- USS Hyperion (AK-107)
USS "Hyperion" (AK-107), a "Crater"-class
cargo ship , is the only ship of theUnited States Navy to have this name."Hyperion", formerly
Liberty ship SS "Christopher C. Andrews", was launched24 June 1943 by Permanente Metals Corp., Richmond, California; sponsored by Mrs. Percy Lindt; acquired by the Navy from WSA10 July 1943 ; and commissioned25 August 1943 at San Diego, Lt. Comdr. C. C. Newman in command.With gasoline barge "YOG-85" in tow, "Hyperion" sailed for the Pacific
18 September on what was to be a memorable voyage. During the 42-day trip, the tow was lost twice; lightning struck the mainmast; a crewman was lost in high seas; and emergency flares were spotted but nothing was found. "Hyperion" finally reachedEspiritu Santo ,New Hebrides on30 October 1943 . The following half year saw the cargo ship shuttling among theSolomon Islands bringing valuable supplies — gasoline, diesel oil, rolling stock, foodstuffs — to the staging area for some of the Pacific's most hard-fought campaigns.On
5 April 1944 "Hyperion" steamed from theSolomons with 45 passengers in addition to her usual cargo of oil and supplies. Arriving10 April atEmirau Island in theBismarcks , occupied only three weeks earlier, "Hyperion" discharged cargo by day and steamed out to safety at night. She then returned to her valuable work in the staging areas, operating betweenNew Caledonia ,Guadalcanal ,New Zealand , and the Bismarcks.In the fall of 1944, as the war advanced steadily across the Pacific and culminated in the climactic
Battle of Leyte Gulf , one of the greatest naval engagements of all time, "Hyperion" had her first taste of battle. Departing Espiritu Santo22 September , "Hyperion" picked up stores atTulagi and joined TG 78.8's reinforcement group which supported AdmiralDaniel Barbey 's Northern Attack Force TF 78. She sailed intoLeyte Gulf in a 33-ship convoy29 October , only three days after the conclusion of that great battle. During the next fortnight, "Hyperion" went to general quarters 87 times, fought off 37 Japanese air attacks, and splashed 2 enemy planes.Another tour of duty shuttling cargo in the staging area between New Zealand and New Caledonia ended in late April 1945 as "Hyperion" loaded 6,500 tons of Army engineering equipment at
Nouméa and steamed forOkinawa , still the scene of bloody fighting. During the 18 days it took her to discharge cargo at Okinawa beginning8 May , "Hyperion" witnessed naval bombardments of the Japanese positions on the island, the battles ofNaha andShuri , and countlesskamikaze attacks — she was anchored less than 500 yards from USS|New Mexico|BB-40|3 when two suicide planes damaged the battleship12 May .As the war drew to a close, "Hyperion" sailed for
San Francisco, California on4 August 1945 ending two years of continuous service in the Pacific. The cargo ship had steamed some convert|75225|nmi|km|-1, carried 150,000 tons of cargo, transported over 1,000 passengers, made 62 voyages to 29 islands and 37 ports, and had fought at Leyte and Okinawa, "Hyperion" had crossed theequator six times and theinternational date line four times.After minor repairs at San Francisco, which she reached
24 August , "Hyperion" sailed for the East Coast via thePanama Canal . ReachingNorfolk, Virginia on24 October 1945 , she decommissioned16 November and was returned to WSA the following day. "Hyperion" was placed in the Maritime Commission National Defense Reserve Fleet, and was berthed in the James River until she was scrapped in 1961."Hyperion" received three
battle stars forWorld War II service.References
*
External links
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.