USNS Mission Capistrano (T-AO-112): Difference between revisions

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|align="center" colspan="2"|[[Image:USNS Mission Capistrano.jpg|300px]] USNS ''Mission Capistrano'' at sea,<br>date and location unkown.<ref>{{USNS Mission Capistrano.jpg/credit}}</ref><br/>
|align="center" colspan="2"|[[Image:USNS Mission Capistrano.jpg|300px]] USNS ''Mission Capistrano'' at sea,<br>date and location unkown.<ref>{{USNS Mission Capistrano.jpg/credit}}</ref><br/>

Revision as of 15:24, 19 April 2008

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USNS Mission Capistrano.jpg USNS Mission Capistrano at sea,
date and location unkown.[1]
History
Laid down: 29 February 1944
Launched: 7 May 1944
Delivered: 14 June 1944
Struck: 1 January 1955
Fate: In service
General Characteristics
Hull type: T2-SE-A2
Displacement: 5,532 tons light;
21,880 tons full
Length: 524 ft (160 m)
Beam: 68 ft (21 m)
Draft: 30 ft (9.0 m)
Speed: 16.5 knots (31 km/h)
Complement: 52
Propulsion: Turbo-electric, single screw
Armament (WWII): 2 x 5 in (2x1)
8 x 20mm (8x1)

USNS Mission Capistrano (T-AO-112) is the second of twenty-seven Mission Buenaventura-class fleet oilers built during World War II for service in the United States Navy. Named for the Mission San Juan Capistrano in California, she is the only U.S. Naval vessel to bear the name.

Operational history

Originally laid down on 29 February 1944 as a Maritime Commission type (T2-SE-A2) tanker hull (MC hull 1819) under a Maritime Commission contract as SS Mission Capistrano at the Marine Ship Corporation in Sausalito, California; launched on 7 May 1944; sponsored by Mrs. James E. George; and delivered on 14 June 1944. Chartered to Pacific Tankers Inc., she spent the rest of the War supporting allied forces overseas (during which time she was awarded the National Defense Service Medal), until returned to the Maritime Commission on 20 April 1946 and laid up at the Maritime Commission Reserve Fleet at Mobile, Alabama. Acquired by the Navy on 17 November 1947, she was designated as Mission Capistrano (AO‑112) and transferred to the Naval Transportation Service for duty. She served with this service until 1 October 1949 when the Naval Transportation Service was absorbed into the new Military Sea Transportation Service (MSTS).

Redesignated USNS Mission Capistrano (T‑AO‑112), she was transferred to the operational control of MSTS on the same date. She continued her service with MSTS until 1 January 1955 when she was placed out of service, struck from the Naval Vessel Register, and transferred to the Maritime Administration and laid up at the Beaumont, Texas Reserve Fleet. Reacquired by the Navy on 5 July 1956, she was transferred to MSTS on the same date and placed in service for further duty with MSTS. She continued her voyages along the world’s tanker routes transporting oil to and from the United States until early 1960, when she entered the Todd Pacific Shipyards at New Orleans, Louisiana for conversion to a "Sound Testing Ship." Reclassified USNS Mission Capistrano (AG‑162) on 1 July 1960 she was modified to carry an ultra‑high‑powered sonar transducer array some five stories high and several tons in weight. The transducer could be raised and lowered like a centerboard through the ship’s bottom. Upon completion of her conversion, she was placed in service as USNS Mission Capistrano (T-AG-162) (date unknown) and joined "Project ARTEMIS," a project intended to ultimately produce a system that could detect submarines at long range.

(PD) Photo: United States Navy
A view of USNS Mission Capistrano (T-AG-162)'s ultra-high-powered sonar transducer array.

Transferred to the Maritime Administration for lay up in the "National Defense Reserve Fleet," Mission Capistrano was sold by the Maritime Administration (MARAD) for commercial purposes in 1972 and converted to a "drill ship." Today, Mission Capistrano serves as part of the "Ready Reserve Force" fleet.

Notes

  1. (PD) Photo: Joe Radigan MACM / United States Navy

References