- USS Celeno (AK-76)
The USS "Celeno" (AK-76) was a "Crater"-class
cargo ship in the service of theUnited States Navy inWorld War II . Named with a variant spelling of the star Celaeno in the constellation Pleiades, it was the only ship of the Navy to bear this name."Celeno" was laid down
3 November 1942 asliberty ship SS "Redfield Proctor" (MCE hull 439) byPermanente Metals Corporation , Yard No. 2,Richmond, California , under aMaritime Commission contract; launched12 December 1942; sponsored by Mrs. G. G. Sherwood; transferred to the Navy19 December 1942; and commissioned2 January 1943 ,Lieutenant Commander N. E. Lanphere, USNR, in command."Celeno" joined the Pacific Fleet and cleared San Francisco
10 January 1943 with cargo forNouméa ,New Caledonia . She arrived1 February to support the operations onGuadalcanal and throughout the Solomons with cargo brought fromNew Zealand to Nouméa,Tulagi , and Guadalcanal itself. Unloading cargo off Guadalcanal on16 June , "Celeno" was attacked by a swarm ofJapan ese bombers. As the freighter’santiaircraft gun s began to fire, the dive bombers scored three near misses, then hit "Celeno"’s stern, putting her 5 in (127 mm) gun out of operation. Her men stood to the remaining guns, and aided in downing at least three enemy planes and damaging several others. A second direct hit set two of "Celeno"’s holds on fire, and another near miss sent her deck cargo of diesel oil and gasoline flaming. With her rudder jammed from the first hit, "Celeno" circled, as her crew determined to save her. Skillful damage control and seamanship beached her safely onLunga Point , and when the air attack had been fought off, "Celeno" was towed off for repairs atPort Purvis . Fifteen of her crew were killed and 19 wounded in the attack.Further repairs at
Espiritu Santo and San Francisco fitted "Celeno" for action once more, and the ship returned to the South Pacific in January1944 to continue her support of the Solomons campaign. As the seizure of bases in theAdmiralty Islands began, "Celeno" brought troops and cargo to Manus through the spring of 1944, and continued to operate throughout the Solomons, Bismarcks, andMarianas . She sailed toAustralia and New Zealand, then made a cargo run to newly securedIwo Jima . Returning to Nouméa, "Celeno" performed rear-area support for theOkinawa operation by voyages toEniwetok andUlithi , en route to Okinawa itself, where she arrived18 June . She returned to Ulithi3 July , and resumed cargo operations throughout the South Pacific.In November
1945 , "Celeno" sailed to Iwo Jima to embark troops for transportation toSaipan , where she picked up another group of men bound for the west coast. "Celeno" was decommissioned at San Francisco1 March 1946 , and transferred to the Maritime Commission."Celeno" received three
battle star s for World War II service.References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/c5/celeno.htm
External links
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.