- USS Tryon (APH-1)
USS Tryon (APH-1) was laid down as
Alcoa Courier (MC hull 175),26 March 1941 , by theMoore Dry Dock Co.,Oakland, California and launched21 October 1941 sponsored by Mrs. Roy G. Hunt. After the bombing ofPearl Harbor , she was designated forU.S. Navy use and assigned the name Comfort in June 1942. Comfort was renamed Tryon13 August 1942 , acquired by theU.S. Navy on29 September 1942 and commissioned30 September 1942 with Comdr. Alfred J. Byrholdt in command.World War II Pacific Theatre operations
USS Tryon, an
Evacuation Transport , got underway forSan Diego on9 October 1942 and departed from there on the 21st, bound forNew Caledonia . On 7 November, she arrived atNoumea ; joined the Service Squadron, South Pacific; and remained with that organization for the next 15 months, evacuating combatcasualties from the Solomons toSuva ,Noumea ,Wellington ,Auckland , andBrisbane . On her return trips to the forward areas, she carried priority cargo andtroops for forces fighting the Japanese.Combat duty
Tryon's first combat duty came in the Marianas during the summer of 1944. On
16 July , she joined Task Force 51 atLunga Point and sortied for the invasion ofTinian . The hospital transport arrived off the beaches on the 24th, combat loaded with troops and equipment. After unloading, she embarked casualties for a week and then got underway for the Marshalls. The ship called atEniwetok , New Caledonia,Espiritu Santo , and theRussell Islands before anchoring offGuadalcanal on27 August 1944 .Tryon embarked 1,323 marines of the 1st Marine Division and sortied on
8 September 1944 , with Transport Division 6 of Task Force 32, for the assault on thePalau s. She was off the beaches ofPeleliu on the morning of the 15th and disembarked elements of the assault wave. Then, serving as a hospital evacuation ship, she embarked 812 combat casualties and, on the 20th, stood out for Manus. She disembarked the patients atSeeadler Harbor four days later and headed back toPeleliu the next morning. The ship remained off the beaches from 28 September to 4 October and then joined a convoy bound for the Solomons.Invasion of the Philippines
When Tryon arrived at
Tulagi on 11 October, she was assigned to the 7th Fleet to participate in theLeyte campaign. She called atHollandia and Humboldt Bay en route and reached Leyte on the 30th. The ship completed unloading the next day and began the return voyage to the South Pacific. The transport loaded troops and cargo atLangemak Bay from 13 through 27 December and headed for Manus on28 December 1944 .On
2 January 1945 , Tryon stood out of Manus with Task Group 77.9, the reinforcement group, for the invasion ofLuzon on the beaches of theLingayen Gulf. She arrived offSan Fabian on the morning of the 11th and began unloading troops and supplies. From 13 to 27 January, she received casualties on board and headed to Leyte Gulf where they were transferred toHope (AH-9) andBountiful (AH-7) . On 2 February, she joined a convoy and departed for the Solomons.Return to Stateside for repairs
On 22 February, the evacuation hospital ship got underway and proceeded via Pearl Harbor to the United States for an overhaul. She arrived at San Francisco on 11 March and remained in the navy yard until 20 May. After refresher training in San Diego, she sailed for Hawaii on 3 June and arrived at Pearl Harbor the following week. The transport then called at Eniwetok, Guam, and San Francisco before returning to Hawaii on 2 August. The next day, she headed for Guam and arrived there on the 15th to hear that hostilities with Japan had ceased. Tryon was routed to the Philippines, embarked occupation troops at Leyte, and joined a convoy for Japan on 1 September. The transport disembarked the troops at Yokohama and received liberated Allied prisoners of war en board for transportation to the Philippines. She disembarked them at Manila on the 18th.
Post-War operations
On
1 October , Tryon was assigned to the "Magic-Carpet" fleet which was established at the end of the war to return troops to the United States. She served with it through the end of the year. In mid-January 1946, the ship was slated for inactivation. She was decommissioned at Seattle on20 March 1946 , returned to the War Shipping Administration in April, and struck from the Navy list on17 April 1946 .Conversion to U.S. Army use
Tryon was turned over to the United States Army on
17 July 1946 and converted into a troop transport by the Todd Shipyard, Seattle, Washington She emerged from the yard on25 August 1947 and was placed in service as Sgt. Charles E. Mower.Conversion to MSTS use
The Secretary of Defense, by a directive dated
2 August 1949 , established a unified sea transportation service; and, on1 March 1950 , the ship was transferred back to the Navy Department, assigned to the Military Sea Transportation Service, and designated T-AP-186. Sgt. Charles E. Mower operated as a dependent transport shuttling between San Francisco and Pearl Harbor until she was inactivated in 1954.Final decommissioning
Sgt. Charles E. Mower was placed out of service, in reserve, on
16 June 1954 ; transferred to the reserve fleet at Suisun Bay; and struck from the Navy list on1 July 1960 .Awards
USS Tryon (PH–1) earned six
battle stars duringWorld War II .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]
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