| USS ''Mission Bay'' operated primarily as an ASW carrier in the Atlantic. She is shown in August, 1944 off the East Coast, wearing Measure 32 Design 4A camouflage. Note the Grumman F6F Hellcats on deck and the large SK air search radar antenna on the mast. |
| Career |  United States Navy Jack |
|---|---|
| Laid down: | 28 December 1943 |
| Launched: | 26 May 1943 |
| Commissioned: | 13 September 1943 |
| Decommissioned: | 1 September 1958 |
| Fate: | Scrapped |
| Struck: | 1 September 1958 |
| General Characteristics |
|---|
| Displacement: | 7,800 tons |
| Length: | 512 ft 3 in |
| Beam: | 65 ft 2 in |
| Draught: | 22 ft 6 in |
| Propulsion: | Two Skinner, Uniflow engines, two screws |
| Speed: | 19 kt |
| Complement: | 860 officers and enlisted men |
| Armament: | 1 x 5"/38AA 8 x 40mm, 12 x 20mm |
| Aircraft: | 27 |
The 'USS ''Mission Bay'' (CVE-59)' was a
''Casablanca''-class escort carrier of the
United States Navy. Named for
Mission Bay, California, she was the only U.S. Naval vessel to bear the name.
Originally scheduled to be built as 'AVG-59', 'USS ''Mission Bay'' (CVE-59)' was redesignated 'ACV-59' on
20 August 1942 and laid down by Kaiser Co., Inc.,
Vancouver, Washington,
28 December 1943; launched
26 May 1943; sponsored by Mrs. James McDonald; redesignated CVE-59 on
15 July 1943; acquired by the Navy from the
Maritime Commission 13 September 1943; and commissioned at
Astoria, Oregon, the same day, with Captain William L. Rees in command. After shakedown off
California, ''Mission Bay'' departed
San Diego 15 November for the east coast via the
Panama Canal, arriving
Portsmouth, Virginia,
5 December. Assigned to convoy and antisubmarine duty, she got underway for
Europe the 26th, arriving
Casablanca,
French Morocco (now
Morocco),
14 January 1944. Two days later the escort aircraft carrier sailed for the east coast, reaching Portsmouth
8 February.
On
20 February ''Mission Bay'' steamed from
New York with a load of Army planes and personnel for
India, stopping at
Recife,
Brazil, and
Cape Town,
Union of South Africa (now Republic of South Africa), before arriving at
Karachi 29 March. By
12 May she was back at Portsmouth. The 28th the carrier departed New York again on another trip to North Africa. ''Mission Bay'' arrived Casablanca
6 June to steam for home 2 days later, entering the New York channel the 17th. That same day she collided with a dredge and had to continue on to Portsmouth for repairs, mooring
22 June. On
8 September ''Mission Bay'' steamed from Portsmouth for the south Atlantic. After refueling at
Dakar,
French West Africa (now
Senegal),
20 September, she conducted antisubmarine operations into November ending at Portsmouth the 25th. Her next cruise from Portsmouth
21 December took her to the
Caribbean for exercises between
Mayport, Florida, and
Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, into March 1945. In February ''Mission Bay'' was ordered to sail in the direction of Gibraltar to meet ''Quincy'' (CA-71) the 23d and escort the heavy cruiser returning in convoy from the
Yalta Conference,
4 February to
11 February, with President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and party embarked. ''Mission Bay'' left the convoy en route to
Newport News, Virginia, mooring at
Bermuda,
British West Indies, the 27th before continuing on to Portsmouth to arrive
9 March.
After
antisubmarine duty in the North Atlantic from
29 March to
14 May when she anchored off New York, ''Mission Bay'' cruised off the east coast, training pilots, until she sailed for Guantanamo Bay
19 July. The escort carrier returned to
Quonset Point, R.I.,
2 August to continue training operations off the east coast through the Japanese surrender
15 August into December. On
19 December ''Mission Bay'' was assigned to the 16th Fleet, with Norfolk as her home yard, to serve in an incommission, in reserve status the next year. Placed in service in reserve
21 February 1947, she entered the Atlantic Reserve Fleet at Norfolk to remain there until she joined the New York Group
30 November 1949. On
12 June 1955 she was redesignated 'CVU-59'. The utility aircraft carrier was struck from the
Naval Vessel Register 1 September 1958 and sold to Hugo Neu Corp of
New York, New York 30 April 1959. She was subsequently scrapped.
References
★
''Mission Bay''
★
USS ''Mission Bay'' (CVE-59); later (CVU-59)