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USS Gardiners Bay (AVP-39)
USS Gardiners Bay (AVP-39)
USS Gardiners Bay (AVP-39) off Houghton, Washington, on 18 February 1945, a week after commissioning.
Career (United States) US flag 48 stars
Name: USS Gardiners Bay
Namesake: Gardiners Bay, on Block Island Sound, Long Island, New York
Builder: Lake Washington Shipyard, Houghton, Washington
Laid down: 14 March 1944
Launched: 2 December 1944
Sponsored by: Mrs. George L. Richard
Commissioned: 11 February 1945
Decommissioned: 1 February 1958
Honors and
awards:
Two battle stars for World War II service
Four battle stars for Korean War service
Fate: Transferred to Norway 17 May 1958
Notes: Served as Royal Norwegian Navy training ship HNoMS Haakon VII (A537) 1958-1974
General characteristics
Class & type: Barnegat-class seaplane tender
Displacement: 1,766 tons (2,592 tons trial)
Length: 310 ft 9 in (94.72 m)
Beam: 41 ft 2 in (12.55 m)
Draft: 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m) (lim.)
Installed power: 6,000 horsepower (4.48 megawatts)
Propulsion: Diesel engines, two shafts
Speed: 18.2 knots (33.7 km/h)s
Complement: 215 (ship's company)
367 (with aviation unit)
Sensors and
processing systems:
Radar; sonar
Armament: 3 x 5-inch (127 mm) guns
8 x 40-millimeter guns
8 x 20-millimeter guns
2 x depth charge tracks
Aviation facilities: Supplies, spare parts, repairs, and berthing for one seaplane squadron; 80,000 US gallons (300,000 L)

USS Gardiners Bay (AVP-39) was a United States Navy seaplane tender in commission from 1945 to 1958.

Construction, commissioning, and shakedown[]

USS Gardiners Bay (AVP-39) launching

USS Gardiners Bay (AVP-39) is launched on 2 December 1944 at Lake Washington Shipyard, Houghton, Washington.

Gardiners Bay was launched on 2 December 1944 at Houghton, Washington, by the Lake Washington Shipyard, sponsored by Mrs. George L. Richard. She commissioned at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard at Bremerton, Washington, on 11 February 1945, with Commander Carlton C. Lucas in command.

Gardiners Bay departed Seattle, Washington, on 1 March 1945 for shakedown out of San Diego, California, which she completed on 20 April 1945.

World War II service 1945[]

Gardiners Bay then proceeded via Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, to Eniwetok in the Marshall Islands to tend seaplanes of Patrol Bombing Squadron (PBV) 19 in a 10-day training period, thence via Saipan and Guam in the Mariana Islands to Kerama Retto, Okinawa, where she arrived on 7 June 1945 with provisions and cargo for Fleet Air Wing 1.

Gardiners Bay devoted the following weeks to tending planes for various patrol bombing squadrons based on Kerama Retto. Between 30 June 1945 and 17 July 1945 she was flagship of an Air-Sea Rescue Unit, utilizing Rescue Squadrons 3 and 4, Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron 4, and three other small seaplane tenders. Eighteen rescue missions were accomplished while in a state of constant alert that saw her men at general quarters for 100 hours.

Relieved as flagship by seaplane tender USS Pine Island (AV-12) on 17 July 1945, Gardiners Bay tended planes of Rescue Squadron 6 at Chimi Bay, Okinawa, until 15 August 1945, the day hostilities with Japan ended, when she put to sea as part of the screen of the United States Third Fleet en route Japan.

Gardiners Bay received two battle stars for service in World War II.

Peacetime service 1945-1950[]

Gardiners Bay entered Sagami Bay, Japan, on 28 August 1945, shifting on 30 August 1945 to Tokyo Bay as a part of the Seaplane Base Group of the Japan Occupation Forces. On 1 September 1945 she became flagship of the Air-Sea Rescue Unit for the Third Fleet with Rescue Squadron 4 based on board. During this service, which extended to 9 January 1946, she helped set up the Tokyo Seadrome off the Yokohama Air Station. She was then stationed at Nagoya, Japan, as tender for courier and transient seaplanes, departing on 29 January 1946 for Shanghai, China. She departed Hong Kong on 9 August 1946, proceeding via Yokosuka, Japan, the Mariana Islands, the Marshall Islands, and Pearl Harbor to the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, where she arrived on 28 November 1946 for overhaul.

After fleet exercises along the United States West Coast, Gardiners Bay departed San Diego on 7 April 1947 for seaplane tender duties in the Caroline Islands; Mariana Islands; Okinawa; Tsingtao, China; and Yokosuka. She returned to Seattle on 4 October 1947, made a cruise to Eniwetok in the Marshall Islands between 15 January 1948 and 5 June 1948, and made another Far East cruise between 15 March 1949 and 14 December 1949 which included seaplane tender operations at Guam; Yokohama, Japan; Sasebo, Japan; Okinawa; and Manila, the Philippines.

Korean War service 1950-1953[]

Gardiners Bay departed San Diego on 27 June 1950 for the first of four long tours supporting United Nations forces in the Korean War. She established a seadrome at Iwakuni, Japan, tending 17 Martin PBM Mariner and eight Royal Air Force Short Sunderland flying boats for search and reconnaissance in the Tsushima Strait and Yellow Sea area, shifting in September 1950 to Inchon, Korea, where she established an advance base for seaplanes making naval mine reconnaissance runs off the northwest coast of Korea. In October 1950 she established another seadrome at Chinhae, Korea, basing there to tend United States Seventh Fleet aircraft conducting reconnaissance until 16 April 1951.

On her second Korean tour, which lasted from 12 September 1951 to 9 April 1952, Gardiners Bay supported Far East aviation patrol units at Okinawa; Iwakuni, Japan; and Manila, Philippine Islands.

Gardiners Bay spent her third Korean War tour, which lasted from 10 July 1952 to 26 January 1953, largely as station ship off the Pescadores and at Okinawa. She took time out from this duty in October 1952 for participation in Exercise Surprise off the coast of French Indochina, testing communications between headquarters and ships and aircraft of the United States, the United Kingdom, and France.

Gardiners Bay's fourth Korean War tour, which lasted from 3 April 1953 to 12 December 1953, was spent in tending amphibious patrol planes at Chinhae, South Korea, and on stations in the Pescadore Islands, the Philippine Islands, Okinawa, and Japan. The Korean War ended during this tour, in late July 1953.

Gardiners Bay received four battle stars for service in the Korean War.

Peacetime operations 1954-1958[]

After returning from her fourth Korean War tour in December 1953, Gardiners Bay made three cruises to support Seventh Fleet operations in the Pacific, from 7 July 1954 to 22 November 1954, from 28 August 1956 to 14 February 1957, and from 10 June 1957 to 16 November 1957. She spent these cruises largely on seaplane tending stations at Okinawa; Manila; and in the Japanese ports of Iwakuni, Sasebo, and Yokohama.

Gardiners Bay returned from her last cruise in U.S. Navy service on 16 November 1957, arriving at Alameda, California. She decommissioned on 1 February 1958.

Royal Norwegian Navy service 1958-1974[]

Gardiners Bay was transferred to Norway on 17 May 1958 under the Military Assistance Program. She served the Royal Norwegian Navy as a naval cadet training ship under the name of HNoMS Haakon VII (A537) until disposed of in 1974, making voyages worldwide during her Norwegian service.

References[]


All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at USS Gardiners Bay (AVP-39) and the edit history here.
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