- USS Artemis (ID-2187)
USS "Artemis" (ID-2187), also known as the USAT "Artemis", was a German passenger liner seized by
U.S. Customs atNew York City at the start of American involvement inWorld War I . She served theU.S. Army as the transport USAT "Artemis", and, at war’s end, she was transferred to the U.S. Navy as a transport for returning American troops and military equipment fromEurope .Constructed in Ireland
The second ship to be so named by the U.S. Navy, "Artemis" was originally built as the steel-hulled, twin-screw passenger steamship "Iowa". Completed in
1902 atBelfast ,Ireland , by Harland and Wolff, Ltd., "Iowa" was owned by the White Diamond Steamship Co., Ltd., and operated by George Warren and Co., ofLiverpool ,England , until acquired by the GermanHamburg-America Line and renamed "Bohemia" in1912 .Seized in New York by U.S. Customs
The outbreak of hostilities in
Europe in the summer of1914 stranded many German andAustria n ships -- "Bohemia" among them—in American ports. Because of her German registry, she was seized by American customs officials after the United States enteredWorld War I in April1917 ,World War I service
Service with the U.S. Army
"Bohemia" was renamed "Artemis", armed with a main battery of one 5-inch and one 3-inch gun, and placed in service as an Army transport. She served as USAT "Artemis" during World War I and for over three months after the war ended. Her battery was removed at
Norfolk, Virginia , on30 November 1918 , and she completed her last voyage as an Army transport atNew York City on23 February 1919 .Bringing U.S. troops back home
Turned over to the Navy at Fletcher's Drydock in
Hoboken, New Jersey , "Artemis" -- given the identification number (Id. No.) 2187 -- was commissioned there on8 April 1919 , Comdr.John P. Jackson in command. Assigned to the Cruiser and Transport Force, "Artemis" sailed forFrance on25 April 1919 , and reachedSt. Nazaire on8 May . Sailing forNewport News, Virginia -- one of the four primary ports of debarkation for the Cruiser and Transport Force -- on the 11th, she arrived at her destination on24 May . Shifting that same day toNorfolk, Virginia , she commenced her secondtransatlantic voyage cycle on1 June . Besides her embarked returningdoughboys , "Artemis" brought back a cargo of trucks to Newport News on her second voyage, arriving there on26 June . Shifting to Norfolk the same day, the ship began her third round-trip voyage on2 July , departing Norfolk forFrance . Arriving at St. Nazaire on15 July , Artemis moved to Brest soon thereafter, and began the return trip from that port on21 July .Arriving at Norfolk on
3 August , via Newport News, the ship underwent voyage repairs at Norfolk from 6 to9 August . She sailed thence for France on the latter day on her last voyage as a naval vessel, reaching St. Nazaire on21 August . Sailing for the United States on12 September , "Artemis" arrived atNew York City on the morning of23 September , mooring at pier 3, Army Base,Brooklyn, New York .Decommissioning
Shifting to steamship pier 2, Army Base, on
8 October , "Artemis" was decommissioned on18 October 1919 . During her career as a Navy transport, she had brought home 11,760 troops. Her name was struck from theNavy list on18 October 1919 , and the ship was transferred to theUnited States Shipping Board (USSB) for disposition.Subsequent maritime career
The USSB's fourth annual report, for the fiscal year ending
30 June 1920 , lists "Artemis" as being transferred to the France and Canada Steamship Corp. to be operated by that company, but this may never have come to pass, since contemporary merchant vessel registers refer only to her USSB ownership. Likewise, lists of ships operated by the France and Canada Steamship Co. do not contain "Artemis".Laid up by
1923 , "Artemis" remained inactive through the 1930's and intoWorld War II , in the hands of the USSB and its successor, theUnited States Maritime Commission . Acquired by the BritishMinistry of War Transport in1941 , the ship was renamed "Empire Bittern". She remained under the British flag until expended as ablockship off theNormandy beaches in June1944 .See also
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U.S. Navy
*World War I References
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* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-a/id2187.htm USS Artemis (ID # 2187), 1919-1919. Previously U.S. Army Transport Artemis (1917-1919)]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/12/172187.htm NavSource Online: USS Artemis (ID 2187) - ex-USAT Artemis]
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