- USS Cetus (AK-77)
The USS "Cetus" (AK-77) was a "Crater"-class
cargo ship in the service of theUnited States Navy inWorld War II . Named after the equatorial constellationCetus , it was the only ship of the Navy to bear this name."Cetus" was laid down
21 November 1942 asliberty ship SS "George B. Cortelyou" (MCE hull 445) byPermanente Metals Corporation , Yard No. 2,Richmond, California , under aMaritime Commission contract; launched26 December 1942; sponsored by Mrs. N. F. Potter; acquired by the Navy4 January 1943 ; and commissioned17 January 1943,Lieutenant Commander N. T. Gansa, USNR, in command."Cetus"’s assignment, for which she sailed from San Francisco
1 February 1943, was carrying cargo amongSouth Pacific bases, and from ports inNew Zealand . She arrived atEspiritu Santo ,New Hebrides ,24 February , and began her share of the buildup of Solomon andSociety Islands bases from which naval forces fought north through the Bismarcks. On12 July 1944 , she sailed fromGuadalcanal forEniwetok , where she prepared for her support of the invasion ofGuam . She put to sea again23 July , and arrived off Guam27 July , 6 days after the initial assault. With bitter fighting continuing ashore, "Cetus" offloaded her much needed cargo over reefs and beaches, then returned to the South Pacific.In September and October 1944, "Cetus" brought cargo, some of which eventually played its part in the liberation of the
Philippines , from Espiritu Santo toUlithi and Manus. "Cetus" lay just outside Manus Harbor10 November when ammunition ship "Mount Hood" (AE-11) exploded, but escaped injury. She returned toAuckland andWellington , New Zealand, to load cargo after brief overhaul, and on18 March 1945 arrived at Guam to aid in preparations for the invasion ofOkinawa , carrying cargo toSaipan , and then to Ulithi. On26 April she herself arrived off Okinawa, with cargo to support the determined fighting ashore. "Cetus" unloaded under the constant hazard of enemy air and surface suicide attack, but received no injury. She then sailed for San Francisco, arriving on12 June for a major overhaul which kept her there until after the close of the war. She proceeded on toNorfolk, Virginia , where she was decommissioned20 November 1945 , and returned to the Maritime Commission the following day. "Cetus" was scrapped in 1972."Cetus" received two
battle star s for World War II service.References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/c5/cetus.htm
External links
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