- USS Sperry (AS-12)
USS "Sperry" (AS-12) was a "Fulton"-class
submarine tender in theUnited States Navy . She was named forElmer Sperry ."Sperry" was laid down on
1 February 1941 at theMare Island Navy Yard ,Vallejo, California ; launched on17 December 1941 , just 10 days after theJapan eseattack on Pearl Harbor ; sponsored by Mrs. Helen Sperry Lea, daughter of Elmer Ambrose Sperry; and commissioned on1 May 1942 , Captain Robert H. Smith in command."Sperry" completed trials and shakedown training; and, on 2 August 1942, she reported for duty to the Commander, Submarines, Pacific, at Pearl Harbor. She remained at
Oahu for almost three months, refitting seven submarines and making voyage repairs to four others.On 26 October, she weighed anchor and headed for
Australia . After cautiously skirting theSolomon Islands and making a three-day stopover atNoumea ,New Caledonia , the submarine tender reachedBrisbane on 13 November. During her two-month stay “down under,” "Sperry" refitted sevensubmarine s and made a voyage repair on one.On 17 January 1943, she sailed for Pearl Harbor, where she arrived on the 31st. After 10 refits, 10 voyage repairs, and over four months at Pearl Harbor, "Sperry" got underway on 8 June.
Steaming in company with USS|Kern|AOG-2 and Coast Guard cutter, "Taney", she reached
Midway Island on 12 June. Her stay there was probably the busiest period in her career. During five months, she serviced 70 submarines, refitting 17 and making voyage repairs to 53.In mid-November, she joined USS|Florikan|ASR-9 in a voyage back to Pearl Harbor, from the 12th to the 16th. She refitted eight submarines and accomplished voyage repairs on seven others between 15 November 1943 and 9 March 1944; then headed west once again.
"Sperry's" tour of duty at
Majuro Atoll lasted from 15 March until 19 September. During her stay, the submarine tender accomplished 19 refits and two voyage repairs. In addition, her crew erected Camp Myrna, the first recuperation camp for submarine crews in the central Pacific area, onMyrna Island .On 19 September, she exited the lagoon with USS|Litchfield|DD-336 and headed for Pearl Harbor again. They reached Oahu on the 24th, but "Sperry" was underway again by 8 October as part of an 11-ship convoy. At Eniwetok, she parted company with the convoy; and, with USS|Corbesier|DE-438, she continued on to the
Marianas Islands . The two ships arrived atGuam on 20 October to begin a four-month tour of duty during which she serviced 20 boats, 14 for refit and six for voyage repairs. Again, her crew constructed a submarine recuperation facility, Camp Dealey.On 13 February 1945, "Sperry" and USS|Southard|DMS-10 left Guam to return to the United States. The two ships reached Pearl Harbor on 22 February. "Southard" remained at Pearl Harbor but "Sperry" continued eastward on 1 March. The submarine tender entered Mare Island Naval Shipyard on 7 March and commenced an overhaul which lasted until 30 April. By 10 May, "Sperry" was back at Pearl Harbor where she completed one refit and three voyage repairs before sailing on 30 June for the Marianas.
She was stationed at Guam from 11 July 1945 to 11 January 1946. During those six months, her stay in the Marianas was interrupted only once, in late November and early December, when she joined USS|Blenny|SS-324, USS|Blower|SS-325, USS|Blueback|SS-326, USS|Charr|SS-328, USS|Redfish|SS-395, USS|Sea Cat|SS-399, and USS|Segundo|SS-398 in a training cruise. They visited
Ulithi Atoll in theCaroline Islands andManus Island in theAdmiralty Islands before returning toApra Harbor 10 days before Christmas.Eleven days into the new year, "Sperry" weighed anchor at Apra and headed for
Long Beach, California . She arrived atTerminal Island on 20 February and began an extensive overhaul which was completed in July 1947. Unlike many of her sister ships, "Sperry" remained an active unit of the fleet, operating out ofSan Diego, California . She earned the coveted battle efficiency “E” three years in a row in 1948, 1949, and 1950. In 1949, she participated inOperation Miki , a war game which simulated the recapture of an enemy-occupied Oahu; and, while returning to San Diego, she operated in support of the first publicized firings of missiles from submarines. Between 1950 and 1953 she serviced and supplied many of the submarines recommissioned for theKorean war . In 1952 she made her only voyage to the western Pacific, sailing sailed via Pearl Harbor, where she stayed from 6 August until 21 September, and serving atChi Chi Jima in theBenin Islands from 2 to 9 October. She returned to the west coast of the United States on 25 October.In December 1951, the battle lines in Korea were more or less stabilized along the 38th parallel, and hostilities slowly decreased over the next two years; "Sperry" gradually returned to her peacetime routine. Over the next 10 years she continued to operate out of San Diego, spending most of her time in port servicing the submarines of the fleet, but occasionally getting underway for training cruises along the west coast. Her area of operation extended from
Mexico north toCanada .From April to September 1961 "Sperry" was at Long Beach Naval Shipyard being brought up to date by a Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization overhaul. In mid-September, she returned to her duties as submarine tender at San Diego, though now with the capability to service ballistic missile submarines.
"Sperry" serviced submarines out of San Diego for another twenty years, until finally decommissioned there on
30 September 1982 and struck from the Navy list that same day. The old tender was transferred to theMaritime Administration on 1 February 1999, and remains available for possible use as a museum ship as of late 2005.As of 2006 no other ship in the United States Navy has been named "Sperry".
External links
* [http://tendertale.com/tenders/112/112.html USS "Sperry"] page on TenderTale
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