USS Orion (AC-11)

Career
Name: USS Orion
Builder: Maryland Steel Co., Sparrows Point, Maryland
Laid down: 6 October 1911
Launched: 23 March 1912
Commissioned: 29 July 1912
Decommissioned: 18 June 1926
Struck: 10 July 1931
Fate: Sold, 30 August 1933
General characteristics
Type: Collier
Displacement: 19,132 long tons (19,439 t)
Length: 536 ft (163 m)
Beam: 65 ft (20 m)
Draft: 27 ft 8 in (8.43 m)
Speed: 14 kn (16 mph; 26 km/h)
Complement: 179 officers and enlisted
Armament: 4 × 3 in (76 mm) guns

USS Orion (AC–11) was a collier of the United States Navy. The ship was laid down by the Maryland Steel Co., Sparrows Point, Maryland, on 6 October 1911, launched on 23 March 1912, and commissioned at Norfolk on 29 July 1912.

Contents

Service history

Atlantic Fleet, 1912—1917

Assigned to general collier duty with the Atlantic Fleet in September, Orion remained in the western Atlantic until placed in reserve at Norfolk on 9 October 1914. Recommissioned on 28 December, she continued to serve the Atlantic Fleet until ordered to Cavite in January 1917.

World War I, 1917—1918

Orion was at Colón in the Canal Zone when the United States entered World War I in April 1917. Orion remained there until 21 May, then returned to Norfolk, whence she steamed to the Azores for operations during June and July. During the latter month, she also assisted in placing a defensive chain across the harbor at Punta Delgado. Returning briefly to Hampton Roads, Orion departed again on 18 August and carried coal and drafts of men to Bahia, Brazil for further transfer to Frederick, Mount Baker, and Glacier. During the fall she served on the east coast from Norfolk to Boston, then, in January 1918, joined the Naval Overseas Transportation Service (NOTS).

Continuing her collier duties under NOTS, she served on general duty in Chesapeake Bay until she steamed south again in April. In May, she off-loaded coal at Montevideo, then headed back toward New York. Just after departing the former, she sighted an enemy submarine and fired on it, chasing it off. On arrival back in the United States, she resumed her more mundane coastal collier duties.

Pacific Fleet, 1918—1925

After the end of the war and the completion of a coal run to France, Orion returned to the United States, and on 5 February 1919 was detached from NOTS and assigned to duty with the Atlantic Fleet. In June, she steamed to the west coast where she joined the Pacific Fleet and for the next year resupplied ports on the west coasts of both North and South America. In August, she was transferred to the Naval Transport Service, then on maneuvers in the West Indies, and with that service continued to supply fleet units until December 1925.

Decommissioning and sale

Then ordered inactivated, she decommissioned at Norfolk on 18 June 1926. Struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 10 July 1931, she was sold to the Union Ship Building Co., Baltimore, Maryland on 30 August 1933.

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