USS Samaritan (AH-10)
USS Samaritan (AP-10) USS Samaritan (AH-10) in San Francisco Bay, late 1945 or early 1946 | |
Career | 100x35px |
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Name: | USS Samaritan (AH-10) |
Namesake: | See note[1] |
Builder: | American International Shipbuilding |
Laid down: | 11 November 1918 as Shope |
Launched: | 31 March 1920 |
Completed: | September 1920 |
Acquired: | 3 November 1921 |
Commissioned: | 22 November 1921 |
Decommissioned: | 25 June 1946 |
Renamed: | USS Chaumont (AP-5), USS Samaritan (AH-10) |
Reclassified: | AP-5 to AH-10, 2 September 1943 |
Identification: | USSB hull no. 671 |
Honors and awards: | Four battle stars for World War II service |
Fate: | Sold for scrap, 1948 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Design 1024 ship |
Displacement: | 8,300 tons (lt) 13,400 t. (fl) |
Length: | 448 ft (137 m) |
Beam: | 58 ft 3 in (17.75 m) |
Draft: | 26 ft 5 in (8.05 m) |
Propulsion: | Geared turbine, single screw, 6,000 horsepower |
Speed: | 14 knots |
Capacity: | (AH) patients: 394 |
Complement: | 286 |
Armament: | Unknown |
USS Samaritan (AH-10) was a hospital ship that served with the US Navy in World War II. Prior to that, she served as a US Navy transport ship under the name USS Chaumont (AP-5).
USS Chaumont, one of twelve 13,400-ton (displacement) Hog Island Type B (Design 1024) transports built for the U.S. Shipping Board at Hog Island, Pennsylvania by the American International Shipbuilding Corporation, was laid down in November 1918 as SS Shope, launched in March 1920 as the U.S. Army's Chaumont, and completed a few months later. Excess to Army needs, she was transferred to the Navy on 3 November 1921 and commissioned on the 22nd, Lieutenant Commander George Harris Emmerson USNA 1908 in temporary command. On 1 December 1921 Commander Clarence Lamont Arnold USNA 1900 assumed command.
Contents
Peacetime service
Assigned to transport duty, Chaumont sailed the Atlantic, Pacific, and Caribbean throughout the twenties and thirties.
From her home port at San Francisco, Chaumont commenced a career of trans-Pacific troop service that initially consisted of voyages between California and Manila via Honolulu. Two or three voyages in 1925-26 took her to Shanghai instead of Manila, and she continued to stop at Shanghai at least once during most subsequent years.
One of her most important contributions, when in the Pacific, was aiding in the collection of meteorological information used by the Weather Map Service of the Asiatic Fleet. She also carried military supplies, Marine expeditionary forces, sailors and their dependents, and occasionally members of congressional committees on inspection tours, calling at ports from Shanghai to Bermuda.
In August 1926 she sailed from San Francisco through the Panama Canal to Annapolis. The return trip took her to Norfolk, Virginia, where she was drydocked for routine maintenance, and then to Guantanamo Bay. Such voyages between the East and West Coasts also became near-annual events.
Missions to Shanghai
Chaumont's voyages to Shanghai provided important assistance to U.S. Far Eastern diplomacy during the 1920s and 1930s by supporting the Marine Corps units deployed to the International Settlement in that city to protect U.S. nationals there. At the end of January 1932 Japanese forces in the Settlement attacked nearby Chinese forces, leading to intensive fighting in the city.
Chaumont was in Manila at the time, and on 31 January the Navy Department ordered her to embark the 1,000 men of the Army's 31st Infantry Regiment and sail for Shanghai. Responding rapidly, Chaumont cleared Manila with the troops on board on 2 February and arrived at Shanghai on the 5th.
Five years later, in mid-September 1937, Chaumont rushed the 6th Marine Regiment to Shanghai to reinforce the 4th Regiment that was protecting the Settlement during the all-out Japanese effort to seize the city from tenacious Chinese defenders. Chaumont suffered two mishaps during her China service in 1936-37, a week-long period aground at Chingwangtao and a collision at Shanghai with the Italian cruiser Raimondo Montecuccoli.
World War II
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Chaumont was on one of her regular voyages from Hawaii to Manila, carrying sailors, civilian workmen, and cargo. She was diverted to Darwin, Australia, where she discharged her passengers and cargo, and was then sent back to the West Coast. After two runs to Pearl Harbor, the now elderly transport was assigned to service between Seattle and Alaska, bringing men and supplies to assist in the defense of the Aleutians. Selected in March 1943 for conversion to a hospital ship, Chaumont was decommissioned in August for conversion at Seattle.
Renamed Samaritan (AH-10), she was recommissioned on 01 March 1944., CDR Charles W. Scribner in command. Between 25 March and 11 May, she made two voyages from San Francisco to Hawaii, with passengers outward bound and patients homeward bound. Arriving in Honolulu a third time 11 May, she continued to Kwajalein, where from 17 June to 1 July, she treated casualties from the Saipan invasion. On 8 July she arrived off Saipan itself to embark patients for evacuation to Noumea, New Caledonia, from which she returned to Saipan 1 August for two weeks of duty as a receiving hospital.
Samaritan evacuated patients from Guam to Guadalcanal, and from Peleliu to the Russell Islands in August and September 1944. After a brief overhaul at Espiritu Santo, she served as base hospital at Ulithi until 16 February 1945, when she sailed for Iwo Jima. She arrived off the bitterly engaged island 20 February, and sailed 2 days later with 606 patients on board for Saipan. On the second day out, eight men were buried at sea.
The hospital ship returned to Iwo Jima 25 February 1945 to embark patients for transportation to Guam on the first of two such voyages. She arrived at Ulithi 2 April, and a week later got underway for embattled Okinawa. Arriving 13 April, she received casualties at the beach during the daytime and withdrew at night to the transport areas offshore, alternating her stays at Okinawa with evacuation voyages to Saipan until 1 July, when she sailed from Saipan for Pearl Harbor. Here she took patients from several island hospitals on board, sailed to San Francisco, and on 10 September back to Pearl Harbor thence Sasebo, where she provided hospital facilities to occupation forces until 15 March 1946.
Decommissioning
She returned to San Francisco 23 April, and was decommissioned there 25 June 1946. On 29 August 1946 she was transferred to the Maritime Commission for disposal, and was delivered to a scrapping firm in January 1948.
Awards
Samaritan received four battle stars for World War II service.
Footnotes
- ↑ For the first name, Chaumont, DANFS Online lists two possible namesakes for this ship: the township of Chaumont, France, HQ of the American Expeditionary Force in World War I; and Le Ray de Chaumont, a French citizen who aided the revolutionaries during the American Revolutionary War. The name Samaritan probably refers to the Good Samaritan of the Bible.
References
- Chaumont AP-5 - DANFS Online.
- AP-5 Chaumont AH-10 Samaritan, Navsource Online.
- This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.
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- Pages with broken file links
- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
- Hog Islanders
- Design 1024 ships
- Ships built in Pennsylvania
- 1920 ships
- Design 1024 ships of the United States Army
- Design 1024 ships of the United States Navy
- Hospital ships of the United States Navy
- World War II auxiliary ships of the United States