Donnie, I envy you the opportunity. One time I got to see the Kidd from a distance, while I was crossing the bridge over the Mississippi at Baton Rouge. I was in a hurry and didn't have time to stop.
One very small (three letters) correction. The ship in question is U.S.S. The Sullivans. "The" is part of the ship's name. The Navy wanted to clarify that the name honored all five of the Sullivan brothers, who were killed on board the Juneau at Guadalcanal. According to Wikipedia, she was the first USN ship named to honor more than one person.
Here's a link to a web photo showing the name painted on the transom:
https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQSgFKPn0_g1R7w0qu2a0_wuitXgP3hr6SATl8agH2ez7SSTPCs
The current The Sullivans also has "the" as part of her name: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3e/US_Navy_090213-N-4774B-039_The_guided-missile_destroyer_USS_The_Sullivans_(DDG_68)_flies_the_ship's_battle_flags_during_exercises_at_sea.jpg
The captain of the new The Sullivans gave the graduation address when my stepson graduated from boot camp at Great Lakes.
If you haven't seen the old movie "The Fighting Sullivans," it's worth watching as an interesting museum piece. It passes over their naval careers and deaths in about two minutes, though. As I recall, some theaters refused to show it because the last few scenes were too much for audiences to take.
Our good Forum friend Al Ross has a book in print called Anatomy of the Ship: The Destroyer The Sullivans. Anybody interested in the ship - or any other Fletcher-class destroyer, gotta have that book.
A couple of years ago I had a graduate teaching assistant who was a Navy vet. I nailed him on this one. He said that he'd been required in one of his training schools to memorize the names of two USN ships that had "the" as part of their names. Neither of us could remember the other one. Anybody else know?
Youth, talent, hard work, and enthusiasm are no match for old age and treachery.