USS Hector (AR-7)

For other ships of the same name, see USS Hector.
USS Hector (AR-7) in 1985
History
United States of America
Name: USS Hector (AR-7)
Namesake: Hector
Builder: Los Angeles Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, San Pedro, California
Launched: 11 November 1942
Commissioned: 7 February 1944
Decommissioned: 31 March 1987
Struck: 1 July 1994
Honors and
awards:

1972 Meritorious Unit Commendation "For meritorious service from 26 January to 25 August 1972 in direct support of United States SEVENTH Fleet combat operations in Southeast Asia. USS HECTOR contributed materially to the success of these operations by rendering vital fleet repair services to United States and friendly naval forces operating in the Republic of Vietnam."

3 x Humanitarian Service Medals
Fate: 20 April 1989 Leased to Pakistan and renamed MOWAIN. Returned to US custody in Singapore in 1994. Sold to Ruby Enterprises of India and rammed ashore and cut apart.
Status: Scrapped
General characteristics
Class & type: Vulcan-class repair ship
Displacement: 9,140/16200 tons
Length: 529 ft 6 in (161.39 m)
Beam: 73 ft 6 in (22.40 m)
Draft: 23 ft 4 in (7.11 m)
Speed: 19 knots
Complement: 1,108
Armament: 4 x 5"38, 8 x 40 mm, 8 x 20 mm

The USS Hector (AR-7) was a repair ship that served in the United States Navy from 1944 to 1987.

World War II

Hector was launched 11 November 1942 by the Los Angeles Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, San Pedro, California and sponsored by Mrs. Schuyler F. Helm. Hector was commissioned 7 February 1944, with Commander J. W. Long in command.

After shakedown along the West Coast, the new repair ship sailed for the Pacific, reaching Pearl Harbor 9 April 1944. She remained at Pearl Harbor effecting repairs on various ships, primarily landing craft, until she departed for Eniwetok on 5 June. Arriving there 13 June, Hector spent the summer at Eniwetok and then sailed for Ulithi 30 September. Her biggest repair job of the war came to her 27 October at Ulithi as the cruiser USS Houston , torpedoed twice by Japanese submarines, was towed alongside. Although hampered by a severe typhoon season which twice sent her out to sea for safety, Hector managed to repair Houston by the end of the year besides aiding many other smaller craft.

Hector departed Ulithi 16 February 1945 and 5 days later steamed into Tarragona, Leyte Gulf, to repair ships as the battle for the Philippines raged. This task completed, she returned to Ulithi 30 March and continued on to Saipan 22 May. After the war ended 1 September, Hector remained in the Pacific to prepare various ships for return to the United States.

Korean War

Departing Saipan 21 January 1946, Hector reached Long Beach, California 3 February. After serving as a repair ship there, she sailed for her first WestPac cruise 7 May 1947, thereby settling into a peacetime schedule interrupted 3 years later by the outbreak of Korean War. Hector sailed into Yokosuka 18 September 1950. From there she continued to Inchon, Korea, arriving at the scene of the Inchon Invasion, 25 September. For the remainder of the Korean War Hector alternated repair service along the Korean coast and in Japan with normal duty out of Long Beach. In 1954 she was presented with the Battle Efficiency Plaque for the year 1953–1954, and again in 1955 was awarded the same plaque for the year 1954–1955.

Thereafter, as before the Korean War, Hector alternated 4 to 6 months of service and exercises along the California coast with 6- and 8-month WestPac cruises. During these cruises the repair ship, operating in support and service of the United States Pacific and Asian defenses, visited such ports as Yokosuka, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Guam, and Eniwetok. Serving intermittently as flagship for both Service Squadrons 1 and 3, Hector also was a major participant in the Navy's "People to People" program in Asia. Her deployments to the Western Pacific continued into the 1960s.

Vietnam

Hector operated in the Far East from Japan to the Philippines between June 1963 and January 1964. After providing repair services for ships at Long Beach during the remainder of 1964 and the first 6 months of 1965, she underwent a modernization overhaul at Long Beach between July 1965 and February 1966 to increase her repair capabilities. Thence, she resumed fleet services out of Long Beach until departing for the Far East 5 August. She arrived Subic Bay later that month, and during the next 6 months repaired and serviced ships in the Philippines, Taiwan, and Japan. She returned to the West Coast in March 1967 and into mid-1967 Hector continued to maintain a high state of readiness and provide repair services at Long Beach.

Hector departed for WESTPAC via Pearl Harbor on 3 January 1972 arriving in Sasebo 26 January where she served as the flagship for COMSERVGRU THREE. While providing service to the fleet during this deployment Hector visited Vung Tau, Vietnam, Hong Kong, DaNang, Vietnam, Subic Bay RP, Okinawa, and Keelung, Taiwan. On 26 Aug Hector was relieved as COMSERVGRU THREE Flagship and departed Sasebo for the USA and arrived in Long Beach on 9 September 1972.

In 1972 Hector was awarded a MERITORIOUS UNIT COMMENDATION that read in part the following: For meritorious service from 26 January to 25 August 1972 in direct support of United States Seventh Fleet combat operations in Southeast Asia. USS Hector contributed materially to the success of these operations by rendering vital fleet repair services to united States and friendly naval forces operating in the Republic of Vietnam. Hector also received a Republic of Vietnam Meritorious Unit Citation and three additional Vietnam Service Medals during this deployment. Hector serviced the fleet as needed in many ports of call including various locations. Hector provided maintenance repairs as well as damage repairs on ships from combat actions, notable the USS Higbee and USS Buchanan.

1974 began withHector in Sasebo, Japan, and after visiting Yokosuka, that deployment ended with her return to Long Beach in the middle of February. In March, Hector's home port was shifted to Mare Island, Vallejo, California. She underwent overhaul in Richmond, CA in April, and visited San Diego during the same year.

End of Vietnam and Beyond

During the evacuation of Saigon in 1975 (Operation New Life), Hector aided in setting up camps in Guam for Vietnamese refugees, for which Hector earned her first Humanitarian Service Award. During the same year, she completed conversion to Navy Distillate fuel and renovation to her crew's galley, mess decks and scullery.

During her deployment in 1977, Hector was called on to replenish desperately needed stores to combatant ships that had departed Pearl Harbor quickly in order to observe Soviet cruise missile triangulation operations. During this operation, the infamous "Hector Missile" was built to confuse the enemy. In July, Hector was forced to cancel an R&R visit to Keelung, Taiwan in order to evade Typhoon Vera, which struck northern Taiwan. She proceeded on to her next scheduled port, Subic Bay RP.

During the spring of 1978, Hector provided Fleet Repair Service in Seattle, WA. Her deployment in September began with a visit to Papeete, Tahiti, and later to Subic Bay, RP; Keelung, Taiwan; Pusan, Korea and finished the year providing FRS in Yokosuka, Japan.

In 1980, she received a major overhaul, and Hector became one of the first ships in the Pacific Fleet to have women officers report aboard. (One of whom was Ensign Darlene Iskra who served aboard as Diving Officer 1980–82 who went on to make Naval History in 1990 by becoming the first woman to command a Naval vessel, the USS Opportune.)

In 1981, Hector began her 25th deployment, visiting Yokosuka Japan; Diego Garcia; Mombasa, Kenya, Melbourne, Australia, Auckland, New Zealand, Tonga, Samoa, Western Samoa. While in Pearl Harbor, Hector sent a team to rescue 12 passengers of a plane which crashed 200 yards off Hector's quarter. For this she was commended by Commander in Chief, US Pacific Fleet. In October 1981, Hector's home port was again shifted, from Mare Island to Oakland, CA.

In June 1982 the first ten enlisted women reported aboard Hector at the Naval Supply Center in Oakland, California. Hector received the Navy "E" Ribbon for the period 1 Jan 1982 – 30 June 1983.

In 1983, Hector spent a month repairing ships in Bremerton, WA. During the month of April, Hector temporarily served as the Logistic Command Center while Commander Task Force 73 was embarked for FLEET EX 83-1, the largest military exercise in the North Pacific since World War II.

In 1984, during the ship’s 26th deployment, Hector steamed over 35,000 miles. She also provided disaster relief to the storm battered island of Madagascar. On this deployment Hector received two Humanitarian Medals. One was for the rescue of 28 Vietnamese refugees from a small wooden craft. For the second award, a group of Hector volunteers spent several days in a leper colony doing maintenance on local homes, and other facilities, while in Madagascar. They also provided some much-needed medical service including dental work, amputations, etc., all with field tools and in a damaged gazebo.

Her home port was changed from Alameda to San Diego in 1985, and the Hector celebrated her 42nd birthday on the high seas. During transit up the Willamette River to Portland, OR in August, Hector's aft mast was snapped off as a result of coming into contact with the Burnside Bridge.

At the beginning of 1986, Hector provided FRS to the Midway Battle Group in Yokosuka, Japan. Hector's stay in Subic Bay was extended to 1 & 1/2 months during January to February due to Philippine elections and civil unrest. She later visited Al-Masirah, Ohman and Pattaya Beach, Thailand.

After 43 years of faithful and productive service to the fleet from the entire West Coast to numerous ports of the Pacific and Southeast Asia, the USS Hector AR-7 Deck Log was closed 31 March 1987 in San Diego, and she was duly decommissioned.

On 20 April 1989, Hector was leased to Pakistan and renamed MOAWIN. She was returned to U.S. custody at Singapore in 1994, and on 17 October of that year was sold to Ruby Enterprises of India. Subsequently, the USS Hector AR-7 suffered an ignominious demise by cutting torches at a nondescript scrap metal yard somewhere on the coastline of India.

References

External links

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