Fitch Coat of Arms

            Fitch Family History and Genealogy
 

U.S.S. Fitch Cover

U.S.S. Fitch Cover

A United States Navy cacheted envelope, mailed from the destroyer, U.S.S. Fitch. It bears a three-cent, green, Iwo Jima Memorial stamp and was postmarked on the ship, 11 Jun. 1947. The return address, typed in red, reads U.S.S. Fitch (DD-462). The envelope was sent to Earl K. Price, 4022 Green Street, Harrisburg, PA, an address which appears to have been printed rather than typed. Mr. Price belonged to the Universal Ship Cancellation Society (USCS), whose members collect covers from such ships. He probably had envelopes printed with the anchor cachet and his address, stamped them, and sent them to various ships. The Navy Mail Clark aboard the U.S.S. Fitch applied the ship's cancellation and mailed the envelope back to Mr. Price. Although Mr. Price typed "DD-462" in the upper left corner, it appears to have been crossed out (perhaps by the Navy Mail Clerk), because by 1947 the ship had been redesignated a destroyer mine sweeper, the DMS-462.

The U.S.S. Fitch was named for Commander LeRoy Fitch (1835-1875), No. 4008, who, during the Civil War, commanded a group of six small converted steamers, called "tinclads" on the Cumberland, Tennessee, and Ohio Rivers. With this fleet, he contributed substantially to the pursuit and defeat of the rebel general, John Hunt Morgan.

The destroyer was built at the Navy Yard in Boston, and launched in June 1941. She served throughout World War II, off Africa and France, in the North Atlantic on combat convoy and minesweeping duty, and at the surrender ceremonies in Tokyo Bay. There is a picture of the ship itself on page 564 of Vol. 2 of Descendants of Rev. James Fitch .

Source: Capt. Robert Rawlins, USN (Ret.), Editor USCS Log.