USS Estero (AG-134)

Last updated
USS Estero (AKL-5), underway at Sasebo, Japan, 23 October 1953.jpg
Estero (AKL-5), underway at Sasebo, Japan, 23 October 1953
History
Flag of the United States.svgUnited States
NameUSS Estero
Namesake Estero Island in Florida
AcquiredMarch 1947
Commissioned5 July 1947, as AG-134 (Miscellaneous Auxiliary)
Decommissioned22 January 1960
ReclassifiedAKL-5 (Light Cargo Ship), 31 March 1949
Stricken1 February 1960
Honours and
awards
7 battle stars (Korea)
FateSold commercial 1946, scrapped September 1994
General characteristics
Type Camano-class cargo ship
Displacement500 long tons (508 t)
Length177 ft (53.9 m)
Beam33 ft (10.1 m)
Draft10 ft (3.0 m)
Propulsion2 × General Motors 6-278A V6 diesel engines, 500 hp (373 kW) each, 2 screws
Speed12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph)
Complement26
ArmamentNone

USS Estero (AG-134/AKL-5) was a Camano-class cargo ship in the United States Navy. She was named after Estero Island off the coast of Florida.

Contents

Estero, which originally served with the U.S. Army as USA FS-275, was acquired by the U.S. Navy in March 1947 and commissioned on 5 July.

Pacific Ocean operations

She was employed in logistics support of the administration of the United Nations Trust Territories, calling throughout the Marshalls, Carolines, and Marianas. On 31 March 1949 she was reclassified AKL-5.

Korean War service

At the outbreak of the Korean War she was fitted out for emergency ammunition carrying service, participating thereafter in the Inchon invasion in September 1950. Early in 1951 she was converted to carry refrigerated cargo, and in September resumed cargo duty bearing supplies to warships until the end of hostilities.

Vietnam War service

From 25 August to 2 September 1954 she made five trips in support of "Operation Passage to Freedom", the evacuation of refugees from North Vietnam. Subsequently she performed her logistics services for the fleet in the western Pacific, with only brief interludes as in May through July 1957 when she transported an Air Force team which was surveying the habitability of prospective stations in the Sulu Sea.

Note: The year of the Sulu Sea Operation appears to be incorrect (unless there were two). I participated in that operation and I left the ship in July 1956. During the 1956 operation her crew also performed reconnaissance of strategic access features which earned the ship a Letter of Commendation from the Chief of Naval Operations.

Formosan Crisis operations

During the Formosan crisis in 1957-58, she rendered important support with emergency lifting of ammunition from Japan to Taiwan. Estero shuttled supplies among Korea, Japan, and Hong Kong.

On 22 January 1960 Estero was decommissioned. Her name was stricken from the Navy List on 1 February 1960.

Estero earned seven battle stars in the Korean War.

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