USS Nausett (IX-190)
Career | 100x35px |
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Name: | USS Nausett |
Builder: | Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., Alameda, California |
Launched: | 1918, as SS W. M. Irish |
Acquired: | 29 October 1944 |
Commissioned: | 8 January 1945 |
Decommissioned: | 12 October 1945 |
Renamed: | Nausett, 29 October 1944 |
Struck: | 24 October 1945 |
Fate: | Returned to the WSA, 12 October 1945 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Oil tanker |
Displacement: | 4,496 long tons (4,568 t) |
Length: | 453 ft (138 m) |
Beam: | 56 ft (17 m) |
USS Nausett (IX–190) was an auxiliary ship in the United States Navy.
Nausett was a tanker completed in April, 1918, by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., Alameda, California. She served the Atlantic Refining Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as SS W. M. Irish until acquired in early October 1944 by War Shipping Administration for U.S. Navy use as a mobile floating storage unit.
Renamed Nausett on 29 October 1944, she was accepted by the Navy on a bareboat charter and commissioned at Pearl Harbor on 8 January 1945. On further inspection, necessary alterations were deemed too expensive to warrant the expenditure.
Decommissioning
In June, Nausett was placed in reduced commission pending her return to WSA on the West Coast. On 23 September 1945, she arrived at San Francisco, California, where she decommissioned and was delivered to WSA, on 12 October 1945. Twelve days later she was struck from the Navy Register.
See also
References
This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.
External links
- HyperWar: Beans, Bullet and Black Oil
- Photo gallery at Navsource.org