- USS Butternut (YAG-60)
USS "Butternut" (AN-9/YN-4/ANL-9/YAG-60) was laid down as a Yard Net Tender on
11 March 1941 atHoughton, Washington , by theLake Washington Shipyard ; launched on10 May 1941 ; and placed in service at thePuget Sound Navy Yard on3 September 1941 , Lt. Andreas S. Einmo,USNR , in charge. After fitting out at Puget Sound the ship began service with the Inshore Patrol,13th Naval District , early in October. She tendedantisubmarine nets and performedminesweeping tasks until May1942 . On13 May 1942 , USS "Butternut" was placed in commission atSeattle, Washington , Lt. Andreas S. Einmo, USNR, in command.World War II Pacific Theater operations
The ship departed
Seattle, Washington , on17 May for a brief visit toSan Francisco, California , until1 June when she got underway for the southwestern Pacific. After escorting SS "Elbridge Gerry" across the ocean, "Butternut" arrived inNouméa ,New Caledonia , on27 June . For 18 months, she tended nets in the southwestern Pacific, first atNew Caledonia , later in theNew Hebrides , and then in theSolomons . Her active service was interrupted only by two repair periods — August and September of1943 atPort Chalmers ,New Zealand , and November1943 to February1944 atPearl Harbor .During her overhaul at
Pearl Harbor , USS "Butternut" was reclassified a net laying ship and was redesignated AN-9. In January1945 , the ship steamed from theSolomons via Humboldt Bay,New Guinea , to Leyte in thePhilippines . She spent the ensuing two years engaged in net and other district craft operations in the waters adjacent to the islands of Leyte and Samar.Post-War net laying assignments
USS "Butternut" departed
Leyte Gulf inconvoy on24 February 1947 and shaped a course for theMarianas . She arrived atGuam on9 March and began three years of service in the Trust Territories of thePacific Ocean Islands. Based atApra Harbor onGuam , she carried passengers and cargo among the islands as well as laying and tending nets at various islands. The ship also performed several assignments offIwo Jima laying mooring buoys and assisting in the recovery, repair and replacement ofsubmarine lines. USS "Butternut" departedGuam on19 June 1950 for repairs at thePearl Harbor Naval Shipyard . The net laying ship completed repairs and put to sea on15 September . Steaming viaGuam andIwo Jima , she arrived in Sasebo,Japan , on28 October . The ship conducted operations at Sasebo andYokosuka, Japan , until7 July 1951 when she set sail forGuam to resume her former duties in theTrust Territories .On
12 December 1951 , USS "Butternut" arrived inPearl Harbor for regular overhaul. She completed repairs almost eight months later, putting to sea for the west coast of theUnited States . The net laying ship reachedSan Francisco, California , on15 August 1952 but moved south toSan Diego, California , soon thereafter. Assigned to the11th Naval District , USS "Butternut" spent a little more than five years operating in and around San Diego tending nets and buoys as well as serving as a training platform for students at the Naval Net School,Tiburon, California , and for members of theU.S. Naval Reserve .Pacific Missile test support
In
1957 , however, her mission changed significantly with the de-emphasis of nets in harbor defense in favor of more sophisticated techniques. On14 December 1957 , the Naval Ordnance Test Station (NOTS),China Lake ,California , assumed operational control of USS "Butternut". Administrative control remained with the Commandant,11th Naval District .For the next seven years, the ship provided support services for the Polaris missile test and development program. In addition to serving as a monitoring platform for the scientists and engineers engaged in the program, USS "Butternut" towed hardware and support craft to and from the
San Clemente Island test site, conducted surveys of the ocean bottom at the site, carriedmissiles to the site, and performed a myriad of other support services. In1964 , theU.S. Navy concluded its Polarismissile tests atSan Clemente Island and closed the facility there.China Lake , however, retained operational control over USS "Butternut" for the purpose of testing the Mark 46antisubmarine warfare (ASW)torpedo and its first modification. That duty, punctuated by repair periods, occupied her until the summer of1969 .Decommissioning
Found to be excess to the needs of the
U.S. Navy late in June1969 , USS "Butternut" was decommissioned atSan Diego, California , on18 July 1969 , and her name was struck from theNavy list that same day.Post-decommissioning activity
Almost immediately, however, she was reinstated on the list of service craft as YAG-60 for service on the
Pacific Missile Range . That assignment lasted for about two years until June of1971 . On1 July 1971 , her service craft designation was struck from theNavy list . Yet even there, her service to the Navy did not end. Early in1972 , she became a salvage training hulk for Service Squadron (ServRon) 5 atMaui in theHawaiian Islands . She was so employed until June of1977 at which time she was destroyed as a target.Awards
USS "Butternut" received one
battle star forWorld War II service.References
See also
*
List of United States Navy ships External links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/18/18009.htm NavSource Online: Service Ship Photo Archive - YN-4 / AN-9 / ANL-9 Butternut / YAG-60]
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