USS Naubuc (AN-84)

History
United States
Name: USS Naubuc
Namesake: A town in Hartford County, Connecticut
Builder: Marine Iron and Shipbuilding Company, Duluth, Minnesota
Laid down: 31 December 1943
Launched: 15 April 1944
Sponsored by: Mrs. Harold E. Ford
Commissioned: 15 March 1945
Decommissioned: 6 September 1946, at Astoria, Oregon
Struck: 1 September 1962
Identification:
  • YN-109 (31 December 1943)
  • AN-84 (15 March 1945)
Struck: 1 September 1962
Reinstated: 1 June 1967
Identification: YRST-4 (March 1968)
Struck: 1 September 1975
Fate: sold, 1 September 1975, for scrapping
General characteristics
Class and type: Cohoes-class net laying ship
Displacement: 775 tons
Length: 168 ft 6 in (51.36 m)
Beam: 33 ft 10 in (10.31 m)
Draft: 10 ft 10 in (3.30 m)
Propulsion: Diesel-electric, 2,500 hp (1,900 kW)
Speed: 12.3 knots (22.8 km/h; 14.2 mph)
Complement: 46 officers and enlisted
Armament:

USS Naubuc (YN-109/AN-84/YRST-4) was a Cohoes-class net laying ship which was assigned to protect United States Navy ships and harbors during World War II with her anti-submarine nets. Her World War II career was short due to the war coming to an end, and she was inactivated only to be commissioned again some time later as a tender for salvage craft.

Construction and career

The second ship to be so named by the Navy, Naubuc was laid down on 31 December 1943 with the identification number YN–109 by the Marine Iron and Shipbuilding Co., Duluth, Minnesota. The ship was launched on 15 April 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Harold E. Ford; and commissioned on 15 March 1945, Lt. (jg.) W. M. Bauer in command with the identification number AN-84.

Following a delayed shakedown off the U.S. East Coast, Naubuc departed Boston, Massachusetts on 24 April 1945, en route to California. Arriving at San Pedro, California on 7 June, she completed intensive net training drills and headed west, anchoring in Pearl Harbor 17 July.

By 1 August she was at Eniwetok, whence she continued on to the Philippines, performing her specialized services of laying and tending protective nets around ships arid across harbor entrances at Leyte until after the cessation of hostilities. Encoute to CONUS in October, she stopped at Kwajalein and Pearl Harbor, arriving at San Francisco, California, 1 December.

On completion of an abbreviated tour in the Panama Canal Zone, Naubus reported at San Diego, California, 2 January 1946, for duty in the 11th Naval District.

Post-war inactivation

Ordered to Seattle, Washington, for inactivation the following month, she decommissioned and entered the 19th Fleet, at Astoria, Oregon, 6 September 1946. She remained in the Columbia River Group, Pacific Reserve Fleet, until struck from the Naval Vessel Register 1 September 1962. She was then transferred to the custody of the U.S. Maritime Administration and placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet.

Reinstatement as a tender

Reacquired five years later, Naubuc was reinstated to the Naval Vessel Register 1 June 1967 arid scheduled to be converted to a Salvage Craft Tender. In March 1968 she was reclassified (ARST–4) and assigned to the 13th Naval District for conversion. In her later years, she was outfitted with four 12-cylinder diesel engines that powered four rotating thrusters mounted on vertical shafts. She was configured as a cable laying and implantment vessel with a cable drum located in the bow along with a cable guide going over the stern. The four thrusters allowed the vessel to stay "on station". When underway, however, only the two bow or stern thrusters were operated at any one time. The vertical thruster shafts increased the vessel's draft significantly. The thrusters were easily damaged by impact with the bottom. The Naubuc's final mission was as a support vessel for a cable underwater recovery vehicle (CURV-2) in the Tongue of the Ocean, off Andros Island.

Final decommissioning

On 1 September 1975 Naubuc was struck from the Navy List and sold.

References


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