- USS Amsterdam (CL-101)
USS "Amsterdam" (CL-101) was a
United States Navy "Cleveland"-classlight cruiser , the last of the class to see action inWorld War II .The ship was laid down on
3 March 1943 atNewport News, Virginia , by the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, launched on25 April 1944 , sponsored byMrs. William E. Hasenfuss (the first "Gold Star Mother " ofAmsterdam, New York , who had lost her sonWilliam E. Hasenfuss, Jr. in theJapan eseattack on Pearl Harbor ), and commissioned at theNorfolk Navy Yard Portsmouth, Virginia , on8 January 1945 , CaptainAndrew P. Lawton in command.After final fitting out at
Norfolk, Virginia , the cruiser got underway on5 February for shakedown training in theChesapeake Bay . On17 February , she stood out fromHampton Roads and headed south forTrinidad and the second phase of her shakedown cruise. "Amsterdam" operated from Trinidad through13 March , when she set a course for Norfolk. During the return voyage, she held shore bombardment practice off the island ofCulebra and then arrived back at Norfolk on the 20th. Following a short cruise toCape May ,New Jersey , for gunnery exercises, the ship entered the Norfolk Navy Yard on24 March for availability."Amsterdam" left the yard on
20 April for training exercises in Chesapeake Bay and, four days later, sailed for theCaribbean . She held training exercises off Culebra and at Guantanamo Bay,Cuba , and then proceeded to thePanama Canal which she transited on5 May . The warship reachedPearl Harbor on18 May and, during her stay in Hawaiian waters, carried out numerous gunnery and tactical exercises.On
9 June , the cruiser set a course for Leyte,Philippine Islands . Upon her arrival in San Pedro Bay on the 21st, she reported to the3rd Fleet for duty. After a period of provisioning and refueling, the ship sortied on1 July withTask Force 38 to cover air strikes against theJapanese home islands . On10 July , the force's planes began a series of raids on Japanese airfields, factories, and shipping. During these actions, "Amsterdam" protected the carriers from attack by enemy air or surface forces. Among the cities the task force attacked wereTokyo , Kure,Kobe , andOsaka . On15 August , TF 38 was preparing to launch another attack on Tokyo when its ships received word of Japan's capitulation.During the next few weeks, "Amsterdam" remained in waters off the east coast of
Honshū guarding against possible Japanese aggression duringarmistice negotiations. She steamed intoTokyo Bay on5 September and remained there through the 20th and then shaped a course for the United States. After brief layovers atBuckner Bay ,Okinawa , and Pearl Harbor to take on personnel for transportation to the United States, the cruiser arrived atPortland, Oregon , on15 October and remained at that port for a fortnight to participate inNavy Day ceremonies. On the 29th, she got underway forSan Pedro, California .The ship reached San Pedro on
1 November . After a period of leave and upkeep, the cruiser left the west coast on19 November bound for Pearl Harbor. She touched there on the 25th and took on personnel and equipment for transportation to the west coast. The cruiser set sail again on12 December , arrived back at San Pedro on the 18th, and rode at anchor there into early 1946. On21 January , she got underway forSan Francisco . Shortly after her arrival, her crew began work to prepare the ship for inactivation and entry into thePacific Reserve Fleet . She was decommissioned on30 June 1947 and was laid up at San Francisco. "Amsterdam's" name was struck from theNavy List on2 January 1971 , and the vessel was sold on11 February 1972 toNational Metal and Steel Corporation ,Terminal Island, California , and later scrapped."Amsterdam" earned one
battle star for her World War II service.References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/a8/amsterdam.htm
External links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/04/04101.htm photographs of "Amsterdam" (CL-101)]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.