- USS Tippecanoe (AO-21)
USS "Tippecanoe" (AO-21) was laid down on 1 October 1919 at
Newport News, Va. , by theNewport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. ; launched on 5 June 1920; delivered to the United States Shipping Board late that year; and acquired by the Navy at theMare Island Navy Yard on 6 March 1922."Tippecanoe" remained inactive at Mare Island for almost two decades before she was finally placed in commission on 6 March 1940, Comdr. Hugh W. Olds in command. The oiler was assigned to Squadron 8, Base Force Train, and operated between the west coast and the
Hawaiian Islands for the next two years. Her most frequent ports of call werePearl Harbor , San Pedro,San Francisco ,San Diego , andSeattle .When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, fortune ordained that "Tippecanoe" be safe in San Francisco. During the first three months of the war, the oiler steamed up and down the west coast between San Diego, San Pedro, San Francisco, and Seattle. She did not leave the west coast until 3 February when she headed back to
Hawaii . She entered Pearl Harbor on the 17th and lay over there until 3 March when she headed for the South Pacific. After a brief stop atPago Pago ,Samoa , the ship put to sea on 15 March and headed to an area north ofNew Caledonia to fuel Rear AdmiralFrank Jack Fletcher 's Task Force (TF) 17. She returned to the vicinity of Samoa on 26 March, visitedTongatapu on 6 April, and put intoNoumea ,New Caledonia , on the 26th.On 1 May, the oiler put to sea to rendezvous with TF 17 once more. She made contact with Rear Admiral
Aubrey W. Fitch 's task unit—built around USS "Lexington" (CV-2)—and, on the 2d and 3d, fueled the venerable carrier and her supporting ships. Drained bone dry, "Tippecanoe" then headed forEfate where she arrived on 4 May, the day Rear Admiral Fletcher's USS "Yorktown" (CV-5) airmen struck the Japanese seaplane base atTulagi to open the preliminaries of the historic action that stopped Japan's southward advance. During theBattle of the Coral Sea itself, "Tippecanoe" remained in the haven at Efate. On 8 May, she got underway and, for a time, joined Vice AdmiralWilliam F. Halsey 's recently arrived TF 16—built around carriers USS "Enterprise" (CV-6) and USS "Hornet" (CV-8). She stopped at Noumea on 11 May and then continued on to Samoa, reachingTutuila on 24 May. Four days later, she put to sea to return to Hawaii and entered Pearl Harbor on the 30th. On 1 July, she leftOahu to conduct nearly a month of operations with TF 18 before returning on the 26th."Tippecanoe" departed Pearl Harbor on
9 August 1942 and reachedAlaska n waters on the 15th to begin three years in the frigid northern latitudes of the Pacific. For the remainder of the war, she steamed the resupply circuit between such ports as Kodiak,Dutch Harbor , Adak, Akutan,Cold Bay , and Attu and made periodic voyages south to Seattle and San Francisco to replenish. In May 1943, she supported the invasion of Attu, but from a safe distance in port at Adak. By the latter part of the summer, the Aleutians had been secured, and her travels among the American bases in the area became routine.On 15 August 1945, when hostilities in the Pacific ceased, "Tippecanoe" was en route from Seattle to Dutch Harbor. After visits to Adak and Attu during the latter half of the month, the oiler headed for
Japan for several months of duty supporting the occupation forces. She arrived atOminato on 8 September and, after a month there, moved on toTokyo . During her two remaining months in Japan, she visited Aomori,Yokohama , andYokosuka . She departed Yokosuka on 28 November to return to the United States and entered San Francisco on 18 December. On 6 March 1946, "Tippecanoe" was decommissioned at Mare Island Naval Shipyard. Her disposal was authorized on 19 March, and her name was struck from the Navy list on 12 April. She was transferred to the Maritime Commission on 7 October and was sold to theNational Metal & Steel Co . on 20 November 1946.See also
*
List of ship launches in 1920
*List of ship commissionings in 1940
*List of ship decommissionings in 1946 References
External links
* [http://www.harvard-diggins.org/Burbank/Julsen_Scrap_Books/Book_2/print_Mare_Island.htm "Mare Island Navy Yard"] - 1928.
Elbridge Ayer Burbank pencil sketch.
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