- USS Merrimack (AO-37)
USS "Merrimack" (AO-37) (ex "Caddo") was one of five "Kennebec"-class fleet oilers (also known as a type
T2 tanker ) built duringWorld War II for service in theUnited States Navy , named after theMerrimack River .The "USS Merrimack (AO‑37)" was laid down as "Caddo" under Maritime Commission contract 12 September 1940 by Bethlehem Steel Co., Sparrows Point, Maryland (USA). It was launched on 1 July 1941 and acquired by the U.S. Navy from Socony‑Vacuum Oil Co., New York City, on 31 December 1941. She was renamed "Merrimack" on 9 January 1942, and commissioned 4 February 1942, Capt. William E. Hilbert in command.
Assigned to the Atlantic Fleet, the new fleet oiler spent the next 2 1/2 years steaming the Atlantic seaways carrying oil for Allied ships from Argentia, Newfoundland (Canada), to Montevideo (Uruguay), and from ports along the U.S. east coast to staging areas in the British Isles and the Mediterranean. Her primary duty was fueling the escorts which protected Allied convoys from German U‑boats.
"Merrimack"’s most memorable crossing began
23 October 1942 fromHampton Roads when she sailed with the Southern Attack Group of the Western Naval Task Force forOperation Torch , the invasion of North Africa. Twice during the passage she refueled the ships of the task force. A heavy storm broke 4 November threatening the landings, but Adm. H. Kent Hewitt kept to the original plan. Its mission was to capture the harbor at Safi (French Morocco), to cut off French forces in southernMorocco , and to enable the landing of General Patton’s tanks for operations againstCasablanca . For more than a year and a half after the landings in Morocco, "Merrimack" carried oil to support operations in North Africa, Sicily, Italy, and France. On her transatlantic voyages, besides oil, she carried passengers and a wide variety of equipment including PT boats, patrol craft, and airplanes. While steaming toward Casablanca 22 June 1943, she joined minesweeper "USS Pilot (AM–104) " in rescuing 113 survivors from the "Lot", a French oiler that had been torpedoed."Merrimack" departed Norfolk, Virginia (USA), on 14 October 1944 for the
Panama Canal and Ulithi, arriving 1 December. Allied forces were retaking the Philippines and preparing for operations even closer to the Japanese home islands. "Merrimack" joined the U.S. 3d Fleet’s At‑Sea Logistics Support Group to fuel the fast carrier task force. She began the new year supporting raids on Formosa 3 and 4 January 1945. The U. S. carriers struck enemy airbases on Luzon, Philippines, 6 and 7 January to help neutralize Japanese resistance to the invasion of that strategic island which began on the beaches of Lingayen Gulf on the 9th. Naval aircraft which she supported returned to Formosa on the 15th and hit targets along the China coast the following day. They again lashed out at Formosa on the 21st.From 16 February through 2 March, "Merrimack" supported the ships covering the landings on
Iwo Jima . During the fight forOkinawa , "Merrimack" alternated between fueling ships involved directly in the landings, and the aircraft carriers during raids to on the Japanese home islands.After Okinawa was secured, the 3d Fleet concentrated on operations against Japan itself. From 10 through 29 July 1945, Merrimack supported raids of overwhelming force on Japanese targets which hastened the end of the war. Following Japan’s capitulation 15 August, "Merrimack" made several cruises between the west coast and the Far East bringing oil for ships supporting the occupation of Japan and operating along the coasts of China and Korea. She was assigned to MSTS I in October 1949, shortly before beginning preinactivation overhaul. "Merrimack" was decommissioned 8 February 1950 and entered the Atlantic Reserve Fleet at Orange, Texas (USA).
When North Korean forces invaded South Korea in 1950, "Merrimack" was recommissioned on 6 December 1950. Assigned to MSTS, the fleet oiler served the Atlantic Fleet, making periodic deployments to the Mediterranean until she was decommissioned 20 December 1954, and entered the Pacific Reserve Fleet at San Diego. She was struck from the Navy list 4 February 1959, transferred to the Maritime Administration, and placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet at Beaumont, Texas. The "Merrimack" was disposed of by MARAD exchange, 19 March 1982. It was sold to Eckhardt & Co. GmbH, Hamburg (Germany), for scrapping, and delivered on 29 March 1982 at Beaumont.
Merrimack received eight battle stars for World War II service.
References
*External links
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.