- USS Vandalia (IX-191)
USS "Vandalia" (IX-191), a twin-screw, steel-hulled tanker, was the third ship of the
United States Navy to be named forVandalia , the name of three cities in theUnited States that is also used poetically for various regions.As "Walter Jennings", her construction was completed in 1921 by the
Federal Shipbuilding Company ofNewark, New Jersey , for the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey and she served under the aegis ofStandard Oil through the 1920s and 1930s. Allocated to the Navy by theMaritime Commission 'sWar Shipping Administration in late 1944, the ship was renamed "Vandalia" on18 October 1944 , being designated asunclassified miscellaneous vessel IX-191. She was accordingly taken over from the War Shipping Administration on23 December 1944 and was commissioned on the same day, Lieutenant R. P. Morrison, USNR, in command, at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii."Vandalia" departed
Pearl Harbor on27 February 1945 forEniwetok in theMarshall Islands and made port on11 March . Routed toSaipan with aMariana Islands -bound convoy, "Vandalia" developed an engine casualty and was forced to reverse course and turn back to Eniwetok for repairs. The vessel got underway on18 March but was rerouted on23 March toUlithi in theCarolina Islands . Entering the harbor at her destination two days later, she proceeded to her assigned berth, remaining there into the summer as station tanker at Ulithi.She subsequently shifted to
Buckner Bay ,Okinawa , to serve as storage tanker there in September. On9 October , a particularly heavy and violenttyphoon swept over Okinawa. "Vandalia" ran aground at 1518 coming to rest about convert|200|yd|m fromMiyegusuku Lighthouse onNaha Island and sinking rapidly. The convert|140|kn|km/h|sing=on winds lashed the ship, and heavy seas pounded the old tanker unmercifully. One engine failed, and the ship went out of control, carried along with the fury of the typhoon, as the ship's force determinedly tried to pump out the engine room, fire room, and after compartments. She came to rest listing to starboard, and the danger immediately confronting the commanding officer, Lieutenant John F. Auge, USNR, was that of the ship capsizing. Accordingly, Auge gave the order to abandon ship, which was done by 0740 on10 October . There were no casualties.Auge observed that the ship appeared to be damaged beyond economical repair but nonetheless stationed a guard on board to prevent pilferage. A guard was retained on board until
20 November when, after stripping her of whatever remained of value, "Vandalia" was decommissioned and abandoned.Struck from the
Naval Vessel Register on5 December 1945 , the tanker was eventually purchased by theChina Merchants and Engineers , Inc., for scrap, on31 December .ee also
See USS "Vandalia" for other ships of the same name.
References
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