- USS Wassuc (CMc-3)
The USS "Wassuc" (CMc-3)—originally a steel-hulled, coastal passenger vessel built in
1924 atElizabethport, New Jersey , by theNew Jersey Drydock and Transportation Corp. ofNew York City as SS "Yale"—was acquired by theU.S. Navy on20 December 1940 . SS "Yale" then began conversion to a coastalminelayer at theNew York Navy Yard . ClassifiedCMc-3 on30 December 1940 and renamed USS "Wassuc" on10 January 1941 , the ship was commissioned at the New York Navy Yard on15 May 1941 .East Coast operations
After commissioning, USS "Wassuc" proceeded south; touched at
Norfolk, Virginia ; and then sailed back northward to theWashington Navy Yard where she arrived on4 June . She subsequently moved to the Mine Warfare School atYorktown, Virginia , on23 June , where she relieved USS "Cormorant" (AM-40), freeing that minesweeper to begin an overhaul. During her service at Yorktown, USS "Wassuc" participated in experimental mine work under the aegis of theBureau of Ordnance (BuOrd). Completing that tour in mid-August, USS "Wassuc" moved to the Marine Basin atBrooklyn, New York , for extensive alterations that were not completed until after theJapan ese attack onPearl Harbor had plunged theUnited States intoWorld War II . Two days afterChristmas of1941 , USS "Wassuc" departedTompkinsville, Staten Island ,New York , bound for Yorktown, Virginia, to receive mine warfare instruction duties and further work under the auspices of BuOrd. USS "Wassuc" spent the next two years operating in the5th Naval District , primarily plying the waters of theChesapeake Bay region and occasionally ranging as far north as the Washington Navy Yard and as far south asCape Hatteras . She operated principally in BuOrd testing programs at the Naval Mine Warfare Proving Grounds atSolomons Island, Maryland , and at Yorktown, Virginia. She also served two tours of duty as a training ship, providing instruction for officers in the compensation of magnetic compasses. Although her duties appear to have been largely experimental and test-oriented, records indicate that the ship laid a small minefield off Cape Hatteras on22 May 1942 . By1944 , USS "Wassuc" was the only coastal minelayer on the U.S. Navy inventory. TheU.S. Army held primary responsibility for defensive coastal minelaying, andsubmarines and aircraft were proving superbly capable of carrying mine warfare to enemy shores. Nevertheless, USS "Wassuc" continued her undramatic but vital experimental and test work, far from the limelight of the far-flung battlefronts. She continued her coastwise routine, ranging fromProvincetown, Massachusetts , andCape May, New Jersey , to New York and Norfolk, Virginia, as well as Solomons Island, through the end of World War II.Decommissioning
Decommissioned at the
Norfolk Navy Yard on8 November 1945 and struck from theNavy list on28 November 1945 , the U.S. Navy's last coastal minelayer was sold to the Patapsco Scrap Corp. on3 August 1948 for scrapping.References
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/#Anchor-Editoria-14954 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]
* [http://ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USN/ships/CMc/CMc-3_Wassuc.html Ships of the U.S. Navy, 1940-1945 CMc-3 USS Wassuc]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/11/0703.htm NavSource Online: Mine Warfare Vessel Photo Archive - Wassuc (CMc 3)]
* [http://www.ibiblio.net/hyperwar/USN/ships/ships-dm.html Ships of the U.S. Navy, 1940-1945 Minecraft]
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