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U.S.S. ARIKARA
(AT-98)Click to view crew list
USS ARIKARA (AT-98) - a Sotoyomo-class auxiliary fleet tug
In Commission 1944 to 1971AT-98 Deployments - Major Events
Add a AT-98 Shellback Initiation | Add a AT-98 Deployment - Major Event | ||||
Month | Year | to | Month | Year | Deployment / Event |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
JAN | 1943 | - | Keel Date: 10 JAN 1943 | ||
JUN | 1943 | - | Launch Date: 22 JUN 1943 | ||
JAN | 1944 | - | Commissioned: 5 JAN 1944 | ||
JUL | 1971 | - | Decommissioned: 1 JUL 1971 |
AT-98 General Specifications
Complement: 85 Officers and Enlisted
Displacement: 1589 tons
Length: 205 feet 0 inches
Beam: 38 feet 6 inches
Draft: 15 feet 4 in
Flank Speed: 16 Knots
USS ARIKARA (AT-98)
Arikara (AT-98) was laid down on 10
January 1943 at Charleston, S.C., by the Charleston Shipbuilding &
Dry Dock Co.; launched on 22 June 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Taylor F.
McCoy; and commissioned on 5 January 1944, Lt. John Aitken,
USNR, in command.
On 15 January, the tug departed Charleston bound for Hampton
Roads, Va. After arriving there on the 17th, she conducted shakedown
training in Chesapeake Bay until the 26th. Following a post-shakedown repair
period in the Norfolk Navy Yard, she stood out of the bay and shaped
a northerly course. After stopping briefly at New York, Arikara moved on to Casco Bay, Maine, where she operated between 10 February and
2 March towing targets and
participating in antisubmarine warfare training.
She returned to New York on 4 March and began preparations for service
overseas. Towing barges, the tug put to sea on
25 March as part of Task Force (TF) 67 bound for the British Isles. She reached Falmouth, England, on 20 April
and, after delivering the barges,
reported for duty with the 12th Fleet.
On the 24th, Arikara moved to Lea, on the Solent
to join the British tug fleet in preparing for the invasion of
Europe. During the remainder of April and all of May, she towed to
dispersal points on the southeastern coast of England portions of the two "mulberries,"
artificial harbors to be erected on the French coast after the initial
assault to provide logistical support for the movement of all Allied
armies inland. On 15 May 1944, she was reclassified a fleet tug and
redesignated ATF-98. Throughout the period leading up to the
invasion, Ankara helped to repel German air attacks; and, though
near misses shook her considerably, she suffered neither hits nor
significant damage from shell fragments.
On the afternoon of 5 June, the tug stood out of
Weymouth, England, on her way to the sector of the Normandy coast
code-named by Allied planners as "Omaha" Beach. After the first
waves of assault troops stormed ashore, the tug began her primary
assignment, clearing wrecks from the beach area reserved for the
erection of the artificial harbors. Soon, however, German fire
began to take such a heavy toll of landing craft that Arikara had to
abandon salvage operations in favor of the even more urgent work of rescue and repair. Her
work enabled the less heavily damaged
landing craft to remain in action, thus maintaining the flow of troops and supplies during the critical phase
of the assault on "Omaha" Beach.
That phase past, the tug resumed salvage and towing work
on the 7th. In all, she spent almost a month supporting the consolidation
of the Normandy invasion. Though she came under air attacks and fire from shore
batteries, her only major damage came from
the explosion of a nearby mine while she was towingthe disabled French destroyer
La Surprise back to England for repairs.
Her main engine room rapidly took on water which rose to within six inches of her main electric motor
before her crew managed to check the
leaks. Ankara completed her mission successfully, and, after 24
hours of feverish activity, her crew had her
repaired and back in action off Normandy.
Early
in July, Ankara and Pinto (ATF-90) received orders to return to England. From there, the two tugs set
out on 12 July in a convoy bound for
the Mediterranean coast of North Africa. Her convoy arrived at Oran, Algeria, on the 21st; but Arikara remained there only until the end of the month.
She headed for Italy on 1 August, reached Naples on the 3d, and joined Rear
Admiral Spencer S. Lewis' TF 87, code-named "Camel" Force, for the mid-August invasion of southern France.
Staged through Ajaccio, Corsica, Ankara's unit, the force's
salvage and fire-fighting group, arrived off
St. Raphael on the Mediterranean coast of France on the morning of 15
August, the day of the assault. For more than
a fortnight, the tug remained in the transport
area, salvaging damaged ships and landing craft, fighting fires, and keeping the approaches to the beach
clear of wrecks. On 2 September, she
moved to the Gulfe de San Tropez, France, and began clearing wreckage from French Riviera ports. She also towed ships to Palermo, Sicily, where they
underwent repairs. In addition, she
made towing voyages to Naples, Marseilles, Bizerte, and Oran.
Late in October at the latter port, Arikara joined
a convoy bound for the United States and headed home. She arrived in
Norfolk on 7 November and remained in that vicinity into December. Late in that month,
she voyaged to Trinidad where she took YFD-6
in tow before continuing on to the Panama Canal. Arikara reached the Canal Zone on 3 January 1945, transited the canal,
and delivered her tow at Cristobal on the 5th. The following day, she and Bannock
(ATF-81) got underway for Hawaii. The tug
entered Pearl Harbor later in January but remained there only until resuming her westward voyage on 4 February,
bound ultimately for the Ryukyus. After stops at Eniwetok and Guam, she reached Ulithi Atoll, in the Carolines, on 17
March. There, she reported for duty with Service Squadron (ServRon) 10 and
began preparations for the conquest of Okinawa.
Ten days later, she departed Ulithi as part of Task Group
(TG) 50.8, the 5th Fleet Logistics Support Group, and headed for the Ryukyu
Islands. To begin the campaign, during the last week in March,
American forces took Kerama Retto, a small group of islands about 15 miles west
of southern Okinawa. Then, on 1 April, the
main assault force landed on Okinawa proper. Arikara spent the
next 11 weeks based at Kerama Retto assisting ships and craft damaged in the struggle for Okinawa. On the night of 2 April, the tug went to the assistance of
Dickerson (APD-21) after that high-speed transport had suffered a
devastating suicide crash from a
Kawasaki Ki. 45 "Nick" twin-engine reconnaissance/ground attack aircraft. Ankara's crew managed to
extinguish the fires raging on board Dickerson,
and the tug took her in tow for Kerama Retto. In spite of Ankara's efforts,
Dickerson proved to be beyond
economical salvage and was towed out to sea on 4 April and sunk.
Although Ankara's main mission at Okinawa was the
removal and salvage of damaged landing craft, kamikaze attacks
continued to add to her burdens. On 11 May, a horde of suicide planes attacked
Evans (DD-552) andHugh W. Hodley (DD-774) on picket station
no. 15 to the northwest of Okinawa. Arikara sped to the aid of Evans,
which had sustained four suicide crashes in rapid succession. Arikara moved
alongside her, put five pumps on board, made
fast a hawser, and towed the destroyer into Kerama Retto for repairs.
A bit over a week later, on 17 May, Longshaw (DD-559)-her
officers and
crew drained by long hours at general quarters and a night of illumination fire in support of the troops ashore-ran aground
on a reef near Naha while en route to yet another call fire mission. Arikara
rushed to her aid. Just when she began taking
up slack on the towline, a Japanese shore battery opened up on the stranded destroyer with uncanny
accuracy. The enemy artillerists
straddled Longshaw immediately, and quickly scored four hits. One of the four caused a forward
magazine to detonate blowing off the
bow forward of the bridge. With Longshaw
a total loss, Arikara parted
the towline and moved off to see to her own defense and to rescue survivors. Longshaw was
later destroyed by "friendly" gunfire and torpedoes.
Arikara performed salvage work in the
Ryukyus well into June. On the 19th of that month, she took kamikaze-damagedEvans in tow
and set course for the Marianas. The tug arrived at Saipan
on 25 June and remained there until 11 July. From Saipan, she sailed to Leyte where she
stayed through 18 August when she got
underway for Japan. The tug stopped at Okinawa before proceeding on to Kyushu.
She returned to Okinawa briefly in September
and then continued on to the Philippines. On 9 October, while still en route to
Leyte, the ship weathered a severe typhoon. After reaching Subic Bay,
she underwent repairs until getting
underway late in November for China. Upon reaching Tsingtao, Arikara began
towing and salvage work in support of
occupation forces.
Late
in Feburary 1946, Arikara left China to resume operations in the eastern and Central Pacific. During
the next few years, her towing and
salvage operations took her to such varied locales as the Panama Canal Zone,
the west coast of the United States,
Hawaii, Okinawa, and the Marianas.
In January 1950, the tug resumed occupation duty upon
her arrival at Yokosuka and, for the next five months, provided towing
and salvage services in Japan. However, on 25 June 1950, North
Korean forces surged south across the 38th parallel into South Korea. Thus, Arikara
entered her second war. She was assigned to TF 90, the Amphibious Force,
Far East. Due to the skeletal nature of
American naval forces in Oriental waters, her assignments early in July consisted of the unlikely duty of escorting shipping between Japan and Korea until an
escort group of more suitable
warships could be assembled. The tug also served as a communications ship and landing control vessel during amphibious operations at Pusan on the southeastern
tip of the Korean peninsula. In addition,
she performed her familiar salvage and rescue
operations.
After
completing her initial missions at Pusan and between that port and Japan, Arikara
moved to other areas of the Korean
peninsula. On 5 September, she departed Yokosuka with Task Unit (TU) 90.04.3, the Pontoon Movement Unit,
on her way to Inchon on the western
coast of Korea. The tug supported the amphibious
assault at Inchon from mid-September to mid-October, before heading, on the 16th of the latter month, for Wonsan on the northeastern coast of Korea. The 20
October amphibious assault on
Wonsan, mooted by the arrival of rapidly advancing Republic of Korea (ROK) ground forces, was transformed into an
enormous reinforcement and logistical support operation. Arikara spent about a month at Wonsan helping to clear
the harbor and to increase its efficiency.
During the latter part of November, she completed upkeep
at Sasebo. Towing and salvage operations in Japanese waters occupied
her during December 1950 and early January 1951. Then, on 12
January, the tug shaped a course back to the United States. Voyaging
by way of the Marianas and Hawaii, she arrived in Long
Beach, Calif., in March. By the beginning of April, Arikara was at
Bremerton, Wash., undergoing repairs; and she remained there
until heading back to Hawaii on 11 June. For the remainder of
1951, she operated out of Pearl Harbor making only two voyages to destinations
outside the Hawaiian operating area. In July, the ship towed an AFDB to Guam;
in August, she returned to Pearl Harbor; and, in October and November, she
made a round-trip
voyage to Subic Bay in the Philippines.
On 3 January 1952, Arikara departed Pearl Harbor
to deploy again to the western Pacific. By the end of the month,
she was back in the Korean combat zone. During that tour of duty in the Far
East, the tug served once more at Wonsan, as well as at Cho Do and
Pusan, and stayed in the waters between Japan and Korea
until the beginning of August. That fall, Arikara moved to the Marshall Islands to
support Operation "Ivy," a nuclear bomb
test conducted at Eniwetok Atoll in November 1952. Although the conflict lasted into the summer of
1953, the tug saw no additional service in the Korean combat zone.
By the time that an armistice ended hostilities in Korea
on 27 July 1953, Arikara had already settled into a schedule of
operations out of Pearl Harbor that included towing missions from Hawaii
to Johnston and Canton Islands and duty in the Aleutians. In the
fall of 1954, the tug began peacetime deployments to the Far East and, for the
remainder of her Navy career, she alternated
between assignments in the western Pacific with the 7th Fleet and operations out of her home port, Pearl
Harbor. During the first 12 years of that period, the tug's Far Eastern
itinerary included mostly Japanese, Korean,
and Philippine ports of call while
her operations out of Pearl Harbor took her to the waters off the coast of Alaska and surrounding the
Aleutians, as well as to islands in the Central Pacific.
Late in 1964, American involvement in the conflict in
SouthVietnam
increased dramatically. As a consequence, Ankara began to
visit the Vietnamese coast more frequently. By the fall of 1966,
the tug found herself calling at such places as Vung Tau and
Danang to provide towing and other support services for Navy
units engaged in fighting communist insurgency and North Vietnamese
aggression in South Vietnam. Her deployments to Asian waters along with the
concomitant service in Vietnam continued into 1970.
Late in February of that year, Ankara returned to
Pearl Harbor from her final tour of duty with the 7th Fleet. She served actively
in the Hawaiian Islands and in Alaskan waters for another 16 months. On 1 July
1971, the tug was decommissioned and simultaneously transferred
to Chile as a loan under the military assistance program. She was
commissioned in the Chilean Navy as Aldea (ATF-63). As of 1 July 1986, Aldea was still
active with the Chilean Navy.
Arikara
earned three
battle stars during World War II, five battle
stars during the Korean conflict, and three battle stars for service in
Vietnam.
[Note: The above USS ARIKARA (AT-98) history may, or may not, contain text provided by crew members of the USS ARIKARA (AT-98), or by other non-crew members, and text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]