Kittredge, Roland, DPC

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Chief Petty Officer
Last Primary NEC
DP-0000-Data Processing Technician
Last Rating/NEC Group
Data Processing Technician
Primary Unit
1960-1962, EM-0000, USS Proteus (AS-19)
Service Years
1959 - 1988
DP-Data Processing Technician
Five Hash Marks

 Last Photo   Personal Details 



Home State
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
Year of Birth
1941
 
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Contact Info
Home Town
Framingham
Last Address
FRAMINGHAM, MA
Date of Passing
Jun 21, 2017
 
Location of Interment
Saint Stephens Cemetery - Framingham, Massachusetts

 Official Badges 

US Navy Honorable Discharge


 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Department of Massachusetts
  2012, American Legion, Department of Massachusetts (Member) (Boston, Massachusetts) - Chap. Page


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

FRAMINGHAM—Roland K. Kittredge, 75, passed away peacefully on Wednesday, June 21, 2017, after a period of declining illness. He was the husband of Sandra H. (Belonis) Kittredge . They would have been married for 53 years this coming July. Roland was a life-long Framingham resident who graduated from Framingham High School, class of 1959. He was the son of the late Roland K. and Marion (Whittemore) Kittredge, and the brother of the late Nancy A. Eldredge of Natick. Following graduation from Framingham High School, he enlisted in the US Navy. After completing the US Navy Electrical and Electronics Prep School and Electrician’s Mate “A” School, he served in the Mediterranean aboard the USS Denebola (AF-56) and in Holy Loch Scotland aboard the USS Proteus (AS-19). While onboard the USS Proteus, he attended and graduated from the US Navy Deep Sea Divers School and was designated a second-class deep sea diver. Upon his discharge from active duty, he joined the US Naval Reserves from September 1962 through June 1986 when he retired with the rank of Chief Petty Officer Data Processing Technician. His Naval decorations include the United States Navy Unit Commendation Medal, United States Navy Reserve Medal (2 stars), National Defense Medal, United States Navy Good Conduct Medal (2 stars), and the Armed Forces Reserve Medal.

Mr. Kittredge worked in several local high technology computer companies including Computer Control Company, Honeywell, Inc., Prime Computer, Inc., Computervision Inc., Informix Software Inc., Ardent Software, Ascential Software and IBM Corporation prior to retiring in 2009. After his retirement, he began working as a technology specialist at Barbieri Elementary School in Framingham. He loved his position there and enjoyed assisting staff and students with any, and all, technology projects. 

Along with his wife Sandra, he is survived by one daughter Kimberly Taylor and her husband, Matthew of Shrewsbury, and their daughter, Courtney Marie Taylor, his sister Faye DeSaulnier and her husband Frank of Shrewsbury, many nieces, nephews, cousins, and close friends.

   

  1960-1962, EM-0000, USS Proteus (AS-19)

EM-Electrician's Mate

From Month/Year
January / 1960

To Month/Year
August / 1962

Unit
USS Proteus (AS-19) Unit Page

Rank
Petty Officer Second Class

NEC
EM-0000-Electrician's Mate

Base, Station or City
Holy Loch, Scotland

State/Country
Scotland (United Kingdom)
 
 
 Patch
 USS Proteus (AS-19) Details

USS Proteus (AS-19)

USS Proteus (AS-19)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The third USS Proteus (AS-19) was a Fulton-class submarine tender in the United States Navy.
Proteus was laid down by the Moore Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, Oakland, California, 15 September 1941; launched 12November 1942; sponsored by Mrs. Charles M. Cooke, Jr.; and commissioned 31 January 1944, Capt. Robert W. Berry in command.

Service history

1944–1959

After shakedown off San Diego, she stood out of San Francisco 19 March for Midway to tend submarines of Submarine Squadron 20. She arrived 3 May, and operating there until 1 December completed 51 voyage repairs and 14 refits for submarines. She returned to Pearl Harbor 4 December, and on 5 February got underway for Guam where she completed 4 voyage repairs and 24 refits by 7 August.

Assigned to occupation duty after the end of the war, Proteus rendezvoused with units of the 3rd Fleet and became the flagship of a 26-ship support group which steamed off the coast of Honshû until 26 August. On the 28th she anchored in Sagami Wan to begin supporting Submarine Squadron 20 as it demilitarized surrendered Japanese submarines, human torpedoes,

torpedo carrying boats, and suicide boats at Yokosuka and other locations in the Sagami Wan-Tokyo Bay areas. Future actors Tony Curtis - whose birth name was Bernard Schwartz - and Larry Storch were aboard Proteus at Tokyo Bay in August-September 1945 - and watched much of the formal surrender activities aboard USS Missouri from Proteus's signal bridge.
Also assigned to repair Japanese submarines, she remained until 1 November, when she headed home.

USS Proteus being lengthened at Charleston in 1959.

Transiting the Panama Canal on 6 December, she reached New London 16 December. A trip to the Canal Zone preceded cold weather operations with SubRon 8 at NS Argentia, Newfoundland during November, after which she returned to New London.

Decommissioned and placed in service 26 September 1947, she provided vital service to the submarine base at New London until January 1959. On the 15th she entered Charleston Naval Shipyard for conversion to a tender for the Polaris Fleet

Ballistic Missile submarines, including the addition of a 44-foot section amidships.

1960–1992

Proteus recommissioned 8 July 1960, and after shakedown at Guantanamo Bay, she accomplished her first SSBN refit 20

January–21 February at New London. She then crossed to Holy Loch, Scotland, arriving 3 March 1961. There for the next two years she completed 38 refits of Fleet Ballistic Missile submarines, for which she received the Navy Unit Commendation.

Back at Charleston for overhaul in 1963, on 2 January 1964 she resumed operations at Holy Loch to provide support and refits to the Fleet Ballistic Missile submarines of Submarine Squadron 14.
On 24 February Proteus arrived at Rota, Spain, to establish the second overseas replenishment site for Fleet Ballistic Missile submarines, returning to Holy Loch 12 April. On 29 June she put in at Charleston and on 16 October was en route to Guam. Arriving Apra Harbor 29 November, she established the third overseas replenishment site for the Fleet Ballistic Missile submarines. She continued to operate at Apra Harbor and in the Pacific for the next seven years, taking a five-month time off for self-overhaul in 1968 - relieved by Hunley (AS-31).

Transfer of a Polaris missile between Proteus and USS Patrick Henry at Holy Loch, Scotland, in 1961.   In 1971, after a brief R&R visit to Pearl Harbor, Proteus proceeded to Mare Island for an extensive overhaul, including a significant propulsion upgrade. A boiler accident forced her to stay at Ford Island, Hawaii for two months then a shake- down was accomplished out of Pearl Harbor, and after an R&R port call to Sydney Australia, Proteus returned to Apra Harbor for the now routine exchange with Hunley.

The exchange was completed by mid-January, 1973, and Proteus resumed her duties. In 1974 personnel from SRF, Guam, removed the remaining 5-inch gun turret and munitions were removed as unnecessary for her primary mission - leaving only the four 20mm mounts as her main defensive weapons. When Saigon fell in 1975, thousands of Vietnamese fled their country, and many made the crossing to Guam - some 100,000 of them. In a massive undertaking called "Operation New Life" - every able-bodied individual who could be spared was "volunteered" to help provide facilities to care for this "tidal wave" of humanity. As part of that effort - over 1,000 officers and men from Proteus worked with Seabee construction personnel to erect the refugee city "Tent City" on Orote Point, Guam - leaving only a hand-picked skeleton crew of individuals aboard to see to her safety and security; as well as handle emergencies from the boats that were in. But for that week, Proteus was out of "business as usual" - for which the Secretary of the Navy awarded Proteus her second Meritorious Unit Commendation in 1975; and she (along with other participating Navy Units) were awarded the first award of the Navy Humanitarian ServiceMedal (established by Executive Order January 1977 for actions beginning 1 April 1975).
In 1976 Proteus received her third consecutive Engineering "E" and second Humanitarian Medal for Typhoon Pamela Disaster Relief; and the Battle Efficiency "E" in 1978. That year, Proteus was sent to overhaul at Long Beach Naval Shipyard rather than the expected retirement and decommissioning.  In 1980, Proteus was home-ported at Apra Harbor, Guam, where her missile silos had been deactivated and the missiles removed and converted to tender submarines. On 21 October 1981, the Proteus was awarded the Battle "E" Efficiency. In November 1981, Proteus deployed on a six month deployment to Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. December 22, 1981, Proteus crossed the equator and received Neptunis Rex and Davy Jones aboard for Shellback ceremonies. In March 1982 while Proteus was still in Diego Garcia, her Majesty's Naval vessel HMS Sheffield docked with Proteus to requisition required parts before deploying to the Falkland Islands War where she was sunk on 10 May 1982 after Argentine air attack on 4 May 1982,

Proteus was the last friendly ship to have any contact with Sheffield before the sinking. Proteus returned to Guam May of 1982, crossing the equator a second time.

Proteus was decommissioned again in September 1992 and soon thereafter struck from the Naval Register.

1994–2007

1994 Proteus was re-commissioned yet again as a Berthing Auxiliary and placed in service at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Washington. At this time Proteus took on the new naval designation Miscellaneous Unclassified IX-518.
In September 1999 the ship was placed out of active service and laid up at the National Defense Reserve Fleet at Suisun Bay, California. Late 2007 she was towed to Esco Marine, Brownsville, Texas for scrapping; which was completed in early 2008.

USS Proteus (AS-19)
 
USS Proteus (AS-19) in 1980
    
Career (USA)
     
Namesake: Proteus   
Builder: Moore Dry Dock Company   
Laid down: 15 September 1941   
Launched: 12 November 1942   
Commissioned: 31 January 1944   
Decommissioned: 26 September 1947
   
Career
    
Recommissioned: 8 July 1960   
Decommissioned: September 1992
  
Career
    
Recommissioned: 1994, reclassified IX-518   
Decommissioned: September 1999   
Struck: 13 March 2001   
Fate: Scrapped, 2007   
General characteristics (as built)    
Class & type: Fulton-class submarine tender   
Displacement: 9,734 long tons (9,890 t)   
Length: 529 ft 6 in (161.39 m)   
Beam: 73 ft 4 in (22.35 m)   
Propulsion: diesel-electric   
Speed: 18.5 knots (34.3 km/h; 21.3 mph)   
Complement: 1,487   
Armament: 4 × 5"/38 caliber guns
8 × 40 mm guns
23 × 20 mm guns 

Commanding Officers, USS Proteus AS-19

Captain Robert W. Berry 31 January 1944 - 12 September 1944
Captain Charles N. Day 12 September 1944 - 4 September 1945
Captain James A. Jordan 4 September 1945 - 27 April 1947
Captain Richard C. Lake 27 April 1947 - 26 September 1947
Captain Richard B. Laning 8 July 1960 - 25 August 1962
Captain Raymond F. Dubois 25 August 1962 - 7 September 1963
Captain Lindsay C. McCarty 7 September 1963 - 16 January 1965
Captain Robert H. Gulmon 16 January 1965 - 14 July 1966
Captain Daniel C. Clements 14 July 1966 - 6 September 1967
Captain Fred T. Berry 6 September 1967 - 6 August 1968
Captain R. M. Weidman Jr. 6 August 1968 - 10 April 1970
Captain Frank A. Thurtell 10 April 1970 - 21 September 1971
Captain John T Rigsbee 21 September 1971 - 6 March 1974
Captain Marvin S. Greer Jr. 6 March 1974 - 8 June 1976
Captain Clifton G. Foster 8 June 1976 - 6 June 1978
Captain Thomas R. Fox 6 June 1978 - 7 August 1980
Captain Michael C. Colley 7 August 1980 - 18 June 1982
Captain J. Stephen Perry 18 June 1982 - 17 July 1984
Captain Herndon A. Oliver III 17 July 1984 - 10 November 1986
Captain Paul W. Middents 10 November 1986 - 1 September 1988
Captain Edward R. Losure Jr. 1 September 1988 - 16 August 1990
Captain William A. Evans IV 16 August 1990 - 11 July 1992


Throughout USS PROTEUS (AS 19) 48-year history, many awards have been bestowed on her.
 The following is a listing of some of those awards:

Meritorious Unit Citations 1963, 1975, 1982
Humanitarian Service Medal 
Golden Anchor 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985
Battle Efficiency "E" 1978, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1988
Engineering RED "E" 1974, 1975, 1976, 1985



Type
Surface Vessel
 

Parent Unit
Fulton-class

Strength
Tender/ Repair Ship

Created/Owned By
YN Coleman, Nelson, YN1 17
   

Last Updated: Jan 27, 2016
   
Memories For This Unit

Best Friends
Bill Cathey
Comley Cathey

Best Moment
Graduating from Diving

   

Other Memories
My whole USN Carrer was great

   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
pics
SoWey NAS
USN
41 Members Also There at Same Time
USS Proteus (AS-19)

Eckert, Donald, SCPO, (1958-1984) EM EM-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Darling, John, (1953-1964) SF SF-0000 [Other Service Rank]
Mackie, James, LT, (1956-1987) OFF 626X Lieutenant
Moorehead, Luther, SCPO, (1946-1967) LS LS-0000 Chief Petty Officer
Remington, Richard, CWO2, (1948-1969) MM MM-0000 Chief Petty Officer
Riojas, Erasmo, CPO, (1948-1970) HM HM-8401 Chief Petty Officer
Bender, Jim, SCPO, (1956-1975) MA MA-0000 Petty Officer First Class
Champagne, Monty R, PO1, (1953-1963) HT HT-9593 Petty Officer First Class
Gibson, Frank, PO1, (1961-1969) ET ET-1325 Petty Officer First Class
Hawkinson, Darryl, MCPO, (1958-1994) DC DC-0000 Petty Officer First Class
McKenney, Charles, CPO, (1941-1974) TM TM-0750 Petty Officer First Class
Phelps, James, SCPO, (1955-1974) BT BT-0000 Petty Officer First Class
Conover, Melvin, PO2, (1962-1966) EN 4319 Petty Officer Second Class
McIntire, Roger, PO2, (1959-1963) YN YN-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Poirier, Donald, PO2, (1962-1966) EN EN-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Robison, Hubert, CPO, (1959-1983) TM TM-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Smith, Alfred, PO1, (1956-1966) HM HM-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Walsh, Maurice, S2c, (1960-1964) SF SF-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Warmack, Ralph, PO2, (1960-1966) ET ET-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
White, Thomas, PO2, (1959-1962) SF SF-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Batchelor, Robert, PO3, (1960-1964) BM BM-5343 Petty Officer Third Class
Boemmel, Mike, CPO, (1955-1976) MM MM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Hammerschmidt, Kurt, PO3, (1958-1962) ETR ETR-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Patten, John, PO3, (1962-1968) MT MT-3318 Petty Officer Third Class
Potter, Richard, CPO, (1959-1979) HT HT-9593 Petty Officer Third Class
Rapata, James, PO2, (1961-1969) DC DC-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Sievert, Allen, PO3, (1961-1966) SK SK-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Winterrath, Roger, PO3, (1960-1963) TM TM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Twigg, Richard, MCPO, (1959-1989) BM BM-0000 Seaman
Robinson, James, FN, (1962-1964) FN FN-0000 Fireman
Wise, John, CPO, (1962-1989) EN EN-0000 Fireman
Laning, Richard, CAPT, (1940-1963) Captain
Horning, James, CPO, (1957-1986) ND Chief Petty Officer
Abreght, Donald, PO2, (1960-1964) Petty Officer Second Class
Doyle, David, LCDR, (1955-1986) Petty Officer Second Class
Martin, Kenneth, CDR, (1957-1993) Petty Officer Second Class
Roberts, Bobby, SCPO, (1954-1974) Petty Officer Second Class
Hell, Chuck, PO3, (1961-1966) Petty Officer Third Class
Hitchcock, William, CPO, (1960-1987) Petty Officer Third Class
Klein, George, PO1, (1960-1980) Petty Officer First Class
Cathey, Conley, PO3, (1957-1961) Petty Officer Third Class

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