USS Saturn (AK-49)

History
Germany, USA
Name:
  • ES Arauca (1939–41)[1][2]
  • SS Sting (1941)[1]
  • USS Saturn (1942–46)[2]
  • SS Saturn (1946–72)
Namesake: Arauca, Colombia
Owner: Hamburg America Line[1]
Operator:
Port of registry:

Nazi Germany Hamburg (1939–41)[1]

United States (1942–72)
Builder: Bremer Vulkan[1]
Launched: 1939
Completed: 1939[1]
Acquired: 20 April 1942[3]
Commissioned: 20 April 1942[3]
Decommissioned: 23 July 1946[3]
Struck: 15 August 1946[3]
Identification:
Fate: sold for scrap 12 September 1972[3]
General characteristics
Tonnage:
Displacement:
  • 5,088 tons light;[2]
  • 9,760 maximum load[2]
Length:
Beam: 55.7 ft (17.0 m)[1]
Draught: 24 ft (7.3 m)[2][3]
Depth: 22.8 ft (6.9 m)[1]
Installed power: 5,600 shp[2]
Propulsion: turbo-electric transmission[2]
Speed: 17.5 knots (32.4 km/h)[2][3]
Complement: 180 (1944)[2]
Sensors and
processing systems:
Armament:
Notes:

USS Saturn (AK-49) was a German cargo ship, built in 1939 as ES Arauca. ("ES" stands for "Electroschiff", meaning German: electric ship.) In 1941 before the US entered World War II, US authorities seized her and started converting her into a United States Navy stores ship. She was the sole ship of the US Navy's Saturn class. She was laid up in 1946 and scrapped in 1972.

Arauca was built for trade between Germany and the Caribbean, and was named accordingly. Arauca is a border town in eastern Colombia on the frontier with Venezuela.

ES Arauca

Arauca was one of three sister ships that Bremer Vulkan of Bremen-Vegesack, Germany built in 1939 for Hamburg Amerikanische Paketfahrt AG (HAPAG).[1] Arauca had two oil-fired high pressure LaMont boilers and turbo-electric transmission.[2] Her boilers fed two AEG turbo generators, which fed current to an AEG electric propulsion motor on her single propeller shaft.[1][2]

In August 1939 Arauca left Germany on her maiden voyage, carrying general cargo to Mexico.[2] Technological problems dogged the voyage, including the superheater of one of her boilers being burnt out.[2]

By the time she had reached port in Vera Cruz and completed discharging her cargo it was the beginning of September and Germany had invaded Poland.[2] German merchant ships now risked being seized or sunk by the Royal Navy, so Arauca remained in port for the next two and a half months.

In December Arauca tried to make for Germany, but off the coast of Florida the light cruiser HMS Orion fired across her bow, so on 19 December she put into Port Everglades.[2][3][4] Orion had opened fire in US territorial waters, which prompted a US protest to the UK Foreign Office.[3][2]

USS Saturn

On 6 December 1941, the day before the Attack on Pearl Harbor, the Bureau of Navigation recommended that Sting be renamed Saturn.[2] Her conversion for Navy use was meant to be completed by late December, but because of her technical complexity this was extended by several months.[2] The opportunity was therefore taken to convert her more fully to Navy specifications, including armament, but the Maritime Commission retained sole charge of her repairs.[2]

On 20 April 1942 Sting was delivered to the US Navy, commissioned as USS Saturn and classified AK-49 at Mobile, Alabama, commanded by Cmdr. Charles M. Furlow.[3] On 3 May Furlow's Navy crew tried to take her to Charleston, South Carolina were stopped by the failure of her condensate pump, steering gear, anchor windlass, make up and main feed pumps, evaporators, fuel oil service pumps and turbine-driven exciter.[2] She eventually left Mobile on 3 June but took until 14 June to reach Charleston, where she needed further repairs.[2]

On 11 August 1942 Saturn tried to leave Charleston for Norfolk, Virginia but the water circulating pumps for both of her boilers failed.[2] On 19 September she left Boston on the first of three trips supplying American bases in Newfoundland with general cargo.[3] However, in October she was drydocked in Boston for emergency replacement of her stern tube, which took until December.[2]

From March 1943 Saturn operated between east coast ports, mainly Norfolk, Virginia, and Baltimore, Maryland, and bases in the Caribbean such as Guantanamo and Trinidad.[3] She suffered a loss of boiler feedwater and high oxygen content in her boiler water, so in July 1943 the Bureau of Ships gave the Norfolk Naval Shipyard plans to replace much of her boiler, feed and condensate system.[2] There are no known records of whether this work was done, and nor are there records of any further technical problems.[2]

In October and November 1943 Saturn made one transatlantic crossing to England, and then resumed supply trips between the USA and Caribbean until September 1944.[3] In April 1944 Norfolk Navy Yard converted her to a provision store ship and on 10 April she was reclassified AF-40.[3] On 2 September 1944 Saturn sailed to the Mediterranean carrying supplies for Operation Dragoon, the invasion of southern France.[3] After one trip to Iceland and several voyages to the Caribbean, she made another trip to Oran, French Algeria in March 1945.[3] Saturn resumed her supply voyages up and down the Atlantic Coast until arriving at Norfolk, VA on 1 July 1946.[3]

Military awards and honors

Saturn received one Porn for her World War II service.[3] Her crew was eligible for the following medals:

Decommissioning, layup and disposal

Saturn was decommissioned on 23 July 1946, redelivered to the War Shipping Administration on 25 July and struck from the Navy list on 15 August.[3] She was laid up in the National Defense Reserve Fleet in the James River, Virginia until 12 September 1972, when she was sold to Isaac Varela of Castellon de la Plana, Spain for scrap.[3]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Lloyd's Register, Steamers & Motorships (PDF). London: Lloyd's Register. 1941. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Roberts, Stephen S (10 January 2010). "Class: Saturn (AF-49)". U.S. Navy Auxiliary Vessels 1884–1945. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 "Saturn". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History & Heritage Command. 22 June 2005. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  4. Engemann, Christel. "The case of Hedy Engemann". The Freedom of Information Times. Retrieved 6 February 2014.

External links

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