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・ USNS Patuxent (T-AO-201)
・ USNS Paul Buck (T-AOT-1122)
・ USNS Pecos (T-AO-197)
・ USNS Perseus (T-AF-64)
・ USNS Persistent (T-AGOS-6)
・ USNS Petrolite (T-AO-164)
・ USNS PFC Dewayne T. Williams (T-AK-3009)
・ USNS Phoenix (T-AG-172)
・ USNS Pililaau (T-AKR-304)
・ USNS Point Barrow (T-AKD-1)
・ USNS Pollux (T-AKR-290)
・ USNS Pomeroy (T-AKR-316)
・ USNS Ponchatoula (T-AO-148)
・ USNS Potomac
・ USNS Potomac (T-AO-150)
USNS Potomac (T-AO-181)
・ USNS Powhatan (T-ATF-166)
・ USNS Private Francis X. McGraw (T-AK-241)
・ USNS Private Frank J. Petrarca (T-AK-250)
・ USNS Private Joe E. Mann (T-AK-253)
・ USNS Private Joe P. Martinez (T-AP-187)
・ USNS Private John F. Thorson (T-AK-247)
・ USNS Private John R. Towle (T-AK-240)
・ USNS Private Jose F. Valdez (T-AG-169)
・ USNS Private Leonard C. Brostrom (T-AK-255)
・ USNS Provo (T-AG-173)
・ USNS Puerto Rico (HST-2)
・ USNS Rainier (T-AOE-7)
・ USNS Range Recoverer (T-AG-161)
・ USNS Range Tracker (T-AGM-1)


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USNS Potomac (T-AO-181) : ウィキペディア英語版
USNS Potomac (T-AO-181)

The fifth USNS ''Potomac'' (T-AO-181) was a United States Navy oiler in non-commissioned service with the Military Sea Transportation Service, later Military Sealift Command, from 1976 to 1983.
''Potomac'', sixth U.S. Navy ship to bear the name, was laid down as SS ''Shenandoah'' at Sun Shipbuilding and Drydock Company at Chester, Pennsylvania, on 1 March 1964 and launched on 10 October 1964. She was built using the 200-foot (61 m) salvaged stern section of the oiler USNS ''Potomac'' (T-AO-150) -- a ship which had been destroyed by a fire on 26 September 1961—to which a new forward section was added. She was the first ship equipped with an offshore petroleum discharge system (OPDS), allowing her to supply petroleum products to forces ashore by pumping it directly over the shore instead of having to deliver it in a port.
The U.S. Navy acquired ''Shenandoah'' on 10 October 1964, and delivered her to Keystone Shipping Company on 11 December 1965. Keystone Shipping then chartered the ship to the Navy's Military Seas Transportation Service (MSTS), which later became the Military Sealift Command (MSC), on a bareboat basis, with Keystone Shipping providing the ship and MSTS providing crew and operating expenses. ''Shenandoah'' operated with a civilian crew in this manner until the MSC purchased her on 12 January 1976. The Navy then designated the ship T-AO-181 and renamed her USNS ''Potomac'', making her the sixth U.S. Navy ship of the name.
In MSC service, ''Potomac'' continued to operate with a civilian crew. The oiler transported bulk petroleum products to the United States armed forces deployed overseas in the Pacific, and on 30 September 1978 was reclassified as a transport oiler and redesignated T-AOT-181.
On 26 September 1983, ''Potomac'' was taken out of MSC service and on 4 March 1984 was transferred to the Ready Reserve Force (RRF), becoming SS ''Potomac''.
In 1990, ''Potomac'', operated by Bay Ship Management, owned by the Maritime Administration, and under charter to the Navy, was transferred to the Maritime Prepositioning Force (MPF) and spent more than 10 years stationed at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. During this time she participated in sorties, exercises, and training activities, assisted in a humanitarian food relief effort for Rwanda, assisted forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and earned the U.S. Navy's "E" for excellence ship award during convoy exercises in the Indian Ocean.
SS ''Potomac'' left Diego Garcia and the MPF in 2000 and was transferred back to the RRF. She was transferred to the Maritime Administration for lay up in the National Defense Reserve Fleet at Beaumont, Texas. In 2006 she was downrated from the Ready Reserve Force and placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet.
==See also==

*USNS ''Potomac'' (T-AO-150)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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