SS Aloha State

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SS Aloha State
History
Name
  • Sea Snipe (1942–47)[2]
  • Edward Luckenbach (1947–60)
  • Aloha State (1960–71)
Owner
Operator
  • War Shipping Administration by American President Lines, Ltd. (1943-46)
  • British Ministry of War Transport (1946)
  • Luckenbach Steamship Co. (1948-59)
  • States Marine Lines (1959-71)
Port of registryUnited States
BuilderWestern Pipe and Steel Company
Yard number84
Laid downAugust 8, 1942
LaunchedDecember 7, 1942
ChristenedDecember 7, 1942, by Mrs. Frank F. Kane
Completed29 May 1943
Maiden voyageAugust 13, 1943
In serviceMay 29, 1943
Out of serviceAugust 4, 1971
FateScrapped in August 1971, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
Notes
  • Official number: 243297
  • Call letters: KOIQ[1]
General characteristics
Displacement7,870 tons
Length492 ft (150 m)
Beam69.7 ft (21.2 m)
Draft29.4 ft (9.0 m)
Decks2 decks and one shelter deck
PropulsionTwin General Electric boilers, single screw shaft

Aloha State built by Western Pipe and Steel Company, San Francisco, as Sea Snipe for the United States Maritime Commission as a standard Type C3-S-A2 transport ship. The ship was one of the first of the standard vessels modified into a troop transport.[3] Sea Snipe was completed 29 May 1943 and delivered to the War Shipping Administration (WSA) upon completion. American President Lines operated the ship throughout the war under a WSA agreement.[2] The ship, after brief charter to the British Ministry of War Transport in 1946 and lay up in 1947 served as a civilian transport ship for 24 years, first as Edward Luckenbach for Luckenbach Steamship Company then Aloha State for States Marine Lines. The ship was scrapped in August 1971.

World War II[]

Sea Snipe was capable of transporting 2,194 troops and 225,500 cubic feet (6,390 m3) of cargo. Its maiden voyage commenced on August 13, 1943 en route to Townsville, Queensland, where it would haul both US and Australian troops to various locations in New Guinea, Indonesia, and the South Pacific until return to San Francisco in November. The ship immediately made a round trip to Brisbane returning 5 January 1944. Sea Snipe then made four round trip voyages from San Francisco in 1944.

The ship made two more Pacific voyages in 1945. The first departed San Francisco 6 February for Finschhafen, Hollandia, Leyte, Lingayen, Subic Bay and Manila with return to Los Angeles. On 22 May the ship departed San Diego for Pearl Harbor, Eniwetok and Guam returning to San Francisco in July. Later in July Sea Snipe departed for the Atlantic and Marseilles for redeployment of troops to the Pacific.

Instead, with the Pacific war ended, the ship was redirected to Hampton Roads from which another round trip to Marseilles was made returning on 27 September. From Baltimore the ship went to Le Havre, returned to Boston, then Naples back to Boston. Another voyage was made to Naples with return to Hampton Roads then back to Le Havre. The ship then went to New York in December with more voyages scheduled. Serious boiler problems required major maintenance and cancellation of the scheduled 1946 voyages.[3] On 29 May 1946 the ship was allocated to the Ministry of War Transport under a bareboat charter.[2]

Civilian Service[]

In 1947, the United States Maritime Commission, who owned the ship, sold Sea Snipe to Luckenbach Steamship, after major repairs on the boiler were made. Luckenbach was purchasing many ex-World War II transports, to make up for ships that were lost in the war. Luckenbach, as a result of major corporate reorganization, sold the ship to States Marine Lines in 1960. They renamed the ship Aloha State, and it served as an international cargo ship until 1971. It was scrapped sometime between August 21 and 31, 1971, in Kaohsiung, Taiwan.[2][1][3]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "S.S. Aloha State". States Marine Lines. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d Maritime Administration. "Sea Snipe". Ship History Database Vessel Status Card. U.S. Department of Transportation, Maritime Administration. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Charles, Roland W. (1947). Troopships of World War II (PDF). Washington: The Army Transportation Association. LCCN 47004779. Retrieved 22 June 2019.

External links[]

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