- USS Alcona (AK-157)
USS Alcona (AK-157) was an "Alamosa"-class
cargo ship commissioned by theU.S. Navy for service inWorld War II . She was responsible for delivering troops, goods and equipment to locations in the war zone."Alcona" (AK-157) was laid down as the unnamed
Maritime Commission contract hull (MC hull 2102) on 27 November 1943 atRichmond, California , by theKaiser Shipbuilding Co.; named Alcona by the Navy and designated AK-157 on 25 February 1944; launched on 9 May 1944 and sponsored by Mrs. Morris Chamberlain ofOakland, California , transferred there by the Maritime Commission to the Navy on 15 September 1944, and commissioned the same day, Lt. Lester J. Lavine,USNR , in command. "Alcona" then shifted to theMare Island Navy Yard ,Vallejo, California , to be fitted out.World War II Pacific Theatre operations
Following shakedown training out of
San Pedro, California , "Alcona" reported by dispatch, for duty withService Squadron 7 on 22 October 1944 the same day that she sailed forSan Francisco, California . Arriving there on the 23d, the cargo ship took on board cargo and got underway on the last day of October to commence operations supplying American advanced bases inNew Guinea and later, in thePhilippines which would keep her occupied for the rest of the war.New Guinea operations
Pausing briefly at
Pearl Harbor on 10 and 11 November, "Alcona" then continued, viaFinschhafen ,New Guinea , to Manus where she arrived on 29 November. After discharging her cargo, "Alcona" then proceeded viaHollandia ,New Guinea , toMios Woendi , in thePadaido Islands , where she spentChristmas before getting underway on 27 December forAustralia .From Australia to the Philippines
"Alcona" reached
Brisbane, Australia , on 4 January 1945 and loaded cargo there until the 10th when she weighed anchor to head for the advanced base atMilne Bay ,New Guinea . Upon emptying her hold there and atFinschhafen ,the cargo ship then proceeded toTorokina , Bougainville, in theSolomons to pick up a mine unit for transportation to thePhilippines . Arriving atCape Torokina on 27 January, the ship got underway, viaHollandia , forLeyte the following morning and arrived at San Pedro Bay,Leyte , on 12 February.Underway for Manus on the 24th "Alcona" arrived in the
Admiralties on 3 March and loaded cargo there before getting underway for Brisbane on the 11th. Although atyphoon hindered the ship's passage, she reached her destination without mishap on the 18th. Subsequently, "Alcona" returned to the Philippines and enteredManila Bay on 24 April. En route back, she touched atSeeadler Harbor , Manus, and Humboldt Bay,New Guinea , before reachingHollandia to reload. Upon arrival back in the Philippines, Alcona discharged her cargo into tank landing craft (LCT's) off the former American naval base atCavite . After discharging more cargo atSubic Bay on 17 May, atGuiuan Samar , the same day, and at San Pedro Bay, "Alcona" visited Brisbane for the third time in mid-June.End-of-war operations
"Alcona" had transported another consignment of cargo to the Philippines by mid-July and had completed her task at
Subic Bay by 8 August, two days after the firstatomic bomb had been dropped on the city ofHiroshima . Underway forSamar on the 12th, "Alcona" arrived three days later and was Iaying at anchor offSamar the day that Japan capitulated, 15 August 1945.Post-war operations
"Alcona" conducted another voyage from Brisbane to the Philippines and then, after undergoing repairs in the advanced base sectional floating drydock "ABSD-5", proceeded to
Samar on 12 November. The cargo ship remained there until she sailed forPanama on 19 January 1946.Transfer to the Atlantic
Reaching Balboa on 3 March, "Alcona" entered the
Panama Canal that afternoon and reached Cristobal on the Atlantic side of theisthmus , at 2340. Underway forNorfolk, Virginia , on the morning of 7 March, "Alcona" proceeded toward her destination until rerouted toNew York on the 12th. She anchored inGravesend Bay, New York , on the 16th but got underway forBayonne, New Jersey , 10 days later. The cargo ship reached the wharf at the naval base annex there that afternoon.After discharging cargo brought from the Pacific and loading new cargo, "Alcona" got underway for Norfolk on the morning of 13 April and anchored in
Hampton Roads the following morning. Underway at 1405 on the 19th, the ship reached Pier 4, Berth 42, Naval Operating Base (NOB),Norfolk, Virginia , at 1445 to discharge cargo. Securing from alI cargo operations on the afternoon of the 24th, she steamed out into Hampton Roads and anchored until the morning of 1 May, when she got underway forBoston, Massachusetts .Exercise Nanook
Initially, it had been planned to decommission "Alcona" at Norfolk so that she might be returned to the
War Shipping Administration and laid up in the James River to await further disposition. However, on 18 April 1946, Capt. Richard H. Cruzen, prospective commanding officer of anArctic exercise, code named "Nanook" requested that "Alcona" be assigned to histask force . The approval of his request prolonged the ship's naval career and, on 27 April theChief of Naval Operations ordered her assigned to "Nanook.""Alcona" arrived at
Boston, Massachusetts , shortly before noon on 3 May and moored alongside the destroyer, "Willard Keith" (DD-775). Five days later, Capt. Robert J. Esslinger (who had won aNavy Cross in "Kearny" (DD-432) and aSilver Star for command of "Sproston" (DD-577) offOkinawa in 1945) relieved Lt. Comdr. H. D. ByingtonUSNR , in command.(Data on Arctic assignment missing from Navy file.)
Final decommissioning
"Alcona" was decommissioned 5 May 1955 and returned to the
Maritime Commission (date unknown). She was struck from theNaval Register on 1 April 1960. Her final disposition: fate unknown.References
ee also
*
List of United States Navy ships
*World War II External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/#Anchor-Editoria-14954 Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/13/130157.htm NavSource Online: Service Ship Photo Archive - AK-157 Alcona]
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