- USS Serpens (AK-97)
The USS "Serpens" (AK-97) was a
United States Coast Guard -manned "Crater"-classcargo ship in the service of theUnited States Navy inWorld War II . It was the first ship of the Navy to have this name. It is named afterSerpens , a constellation in thenorthern hemisphere ."Serpens" was laid down
10 March 1943 asliberty ship SS "Benjamin N. Cardozo" (MCE hull 739) byCalifornia Shipbuilding Corporation ,Wilmington, California , under a Maritime Commission contract; launched on5 April 1943 ; sponsored by Mrs. H.P. Needham; transferred to the Navy on19 April 1943 ; renamed "Serpens" and designated AK-97; and commissioned at San Diego on28 May 1943 , Lt. Comdr. M.J. Johnson, USCGR, in command.Following shakedown off southern California, "Serpens" loaded general cargo at Alameda and, on
24 June , sailed west to assume provision ship duties in support of operations in the Solomons. By mid-July, she was in theTonga Islands . At the end of the month, she was en route fromNew Caledonia toNew Zealand ; and, by mid-August, she had emptied her holds atWellington . She then took on more cargo; returned toNew Caledonia ; and commenced a series of short hauls to Vitu Levu,Tutuila , Penrhyn,Bora Bora ,Aitutaki , andTongatapu .On
9 November , "Serpens" returned to New Caledonia. In early December, she moved into the southern Solomons; and, after completing aFlorida Island -Banika Island run, she stood off Lunga Point, Guadalcanal, to load cargo for Bougainville. During January 1944, she completed two runs intoEmpress Augusta Bay . In February, she was ordered back to New Zealand for dry-docking before loading dry provisions.For the next four months, "Serpens" delivered consignments to bases in the
New Hebrides and the Solomons, returning to New Zealand to reload only once. In July, she was atPurvis Bay for the installation of SF-1 radar. She then resumed operations and, through October, carried general cargo and rolling stock between ports and anchorages in the Solomons. In mid-November, she loaded repairable vehicles from the Russells and from Guadalcanal and sailed for New Zealand where, after offloading, three of her holds were converted for ammunition stowage.Late in December 1944, the Liberty ship commenced loading at Wellington, finished it at
Auckland , and returned to the Solomons in mid-January 1945. Late in the evening onJanuary 29 1945 , the "Serpens" was anchored off Lunga Beach. The commanding officer and seven others, one officer and six enlisted men, were ashore. The remaining 198 members of "Serpens" crew and 57 members of an Army stevedore unit were on board the ship, loading depth charges into her holds. During the loading, "Serpens" exploded. The force of the explosion was so great that it killed an Army soldier who was ashore. After the explosion, only the bow of the ship was visible. The rest had disintegrated, and the bow sank soon afterward. Only two sailors aboard survived the incident. The cause of the explosion was never completely determined. The loss of the "Serpens" remains the largest single disaster ever suffered by the U.S. Coast Guard."Serpens" earned one
battle star for her World War II service. A mass grave for 250 of her dead was dedicated atArlington National Cemetery in 1950.(AK-97: dp. 14,250; l. 441'6"; b. 56'11"; dr. 27'7"; s. 11 k.; cpl. 206; a. 1 5", 1 3"; cl. Crater; T. EC2-S-C1)
References
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*External links
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* [http://www.uss-serpens.org/ The USS "Serpens" Commemorative Website]
* [http://www.uscg.mil/HQ/G-CP/HISTORY/WEBCUTTERS/Serpens_Photos.html USS "Serpens" Photo Gallery]
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