USS Zuni (ATF-95)

USS Zuni (ATF-95)

USS "Zuni" (AT/ATF-95), a "Navajo"-class Fleet Tug, was a ship of the United States Navy named for the Zuni, the popular name given to a tribe of Pueblo Indians indigenous to the area around the Zuni River in central New Mexico near the Arizona state line.

"Zuni" (AT-95) was laid down on 8 March 1943 at Portland, Oregon, by the Commercial Iron Works; launched on 31 July 1943; sponsored by Mrs. J. J. O'Donnell; and commissioned on 9 October 1943, Lieutenant Ray E. Chance in command.

1943

"Zuni" completed shakedown training late in October and on the 28th reported for duty with the Western Sea Frontier, The following day, she departed Puget Sound, bound for Kodiak, Alaska. On 10 November, she stood out of the harbor at Kodiak with two barges in tow. In extremely heavy weather during the voyage south, the towlines to both barges parted; and "Zuni" experienced great difficulty in keeping herself afloat. Though she managed to maintain contact with the second barge after it broke loose, she ultimately received orders to abandon it and make for Seattle, Washington.

On 1 December, the tug was reassigned to Service Squadron 2 (ServRon 2) and departed Seattle that same day with a barge in tow, bound for Oakland, Calif. After repairs at Oakland, the tug headed west for the New Hebrides on 27 December 1943, in company with four cargo ships, and arrived in Espiritu Santo at the end of January 1944.

1944

Early in February, the tug left Espiritu Santo, set her course for Hawaii, and arrived in Pearl Harbor on 17 February. She performed routine missions at Oahu for about a month, getting underway on 21 March for a round-trip voyage to Canton Island. She returned to Oahu on 9 April towing two barges from Canton Island. On 20 April, she stood out of Pearl Harbor, pulling three barges bound for Majuro Atoll, and returned to Hawaii on 11 May. On 15 May 1944, she was redesignated a Fleet Ocean Tug, ATF-95.

A week later, she began an extended tour of duty in the Central Pacific. Towing "ARD-16", the tug arrived in Kwajalein lagoon on 2 June. Reassigned to ServRon 12, "Zuni" served as a harbor tug at Kwajalein until mid-July when she again took "ARD-16" in tow and got underway for the Mariana Islands. There, she participated briefly in the 24 July assault on Tinian before settling into a routine of shuttle voyages between Eniwetok and the Marianas. Late in September, she towed "ARD-17" to the Palau Islands where, during the first 18 days of October, she provided support services to the combined forces invading Peleliu. At that point, she received urgent orders to rendezvous with USS|Houston|CL-81|3 after that light cruiser had been damaged by two torpedoes during a Japanese aerial blitz to answer Task Force 38's raids on Okinawa and Formosa. She relieved USS|Pawnee|ATF-74|3 of the light cruiser and towed the battered warship into Ulithi lagoon on 27 October. After serving at the anchorage there for five days, the tug returned to sea with a group of oilers. Soon another set of urgent orders sent her to aid another light cruiser, USS|Reno|CL-96|3, which had been torpedoed in the Philippines, off the San Bernardino Strait, on 3 November by Japanese submarine "I-41". Though the cruiser nearly capsized, the ships’ companies of "Zuni" and "Reno" combined marvelously to meet the threat; and the tug succeeded in towing the cruiser 1,500 miles (2,800 km) back to Ulithi.

The tug remained in Ulithi for the rest of November and throughout most of December. During the latter month, she towed the disabled merchantman SS "John B. Floyd" into Ulithi and conducted a solitary cruise to eastward of the Philippines. On 29 December, "Zuni" put to sea with Task Group 30.8, the replenishment group for TF 38, and cruised for almost a month off Luzon. She returned to Ulithi on 28 January 1945 for engine repairs.

1945

She moved back out to sea in February and arrived off Iwo Jima three days after the initial assault. For 31 days, she performed yeoman service for the warships in the area. She pulled a transport off a sand bar. She deliberately ran herself aground alongside disabled "LST-944" to help that ship land ammunition. More routine missions consisted of assisting broached landing craft and laying submerged fuel pipes.

Work in the shallows, however, was as dangerous to her as to others. While attempting to salve "LST-727" on 23 March 1945, she was stranded on Yellow Beach when a broken towline fouled her anchor and propeller. She lost two crewmen in the disaster and suffered a broken keel and holed sides. She was pulled off the beach by USS|Zebra|AKN-5|3, temporarily repaired, and towed to Saipan. After further temporary repairs, "Zuni" was towed to Pearl Harbor where she arrived at the end of May. During the more than 14 weeks of repairs she underwent there, World War II ended.

"Zuni" resumed active duty on 15 September and served with the Pacific Fleet until early in 1946, when she was transferred to the Atlantic Fleet. She served in the 8th Naval District until she was decommissioned on 29 June 1946 and transferred to the United States Coast Guard. "Zuni" was struck from the Navy list on 19 July 1946.

"Zuni" earned four battle stars for her World War II service. Admiral William Halsey awarded the Legion of Merit to her skipper, Lt. Ray E. Chance. From the time of her commissioning "Zuni" was underway 80% of the time.

USCGC "Tamaroa"

The ship was renamed USCGC "Tamaroa" (WAT-166), after the Tamaroa tribe of the Illiniwek tribal group. She was later reclassified a Medium Endurance Cutter, WMEC-166. As "Tamaroa", she is best known for her rescue work during the "Perfect Storm" of 1991. She was decommissioned by the Coast Guard on 1 February 1994. As of|2007, she is undergoing restoration as a museum ship in Newport News, Virginia.cite web
url = http://www.wtkr.com/Global/story.asp?S=7165158&nav=ZolHbyvj
title = Hero Ship USS Zuni Docks in Newport News
publisher = WKTR NewsChannel 3
accessdate = 2007-10-29
]

References

*

External links

*
* [http://www.zunimaritime.org]
* [http://www.zuninews.4t.com]


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