Difference between revisions of "USAT Etolin"
From Our Contribution
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| caption2 = c1946 | | caption2 = c1946 | ||
| shipname = USAT Etolin | | shipname = USAT Etolin | ||
− | | shipowner = | + | | shipowner = Matson Navigation Company |
| shipbuilder = Newport News Ship Building Company | | shipbuilder = Newport News Ship Building Company | ||
| shipyardnumber = | | shipyardnumber = | ||
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==Remarks== | ==Remarks== | ||
− | Built as a Passenger Liner for the | + | Built as a Passenger Liner for the Matson Navigation Company, she was originally named the ''SS Matsonia'', and served during WW1 (1918-19) as a troopship with that name under the control of the US Navy. She made six round trips to Europe from the US before the Armistice, and after the Armistice made eight journeys returning US troops to America. Decommissioned in September 1919, she was returned to her owners. |
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+ | In March 1937 she was sold to Alaska Packers of San Francisco, and renamed ''SS Etolin''. Pressed into service again during WW2 (August 1940 - April 46) when she was chartered by the Army as a Troop Transport and sailed as ''USAT Etolin''. | ||
Revision as of 22:20, 18 April 2022
Remarks
Built as a Passenger Liner for the Matson Navigation Company, she was originally named the SS Matsonia, and served during WW1 (1918-19) as a troopship with that name under the control of the US Navy. She made six round trips to Europe from the US before the Armistice, and after the Armistice made eight journeys returning US troops to America. Decommissioned in September 1919, she was returned to her owners.
In March 1937 she was sold to Alaska Packers of San Francisco, and renamed SS Etolin. Pressed into service again during WW2 (August 1940 - April 46) when she was chartered by the Army as a Troop Transport and sailed as USAT Etolin.
From July 1943 until the end of the war she operated in the Pacific theatre. Turned over to the War Shipping Administration in April 1946, and laid up in the James River, she was scrapped at Baltimore in 1957. Armament: Four 6" mounts, two 1-pounders, and two machine guns.