USS Mellena (AKA-32): Difference between revisions
John Leach (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "Chinese" to "Chinese") |
John Leach (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "Marianas" to "Northern Mariana Islands") |
||
Line 64: | Line 64: | ||
''Mellena'' (AKA-32) was laid down under [[Maritime Commission]] contract by [[Walsh-Kaiser Co., Inc.]], [[Providence, R.I.]], 25 September 1944; launched 11 December 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Paul P. Neal; acquired by the Navy 20 January 1945; and [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] the same day, LCDR B. C. Modin in command. | ''Mellena'' (AKA-32) was laid down under [[Maritime Commission]] contract by [[Walsh-Kaiser Co., Inc.]], [[Providence, R.I.]], 25 September 1944; launched 11 December 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Paul P. Neal; acquired by the Navy 20 January 1945; and [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] the same day, LCDR B. C. Modin in command. | ||
After shakedown out of [[Naval Station Norfolk|Norfolk, Va.]], ''Mellena'' carried cargo via [[Guantanamo Bay Naval Base|Guantanamo Bay]] and [[Panama]] to [[Pearl Harbor]] where she arrived in mid–March. She trained in [[Hawaiian Islands|Hawaiian]] waters until [[8 April]]; and following a cargo run to [[San Francisco, California]] and back continued amphibious support training exercises until sailing for the [[Philippines]] [[13 June]]. She reached [[Guinan]], [[Samar]], [[28 June]]. During the closing weeks of fighting in the western [[Pacific]], she made cargo runs to the [[Palaus]], the [[Admiralties]], and the [[ | After shakedown out of [[Naval Station Norfolk|Norfolk, Va.]], ''Mellena'' carried cargo via [[Guantanamo Bay Naval Base|Guantanamo Bay]] and [[Panama]] to [[Pearl Harbor]] where she arrived in mid–March. She trained in [[Hawaiian Islands|Hawaiian]] waters until [[8 April]]; and following a cargo run to [[San Francisco, California]] and back continued amphibious support training exercises until sailing for the [[Philippines]] [[13 June]]. She reached [[Guinan]], [[Samar]], [[28 June]]. During the closing weeks of fighting in the western [[Pacific]], she made cargo runs to the [[Palaus]], the [[Admiralties]], and the [[Northern Mariana Islands]], and at the [[Surrender of Japan|cessation of hostilities]] she was anchored at [[Iwo Jima]]. After transporting [[Seabees]] to [[Saipan]], she returned to [[Leyte Gulf]] [[28 August]] to carry [[Occupied Japan|occupation troops]] to [[Japan]]. | ||
Assigned to Transport Squadron 24, ''Mellena'' embarked 242 MPs and Army Engineers of the XIV Corps at [[Manila]] and sailed for Japan [[7 September]]. Reaching [[Tokyo Bay]] the 13th, she steamed up the [[Honshū]] coast and debarked her troops at [[Shiogama]] two days later. She battled [[typhoon]] seas off Honshū [[18 September]] and arrived [[Okinawa Island|Okinawa]] a week later to embark units of the 1st Marine Division. Operating with the 7th Amphibious Group, she sailed for Chinese waters [[29 September]] to support the U.S. program of assisting the [[Chinese Nationalists]] in their efforts to regain control of the Chinese mainland following the defeat of Japan. | Assigned to Transport Squadron 24, ''Mellena'' embarked 242 MPs and Army Engineers of the XIV Corps at [[Manila]] and sailed for Japan [[7 September]]. Reaching [[Tokyo Bay]] the 13th, she steamed up the [[Honshū]] coast and debarked her troops at [[Shiogama]] two days later. She battled [[typhoon]] seas off Honshū [[18 September]] and arrived [[Okinawa Island|Okinawa]] a week later to embark units of the 1st Marine Division. Operating with the 7th Amphibious Group, she sailed for Chinese waters [[29 September]] to support the U.S. program of assisting the [[Chinese Nationalists]] in their efforts to regain control of the Chinese mainland following the defeat of Japan. |
Revision as of 16:32, 6 March 2024
Artemis-class AKA, similar to USS Mellena | |
History | |
---|---|
Laid down: | 25 September 1944 |
Launched: | 11 December 1944 |
Commissioned: | 20 January 1945 |
Decommissioned: | 11 June 1946 |
Struck: | 3 July 1946 |
Fate: | Transferred to the California Maritime Academy and commissioned as the Golden Bear in 1946, decommissioned in 1971 and subsequently sold for scrap. |
General Characteristics | |
Builder: | Walsh-Kaiser Co., Inc. |
Hull type: | S4-SE2-BE1 |
Displacement: | 4,087 tons light, 7,080 tons loaded |
Length: | 426 ft (129.8 m) |
Beam: | 58 ft (17.7 m) |
Draft: | 16 ft (4.9 m) |
Propulsion: | Steam turbo-electric drive; two boilers, two propellers, 6,000 shp (4.5 MW) |
Speed: | 16.9 knots (31.3 km/h) |
Complement: | 321 (20 officers, 301 men), plus 255 embarked troops |
Armament: | 1 × 5"/38 caliber DP gun, 4 × twin 40 mm AA guns, 16 × 20 mm AA guns |
Boats: | 14 LCVP, 8 LCM |
USS Mellena (AKA-32) was an Artemis class attack cargo ship named after the minor planet 869 Mellena, which in turn was named after Werner von Melle, mayor of Hamburg. She served as a commissioned warship for 16 months, and as a merchant marine training ship for 25 years after that.
History
Mellena (AKA-32) was laid down under Maritime Commission contract by Walsh-Kaiser Co., Inc., Providence, R.I., 25 September 1944; launched 11 December 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Paul P. Neal; acquired by the Navy 20 January 1945; and commissioned the same day, LCDR B. C. Modin in command.
After shakedown out of Norfolk, Va., Mellena carried cargo via Guantanamo Bay and Panama to Pearl Harbor where she arrived in mid–March. She trained in Hawaiian waters until 8 April; and following a cargo run to San Francisco, California and back continued amphibious support training exercises until sailing for the Philippines 13 June. She reached Guinan, Samar, 28 June. During the closing weeks of fighting in the western Pacific, she made cargo runs to the Palaus, the Admiralties, and the Northern Mariana Islands, and at the cessation of hostilities she was anchored at Iwo Jima. After transporting Seabees to Saipan, she returned to Leyte Gulf 28 August to carry occupation troops to Japan.
Assigned to Transport Squadron 24, Mellena embarked 242 MPs and Army Engineers of the XIV Corps at Manila and sailed for Japan 7 September. Reaching Tokyo Bay the 13th, she steamed up the Honshū coast and debarked her troops at Shiogama two days later. She battled typhoon seas off Honshū 18 September and arrived Okinawa a week later to embark units of the 1st Marine Division. Operating with the 7th Amphibious Group, she sailed for Chinese waters 29 September to support the U.S. program of assisting the Chinese Nationalists in their efforts to regain control of the Chinese mainland following the defeat of Japan.
Mellena entered the Gulf of Chihli 3 October and during the next week she debarked the 1st Marines who were ordered to take control of the Tientsin area until Nationalist troops could be brought in to replace them. Departing Taku 11 October, she steamed via the Philippines to French Indochina where she arrived in the approaches to Haiphong 26 October. There she boatloaded 906 troops of the 52d Chinese Army and support equipment before sailing for northern China 30 October. As part of an eight–ship troop convoy, she reached Chinwangtao, China, 7 November and discharged the Nationalist troops. She returned to Taku 2 days later and on the 13th was assigned to "Magic Carpet" duty. Steaming via Tsingtao and Okinawa, she sailed with a capacity load of returning troops and arrived Portland, Oreg., 12 December.
From 14 December to 9 January 1946, Mellena underwent repairs at Willamette Iron & Steel Co. Thence she sailed 18 January for San Pedro where she arrived the 29th via San Francisco and San Diego. Designated for conversion to a surveying ship (AGS) 26 January, she operated out of San Pedro under Service Force, Pacific Fleet, until 6 March when she was ordered to be disposed of rather than converted. Assigned to the 12th Naval District 9 April, she reached Vallejo, California, the 15th. She decommissioned there 11 June 1946 and simultaneously was transferred to War Shipping Administration for delivery to the California Maritime Academy. Mellena was struck from the Navy list 3 July 1946. Subsequently, she was recommissioned for the Academy as T.S. Golden Bear. She was sold for scrap following her decommissioning in 1971.
References
- Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships (Primary source for this article)