USS Buckeye (AN-13)

USS Buckeye (AN-13/YN-8) was an Aloe-class net laying ship in service with the United States Navy from 1942 to 1947. In the late 1970s and 1980s, she was used as a salvage training hulk.

Buckeye as a salvage training hulk, in 1979
History
United States
Name: USS Buckeye
Namesake: A tree resembling the horse chestnut
Ordered: as Cottonwood (YN-8)
Builder: Commercial Iron Works, Portland, Oregon
Laid down: 17 March 1941, as Buckeye (YN-8)
Launched: 26 July 1941
Sponsored by: Miss Sara Ann Tefler
Commissioned: 26 December 1942 as USS Buckeye (YN-8) at Dutch Harbor, Alaska
Decommissioned: March 1947 at Subic Bay, Philippine Islands
In service: 5 September 1941
Renamed: Buckeye, 16 October 1940
Reclassified: AN-13, 1 January 1944
Stricken: 1 July 1963
Homeport: Tiburon, California
Fate: Transferred in 1963 to the U.S. Maritime Administration's National Defense Reserve Fleet, Suisun Bay, Benicia, California
Notes: Reacquired by the Navy,5 May 1976, for use as a salvage training hulk
General characteristics
Type: Aloe-class net laying ship
Tonnage: 660 tons
Displacement: 700 tons
Length: 163' 2"
Beam: 30' 6"
Draft: 11' 8"
Propulsion: diesel engine, single propeller
Speed: 12.5 knots
Complement: 48 officers and enlisted
Armament: one single 3 in (76 mm) dual purpose gun mount; two 0.5 in (12.7 mm). machine guns

Built in Portland, Oregon

Buckeye (YN-8) was laid down on 17 March 1941 at Portland, Oregon, by the Commercial Iron Works; launched on 26 July 1941; sponsored by Miss Sara Ann Tefler; and placed in service on 5 September 1941, Lt. Elias Johnson, USNR, in charge.

World War II service

North Pacific operations

After fitting out at the Puget Sound Navy Yard, Buckeye began duty in the 13th Naval District. She tended nets there until the fall of 1942. At that time, the ship was transferred to the Alaska Sector based at Dutch Harbor.

While stationed there, she was placed in full commission on 26 December 1942, Lt. Comdr. Elias Johnson, USNR, in command. She continued to tend nets and buoys in the Aleutian Islands, first at Dutch Harbor and, after May 1943, at recently captured Attu. On 1 January 1944, Buckeye was re-designated AN 13. During the summer of 1944, the net layer received orders to Seattle, Washington, for an overhaul that she completed between 24 July and 11 September.

West Pacific operations

Following a round-trip voyage from the U.S. West Coast to Hawaii and back, Buckeye was stationed at the Naval Net Depot at Tiburon, California, near San Francisco, California, as ready duty ship and standby vessel for emergency repairs. That duty lasted until 27 January 1945 when she was transferred to Service Squadron (ServRon) 6 of the U.S. 7th Fleet.

During February and March, the net layer stopped at Pearl Harbor, Funafuti in the Ellice Islands, Manus in the Admiralty Islands, and Hollandia on New Guinea before arriving in the Philippines in April. Initially, she served in Leyte Gulf but, later that summer moved to Luzon where she operated in Manila Bay and Subic Bay.

Post-war activity

Buckeye spent the remainder of her active career at Luzon. On 17 July 1946, the ship went aground in Subic Bay. With the assistance of Elder, she was refloated on 29 July and was towed to Alava Dock for repairs.

Post-war inactivation

She was still undergoing repairs at the end of 1946 and, apparently, they were never completed. She went out of commission at Subic on 4 March 1947. Later transferred to the Pacific Reserve Fleet group berthed at San Diego, California, she remained there until 1963 when she was turned over to the U.S. Maritime Administration for lay up in Suisun Bay, California

Her name was struck from the Navy List on 1 July 1963. She remained at the Suisun Bay facility until 5 May 1976 at which time she was reacquired by the Navy for use as a salvage training hulk. Her status is unknown.

gollark: So what's the problem ¿
gollark: It should (assuming it is) bind automatically.
gollark: It's just like using a regular screen, probably.
gollark: ```yo```
gollark: Stick the linked card in its card slot.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.