USS ABSD-5

Last updated
USS ABSD-5
ABSD5repairingUSSMississippiBB41.jpg
ABSD-5 at Manicani Island, Philippines repairing USS Mississippi in July 1945
History
Flag of the United States.svgUnited States
NameUSS AFDB-5- ABSD-5
Owner US Navy
OperatorUS Navy
Builder Chicago Bridge & Iron Company in Morgan City, Louisiana
Laid down1943 and 1944
Sponsored byMrs. John P. Millon
Completed1944
Commissioned15 June 1944
Recommissioned1946 to AFDB-5
Out of serviceMay 1946
Stricken15 April 1989
Honors and
awards
American Campaign Medal ribbon.svg American Campaign Medal

Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal ribbon.svg Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal

World War II Victory Medal ribbon.svg World War II Victory Medal
FateScrapped in 1997
General characteristics
Displacement30,800 (in nine sections, (A-G)
Length825 ft (251 m) (in nine sections)
Beam256 ft 0 in (78.03 m)
Height9 ft (2.7 m) floated, 78 ft (24 m) flooded
Propulsionnone
Capacity90,000 tons lift
Complement690 officers and men
Armament
  • 14 × 40 mm (1.6 in) guns
  • 14 × 20 mm (0.79 in) guns
One Advance Base Sectional Dock (ABSD) section under tow with float wings up in 1944 ABSDsectionUnderTowwingsup.jpg
One Advance Base Sectional Dock (ABSD) section under tow with float wings up in 1944
USS Artisan (ABSD-1), USS ABSD-5 sister ship, with USS Antelope (IX-109) and LST-120 in the dock at Espiritu Santo, New Hebrides Islands, 8 January 1945, before moving to Manicani Island USS Artisan ABSD-1 01.jpg
USS Artisan (ABSD-1), USS ABSD-5 sister ship, with USS Antelope (IX-109) and LST-120 in the dock at Espiritu Santo, New Hebrides Islands, 8 January 1945, before moving to Manicani Island

USS ABSD-5, later redesignated as AFDB-5, was a nine-section, non-self-propelled, large auxiliary floating drydock of the US Navy. Advance Base Sectional Dock-5 (Auxiliary Floating Dock Big-5) was constructed in sections during 1943 and 1944 by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Company in Morgan City, Louisiana for World War II. With all nine sections joined, she was 825 feet long, 28 feet tall (keel to welldeck), and with an inside clear width of 133 feet 7 inches. ABSD-5 had two traveling 15-ton capacity crane with an 85-foot radius and two or more support barges. The two side walls were folded down under tow to reduce wind resistance and lower the center of gravity. ABSD-5 had 6 capstans for pulling, each rated at 24,000 lbf (110,000 N) at 30 ft/min (0.15 m/s), 4 of the capstans were reversible. There were also 4 ballast compartments in each section. [1] [2]

Contents

World War II

In May 1945 ABSD-5 started repairing ships in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater of war. ABSD-5 departed New Orleans, Louisiana on 18 November 1944, arriving at the Panama Canal on 29 November 1944. One section was towed with War Shipping Administration's ocean tugboat St. Simon and another section was towed by USS Undaunted (ATA-199). After crossing the Pacific Ocean in convoys the nine sections arrived in Leyte on 24 February 1945, with assembly completed in May 1945. Naval Construction Battalion Detachment 1055 and 1053 assembled ABSD-5. [3] [4] [5]

ABSD-5 was stationed at Leyte-Samar Naval Base's Manicani Island, a small island in Leyte Gulf of the Philippines, near Guiuan, Samar. ABSD-5 repaired the large ships in the US Navy and United Kingdom's Royal Navy. Able to lift 90,000 tons, ABSD-5 could raise large ships, like aircraft carriers, battleships, cruisers, and large auxiliary ships, out of the water for repair below the ship's waterline. She was also used to repair multiple smaller ships at the same time. Ships in continuous use during war need repair both from wear and from war damage from naval mine and torpedoes. Rudders and propellers are best serviced on dry docks.

Without ABSD-5 and her sister ships, at remote locations months could be lost in a ships returning to a home port for repair. ABSD-5 had provisions for the repair crew, such as bunk beds, meals, and laundry. ABSD-4 had power stations, ballast pumps, repair shops, machine shops, and mess halls to be self-sustaining. [6] [2] [7] ABSD-2 had two rail track moveable cranes able to lift tons of material and parts for removing damage parts and install new parts. USS Audubon (APA-149), a Haskell-class attack transport repaired in August 1945 is one of the many ships repaired in ABSD-5. USS Mississippi (BB-41) was repaired in ABSD-5. Due to the Mississippi's 30 ft (9.1 m) draft with a full load, the battleship had to unload much of her ammunition and fuel oil before entering AFDB-5. USS Mount Olympus, a Mount McKinley-class command ship was repaired in August 1945. The cargo ship USS Alcona was repaired in November 1945. USS Indianapolis (CA-35) repaired April 1945. On 15 October 1945 USS Ashland (LSD-1) entered AFDB-5 for repairs. [8] [9]

For the crew to live in the Navy had barracks ships called APL, that dock next to AFDB-5. In September 1945 USS Artisan (ABSD-1), which had been operating at Espiritu Santo's Espiritu Santo Naval Base in the New Hebrides, started repairing ships at Manicani Island with ABSD-5. The sections of USS Artisan (ABSD-1) had started arriving at Manicani Island in July 1945. [10] [1] [11]

Post-war

After the war, ABSD-5 was reclassified AFDB-5, in April 1946 AFDB-5 was disassembled and towed to Sabine River at the Naval Air Station, Port Arthur, Texas, near Orange, Texas in 1984. AFDB-5 was struck from the Naval Register on 12 January 1984. AFDB-5 was scrapped in 1997. [12] [1] [13]

See also

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References

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  2. 1 2 navsource, AFDB-5, ex USS ABSD-5 Sections, A through G
  3. Naval Construction Battalion Detachment 1055, Dec. 1945
  4. Construction Battalion Detachment 1053, Dec. 1945
  5. Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships: V. 7, T-V, By United States. Naval History Division, page 402
  6. US Navy Department, Manual of Advanced Base Development and Maintenance, April 1945
  7. Untold Stories, By Cap'n Dee
  8. ussashland.org, USS Ashland (LSD-1)
  9. historycentral.com, USS Alcona
  10. USS ABSD-1 [1943-1946]
  11. US Navy 80-G-354318 Naval Amphibious Base, Manus, Admiralty Islands
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  13. Sabine Pass, Port Arthur, Texas, United States Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility, by Howard C. Williams