USN Auxiliary Ships

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Brian James
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USN Auxiliary Ships

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Water distilling Ship USS Pasig pictured in 1945.
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Brian James
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

Unread post by Brian James »

The launch of Liberty Ship SS Frederick Douglass from Bethlehem Fairfield Shipyards at Baltimore on May 22nd 1943.She suffered torpedo damage from Type VIIC U-Boat U-238 on September 20th 1943 and was sunk on the same day by sister ship U-645.The British ship SS Rathlin rescued all seventy aboard (forty merchant seamen, twenty-nine Armed Guard, and one female stowaway!).
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Little h
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

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Brian James wrote: Thu Jun 13, 2019 2:35 am Water distilling Ship USS Pasig pictured in 1945.
Interesting ship; however the gantry has me completely puzzled with it's 'A' frame boom complete with a plethera of blocks and tackle, none of which appear to have anything to do with the functioning of lowering/raising said 'A' frame boom, see the following images from navsource:-
09450321 navsource.jpg


Amid ships plan view looking aft of USS Pasig (AW-3) moored pierside at Mare Island Navy Yard, 6 January 1945.
US National Archives Photo # 19-LCM-77866, a US Navy Bureau of Ships photo now in the collections of the US National Archives.

09450306 navsource.jpg

USS Pasig (AW-3) extending the A-frame, in Haiphong Harbor, Vietnam, October 1954
09450307 navsource.jpg

USS Pasig (AW-3) extended the A-frame for lift, in Haiphong Harbor, Vietnam, October 1954 with an unidentified YW/YO alongside.

Q. what would comprise the lift?

Navsource;
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Little h
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jbryce1437
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

Unread post by jbryce1437 »

Little h wrote: Thu Jun 27, 2019 6:01 pm
Brian James wrote: Thu Jun 13, 2019 2:35 am Water distilling Ship USS Pasig pictured in 1945.
Interesting ship; however the gantry has me completely puzzled with it's 'A' frame boom complete with a plethera of blocks and tackle, none of which appear to have anything to do with the functioning of lowering/raising said 'A' frame boom, see the following images from navsource:-

09450321 navsource.jpg



Amid ships plan view looking aft of USS Pasig (AW-3) moored pierside at Mare Island Navy Yard, 6 January 1945.
US National Archives Photo # 19-LCM-77866, a US Navy Bureau of Ships photo now in the collections of the US National Archives.


09450306 navsource.jpg


USS Pasig (AW-3) extending the A-frame, in Haiphong Harbor, Vietnam, October 1954

09450307 navsource.jpg


USS Pasig (AW-3) extended the A-frame for lift, in Haiphong Harbor, Vietnam, October 1954 with an unidentified YW/YO alongside.

Q. what would comprise the lift?

Navsource;
The tall structure amidships is a 160-ton capacity crane for lifting LCT's on and off the decks of LST's at advanced bases.

Jim
HMS Raleigh 1963 , HMS Collingwood 1963 & 67 , HMS Ark Royal 1964-7, HMS Undaunted 1968-71, HMS Victory (Fleet Maintenance Group) 1971-72, HMS Exmouth 1972-74
JEM, EM, OEM, LOEM, POOEL
Then 28 years in the Fire Brigade
Retired since 2002
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Little h
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

Unread post by Little h »

jbryce1437 wrote: Thu Jun 27, 2019 7:45 pm
Little h wrote: Thu Jun 27, 2019 6:01 pm
Brian James wrote: Thu Jun 13, 2019 2:35 am Water distilling Ship USS Pasig pictured in 1945.
Interesting ship; however the gantry has me completely puzzled with it's 'A' frame boom complete with a plethera of blocks and tackle, none of which appear to have anything to do with the functioning of lowering/raising said 'A' frame boom, see the following images from navsource:-

Q. what would comprise the lift?

Navsource;
The tall structure amidships is a 160-ton capacity crane for lifting LCT's on and off the decks of LST's at advanced bases.

Jim
Cheers Jim ... so the info was in the link to Navsource all the time :oops: "what a mistaka to maka" ;)
Little h
designeraccd
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

Unread post by designeraccd »

Here is a shot of old USN sub tender HOLLAND in Brisbane, 1942. Plus a view of her in 1943 after some up grading in the U.S. :) DFO
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Brian James
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

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Fleet Collier No 2,USS Ontario pictured at Mare Island Navy Yard on December 5th 1908.Ontario served with a merchant complement until she decommissioned on April 7th 1913 to undergo conversion to a Repair Ship. After conversion, she recommissioned on December 23rd 1914 as Repair Ship No 2 USS Prometheus.
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Brian James
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

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Lead Ship,Ammunition Ship USS Pyro pictured under construction at Puget Sound Navy Yard,August 13th 1919.
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Pelican
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

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Vanport, Liberty Ships, and Jim Crow Shipyards

In recent protests in Portland, the white nationalist group Proud Boys assembled on the edge of town in Delta Park, while, close by, Black Lives Matters counter-protestors gathered, on the other side of the highway, in a section of the park referred to as Vanport. Although little is left beyond the name, Vanport is part of the history of the struggle for racial justice that still resonates in Portland and so much of the nation today.

Built in just 110 days in 1942, Vanport was a housing project meant to provide shelter for 40,000 shipyard workers, who came to Portland to work in the three nearby Kaiser shipyards, building Liberty and Victory ships, as well as aircraft carriers, tankers, and landing ships, to support the war effort. Kaiser’s Northwest shipyards produced 752 ships during the war years and Vanport soon became the second-largest city in Oregon.

From the historical marker: Nicknamed Kaiserville, most Vanporters lived in one-bedroom apartments. There was a library, post office, police station, infirmary, public cafeteria, stores, and a 750-seat movie theater. While most Americans had no medical insurance, Kaiser’s workers enjoyed a prepaid health plan. After the war, the plan and its doctors became the Kaiser Permanente medical and dental care program.

There was another side to Portland and to Vanport. Given a general labor shortage, Blacks, as well as Native Americans, and women were hired by the Kaiser shipyards. The Black population of the Portland area rose tenfold, from 2,000 in 1940 to 20,000 by 1945.

This proved to be a problem for Portland because the city and the state of Oregon had a long-established history of excluding black residents. The first law excluding Blacks from the state was enacted in 1844. Oregon entered the Union in 1859 as a “whites-only” state. The original state constitution banned slavery but also excluded nonwhites from living there. The exclusionary laws remained on the books until 1922.



When Black workers arrived in Portland they found that Jim Crow practices had followed them to the Northwest. The Kaiser shipyard Boilermaker’s Union refused to allow skilled Black workers into the union. The only shipyard jobs available to Blacks were as helpers and cleaners. Skilled Black welders and fitters were allowed to join an “auxiliary union” where they were paid less, had no union privileges, but were expected to pay the same union dues as white workers. Many Blacks refused to join the auxiliaries.

The workers complained. Kaiser and the unions should have been bound by Roosevelt’s Executive Order 8802: Prohibition of Discrimination in the Defense Industry, which notionally barred racial discrimination.

Oregon Kaiser shipyards fired more than 300 black workers in July 1943 for refusing to join the auxiliary. The Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC) held public hearings and issued a “cease and desist” order, with little result. In 1944, further intervention in courts by the FEPC resulted in a favorable ruling. By then, the war, and shipyard production, was almost over.

After the war, the shipyards shut down and the population Vanport shrank by half. For many long-time Portland residents, Vanport was known as the “Negro Project” despite the fact that African Americans were no more than 25% of residents at any given time.

Then on May 31, 1948, a railroad dike on the Columbia River broke causing a flood that effectively wiped Vanport off the map. In just over a day, Vanport was gone.

As noted by the BlackPast blog: Despite its short life span, Vanport helped create several “firsts” for Oregon and the Portland area. The first black teachers and policemen in the state were hired in Vanport during the war years. The Vanport Interracial Council worked to establish a Portland office of the Urban League. Vanport College was the precursor to Portland State University where many veterans used the GI Bill to get a new start on life. In the end, Vanport became part of the story of civil rights and African Americans in the West.

FROM, which conains links:
http://www.oldsaltblog.com/2020/09/vanp ... more-56083
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HMS Pelican 1938 - 1958 GGCV L86 U86 F86 What I Have I Hold ~ A wonderful bird is the Pelican its beak can hold more than its belly can.
Brian James
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Re: USN Auxiliary Ships

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Pyro Class Ammunition Ship USS Nitro pictured on August 22nd 1922.
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