- USS President Adams (APA-19)
USS "President Adams" (AP-38/APA-19) was a of the
United States Navy , named forJohn Adams andJohn Quincy Adams , the second and sixth Presidents of the United States.__TOC__
"President Adams", built under
Maritime Commission contract, was laid down as MC hull 57 by theNewport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co. ,Newport News, Virginia ,6 June 1940 ; launched31 January 1941 ; sponsored by Mrs.Robert H. Jackson ; delivered to the Navy5 June 1941; converted by theNorfolk Navy Yard ; and commissioned19 November 1941, Commander C. W. Brewington in command.Stripped for war service with the entry of the United States into World War II,
7 December 1941 , "President Adams" fired her guns against the enemy, aU-boat , for the first time on Christmas Day. Following the encounter, she continued her shakedown exercises, then, steamed to thePacific and trained troops offCalifornia as she readied for her first amphibious operation. In June, 1942, she embarked the 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marines, and got underway1 July for the South Pacific. Between 7 and9 August , as the United States launched the first step on the island-paved path to victory in the Pacific, her LCMs andLCVP s landed the Marines in theGuadalcanal -Tulagi area. Retiring from the area, the converted liner carried casualties toSamoa , whence she began bringing in reinforcements. For six months she transported fresh troops and equipment to, and brought out wounded from, Guadalcanal.Organized resistance on that island ceased
9 February 1943 , but theSolomon Islands campaign was not over. "President Adams", redesignated APA-19 (effective1 February ) continued to carry men and equipment to and from embattled islands of the south Pacific, escaping serious damage from numerous Japanese air attacks. During March and April she trained assault troops inNew Zealand , then transported men and materiel from there, and fromAustralia , to Guadalcanal, whence she steamed withUnited States Army forces forRendova . Landing those troops30 June , she took on survivors from USS|McCawley|APA-4|2,1 July , and sailed to Nouméa.From
New Caledonia , "President Adams" returned to New Zealand, underwent an abbreviated overhaul, then resumed transporting men and equipment to the Solomons and training assault troops for amphibious operations, this time for Bougainville. On1 November , after bombarding the beaches atTorokina Point , she landed the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marines, atEmpress Augusta Bay .During the next six months, "President Adams" thrice returned to Bougainville with reinforcements; carried Army Engineers to
Emirau ; transported two groups of Army reinforcements toCape Gloucester onNew Britain ; and, then, prepared for action in the Marianas. In June, 1944, she steamed toKwajalein , thence toSaipan , where, as a floating reserve, she stood by to the east of the island as theBattle of the Philippine Sea raged to the west. With the postponement of the assault onGuam and her troops not needed on Saipan, she steamed toEniwetok where she remained until17 July . On the 21st, she stood off Guam as that operation got underway, and, during the next five days, unloaded men and equipment, sent supplies and provisions, including hot food, to the beaches and took on casualties for evacuation toPearl Harbor and the West Coast.By
16 October , having undergone overhaul, "President Adams" embarked construction equipment atPort Hueneme andSeaBees personnel atSan Francisco, California and sailed forManus Island . Thence she returned toNew Caledonia where she took on Army infantrymen for transportation west, to the assault beaches onLingayen Gulf ,Luzon ."President Adams" landed "passengers" and cargo 11–12 January 1945 then retired to Leyte, discharging casualties from
Lingayen , then she sailed back to Guam, whence she carried Marine Corps units toIwo Jima , landing them19 February . During the first ten days of the invasion she stood off the beaches, unloading cargo, receiving casualties, provisioning and repairing small boats.After retiring to Saipan, "President Adams" continued on to Nouméa, whence she carried Army personnel to Leyte, and then, for the next two months, she ferried troops from
New Guinea to thePhilippines . On17 July she got underway for the United States.Emerging from overhaul at
Portland, Oregon , after the cessation of hostilities, "President Adams" commenced moving occupation troops to the Far East and returning veterans to the United States. After the initial post-war transport assignments, she carried dependents to occupied zones and transported military personnel and equipment to ports in Japan,China and the Philippines. On7 March 1947 , she departed the West Coast forNorfolk, Virginia . Arriving on the 24th, she commenced cargo and passenger runs between the East Coast and theCaribbean . Designated for inactivation in October, 1949, she completed her last Caribbean run, toPort-au-Prince ,Trinidad , andCoco Solo ,19 January -2 February 1950 , and on the 8th departed Norfolk for the West Coast. On2 March she arrived at San Francisco, where she decommissioned14 June 1950 and joined thePacific Reserve Fleet . She remained berthed at San Francisco until struck from the Navy List,1 October 1958 , and transferred to theMaritime Administration 'sNational Defense Reserve Fleet , and was berthed atSuisun Bay , California into 1970."President Adams" was scrapped in
Taiwan in 1974.Awards
"President Adams" earned 9
battle star s duringWorld War II .References
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/p11/president_adams.htm history.navy.mil: USS "President Adams"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/03019.htm navsource.org: USS "President Adams"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/amphib/apa19.txt hazegray.org: USS "President Adams"]
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