USS Kittaton (YTM-406)

USS Kittaton (YT-406 /YTB-406 /YTM-406) was a Sassaba-class district harbor tug that served the U.S. Navy at the end of World War II. She served in the Pacific Ocean, often in the Japan and Philippine Islands area and was eventually struck from the Navy list at an unspecified date.

USS Kittaton (at right) escorting USNS General LeRoy Eltinge (T-AP-154)
History
United States
Name: Kittaton
Namesake: A creek in Virginia named for a Native American word meaning "the great town or village."
Ordered: as YT-406
Builder: Ira Bushey & Sons, Inc., Brooklyn, New York
Laid down: date unknown
Launched: 30 June 1944
Acquired: by the U.S. Navy in December 1944
In service: 19 January 1945 as Kittaton (YTB-406)
Out of service: date unknown
Reclassified:
  • Harbor Tug, Large YTB-406, 15 May 1944
  • District Harbor Tug, Medium YTM-406 in February 1962
Stricken: date unknown
Identification: IMO number: 8853568
Honours and
awards:
World War II Victory Medal
Fate: sold for scrapping, 23 April 1987
General characteristics
Type: Sassaba-class district harbor tug
Displacement: 238 tons
Length: 100'
Beam: 25'
Draft: 9' 7"
Propulsion: Diesel, single screw
Speed: 12 knots
Complement: not known
Armament: none

Built in Brooklyn, New York

Kittaton (YTB-406) was laid down as YT-406; re-classified YTB-406 on 15 May 1944; launched 30 June 1944, by Ira Bushey & Sons, Inc., Brooklyn, New York; and placed in service 19 January 1945, Ens. T. J. Barfield in command.

Assigned to duty in the Pacific Ocean theatre of operations, Kittaton joined Task Force 16 at Pearl Harbor 21 May. Departing 2 days later, she steamed via Kwajalein and arrived Guam in June for towing operations out of Apra Harbor.

Post-war service

Kittaton served at Guam and in the western Pacific until February 1947 when she was assigned to further duty with Service Force, Pacific Fleet. Reclassified YTM-406 in February 1962, Kittaton in 1967 remained on active service with the U.S. Pacific Fleet out of U.S. Naval Base Subic Bay, Philippine Islands.

Deactivation

Kittaton was decommissioned and struck by the Navy at an undisclosed date. She was sold for scrapping on 23 April 1987.

Honors and awards

Qualified Kittaton personnel are eligible for the following:

gollark: You probably want to revert that when the program *exits*.
gollark: > Which is exactly what they wanted here!Not necessarily, this actually does sound like a case where they might want each task to run in its own coroutines (or would, if their pathfinding did yields).
gollark: I mean, it's great for very simple situations where you want to run two things at once in the simplest case, but often projects want to run a listener "thread" and temporarily spawn tasks to handle them or something and this ends up being constantly reinvented.
gollark: > Thanks for that gollark :/.You're welcome! It would be useful if there was an API for this! Perhaps I could simplify some of my stuff and make a PR!
gollark: Parallel isn't great because you can't add an extra task after it starts.

See also

References

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