- USS Aquarius (AKA-16)
USS "Aquarius" (AKA-16) was an sclass|Andromeda|attack cargo ship in the service of the
United States Navy . She was named after the constellation "Aquarius." She was one of a handful ofWorld War II AKAs manned by officers and crew from theUnited States Coast Guard . She served as a commissioned ship for 2 years and 9 months.History
"Aquarius" (AKA-16) was laid down under a
Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 205) on28 April 1943 atKearny, N.J. , by theFederal Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. ; launched on23 July 1943 ; sponsored by Mrs. Edmund E. Brady, Jr.; acquired by the Navy on20 August 1943 ; and commissioned on21 August 1943 , Capt. R. V. Marron, USCG, in command.Manned by a Coast Guard crew, she conducted brief shakedown training in
Chesapeake Bay and sailed on15 September via thePanama Canal to the west coast. ReachingSan Francisco on19 October , she loaded cargo and embarked passengers for transportation to Hawaii. She reachedPearl Harbor on28 October and then returned toSan Diego where she reported for duty to the 5th Amphibious Force, Pacific Fleet, and was assigned to Transport Division 24. Following a repair period lasting until25 November , she embarked Marines and got underway for amphibious training exercises off the California coast.On
4 January 1944 , she sailed for Hawaii. She joined Task Force (TF) 53 at Pearl Harbor and sortied on22 January for the invasion of the Marshall Islands. She stood into the transport area off Roi and Namur Islands,Kwajalein Atoll , on31 January and from then until6 February , unloaded her cargo and disembarked troops. On10 February , she arrived atFunafuti , Ellice Islands, where she joined the 3d Fleet. During the remainder of February and into early March, she operated in theSolomon Islands conducting amphibious training exercises with Army troops. On21 March , she moved toNoumea , New Caledonia; loaded Army personnel and equipment; and took them toEmirau Island to serve as a garrison force. From Emirau, she embarked troops of the 4th Marine Regiment and took them back toGuadalcanal . Between20 April and28 April , she carried elements of the Army's 40th Division toCape Gloucester ,New Britain , and returned the 1st Marine Division to theRussell Islands .Following repairs at
Espiritu Santo , "Aquarius" returned to Guadalcanal to conduct rehearsals with the 3d Marine Division for the projected assault on theMarianas . On4 June , she departed Guadalcanal with TF 53 and proceeded to Kwajalein, the staging base for the operation. This force had orders to act as a floating reserve during the Saipan landings and, when directed, to invadeGuam . TF 53 sortied from Kwajalein on the 12th. However, the engagement with the Japanese Mobile Fleet in theBattle of the Philippine Sea and the unexpectedly fierce resistance of the Japanese garrison onSaipan caused the invasion of Guam to be postponed. After standing-by for over a fortnight, "Aquarius" and the other ships for TF 53 put intoEniwetok on28 June to await further orders.They sortied again on
17 July and reached Guam on21 July . By26 July , all of her cargo was unloaded, and she sailed for Eniwetok. From there, she proceeded on to Espiritu Santo, where she arrived on6 August . After a week of provisioning, she moved to Guadalcanal. During the rest of August, she took part in training exercises for the assault on Peleliu. She got underway with TG 32.17 early in September and entered the transport area offPeleliu on15 September . She remained in the area unloading cargo and receiving casualties from the beach until22 September ."Aquarius" then headed for
Hollandia ,New Guinea , where she arrived on25 September . After embarking Army personnel for exercises in the Humboldt Bay area, she sortied on13 October with TG 78.1 for the invasion of Leyte. On A-day,20 October , she was anchored in San Pedro Bay and began unloading her cargo. She left the area the next day and returned to Hollandia, and made another run to Leyte in mid-November. By the end of November, she was atAitape , New Guinea, to load more Army units. She sailed on28 December with TG 78.1 to support the landings at Lingayen Gulf.She reached the invasion area on
9 January 1945 , completed unloading the next day, and retired to Leyte on the13 January . She took on cargo and personnel for the impendingZimbales -Subic Bay operations. She reached that area on29 January and two days later was back in Leyte. Late in February, she proceeded via Hollandia to Guadalcanal and held training exercises off Guadalcanal until sailing forUlithi on15 March . On27 March she sortied with Transport Division 36 for the assault on Okinawa."Aquarius" remained off Okinawa from
1 April to9 April , resupplying other ships. She got underway again on the latter day; called at Saipan on13 April ; Pearl Harbor on26 April ; and arrived atSeattle , Wash., on4 May to begin overhaul.The yard period ended on
12 July , and she conducted refresher training off the west coast. While she was still in Californian waters Japan capitulated. She departed San Diego on18 August , arrived at Guam on4 September , and moved to Saipan three days later to load cargo and troops for use in the occupation of Japan. On23 September , she anchored in the harbor of Nagasaki to begin unloading. Departing Japan on26 September , she proceeded toMindoro andManila Bay , Philippines. On23 October , she sailed fromManila with TG 78.7 bound forHong Kong . During the next two months, she shuttled Chinese troops and supplies between Hong Kong,Chinwangtao , and Tsingtao. She returned to Seattle on13 December .She remained on the west coast until February 1946, then proceeded to New York where she was placed out of commission on
23 May . She was turned over to theWar Shipping Administration on12 September , and her name was struck from the Navy list on13 November 1946 . She was subsequently sold to U.S. Lines on12 February 1947 . [ [http://www.pmars.imsg.com/detail.asp?Ship=289 Maritime Administration Ship Record Detail: "Aquarius"] ]"Aquarius" earned eight battle stars for her World War II service.
References
External links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/02016.htm NavSource Online: AK-65 / AKA-16 "Aquarius"]
* [http://ussrankin.org/id352.htm 51 Years of AKAs]
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