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USS Pelias (AS-14)

USS Pelias (AS-14).jpg
History
United States
Namesake: Pelias
Builder:
Launched: 8 May 1939
Acquired: 1940
Commissioned: 5 September 1941
Decommissioned: 14 June 1970
Struck: 1 August 1972
Fate: Disposed of, sold by Defense Reutilization and Marketing Service (DRMS) for scrapping, 1 October 1973
Status: Scrapped
General characteristics
Class and type: Converted Type C3 ship / USS Griffin (AS-13) class
Displacement: 8,236 (It.)
Length: 492 ft (149.96 m)
Beam: 69.5 ft (21.18 m)
Draft: 21 ft (6.40 m)
Propulsion: Diesel engine 8,500shp, single propeller
Speed: 16.5 knots
Complement: 925
Armament:
  • one single 5"/38 DP gun mount
  • one single 3"/50 DP gun mount
  • four .50 cal machine guns

USS Pelias (AS–14), was a Griffin-class submarine tender in service with the United States Navy from 1941 to 1970.

Pelias was laid down as SS Mormacyork under Maritime Commission contract by Sun Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co., Chester, Pennsylvania, 8 May 1939; launched 14 November 1939; sponsored by Miss Barbara W. Vickery; and delivered to Moore-McCormick Steamship Co., 1 April 1940. Mormacyork served for a short time on passenger service between ports in the United States and South America. Acquired by the Navy late in 1940, she was renamed Pelias 9 January 1941 and converted for Navy use as a submarine tender by Bethlehem Steel Co., Brooklyn, N.Y. Pelias commissioned at New York 5 September 1941, Comdr. William Wakefield in command.

Following shakedown off New England, Pelias sailed for the Pacific 9 October 1941. Steaming via San Diego, California, she arrived Pearl Harbor 21 November 1941 as the tender for Submarine Squadron Six. Six days later she began sub overhauls at the Submarine Base where she was berthed during the Japanese attack 7 December 1941. During the sneak attack her guns splashed one enemy torpedo plane, and damaged a second, as they made their deadly runs along the main channel little more than 100 yards from her port side. She resumed repair duty shortly after the attack and during the early months of the war provided valuable assistance as the United States Pacific Fleet prepared for the long struggle for supremacy of the Pacific.

After servicing almost a score of submarines at Pearl Harbor, Pelias steamed to San Francisco late in May 1942 and took on spare parts, provisions, and ammunition. Departing for the Southwest Pacific 22 June 1942, she touched at Melbourne, Australia, 16 July and reached Albany, Australia, the 23d. Assigned to duty under Rear Admiral Charles A. Lockwood, ComSubSoWesPac, she refitted the 10 submarines of Submarine Squadron 6 at Albany before shifting her base to Fremantle, Western Australia, 27 October. There, she relieved Holland as mother ship for the SoWesPac submarines, which pressed the attack against Japanese naval and merchant shipping. Except for brief deployments to Exmouth Gulf in May 1943 and to Albany in March 1944, Pelias operated out of Fremantle during her Australian employment. Between July 1942 and May 1944 she overhauled, repaired, and refitted 59 submarines of Submarine Squadrons 6, 12, and 16.


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