clemente Island, CA. The ship is intact and upright
on the seabed. Her main mast can be seen protruding
into the water column indicating a list to starboard.
Image by Capt. Ray Arntz.
In a year where the
weather has made offshore exploration an exercise in
frustration, we left Seal Beach on glass smooth seas
and averaged over 26 knots over to San Clemente
Island. The sun was poking its way through the
morning haze as we arrived on site. Despite green
water on top, we hoped for clear conditions at depth.
Ray dropped the down line and John and I geared up.
There was slight surface current running as we
dropped into the water and scootered over to the down
line. Our descent took about 4 minutes during which
the visibility finally opened up below 200 feet.
Brown and white basket sponges came into view about
40 feet above the wreck. As our lights found the ship
it exploded in the familiar covering of pink
corynactis and sponges on a base of greenish brown
encrustation. As usual, Ray put the down line exactly
where we asked him to-off the port side just aft of
amidships.
We came in at main deck level. I looked
up and could see superstructure silhouette against a
featureless green background. I banked left and
motored half throttle at deck level along the side of
the ship. John scootered inboard flying a couple of
feet over the main deck. I looked back over my
shoulder and saw him cruising 15 feet behind and to
my right underneath overhanging features of the
superstructure. With his twin 35 watt lights attached
to the video mounted on the front of his scooter, it
looked like there was a car following me around.
Excellent. The dive was going exactly as planned; we
were dialed and in the groove. As we continued
forward a large section of the main deck disappeared
revealing a massive generator and interior features
of the ship. We had obviously found the entry point
of the Condor missile. The hull was blown away down
to the water line and the interior destruction
testament to the power of the ordnance. My guess is
the missile went in just forward of the single stack.
Port Hedgehog
Photo by John Walker
I cranked the scooter’s nose up and ascended the
forward edge of the impact area, riding up onto the
deck just below the bridge. Ahead of me was a large
rectangular box like structure I recognized as the
port side Hedgehog. The Hedgehogs were a mortar based
ASW system added to the vessel in exchange for its
second 3”/50 gun mount. As I looked forward from the
Hedgehog platform I could see the forward 3" mount.
The main armament on the Buckley Class boats were 3
3”/50 caliber guns. These were unshrouded, as opposed
to guns on other DE, DD and larger class capital
ships. As with the USS Burns, the barrel and breach
of the gun was richly covered in corynactis.
Kendall examines the bow of Vammen. Note the large
barrel sponge on the bow chock.
Photo by John Walker
The razor thin bow of the Vammen looking aft.
Photo
by John Walker
As I approached the bow, I was amazed to see a
beautiful large barrel sponge perched atop the
railing at the very tip of the bow. Perfectly
symmetric, the sponge looked like some kind of
whimsical nautical adornment from the days when
warships still carried an element of artistic
expression in their design. The bow of a DE is razor
thin, and flying past the bow and turning around
presented an excellent view of the narrow beamed
ship. John was close behind so I moved out of the
shot and headed down the starboard rail back towards
the bridge. Climbing up the starboard side I flew
past the bridge and was amazed by the narrowness of
the deck hatches. I knew DE’s were compact, but
clearly crew comfort was an afterthought to Vammen’s
designers.
The stern of Vammen covered in corynactis and barrel
sponges.
Photo by John Walker
Heading aft, I flew along the deck looking for the
triple mid-ship mounted torpedo launchers. These I
did not find and it’s possible they were removed
either as part of a refit or simply in preparation of
the vessel as a target ship. I then dropped down to
main deck level and flew under the overhang of the
starboard 40mm gun tub. The fantail came up quickly
as I flew through a thick cloud of fish and out over
the stern. Like the Burns, the stern of Vammen is
heavily encrusted and covered with sponges. The
ship’s rudders were visible below and a large mooring
chain extends down the stern and off into the sand.
As John flew by I headed forward again, up and over
the aft facing 3 inch gun and along the deck of the
port side. From the barrel of the aft facing gun
sprouted a pair of sponges- a perfect visual metaphor
of the transformation of Vammen from weapon to
garden.
Vammen's aft 3"/50 caliber gun.
Photo by John
Walker
Time came to complete our circuit. As I looked up
for the silhouette of the down line, I was treated to
the outline of the ship’s mast again, shrouded in
fish and back-lit against the light green of the
shallower depths. I scootered up and around the mast
as John stayed low and shot up. Figuring we’d passed
the up line, we headed aft again and found the poly
pro line, starting our ascent right at 15 minutes.
Scott met us at 70 feet with back-up deco gas and
took John’s scooter so he could get some video of
both of us hanging out. We then started handing Scott
used deco bottles. The water warmed up as the
visibility dropped from 70 feet to less than 20 and
we wound up an uneventful hang to complete our ascent
into bright sunshine and a light swell. Getting back
aboard Sundiver II was a breeze as our rigs were
winched aboard and we slithered onto the swim step.