![]() ![]() Like all escort carriers, Liscome Bay was built mostly from a converted merchant-ship Hull. On August 7, 1943, Liscome Bay was delivered to the U.S. On July 15, 1943, Liscome Bay‘s redesignation from ACV-56 to CVE-56 was completed. ![]() This followed the practice of naming escort carriers after bays, islands and sounds of the United States, or after major U.S. ![]() 302, become USS Liscome Bay, named after a small bay on the south coast of Dall Island, which lies off the southern coast of Alaska. He further recommended changing their British names and redesignating their class as CVE (aircraft carrier, escort) instead of ACV (auxiliary aircraft carrier).Īnd so HMS Ameer, formerly Hull No. Newton, endorsed a recommendation that 29 auxiliary aircraft carriers built for the British navy be assigned to the United States. On the same day, tugs took the powerless Hull and towed it downstream 100 miles from Vancouver to the Astoria (Oregon) Naval Station for final fitting out and delivery.īy that time, 3 1/2 months later, in August 1943, the Ameer would have new owners and even a new name. Morrell stepped up to the platform built near the bow of the partially finished Hull and smashed the traditional bottle of champagne against the bow section, sending Ameer sliding down the ways into the Columbia River. Hoffer of the Westminster Presbyterian Church, Mrs. Zitzewitz, liason officer at the Vancouver yards and James MacDonald, the British consul in Portland, Ore., who spoke at the ceremony.Īfter an invocation by Dr. Navy ‘Seabees.’ Also attending the ceremony was Mrs. She was launched in a special ceremony at the Kaiser shipyards by her sponsor, Mrs. The name she would be given upon her completion, and when she was turned over to the British Royal Navy, would be HMS Ameer (ACV-56).īy April 19, 1943, Ameer‘s Hull and part of her flight deck were finished. And when work began on her in earnest as an auxiliary aircraft tender, her designation was changed to Kaiser Shipyards Hull No. She began her life as Maritime Commission Hull No. Relatively speaking, it should also be noted, no other single carrier in World War II, escort, light or fast, suffered higher casualties - 600 men killed out of a crew of 900, 70 percent of the crew gone in only 20-plus minutes.ĬVE-56 had a name, of course - the USS Liscome Bay. The loss of these ships, tragic and costly in lives as they were, did not compare to the shock that went through America’s CVE crews when that first escort carrier was sunk in November 1943. Lo (CVE-63), sunk by a Japanese kamikaze plane attack on OctoOmmaney Bay (CVE-79), scuttled after being struck by a kamikaze on Januand Bismarck Sea (CVE-95), sunk by a kamikaze off Iwo Jima on February 21, 1945. They were: Block Island (CVE-21), sunk by the German submarine U-549 in the Atlantic on Gambier Bay (CVE-73), sunk in the Battle of Samar by Japanese cruiser gunfire on OctoSt. She was the first of her flock to go, but before war’s end in 1945, the ill-fated CVE-56 would be joined by five more American-built escort carriers (CVEs) sunk by enemy action. And she ended her short, 11-month span in 23 terrifying minutes off Makin Atoll in the Pacific, after being struck by a single torpedo from a Japanese submarine. She began life as a nameless Hull in the Kaiser shipyards in Vancouver, Washington, on December 12, 1942. USS Liscome Bay: Hit By a Torpedo Near Makin Atoll During World War II Close ![]()
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