- USS Waukesha (AKA-84)
USS "Waukesha" (AKA-84) was a "Tolland" class
attack cargo ship named afterWaukesha County, Wisconsin . She was designed to carry military cargo andlanding craft , and to use the latter to land weapons, supplies, and Marines on enemy shores during amphibious operations. She was later sold private and, under new name of SS "Mary Luckenbach", sank a Navy hospital ship after colliding with her out of San Francisco on25 August 1950 .Operational history
"Waukesha" was laid down under a
Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 1395) on3 July 1944 , atWilmington, North Carolina , by theNorth Carolina Shipbuilding Company ; launched on6 September 1944 ; sponsored by Mrs. H. V. Mason; converted to an attack cargo ship by the Todd-Erie Shipyard of New York City; and commissioned at the New York Navy Yard, Lt. Comdr. John S. Herold, USNR, in command. Following shakedown inChesapeake Bay , "Waukesha" got underway for the Pacific on27 March 1945 . She transited thePanama Canal in company withUSS Vinton (AKA-83) on2 April and arrived atPearl Harbor on the 17th. She conducted exercises and maneuvers in the Hawaiian area before getting underway on11 May and proceeding viaEniwetok andUlithi toOkinawa . The cargo ship arrived atBuckner Bay on13 July , with Convoy OKU-17, dropped anchor, and commenced unloading her cargo. Twice the operation was interrupted by fierce typhoons which whirled intoBuckner Bay and forced the ships at anchor to get underway and make for the relative safety of the open sea. In addition, Japanese nuisance raids continued nightly, keeping all hands at general quarters for long periods. Her next orders—to proceed toPearl Harbor —were cancelled when the ship received news that the Japanese were entertaining thoughts of surrender in the aftermath of the explosions of two atomic bombs. The attack cargo ship instead steered a course forGuam and arrived at Apra Harbor on the 12th. Two days later, she embarked men and material of the 14th Marine Regiment. She was ready for sea on the following day,15 August 1945 , the day on which the Japanese accepted the terms of thePotsdam Declaration . "VJ Day" only marked the beginning of another phase of "Waukesha"'s brief Navy career—the occupation of the Japanese home islands. She rendezvoused with units of the 3d Fleet offHonshū and entered Tokyo Bay on the 27th, anchoring off the bomb-scarredYokosuka Naval Base on the 30th to commence offloading her men and equipment to support the occupation. "Waukesha" returned toSaipan on5 September and embarked men of the 2d Marine Division; transferred some of her own men to other ships for transportation back to the United States; and took on supplies for a second trip to Japanese ports. She arrived at Nagasaki and tied up at Dejima Wharf on the 24th, to disembark her marines of the occupation force. Underway for thePhilippines four days later, the ship transferred four landing boats toUSS Oconto (APA-187) at Subic Bay on4 October and then obtained five boats from the Army Boat Pool inLingayen Gulf before moving toManila . Loading cargo occupied the ship in thePhilippines before she sailed forJapan for her third and final visit to that country's ports, carrying cargo toHonshū and reaching Kii Suido on23 October . Shifting toNagoya on1 November , "Waukesha" embarked demobilized sailors, soldiers, and marines to transport them home in Operation "Magic Carpet." After departingNagoya on the 9th, she made port atSeattle , Wash., on the 21st and unloaded her passengers before proceeding south forSan Francisco . The ship later made more Far Eastern cruises and called atOkinawa en route toTsingtao ,China , where she arrived on2 March 1946 . Remaining until8 March , the attack cargo ship set course, viaOkinawa , forSan Diego , Calif., which she reached on15 April 1946 . "Waukesha" departedSan Diego on30 April and steamed, via thePanama Canal , to the east coast. She arrived at Norfolk, Va., on24 May .Decommissioned and returned to the
Maritime Commission 'sWar Shipping Administration on10 July 1946 , the attack cargo ship was struck from the Navy list on31 July 1946 . Acquired by the Luckenbach Steamship Co. of New York City in 1947, the erstwhile warship was renamed SS "Mary Luckenbach". At 17:05 on25 October 1950 , "Mary Luckenbach" colllided with USNS|Benevolence|AH-13 just off San Francisco. "Benevolence" sank in 15 minutes with a loss of 23 lives."Mary Luckenbach" operated with the same firm until 1959, when the ship was renamed SS "Bayou State". She sailed under the flag of the States Marine Lines, Inc., of New York, until 1970, when her name disappeared from the merchant registers.
References
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/w4/waukesha.htm Naval Historical Center: USS "Waukesha"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/02084.htm NavSource Online: AKA-84 "Waukesha"]
* [http://ussrankin.org/id352.htm 51 Years of AKAs]
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