- USS Basilan (AG-68)
USS "Basilan" (AG-68/ARG-12) was a "Basilan"-class
miscellaneous auxiliary acquired by theU.S. Navy duringWorld War II . The ship was designed as a combined barracks-stores-waterdistillation ship, but was later converted to an electronics repair ship. She spent her Navy career in thePacific Ocean theatre of operations.Liberty ship built in Louisiana
"Basilan" (ARG 12) originally projected as the EC-2 “
Liberty Ship ” "Jacques Phillipe Villere" -- was laid down on5 February 1944 atNew Orleans, Louisiana , by the Delta Shipbuilding Corporation. under aU.S. Maritime Commission contract (MCE hull 2460); redesignated as amiscellaneous auxiliary , "AG-68", on14 March 1944 , and allocated for conversion in response to the urgent need for self-propelled special barracks-stores ships; launched on21 March 1944 ; and sponsored by Mrs. Percy H. Brown.Delivered to the Navy on
21 April 1944 , "Basilan" was placed in reduced commission that same day for the voyage from New Orleans toMobile, Alabama . Placed out of commission at the latter port on24 April 1944 , she underwent conversion for her new role as a combined barracks-stores-distilling ship by theWaterman Steamship Company ; and was recommissioned at Mobile on10 October 1944 , Lt. Comdr. Lawrence A. Parks,USNR , in command.World War II service
East coast operations
Ordered to proceed to
Pilottown, Louisiana , on21 October , "Basilan" departed as directed and there joinedconvoy HK-293 on22 October . She reachedKey West, Florida , on25 October , joining convoy KN-346 later the same day and proceeding thence toNorfolk, Virginia . Anchoring inHampton Roads on31 October , the ship moved intoChesapeake Bay the following morning.After shakedown training, "Basilan" entered
drydock to undergo repairs and the installation of her evaporators at theNorfolk Navy Yard from 5 to25 November , after which time she shifted to the Naval Operating Base (NOB), Norfolk, to load supplies.Underway on the morning of
4 December , "Basilan" proceeded independently toNew York City , arriving at her destination the following afternoon. Proceeding thence in convoy on the afternoon of7 December , she arrived atGuantanamo Bay, Cuba , on the morning of the 14th. She sailed on the afternoon of15 December in convoy GZ-109 forPanama , reaching thePanama Canal and commencing her transit of the isthmian waterway on the morning of19 December .Drydocked that same afternoon at Balboa,
Panama Canal Zone , for the complete realignment of her enginecrankshaft , "Basilan" underwent repairs into the new year 1945.Pacific theatre operations
After her main engine broke down during the post-repair trials on
15 January 1945 , she was towed back to Balboa for additional work that lasted over almost afortnight . Following a successful post-repair trial run, "Basilan" shaped a course, proceeding independently, forPearl Harbor on27 January .Three-quarters of an hour into the afternoon watch on
1 February , however, she received dispatch orders re-directing her toSan Francisco, California , for reconversion to an “electronic repair and staff maintenance ship.” She reached theBethlehem Steel Company ’s shipyard at San Francisco on12 February . Shifting to the Naval Supply Depot to unload stores two days later, she returned to Bethlehem Steel’s yard on20 February . She remained there, undergoing conversion for her new role, through the end of March1945 .Underway for the Western
Caroline Islands on1 April , "Basilan" arrived atUlithi Atoll on the 24th, reporting for duty withService Squadron (ServRon) 10 and assignment to work in conjunction with "Jason" (ARH-1). The skilled artificers of "Basilan’s" ship repair unit (SRU) worked alongside those of "Jason" and under the direction of the latter’s repair officer. Simultaneously, the workload of “installing, maintaining and repairing electronic equipment” kept "Basilan’s" electronic repair force busy.The advent of the
typhoon season made it imperative to shift ServRon 10’s principal base of operations from the Western Carolines to thePhilippine Islands . With the selection of San Pedro Bay,Leyte Gulf , as the base site, the movement towardLeyte began on7 May . "Basilan" sailed with the fourth increment of ServRon 10 on20 May , and reached her destination on25 May . ServRon 10’s maintenance staff (later designated as Service Division 101, Maintenance) reported on board on28 May ."Basilan" carried out her support mission in Philippine waters as the Pacific War progressed to its victorious conclusion that summer. During her time in Leyte Gulf, again working with "Jason", she also provided important services in conjunction with the modern repair ship "Ajax" (AR-6) and the veterans "Vulcan" (AR-5) and "Prometheus" (AR-3). "Basilan’s" “skilled workmen in (the ship’s) SRU and electronic repair forces,” her chronicler noted modestly, performed “commendable work on such ships as the "Missouri" (BB-63), "Bennington" (CV-20), "Randolph" (CV-15), "Essex" (CV-9), and others…
”Her unique equipment also enabled her to fulfill another key sustaining role in supporting the forces afloat. “Due to our large evaporator capacity,” her historian later wrote, “we were able to issue water to many of the LCIs (
infantry landing craft ), LCS’s (support landing craft) and other small craft.”End-of-war operations
On
13 September , "Basilan" stood out of Leyte Gulf, bound for Jinsen (laterInchon ),Korea , to participate in the occupation of that former Japanese territory, briefly retracing her course in response to warnings of two typhoons crossing her proposed course.Earmarked for disposal on
21 September , the ship nevertheless remained on occupation duty, first at Jinsen and later atShanghai ,China , into the late autumn of 1945. "Basilan" concluded her occupation work on2 December , when she sailed from Shanghai, bound forPearl Harbor , arriving at her destination onChristmas Day 1945 . She sailed for the Pacific Northwest two days later.Reaching
Seattle, Washington , on6 January 1946 , "Basilan" began pre-inactivation overhaul soon thereafter. Before stripping could be completed, however, on22 February the ship received orders to report to Commandant,14th Naval District , for berthing and eventual assignment to JointTask Force (JTF) 1 being constituted to take part in theatomic bomb tests atBikini Atoll (Operation Crossroads ). On25 February , the ship departed for Pearl Harbor, and reached her destination on8 March .Post-war decommissioning
Decommissioned at Pearl on
22 April 1946 , "Basilan", never ultimately employed in Crossroads, remained in Hawaiian waters until30 March 1947 , when she sailed, in tow of tug "VO-69", and in company with the fleet tug "Abnaki" (ATF-96) and five other small tugs and their tows, forSan Francisco, California .Reaching
Drake’s Bay on15 April , she was turned over, having been stripped, to theU.S. Maritime Commission on14 May . Her name was stricken from theNaval Register on28 May 1947 , and the ship remained in theNational Defense Reserve Fleet atSuisun Bay ,California , until12 June 1972 when she was sold to Zidell Explorations, Inc., for scrapping.See also
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United States Navy
*World War II References
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* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/29/2912.htm NavSource Online: Service Ship Photo Archive - ARG-12 / AG-68 Basilan]
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