USNS Mission San Carlos (T-AO-120)

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Career United States Navy ensign
Laid down: 1 November 1943
Launched: 12 February 1944
Acquired: 12 November 1947
In service: 12 November 1947
Out of service: 6 November 1957
Struck: 6 November 1957
Fate: Sold, 16 May 1966
General characteristics
Displacement: 21,880 tons full
  5,532 tons light
Length: 524 ft (160 m)
Beam:   68 ft (21 m)
Draft:   30 ft (9 m)
Propulsion: Turbo-electric, single screw,
6,000 hp (4.5 MW)
Speed: 16.5 knots (31 km/h)
Complement: 52 mariners

USNS Mission San Carlos (T-AO-120) was one of twenty-seven Mission Buenaventura-class fleet oilers built during World War II for service in the United States Navy. She was one of two named for Mission San Carlos Borroméo de Carmelo, located in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, the other being Mission Carmel (T-AO-113).

Mission San Carlos was laid down on 1 November 1943 under a Maritime Commission contract by Marine Ship Corporation, Sausalito, California: launched 12 February 1944; sponsored by Mrs. J. H. Pomeroy; and delivered 15 April 1944. Chartered to Pacific Tankers, Inc. for operations on 15 April, she spent the remainder of the War providing allied forces overseas with the vital fuel needed to keep America's armies on the move (during which time she was awarded the National Defense Service Medal). She was returned to the Maritime Commission on 20 April 1946 and laid up in the Maritime Reserve Fleet at Mobile, Alabama.

Acquired by the Navy on 12 November 1947 and chartered to Marine Transport, Inc. for operations, she was placed in service with the Naval Transportation Service as Mission San Carlos (AO-120). After 1 October 1949 she was under the operational control of the newly created Military Sea Transportation Service as USNS Mission San Carlos (T-AO-120). She remained in service with MSTS until 6 November 1957 when she was transferred to the Maritime Administration (MARAD) for lay up in the Maritime Reserve Fleet at Beaumont, Texas. She was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on the same date.

Sold to Transwestern Associates on 16 May 1966 for conversion to a bulk carrier, she was reacquired by MARAD in the summer of 1966 and resold to Hudson Waterways Corporation for conversion into a combination train ferry and container ship in September, 1966. Renamed Seatrain Maryland, into 1969 she carried cargo between the east and west coasts of the United States and occasionally to Vietnam.

The ship's final disposition is unknown.

[edit] See also

  • USS San Carlos (AVP-51)

[edit] References

This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.