USAT St. Mihiel prior to World War II |
|
Career | |
---|---|
Name: | USS St. Mihiel (AP-32) |
Namesake: | A World War I battlefield in France |
Builder: | American International Shipbuilding |
Cost: | ~$2,000,000 |
Laid down: | 20 November 1918 as Sinnemahoning |
Launched: | 19 November 1919 |
Completed: | September 1920 |
Acquired: | By the Army: 1922 |
Commissioned: | Army: 1922 - 1941 Navy: 22 Jul 1941 - 16 Nov 1943 Army: Nov 1943 - 1946 |
Honors and awards: |
One battle star for World War II service |
Fate: | Scrapped, 1957 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Argonne class transport, Hog Island Type B hull |
Displacement: | 8,550 tons (lt) |
Length: | 448 ft (137 m) |
Beam: | 58 ft 2 in (17.73 m) |
Draft: | 28 ft (8.5 m) |
Propulsion: | Steam turbine |
Speed: | 15.5 knots (28.7 km/h) |
Range: | 24 days |
Complement: | 253 |
Armament: | (WWII) 1 x 5"/38 caliber dual purpose gun, 4 x 3"/50 caliber dp guns |
St. Mihiel, launched in October 1920 for the United States Shipping Board by the American International Shipbuilding Corporation at Hog Island, Pennsylvania, was operated by the United States Army Transportation Corps from 1922 until mid-1940 as USAT St. Mihiel. Then transferred to the Navy, she was commissioned as USS St. Mihiel (AP-32) on 22 July 1941, Comdr. Edward B. Rodgers in command. In November 1943, she was transferred back to the Army and made a hospital ship, USAHS St. Mihiel. This ship is an example of an EFC Model 1024 ship design.
Having operated as a transport between the west coast and Alaska, with occasional runs to Hawaii prior to her transfer to the Navy, St. Mihiel performed the same duty after commissioning. In July 1942, she transported the wreckage of the Akutan Zero to San Diego, which become first flyable Zero fighter acquired by the United States during the war.
Into 1943, she called regularly at ports on mainland Alaska and in the eastern Aleutians. In May 1943, she participated in the occupation of Attu; then resumed more routine transport duties. On 9 September 1943, two days later, she headed south to San Francisco. On the 23rd, she steamed west to Hawaii and from there began her last voyage for the Navy. Transiting the Panama Canal in mid-October, she steamed on to Boston, where she was decommissioned on 16 November 1943 and returned to the Army which used her as a hospital ship for the remainder of World War II.
In 1946 she was decommissioned, passed to US Maritime Commission and laid up until scrapped at Baltimore by Patapsco Scrap Company in 1957.
St. Mihiel received one battle star for her service during the occupation of Attu in 1941.
|
|
|