- USS Severn (AO-61)
USS Severn (AO-61) was a sclass|Ashtabula|fleet oiler. She was constructed for the
U.S. Navy duringWorld War II and her assignment was to provide liquids, such as fuel or water, to ships in the forward battle areas. She survived this dangerous task and returned home post-war with twobattle star s to her credit.The fourth Navy ship to be named "Severn", she was laid down under
Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 727) on24 November 1943 by the Bethlehem-Sparrows Point Shipyard, Inc.,Sparrows Point, Maryland ; launched on31 May 1944 ; sponsored by Mrs. Harold B. Hinton; and delivered and commissioned on19 July 1944 , Lt. Comdr. Owen Rees in command.World War II Pacific Theatre operations
Following shakedown in
Chesapeake Bay , "Severn" departed theU.S. East Coast for thePanama Canal and duty as a fresh water carrier in the Pacific. Assigned toServRon 8, she arrived atPearl Harbor on8 September and atEniwetok on the 22d. There she discharged her cargo into YO's; and, on the 28th, sailed for the Admiralties. At Manus, on3 October , she commenced watering amphibious craft of theU.S. 7th Fleet preparing for theLeyte invasion; and, on the 13th, got under way forHollandia , whence she sailed forLeyte Gulf on the 18th.Supporting the Philippine Islands invasion
The 23d brought the beginning of the
Battle for Leyte Gulf ; and, as that day turned into the 24th, "Severn" entered the gulf. After daylight, she moved into San Pedro Bay. An hour later, she underwent her first air attack; and, on the 25th, began discharging fresh water.Missed by a bomb from a plane
Through the daily air attacks of the next few weeks, "Severn" continued to provide U.S. 7th Fleet units with water. By November, the attacks were down to two a day and were usually broken up by friendly aircraft. But, on the 24th, an enemy plane penetrated the CAP cover and released a bomb aimed at the water carrier. The bomb missed "Severn", but hit "PC-1124" then receiving water. In December, "Severn" returned to Manus; took on more water, clothing, dry provisions, and lube oil; loaded an "LCVP" and 2 jeeps at Hollandia; then returned to the
Philippines in time to support the landings inLingayen Gulf . Arriving in that gulf on13 January 1945 , she distributed water and fuel oil through the 26th; then returned to San Pedro Bay. From Leyte, she proceeded back to the Admiralties; and, on14 February , got under way for the Western Carolines.South Pacific operations
During March, "Severn" filled her cargo tanks with water at
Guam and offloaded atUlithi -- into ships staging for theOkinawa campaign. In April, she continued to focus her operations on Ulithi, which she left only to rendezvous withU.S. 5th Fleet units at sea to return to the Marianas to refill her cargo tanks. In May, with the arrival of USS|Ataban|AW-4 at Ulithi, she commenced roughly triangular operations which took her from the Carolines to the Admiralties to the Marianas and back to the Carolines—taking on potable water at Manus and Guam and discharging it into water carriers and small craft atSaipan and Ulithi.End-of-war activity
In August, "Severn" moved up to Okinawa to discharge water to ships in
Buckner Bay and in theHagushi anchorage. After the end of hostilities, she remained at Okinawa, and-during September, October, and November, she shuttled water fromSamar to the Ryūkyūs. In December, she carried water to distributing ships at Sasebo,Kagoshima , andWakayama ,Japan ; and, on the 27th, sailed for theUnited States .Supporting nuclear testing at Bikini
"Severn" arrived at
San Pedro, California , on10 January 1946 . Overhaul followed; and, in May, she sailed for the Marshalls. There, into October, she provided fresh water to units of JointTask Force 1 duringOperation Crossroads , the atomic test series conducted that summer atBikini Atoll . She then returned to the United States; and, in December, assumed the duties of an oiler and initially transported Navy special fuel anddiesel fuel betweenU.S. West Coast ports.Post-war runs
At mid-month, "Severn" sailed for Japan where she joined ServRon 3 and commenced shuttling fuel between Japanese and Korean ports. In February 1947, she was transferred to
Persian Gulf runs; and, into July, moved fuel fromRas at Tanura toYokosuka . In July, she returned to the U.S. West Coast for overhaul; and, in November, resumed runs between Japan and the Persian Gulf. In May 1948, her schedule was altered; and, into September, she carried petroleum products from theMiddle East to the east coast of the United States. She then returned to the Pacific; and, but for a run to Europe, she conducted Persian Gulf-Japan runs until ordered back to the United States for inactivation in January 1950.Decommissioned in 1950
At the end of that month, she proceeded to the
Puget Sound Navy Yard for tank cleaning and voyage repairs; then, in early April, moved south toSan Diego, California , to complete inactivation. Despite the outbreak of hostilities inKorea , she was decommissioned as scheduled on3 July but was soon reactivated again as that conflict drew available shipping into the Pacific and produced unfilled demands in other areas.Recommissioned during the Korean crisis
"Severn" was recommissioned on
29 December 1950 and, although assigned to Service Force, Atlantic, was initially employed in transpacific service. By April 1951, when she transited the Panama Canal to take up duties with the Atlantic Fleet, she had completed two runs to Japan.East Coast operations
Homeported at
Newport, Rhode Island , "Severn" operated along the east coast and in the Puerto Rican area into the fall and, in November, was deployed, for the first time, to theMediterranean for duty with theU.S. 6th Fleet . In March 1952, she returned to Newport. During the summer, she participated inmidshipman cruise "Baker;" and, in the fall, after availability and independent ship exercises, resumed participation in scheduled operations in the western Atlantic andCaribbean . "Severn" returned to Newport, Rhode Island, from her last Mediterranean deployment on10 June 1971 . She spent the next 18 months engaged in operations and exercises out of Newport.Final decommissioning
During the first six months of 1973, "Severn" was at Newport preparing for decommissioning. On
1 July 1973 , she was decommissioned and towed to the Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility atPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania . Exactly one year later, her name was struck from the Navy List, and her hulk was turned over to theMaritime Commission for disposal. Subsequently, she was sold,22 January 1975 , byMARAD . Her current fate is unknown.Military awards and honors
"Severn" earned two battle stars during World War II.
References
See also
*
List of United States Navy ships External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/#Anchor-Editoria-14954 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/19/19061.htm NavSource Online: Service Ship Photo Archive - AO-61 Severn]
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