Everything about Uss Maumee Ao-2 totally explained
The second
USS Maumee (AO-2) was laid down as
Fuel Ship No. 14 on
23 July 1914 by Navy Shipyard,
Mare Island, Calif.; launched
17 April 1915; sponsored by Miss Janet Crose; and commissioned
20 October 1916, Lt. Comdr.
Henry C. Dinger in command. When the Navy’s ship classifications were introduced
17 July 1920,
Maumee was designated AO-2.
Maumee was the first surface ship in the U.S. Navy to be powered by
diesel engines. Supervising their installation and operation was her Executive and
Chief Engineering Officer, Lt.
Chester W. Nimitz.
Early career
Prior to the entry of the United States into
World War I,
Maumee operated off the east coast and
Cuba. Following the declaration of war,
6 April 1917, she was assigned duty refueling at sea the destroyers being sent to
Britain. Stationed about 300 miles south of
Greenland,
Maumee was ready for the second group of U.S. ships to be sent as they closed her
28 May. With the fueling of those six destroyers,
Maumee pioneered the Navy’s underway refueling operations, thus establishing a pattern of mobile logistic support which would enable the Navy to keep its fleets at sea for extended periods, with a far greater range independent of the availability of a friendly port. This independence proved crucial to victory in
World War II by the ships commanded by
Fleet Admiral Nimitz who as
Maumee’s executive officer had played a key role in the refueling developments.
By
5 July Maumee had refueled 34
Ireland‑bound destroyers in mid‑Atlantic. During the remainder of the war she completed two further ocean crossings to
Europe where she refueled naval units attached to the
American Expeditionary Force. Following the end of the war,
Maumee operated off the east coast until decommissioning
9 June 1922 for layup in reserve at
Philadelphia.
World War II
With the opening of hostilities in Europe,
Maumee was brought out of reserve, given an extensive overhaul at
Baltimore, Maryland during which she received conventional steampower propulsion, and recommissioned
2 June 1942. Assigned to the
Atlantic Fleet she was employed as a training ship for PCs, SCs, YNs, and ARs off the
North Carolina Capes with periodic refueling runs to the
Bermuda training area until
6 November 1942.
At that time she commenced her first transatlantic crossing since World War I. Steaming from
Norfolk via Bermuda, she arrived
Casablanca 25 November and refueled small craft during the liberation of
North Africa. She sailed for home
22 December, returning to Norfolk
9 January 1943 and completing an oil run to
Aruba before getting underway again for North Africa
19 March.
Maumee continued to transport fuel to north
Africa until
8 July, when she was ordered to carry oil from the
Netherlands West Indies to east coast Navy bases. For the next 8 months she operated between the
Caribbean and bases as far north as
NS Argentia,
Newfoundland.
On
25 March 1944, the oiler resumed transatlantic runs, this time along the
North Atlantic convoy route to
Northern Ireland and
England. After completing two voyages, she returned to coastal fueling runs between Aruba and the east coast
22 November.
In May
1945 Maumee received orders to join the
Pacific Fleet. She departed Norfolk
20 June and arrived at Pearl Harbor
15 July, the same day she was redesignated
AG-124. After a month at
Pearl Harbor, she departed for
China, arriving off the
Yangtze River 30 September. Three days later she ascended the
Whangpoo River to
Shanghai where she served as a
station fuel ship until
16 November, when she sailed for Pearl Harbor.
Postwar Service
Reassigned to the Atlantic Fleet, she departed
Hawaii 13 December, transited the
Panama Canal,
1 January 1946, and arrived at
Portsmouth, Virginia, on the 8th. She steamed south to
Guantanamo Bay 12 February, where she reported to TG 23.9, a shakedown group composed of former U.S. Navy vessels under lend lease to the Nationalist Chinese Government. For the next 2 months she rendered repair, tender, and fuel services to the group in Cuban waters and then was assigned to accompany them to China.
The task group sailed for the
Western Pacific 14 April. The following month
Maumee received word that she too was to be transferred to the
Nationalist Chinese Government under
lend lease. The group arrived at
Tsingtao 19 July and on
5 November ended 30 years of service to the US Navy.
Transferred to the Chinese Government on the same day, she commissioned on 5 November as
RCN Omei (AO-509). Transferred to the
Republic of China permanently on
7 February 1948, her name was struck from the U.S.
Naval Vessel Register 12 March.
Maumee saw continuous service in the
Republic of China Navy until she was decommissioned at
Kaoshiung,
Taiwan, in the summer of
1967. Stricken from the Chinese Naval Vessel Register shortly after, she was scrapped at the
Kaoshiung Naval Base from August to October 1967.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Uss Maumee Ao-2'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://uss_maumee__ao-2.totallyexplained.com">USS Maumee (AO-2) Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |