- USS Sabine (AO-25)
USS "Sabine" (AO-25), a "Cimarron"-class
fleet replenishment oiler serving in theUnited States Navy , was the second ship named for the Sabine River on theTexas -Louisiana border."Sabine" was laid down on 18 September 1939 as SS "Esso Albany", MC hull 10, by the
Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation , at theBethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard ,Sparrows Point ,Maryland ; launched on 27 April 1940; sponsored by Miss Ellen Klitgaard; renamed "Sabine" on 19 September 1940; acquired by the Navy through purchase on 25 September 1940; and commissioned on 5 December 1940, Commander Edmund W. Strother in command.World War II
Following shakedown, "Sabine" transited the
Panama Canal and joined the Base Force Squadron of theUS Pacific Fleet . During 1941, she plied the waters betweenCalifornia andPearl Harbor supplying fuel to ships operating inHawaii an waters. Early in 1942, "Sabine" supported carrier task forces that carried out raids againstWake Island and theGilbert Islands . On 10 April, she joined the task force built around USS|Hornet|CV-8 and USS|Enterprise|CV-6 which steamed to within 700 miles of the coast ofJapan and launchedbomber s of theUnited States Army Air Forces commanded byLt. Col. James Doolittle. The Doolittle Raiders bombedTokyo ,Yokosuka ,Nagoya , andKobe . This daring strike surprised the Japanese and helped to boost American morale. In May, "Sabine" provided at-sea refueling for ships in the South Pacific nearNew Guinea andAustralia . In June, she serviceddestroyer s andcruiser s onAleutian Patrol offKodiak, Alaska . August found her in southern waters again where, in company with USS|Saratoga|CV-3, she played an important role in theBattle of the Eastern Solomons . During September, she supported ships in and aroundNew Caledonia , theSolomon Islands , and theNew Hebrides . By October, she was busy providing fuel for warships engaging Japanese forces in theBattle of the Santa Cruz Islands . "Sabine" returned to the United States for two brief periods in January and July 1943. The rest of her time, up to November, was spent on fueling operations in the South andCentral Pacific . When the assault on the Gilbert Islands commenced on 19 November 1943, "Sabine" was busy refueling the carriers,battleship s, cruisers, and destroyers that were supporting the landing forces. During the Gilbert operation, the "sea going service station" concept emerged. "Sabine" and other oilers were assigned designated station areas. Individual combatant ships were sent to these areas in accordance with a preplanned schedule, rather than steam in groups to the areas where each might lose hours waiting for her turn alongside the oiler. Other oilers shuttled between the station areas and Pearl Harbor, which was replenished by a vast fleet ofMerchant Marine tankers. In January, February, and March 1944, "Sabine" operated withTask Force 58 supporting carrier raids on thePalau Islands , theCaroline Islands , and theMarshall Islands . She was detached on 22 April; but, after a voyage to Pearl Harbor, arrived atMajuro Atoll on 18 May ready to rejoin TF 58 for the comingMarianas Islands campaign. The force sortied on 6 June, and "Sabine" supported the landings onSaipan andGuam and subsequent operations in the Marianas until returning to Pearl Harbor on 14 August. She participated in the invasion of the Palaus during September. In October, she supported the assault forces at Leyte and subsequently provided fuel during follow-up operations in thePhilippines . From March through June 1945, "Sabine" assisted in the Okinawan campaign. July and August were spent supportingUS Third Fleet strikes against the Japanese home islands. Japan surrendered in mid-August, and "Sabine" anchored inTokyo Bay on 18 September.Postwar service
"Sabine"'s post-war duties took her from Tokyo to the
Yangtze River . Arriving on 19 November, she remained until 22 April 1946. FromChina , she returned to Hawaiian and west coast operations. However, she made several Far East cruises; and, on 13 June 1949, she was transferred to theUS Atlantic Fleet . "Sabine" followed a schedule of east coast fueling operations, training exercises, andMediterranean deployments until she was placed out of commission, in reserve, on 14 February 1955 and assigned to thePacific Reserve Fleet for further transfer to theMilitary Sea Transportation Service (MSTS). She was activated by MSTS on 15 November 1956 atSan Diego and commissioned on 10 December. Following operations under MSTS, "Sabine" was again placed out of commission, in reserve, on 13 November 1957. Berthed with theNational Defense Reserve Fleet atBeaumont, Texas , she was not struck from theNavy List until 14 January 1959. "Sabine" was reacquired by the Navy in 1961 and towed toNew York City for refitting. She recommissioned on 14 December 1961 and rejoined the Atlantic Fleet, homeported atMayport, Florida . During theCuban missile crisis , "Sabine" was active in the navalquarantine late in 1962. She also participated in operations during the political crisis of mid-1965 in theDominican Republic . The remainder of the time, during these years and the years which followed, found "Sabine" busy in local operations, training exercises, and deployments to theNorth Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean. In October 1968, she was ordered to report toPhiladelphia to begin deactivation. For a third time in her long career, "Sabine" was decommissioned on 20 February 1969; and she joined theAtlantic Reserve Fleet , at Philadelphia,Pennsylvania . On 22 January 1970, "Sabine" was transferred to the custody of theMaritime Administration and berthed with the James River,Virginia , Group of the National Defense Reserve Fleet, where she remained into 1976. She was struck from the Navy List for the final time on 1 December 1976, and sold on 1 August 1983. "Sabine" earned tenbattle star s forWorld War II service.References
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/s2/sabine-ii.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Sabine"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/19025.htm navsource.org: USS "Sabine"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/auxil/ao25.htm hazegray.org: USS "Sabine"]
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