|
eclipses by a satellite. (A.K.A. -54; dp. 13,910 (tl) I. 459'2",,b.63'0 " dr. 226'4 " (lim),,s. 16.5 k. (tl.); cpl. 429; A. 15', 8.40 mm; cl. Andromeda; t. C 2-S- BI)
Algol (A..K.A.-54) WAS LAID DOWN ON 10 December 1942 at Oakland, Ca. by the Moore DryDock Co. under a Maritime C commission contract (MC hull 1153) as James Bames; launched on 17 February 1943; sponsored by Mrs. J. A. McKeown; renamed Algol on 30 August 1943; placed in reduced commission on 27 November 1943 for the voyage to the Willamette Shipyard in Portland Or de-commissioned there on 3 December 1943; converted to an attack cargo ship; and placed in full commission on 21 July 1944, Lt. Comdr. Axton T. Jones U.S.N.R. in full command. Algol completed shakedown training along the California coast by 3 September. She then put into Oakland, Ca. and began loading cargo. She departed Oakland, Ca. on 4 October bound for the Western Pacific.Steaming via Eniwetok Atoll., she arrived at Saipan in the Marianas late in Oct . After loading her cargo in Saipan, Algol got underway for New Guinea on 31 October. The attack cargo ship put Into Hollandia on 6 November and remained there two days before pushing on to Noumea, New Caledonia, where she stopped between 24 November and 17 Dec. On 17 December, Algol headed for Guadalcanal where she participated in landing exercises in participation for the assault on Luzon at Lingayen Gulf. At the end of the year, she moved up to the staging area at Manus in the Admiralty Islands. On 2 January 1945 the attack cargo ship put to sea as an element at task unit (TU) 78.11.7 Along the way, many reports came in of submarines, torpedoes, and unidentified aircraft in Area. However no verified attacks occurred. Algol and her colleagues arrived safely in Lingayen Gulf on 11 January. Her boats and boat crews went immediately to help unload SS President Monroe. The attack transport began her own unloading the following day. She completed cargo operations on 13 January and got underway for Leyte on the 15 th. During the voyage, she also towed the SS President Monroe which had suffered a main propulsion plant casualty. The two ships arrived in San Pedro Bay 20 January. There, she immediately began loading for a second invasion of Luzon. When she arrived off the coast of Zambales province on the western coast of Luzon just north of Subic Bay, she and the other ships found things very peaceful, and so it was. .The entire area was in the friendly hands of Filipino guerrillas. The prelanding bombardment was cancelled, and troops and cargo moved ashore easily.Upon her return to Leyte on 3 February, Algol spent about six weeks catching up on minor ship repairs, and her crew enjoyed more frequent liberty by mid March, however, it was time to back to get back in the war, and she began preparations for the assault on the Ryukyu Islands. On 27 March, the attack cargo ship departed Leyte with cargo and elements of the 184 Th. Regimental Combat Team (RTC) 7Th. Infantry Division, embarked. She arrived off Okinawa early in the morning of 1 April and began unloading soon after the invasion started. That night instead of retiring with the other Transports and cargo ships, Algol moved into the inner transport Area to serve as a tender for the landing craft. The ship remained at Okinawa until 10 April at which time she shaped a course for Guam, in company with TU51.29.12. from Guam, Algol continued east to Hawaii and thence to San Diego, Cal. where she arrived on 4 May. A three week availability followed. On 28 May, the attack cargo ship embarked upon a voyage to Hawaii, from which she returned to the west coast at San Francisco, Cal. on 18 June. She put to sea once again on 6 July bound for the Western Pacific. After stops at Eniwetok and Ulithi en route, the ship arrived at Kerema Retto off Okinawa on 9 September. From there, she moved down to the northern Solomons, arriving at Cape Torokina, Bougainville, on 4 October. There, she loaded cargo and equipment for Marine Air Group (MAG) 25 transportation to China. Algol arrived in Tsingtao,China early in November, unloaded her cargo, and departed that port at the end of the third week in November.The islands of the central and western Pacific as well as to and from ports on the west coast of the United States. In July 1947 she was placed in commission, in reserve, preparatory to decommissioning. However, during the inactivation process, the attack cargo ship was ordered back to active service. By late summer of 1949, she was back in full commission, operation out of Little Creek, Va. under Commander, Amphibious Forces, Atlantic Fleet. Near the end of August, ALGOL embarked elements of the 7Th . Marine Division at Morehead, City, N.C. and sailed for the Mediterranean Sea. After visiting a number of ports along the shores of that sea and conducting operations with Americans naval forces in the area, the attack cargo ship returned to Norfolk in February of 1950. In august of 1950, just weeks after the outbreak of hostilities in Korea, she was transferred to the Pacific. The ship embarked elements of the 1st. Marine Division and set sail for Kobe, Japan, on 31 August. Agol arrived in Kobe, Japan on 16 September but put to sea again the following day to join in the Inchon invasion. The initial assault in Inchon had gone forward the day before Algol's arrival in Japan. Her mission, therefore, was one of resupply and reinforcement. She remained at Inchon, unloading, from 21 to 27 September. On the latter day, the attack cargo ship headed back to Japan. Algol returned to Inchon on 8 October and embarked Headquarters Company, 1st. Ordnance Battalion, 1st. Marine Division, for what was to have been an amphibious assault at Wonson on the northwestern coast of Korea. However United States (UN) naval gunfire and air activity forced the North Koreans back from the coastal plain into the highlands. This enabled Republic of Korean forces ashore to move northward and occupy Wonson themselves. UN troops, therefore, landed unopposed during the last week in October. Following that, the ship returned to Japan and remained there until early December. At that time, the Chinese communists intervened massively and sent the UN forces reeling southward. Algol went to Chinnampo where she assisted in the evacuation of UN troops during the first week in December. The following week, she moved to Inchon to help evacuate troops at that location. Those operations lasted until the beginning of the second week in January of 1951.Between July 1951 and March 1952 she conducted training missions along the coast of Southern California and between there and the Hawaiian Islands. She completed a yard period in Pearl Harbor in March 1952, and put to sea on her way to the Far East. She arrived in Japan late that month and took part in amphibious exercises off the island of Hokkaido. Algol visited Yokosuka early in April and, from there, moved to Hong Kong for a two week port call. May brought a visit to Subic Bay in the Philippines followed by more training exercises at Otaru, Japan. Exercises with units of the 7Th. Fleet punctuated by visits to a number of Oriental ports occupied her time for most of the remainder of 1952. December, the attack cargo ship was on her way back to the West Coast.. She arrived in Long Beach, Cal. on 15 December 1952. Training and amphibious exercises broken only by a repair period at the Todd Shipyard at Alameda, Cal. that summer filled her time throughout the year 1953 and into the second month of 1954. Algol departed the west coast bound for Japan. She entered port at Yokosuka on March 9Th in April, the ship participated in exercises at Okinawa. The usual round of port visits and exercises followed. Early in August, she concluded a two weeks visit at Hong Kong and headed via Subic Bay--to Tourane and Haiphong in North Vietnam. At those ports, the attack cargo ship embarked non-communist refugees and carried them south to Saigon in South Vietnam.
|