Aerial port side view of the American cargo steamer City of Philadelphia. (Australian War Memorial) | |
History | |
---|---|
Name |
|
Owner |
|
Operator |
|
Builder | Great Lakes Engineering Works, Ashtabula, Ohio |
Yard number | 513 |
Launched | 3 November 1919 |
Completed | November 1919 |
Identification |
|
Notes | Wartime SWPA permanent local fleet identification number: X-104 |
General characteristics [1] [2] [3] | |
Type | EFC Design 1074 ship |
Tonnage | |
Length | 253.4 ft (77.2 m) registry length |
Beam | 43.7 ft (13.3 m) |
Depth | 26.2 ft (8.0 m) |
Installed power | Oil fired steam boilers |
Propulsion | Triple expansion engines, 1,500 ihp |
Notes | Australian War Memorial photo caption notes armament of USAT City of Philadelphia as one 3 inch gun and four 20 mm Oerlikon AA guns. |
SS Lake Elsmere was an Emergency Fleet Corporation (EFC) Design 1074 cargo ship built for the United States Shipping Board (USSB) during the massive shipbuilding effort of World War I.
The USSB operated the ship until sold in 1923 to the Southern Steamship Company for operation between Philadelphia and Houston as City of Philadelphia. In June 1942 the ship was delivered to the War Shipping Administration (WSA) for wartime operation first allocated to the U.S. Army with the WSA operator being Atlantic Gulf and West Indies Lines (AGWILINES), the parent company of Southern Steamship. On 27 May 1943 WSA obtained the vessel under bareboat charter with Army operating the ship under sub-bareboat charter. As USAT City of Philadelphia the ship arrived in Australia to remain the rest of the war in the U.S. Army Services of Supply permanent local fleet with the fleet designation X-104. WSA delivered the ship to the owners at Shanghai in December 1945 where the ship was sold to the China Merchants Steam Navigation Company and renamed Hai Cheh. Later sold to the Republic of China the ship was named Ho Ping Pa Hao 1950 to 1960 and Hoping No. 8 1960 until 1967 when the ship dropped out of registers.
Lake Elsmere, hull 513, was one of eight Design 1074 ships built by Great Lakes Engineering Works at its Ashtabula, Ohio yard, launched 3 November 1919 with completion later that month. [1] [4] A total of fifty-two Design 1074, "Great Lakes Engineering type," were built in among a larger group of ships built for the USSB on the Great Lakes known as the "Laker" type. [1] [5]
The ship was registered with U.S. Official Number 219256, signal LTRW, at Cleveland, Ohio as 2,674 GRT, 1,663 NRT, 253.4 ft (77.2 m) registry length, 43.7 ft (13.3 m) beam, 26.2 ft (8.0 m) depth, 1,500 indicated horsepower and a crew of 35. [2] [3] In 1950 rebuilds resulted in a tonnage change to 2,606 GRT, 1,432 NRT. The ship disappeared from registry in 1967. [3]
The USSB operated Lake Elsmere from delivery in November 1919 until sold in an offer accepted 10 April 1923 of the Southern Steamship Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Atlantic Gulf and West Indies Lines (AGWILINES), for $75,000. [6] The ship was renamed City of Philadelphia, registered at Philadelphia, operating in freight service between Philadelphia and Houston, Texas. [1] [3] [7] [8]
On 6 June 1942 the ship was delivered to the War Shipping Administration (WSA) at New Orleans for wartime operation under an Army charter agreement with AGWILINES as the WSA operating agent. That changed to a sub-bareboat charter by the Army from WSA on 27 May 1943 in New York with the ship operating as USAT City of Philadelphia. [9] [note 1]
City of Philadelphia was among the vessels meeting transportation requirements in the South West Pacific Area (SWPA). Operations in undeveloped ports and shallow waters of northern Australia and the islands to the north resulted in a request by the South West Pacific Area Services of Supply for at least twenty additional vessels [note 2] for the command's permanent local fleet having moderate draft and capacity of between 4,000 DWT and 6,000 DWT with large hatches and at least one boom rated for 25 ton lift. The vessels were to be capable of troop transport without significant loss of cargo capacity. Such vessels were typically in coastwise trade in the United States and the size limitation of passage from the Great Lakes to the coasts meant that many were built on the Great Lakes with them often being termed "Lakers" or "Lake type vessels". Such vessels were allocated to meet the SWPA requirement with City of Philadelphia, arriving 12 November 1943 and given the SWPA fleet identification X-104, being one of 29 sent by 11 February 1844. The ship was classed among the 8.5 kn (9.8 mph; 15.7 km/h) vessels and among the ten altered to transport refrigerated cargo. [10]
After the war WSA redelivered City of Philadelphia to the owners at Shanghai on 29 December 1945 who, with United States Maritime Commission approval sold the ship for $158,973.89 to China on 4 January 1946. [9]
Renamed Hai Cheh the ship operated for China Merchants Steam Navigation Company until transferred to the Republic of China in 1949. From 1950 the ship was operated by China People's Steam Navigation Co., Shanghai as Ho Ping Pa Hao 1950—1960 and Hoping No. 8 1960—1967 when the ship dropped out of registers in 1969. [3] [4] [9]
SS Absaroka was a steamer, named after the Absaroka Range of mountains in Montana and Wyoming, completed in February 1918 for the United States Shipping Board (USSB) which briefly operated the ship. From 17 September 1918 to 4 March 1919 the ship was commissioned as USS Absaroka with the identification number IX-2581 in United States Navy and operated by the Naval Overseas Transportation Service.
SS Borinquen, the Taino language name for Puerto Rico, was a passenger liner launched 24 September 1930 and delivered to the Atlantic, Gulf & West Indies Steamship Lines (AGWI) in 1931 for operation by its subsidiary the New York & Porto Rico Line. The line operated the ship until it was requisitioned by the War Shipping Administration (WSA) the last day of 1941 for service as a troop transport. The line then operated the ship as agent for the WSA until 6 May 1944 when operation was transferred to the United States Army for support of the Normandy landings with the ship arriving off the beaches on 7 June 1944. Borinquen continued service post war until redelivered to the owners 14 June 1946. The ship was sold in 1949 and became the Arosa Star. After further sales and change in the cruise ship regulations the ship was again sold and grounded as La Jenelle on the California coast in 1970.
USS City of Dalhart (IX-156) was built for the United States Shipping Board (USSB), delivered to the USSB in November 1920 and, after exchanging original steam engines with diesels, operated by the board's agents in Pacific trade until bareboat charter to the Navy in February 1944 by the War Shipping Administration (WSA) for the duration of the war. Commissioned 2 June 1944 and designated unclassified miscellaneous vessel IX-156 the ship served the remainder of the war in the western Pacific.
USS General J. H. McRae (AP-149) was a General G. O. Squier-class transport ship built for the United States Maritime Commission during World War II. In 1946 she was transferred to the US Army and operated as USAT General J. H. McRae. On 1 March 1950 she was transferred to Military Sea Transportation Service and operated as USNS General J. H. McRae (T-AP-149). She was named for US Army Major General James H. McRae.
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Koninklijke Paketvaart-Maatschappij, better known as KPM, was a Dutch shipping company (1888–1966) in the Netherlands East Indies, now Indonesia. It was the dominant inter-island shipping line in Indonesia during the last half century of the colonial era. KPM maintained connections between the islands of Indonesia,
USS Majaba (AG-43/IX-102) was the Design 1049 cargo ship Meriden built in 1919 by the Albina Engine & Machine Works, Portland, Oregon. All the ships were requisitioned by the United States Shipping Board (USSB) for World War I service. The ship was bought by the E. K. Wood Lumber Co., of San Francisco, California in 1923 and renamed El Capitan. The ship was chartered by the U.S. Navy through the War Shipping Administration (WSA) in April 1942 and commissioned as Majaba.
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SS Tasman was a 4,922 gross register tons (GRT) Dutch steamship built by Earle's Shipbuilding and Engineering Company Limited, Hull in 1921 for Koninklijke Paketvaart-Maatschappij (KPM), Batavia. With outbreak of the war in the Pacific and the fall of the Dutch East Indies, Tasman was one of 21 KPM vessels that sought refuge in Australia. These ships became the core of the initial Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA) command's permanent local fleet under U.S. Army control. After general service as a transport, the ship was converted to a hospital ship at Melbourne. The ship, under the Dutch flag and Dutch certification under the Hague Convention, served the remainder of the war as a Dutch hospital ship.
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MS Sea Witch was a United States Maritime Commission type C2 cargo ship, the first of four pre-war hulls, built by Tampa Shipbuilding & Engineering Company, Tampa, Florida and delivered in July 1940. The ship was of the basic C2 design, rather than the more numerous C2-S, C2-S-A1, C2-S-B1 types and four C2-T hulls delivered December 1941 through March 1942. Sea Witch was one of the relatively few C2 types built with diesel engines.
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