- USS Phaon (ARB-3)
The USS "Phaon" (ARB-3) was one of 12 "Aristaeus"-class battle damage repair ships built for the
United States Navy during World War II. Named forPhaon (inGreek mythology , a boatman ofMitylene in Lesbos), she was the only U.S. Naval vessel to bear the name.Originally laid down as "LST-15 " by the Tampa (Florida) Shipbuilding Company on 17 September 1942; reclassified as a battle damage repair ship 25 January 1943; launched 30 January 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Marion D. Calabreeze; and commissioned 5 August 1943 with Lieutenant George Fay Watson, USNR, in command. As an ex-LST, ARB–3 had heavier armament, greater deck facilities for cargo handling, and a much longer superstructure deck, though in this case the tank deck was covered with lathes, grinders, drills, metal cutters, welding machines and other shop equipment not found on an LST. After shakedown to
New Orleans and final fitting out there, she sailed 3 September via Guantanamo Bay and thePanama Canal forSamoa , anchoring inPago Pago Harbor 13 October. From Samoa "Phaon" moved toFunafuti in theEllice Islands , arriving there shortly after the occupation of that island on 18 October. There, she repaired LCTs, pontoonbarge s, andPT boat s. She restored many craft used in the Invasion ofTarawa ,Gilbert Islands . From Funafuti "Phaon" advanced westward toMajuro in theMarshall Islands , arriving 6 February 1944, shortly after the invasion. Here, in the same harbor with one of the mightiest fleets ever assembled, "Phaon" worked onminelayer s, tankers, minesweepers,destroyer s, and small boats (LCVP s and LCMs). On 18 March 1944 "Phaon" weighed anchor again, proceeded viaKwajalein toEniwetok in the Marshalls, arriving 23 March for repair work on small boats, LCTs, and yard minesweepers. On 9 June 1944 Phaon left Eniwetok arriving 15 June,Saipan for the invasion. There, onD-Day plus three, the destroyer USS|Phelps|DD-360|6 came alongside for repairs and many other ships thereafter. As metalsmiths, mechanics, and carpenters from "Phaon" swarmed over "Phelps" repairing the damaged boiler, blower, deck and bulkheads, the sturdy warship still very much in the fight, blasting away at enemy troops and pillboxes. On 24 June, during an air raid by Japanese G4M "Betties", "Phaon" suffered a near-miss on the starboard side. The damage to the ship was not very serious but the shrapnel fragments killed two of her men and injured eleven others. That day, she worked on aPCS and two LCIs, also repairing other small craft in preparation for the Invasion ofTinian . On 24 July, the morning of the Tinian invasion, the destroyer USS|Norman Scott|DD-690|6 came alongside with numerous dead and wounded officers and men. She had suffered several direct hits from a Japanese six-inch shore battery and her bridge was practically torn away. While "Phaon's" medical department cared for the wounded, her repair department patched up the ship, enabling "Norman Scott" to pull away two days later. The securing of Saipan by no means ended "Phaon's" work there. Saipan was her last invasion, but she prepared and repaired ships forIwo Jima ,Okinawa , and thePhilippines . During the month between the invasions of Iwo Jima and Okinawa, "Phaon" worked on 96 different ships. After V-J Day, her work was still far from finished and she continued repairing and overhauling the ships that needed it. On 28 December 1945 "Phaon" was ordered back to the United States. In 29 months away she had completed approximately 2,000 repair jobs, on almost everything from small boats tobattleship s. She was decommissioned and placed in reserve on 15 January 1947, berthed atSan Diego , struck from theNaval Vessel Register 1 July 1961, and sold for scrapping on 8 July 1962 to Zidell Explorations, Inc. ofPortland, Oregon . "Phaon" received threebattle star s for World War II service.References
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