New Bedford at anchor, c. 1944-current, location Ballard Shipyards |
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Career (USA) | |
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Name: | USNS New Bedford |
Namesake: | New Bedford, Massachusetts |
Builder: | Wheeler Shipbuilding Company |
Laid down: | as FS-289 for the U.S. Army (1944) |
Launched: | 1945 |
Completed: | 1945 |
Acquired: | by the U.S. Navy, July 1, 1950 |
Commissioned: | July 1, 1950 as USNS New Bedford (IX-308) |
Decommissioned: | October 28th, 1994 |
In service: | 1945 |
Out of service: | 4 April 1995 |
Reclassified: | AKL-17, June 1950 |
Refit: | IX-308, USNS New Bedford in 1963 |
Struck: | October 28th, 1994 |
Fate: | sold, 1996 |
Status: | In Purchase Agreement |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Camano-class cargo ship |
Tonnage: | 620 tons |
Displacement: | 414 tons(lt) |
Tons burthen: | 940 tons(fl) |
Length: | 177 ft |
Beam: | 32 ft |
Draft: | 10 ft |
Propulsion: | Two 500 hp GM Cleveland Division 6-278A 6-cyl V6 diesel engines, twin screws |
Speed: | 12 knots |
Complement: | 26 officers and enlisted |
USNS New Bedford (FS-289/AKL-17) was a Camano-class cargo ship constructed for the U.S. Army as FS-289 shortly before the end of World War II.
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Built as the U.S. Army U.S. Army Freight and Supply Ship FS-289 at Wheeler Shipbuilding, Whitestone New York in 1944[1] she served with a U.S. Coast Guard crew operating in Hawaii during the remainder of the war.[2]
Acquired and converted to a Camano-class cargo shipby the US Navy, 1 July 1950 Placed in service as USNS New Bedford (AKL-17).[3]
New Bedford's shakedown cruise initially took her across the central Pacific Ocean to Midway Islands, Guam and Saipan. Attached to the Service Force, Pacific Fleet, New Bedford carried supplies between Navy bases throughout the central Pacific. The New Bedford is also the sister ship of the ill-fated Pueblo, which was captured by the North Koreans in 1968 and whose crew was imprisoned for 11 months.
The ship then served out of the port of New Bedford servicing the U.S. Air Force Texas Towers with equipment, food, petroleum, oils, and lubricant and other required supplies.[4] On 14 January 1961 the ship delivered supplies and stood by the ill fated Texas Tower #4 and was struggled in the storm trying to reach the tower as it was wrecked. It was lost with all 28 hands at 7:20pm on January 15, 1961.[5]
The ship was placed out of service in 1963 and then was reclassified Miscellaneous Unclassified, (IX-308) where it was deployed to the Naval Undersea Warfare Center, Keyport, Washington for torpedo testing duty and assigned service-craft status. The (IX-308) served as a Torpedo Test Firing Vessel and during this assignment she steamed over 310,000 nautical miles. She was equipped with both surface and underwater launchers and associated fire control equipment. She supported proofing, acceptance testing and research work on Keyport's ranges since that time.
During these past 31 years, the New Bedford has: 1) fired over 7200 units (torpedoes, targets, etc.); 2) recovered more than 900 units; 3) planted more than 5425 range buoys; 4) retrieved over 4650 range buoys; 5) made server port calls to Vancouver and Nanaimo, British Columbia and two trips to San Diego.
The IX-308's out-of-service ceremony incorporated elements of the vessel's presumed history. The torpedo station people had come to the assumption that this ship, not her sister ship the Hewell,[6] was used in the movie.[7] The proceedings were highlighted by audio clips taken directly from the film. Those present heard memorable film quotes just as they had been spoken by the actors in the film so many years ago.
The ceremony was not limited to the ship's film history, but also touched on its long military career. The Mayor of the City of New Bedford, Massachusetts, the Honorable Rosemary Tierney, was in attendance along with retired Navy Captain Frederick R. Purrington.
The out of service ceremony commenced flawlessly, but did not end without one final act of good humor. Code 80's Steve Schultz appeared as Ensign Pulver at the end of the proceedings. He sprinted down the bow of the vessel with a palm tree. Schultz, or rather Pulver, launched the unsuspecting palm over the pier in one final act of defiance as well as in celebration and honor of the New Bedford IX-308.
In total, the USNS New Bedford served for nearly five decades in the Army and Navy. October 28, 1994 finally saw the flag lowered on the vessel, thus ending its military career.
This article includes information collected from the Naval Vessel Register, which, as a U.S. government publication, is in the public domain. The entry can be found here.
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