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U.S.S. WASHBURN

(AKA-108)

VOCA IMPEDIMENTA

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USS WASHBURN (AKA-108 ) - a Tolland-class attack cargo ship

In Commission 1945 to 1946

AKA-108 Deployments - Major Events

Add a AKA-108 Shellback Initiation Add a AKA-108 Deployment - Major Event
Month Year to Month Year Deployment / Event
OCT1944-Keel Date: 24 OCT 1944
at North Carolina Shipbuilding Company Wilmington NC
DEC1944-Launch Date: 18 DEC 1944
MAY1945-JUN1945Commisioning
MAY1945-Commissioned: 17 MAY 1945
JAN1949-JAN1952Inchon Landing
SEP1950-NOV1951Korean War
AUG1957-APR1958West Pac
APR1962-Shellback Initiation - 24 APR 1962 - Pacific Ocean
MAY1962-AUG1962Guantanamo Bay
SEP1962-NOV1962Cuban Missle Blockade
OCT1962-OCT1962Cuban Missle Blockade
JUN1963-Shellback Initiation - 6 JUN 1963 - Pacific Ocean
MAY1964-Shellback Initiation - 10 MAY 1964 - Pacific Ocean
DEC1964-SEP1965West Pac-Viet Nam
MAY1965-SEP1965West Pac-Viet Nam
FEB1968-MAR1968West Pac
FEB1968-NOV1968West Pac-Viet Nam
MAY1969-OCT1969West Pac-Viet Nam
SEP1969-APR1970West Pac-Viet Nam
MAY1970-Decommissioned: 16 MAY 1970

AKA-108 General Specifications

Class: Tolland-class attack cargo ship

Named for: Washburn County

Complement: 425 Officers and Enlisted

Displacement: 13910 tons

Length: 459 feet 2 inches

Beam: 63 feet

Flank Speed: 16 Knots

Final Disposition: Sold for scrap



USS WASHBURN (AKA-108)



Washburn (AKA-108) was laid down on 24 October 1944 at Wilmington N.C. by the North Carolina Shipbuilding Co. under a Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 1801) ; launched on 18 December 1944; sponsored by Maj. K. A. Towle USMCR; delivered to the Navy in an incomplete state on 30 December 1944 ; and completed at the Todd-Hoboken shipyard at Hoboken N.J. where she was commissioned on 17 May 1945 Comdr. W. C. Jackson IJSNR in command.


Following two weeks of shakedown training in the Virginia capes area Washburn departed Norfolk Va. en route to the Mediterranean coast of France. She arrived in Marseille on the 26th and began loading Army troops and supplies bound for the Philippines. She stood out of Marseille on 11 July and arrived in Manila on 24 August nine days after the cessation of hostilities. With the war ended the attack cargo ship unloaded her passengers and cargo at Manila and began service in support of the occupation of former Japanese holdings in the Far East. She moved to Lingayen in northern Luzon to load soldiers of the 6th Army's 33d Division for transportation to the Japanese home islands and occupation duty. She departed the Philippines soon thereafter and arrived at Wakayama on the island of Honshu Japan and disembarked her passengers.


For the remainder of the year the cargo ship carried passengers and equipment between various locales in the western Pacific in continued support of the American occupation. From January to March 1946 she conducted amphibious and fleet training in the eastern Pacific before returning to the. Far East to resume her support missions for the occupation forces. In April Washburn headed back east to resume her training schedule. That employment-broken only by a voyage to Alaskan waters in July 1948 for a resupply mission - lasted until November 1948.


At that point the ship returned to the Orient once more for almost a year of duty in support of the occupation forces. During that time she visited Okinawa Iwo Jima Pearl Harbor and Tsingtao in China. During the fall of 1949 she returned to the west coast to participate in Operation "Miki " a large-scale joint-service exercise staged out of Puget Sound Wash. which simulated the invasion and defense of the Hawaiian Islands.


In February 1950 she transited the Panama Canal to return to the Atlantic for the first time since her maiden voyage. She participated in Operation "Portrex " an Atlantic Fleet Amphibious Forces assault exercise held at a small island near Puerto Rico. After a liberty call at San Juan Puerto Rico at the operation's conclusion she retransited the Panama Canal and resumed duty with the Pacific Fleet.


That summer the outbreak of hostilities in Korea called her back to the Far East. Following a resupply mission to Point Barrow Alaska Washburn turned west toward Japan ; and for about 18 months she plied the waters between Japan and Korea keeping the flow of supplies and reinforcements to bolster the United Nations forces. She participated in the Inchon and Wonsan landings in September and afterward resumed her supply and reinforcement shuttles. In June of 1951 she returned to the role for which she was designated by participating in the diversionary landings staged at Kangmung Korea. After a resumption of Japan-to-Korea runs which she conducted from July to November she headed back to the United States arriving on the west coast on 16 December 1951. Eastern Pacific operations including another resupply run to Point Barrow in Alaska during June of 1952 occupied her time until the spring of 1953. In March she again voyaged to the Far East visiting Nagoya and Sasebo in Japan and Pusan and Inchon in Korea. She stopped at the latter port during her participation in Operation "Big Switch " the mutual repatriation of prisoners of war at the end of the Korean conflict. In October Washburn returned to the United States and resumed west coast operations.


In October 1954 the attack cargo ship set out upon an eight-month deployment to the Orient. She stopped at many already familiar ports-Nagoya Sasebo Pusan Inchon and Okinawa-and added some new ones to her itinerary-Yokosuka in Japan Subic Bay in the Philippines the island of Taiwan and most notably the Tachen Islands. The last-named group of islands came into her sphere of operations because of their proximity to mainland China and the consequent communist threat to their Nationalist Chinese populations and garrisons. Early in February 1955 Washburn and the other ships of Rear Admiral Sabin's Amphibious Evacuation Force TF 76 brought 15 627 civilians and 11 120 military men as well as 8 630 tons of equipment 166 artillery pieces and 128 vehicles out of the Tachens to Taiwan while the carriers of TF 77 and the gun ships of TF 75 stood guard.


For almost another decade Washburn continued alternating western Pacific deployments of varying length with normal operations along the west coast. Periodically crises occurred and took her to some of the world's trouble spots. In January 1962 she showed up at Nationalist Chinese-held offshore islands once again in support of naval forces sent there as a show of force in response to communist Chinese shelling of Quemoy and Matsu islands. By the following fall she found herself halfway around the world in the West Indies supporting the Navy's quarantine of Cuba called by President Kennedy to rid that island of offensive Russian missiles. Otherwise the decade between 1955 and 1965 proved relatively normal made up of the usual resupply voyages amphibious and fleet exercises port visits and ever-recurring overhauls.


Near the end of 1964 however the attack cargo ship entered a geographic region that dominated her western Pacific deployments for the remainder of her career -Vietnam. In December of that year she began hauling supplies and equipment there for use by the South Vietnamese government in its struggle with communist insurgents. Thereafter she cruised off the coast with marines embarked as part of a contingency force. That duty lasted until 8 March 1965 when she landed troops near Danang. She returned to amphibious operations in mid-April landing reinforcements for the defense of the airfield near Danang and Phu Bai in the so-called Hue landings and again early in May when three battalion landing teams (BLT's) and a mobile construction battalion went ashore near Chu Lai to extend the perimeter and construct an airfield. She departed the Vietnamese coast at the end of May for more routine 7th Fleet duties but returned for one more brief tour of duty in the combat zone before heading home early in September.


Almost a year later in August 1966 the attack cargo ship returned to the Far East and late in September to Vietnamese waters. Her duty again consisted of transporting troops and supplies to from and between points in Vietnam. Each month from September 1966 to February 1967 brought duty off the coast of Vietnam. Between each tour in the combat zone she visited ports elsewhere in the Orient calling frequently at places in Japan on Okinawa and in the Philippines.


Early in February 1967 she completed her last mission in the combat zone and headed home. Steaming via Okinawa and Yokosuka Japan she arrived in San Diego on 15 March. She conducted normal operations until the end of July when she entered the Todd Shipyard at Seattle Wash. for a three-month overhaul. Washburn returned to San Diego on 2 November and began refresher training on the 20th.


Early in 1968 she headed back to the Far East and by late February returned to the coast of Vietnam. During her 1968 deployment Washburn spent four extended tours of duty off Vietnam again carrying troops and supplies to and from operational areas throughout the southern half of the country.


That fall she resumed normal operations out of San Diego ; but late the following spring she headed back to the western Pacific. From May to October the ship cruised the coast of Vietnam departing periodically to transport marines to Okinawa to make liberty calls at various ports in the Far East and to replenish in Japan and in the Philippines. She finished the last of four tours in the combat zone on 3 October and after stopping at Okinawa to participate in an amphibious exercise headed back to the United States on 9 October.


She arrived in San Diego on 26 October and resumed local operations. That employment continued until 16 May 1970 at which time she was decommissioned. Soon thereafter Washburn was placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet at Suisun Bay Calif On 1 September 1971 she was transferred permanently to the custody of the Maritime Administration On 1 October 1976 Washburn's name was struck from the Navy list and she was sold for scrapping.


Washburn earned five battle stars during the Korean War and six battle stars for Vietnam service.

[Note: The above USS WASHBURN (AKA-108) history may or may not contain text provided by crew members of the USS WASHBURN (AKA-108) or by other non-crew members and text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]