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USS Argus (PY-14)

USS Argus
USS Argus (PY-14), at sea, circa 1944/1945.
History
United States
Name: Haida
Namesake: Haida people
Builder: Germaniawerft, Kiel
Completed: 1929
Status: Acquired by the Navy, 25 October 1940
History
United States
Name: Argus
Namesake: Argus Panoptes
Acquired: 25 October 1940
Commissioned: 13 February 1941
Decommissioned: 15 April 1946
Struck: 21 May 1946
Identification:
Fate: Sold into private market
Status: Transferred to the Maritime Commission, 30 October 1946
General characteristics
Type: Yacht
Displacement: 859 long tons (873 t)
Length: 207 ft 6 in (63.25 m)
Beam: 30 ft (9.1 m)
Draft: 13 ft 5 in (4.09 m)
Installed power:
Propulsion: 2 × screws
Speed: 13.5 kn (15.5 mph; 25.0 km/h)
Complement: 59
Armament:

USS Argus (PY-14) was a patrol yacht that saw service in the United States Navy during World War II. Named for the Argus (a monster with a hundred eyes supposedly slain by the Greek mythological messenger of the gods, Hermes), she was the second U.S. Navy vessel to bear the name.

A yacht built in 1929 at Kiel, Germany by Germaniawerft as Haida, the ship was acquired by the Navy on 25 October 1940 from Mrs. Max C. Fleischmann of Glenbrook, Nevada; converted at Long Beach, California by the Craig Shipbuilding Company for naval service; renamed Argus on 14 November 1940; and commissioned on 13 February 1941 with Lieutenant Commander Harold H. Connelley in command.

Argus arrived in San Francisco on 19 February 1941 and began duty patrolling San Francisco Bay as a unit of the Patrol force, 12th Naval District. That assignment lasted until May 1941, when she was reassigned to what appears to have been a successor organization — Patrol Squadron 1, Local Defense Force, 12th Naval District. Her duty, however, remained substantially the same as before, patrolling San Francisco Bay. She continued to perform this task until decommissioned on 17 September. She was then transferred to the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.

Renamed Pioneer, she served the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey for eight months before she was returned to the United States Navy in March 1942.

Pioneer was returned to the Navy on 16 March 1942 and, after reconversion at the General Engineering & Drydock Company, she was recommissioned at San Francisco on 18 April, again as Argus. The converted yacht resumed her patrols of San Francisco Bay under the auspices of the Commandant, 12th Naval District, and continued that duty for the remainder of her naval career. There were two notable events during her wartime career. The first occurred when Argus rescued the 60 survivors from the Liberty ship John A. Johnson, which had been torpedoed and sunk by the I-12 on 30 October 1944. I-12, after ramming and sinking the lifeboats and rafts, had then machine-gunned the 70 survivors in the water, killing 10. A Pan American Airways plane spotted John A. Johnson's remaining men soon thereafter, and Argus recovered them at 21:35 on 30 October. She disembarked them at San Francisco on 3 November. Ardent and Rockford then teamed up to sink I-12 10 days later.


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