- USS Admiral Hugh Rodman (AP-126)
"USS Admiral Hugh Rodman" (AP-126) was an "Admiral W. S. Benson" class transport: Laid down, 24 April 1944, as a Maritime Commission type (
P2-SE2-R1 ) hull, under Maritime Commission contract, (MC hull 684), atBethlehem-Alameda Shipyard Inc.,Alameda, California ; Launched, 25 February 1945; Commissioned USS "Admiral Hugh Rodman" (AP-126), 7 July 1945, Capt. Lewis E. Coley in command; Decommissioned, 14 May 1946, atNew York ; Transferred to theU.S. Army Transportation Service in May 1946; Commissioned USAT "General Maurice Rose", 1 August 1946; Reacquired by theU.S. Navy and assigned to theMilitary Sea Transport Service (MSTS); Placed in service as USNS "General Maurice Rose" (T-AP-126), 1 March 1950.World War II Pacific Theatre operations
Assigned to the
U.S. Pacific Fleet , the transport departedSan Francisco, California , on 21 July 1945 for a shakedown cruise which took her to San Diego and Los Angeles. She returned to her home port on 16 August – two days after hostilities with Japan ended—and embarked fresh troops to replace war-weary veterans in theFar East . She transited theGolden Gate on 21 August and proceeded viaUlithi to thePhilippines . Following stops at San Pedro Bay,Leyte , andBatangas andManila ,Luzon , she headed home and reachedSan Francisco, California , early in October.Then, following a second round-trip voyage to the
Philippines , she again got underway fromSan Francisco, California , in December, and set course for Nagoya,Japan . This shuttle run ended atLos Angeles, California , on 3 January 1946. Another voyage to Japan – this time to Yokohama – took her back toSeattle, Washington . Early in March, she sailed from that port with occupation troops and delivered them toOkinawa .Transferred to the U.S. Army
From that island in the
Ryukyus , the ship sailed, via thePanama Canal , for theeast coast of the United States . She reached New York on 14 May, was decommissioned on that day, and was transferred to the War Department later that month. The ship entered theBethlehem New York yard at 56th Street on 3 June to receive the repairs and modifications she would require upon assuming a slightly different role. She got underway again on 1 August and served theU.S. Army Transport Service as "General Maurice Rose" until she and her sisterU.S. Army transports were transferred to the U.S. Navy on 1 March 1950 to serve in the recently established Military Sea Transportation Service.Transferred to the U.S. Navy
She was given the classification T-AP-126 at that time. Manned by a civilian crew, "General Maurice Rose" operated out of New York in the Atlantic and the
Mediterranean during the next 15 years.Transporting Soldiers and Refugees
Steaming primarily between New York and
Bremerhaven, Germany , she completed more than 150 round-trip voyages while carrying military dependents andEurope an refugees and rotating combat-ready troops. In addition, the ship deployed to theMediterranean 17 times to support U.S. 6th Fleet operations. Following the gallant, but abortive, Hungarian revolution in October 1956, she completed three runs toBremerhaven, Germany , and back between 12 January and 27 March 1957 transporting Hungarian refugees to theUnited States . On three occasions between 1 April and 5 October, "General Maurice Rose" was dispatched to the easternMediterranean to support units of theU.S. 6th Fleet responding to political crises inJordan .Vietnam Crisis operations
In 1965, however, America's increased involvement in the war in
Vietnam beckoned the transport toward a new theater of operations. After completing nine voyages toBremerhaven, Germany , and back between 16 January and 4 August 1965, General Maurice Rose departed New York on 14 August for transport duty to southeastAsia . She sailed viaLong Beach, California , andPearl Harbor toQui Nhon ,South Vietnam , where she arrived on 14 September and began debarkingtroops and supplies. After departingVietnam on the 19th, she steamed viaOkinawa and theU.S. West Coast and reached New York on 18 October.During the first eight months of 1966, she made eight round-trip runs to
Europe and back. On 8 September, she again departed New York for troop lift duty toSouth Vietnam . She operated in the western Pacific supporting the forces of freedom in southeastAsia through the end of 1966. She returned to New York late in January 1967 for an overhaul and was placed in ready reserve status. As such she was laid up at theCavin Point Army Depot in New York harbor.Deactivation
"General Maurice Rose" was: Placed in ready reserve status and laid up in the
Cavin Point Army Depot in New York harbor in 1967; Transferred to the permanent custody of the Maritime Administration (MARAD), 30 June 1970 and shifted to theNational Defense Reserve Fleet ,James River ,Fort Eustis, Virginia ; Struck from theNaval Register , 20 August 1990; Final Disposition, sold by the Maritime Administration in June 1997 for scrapping at Brownsville, Texas.References
See also
*
List of United States Navy ships
*World War II
*Troopship
*Transport (ship) External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/#Anchor-Editoria-14954 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.