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・ USS Exploit
・ USS Exploit (AM-440)
・ USS Exploit (AM-95)
・ USS Express No. 4 (SP-745)
・ USS Extractor (ARS-15)
・ USS Extricate (ARS-16)
・ USS Exultant
・ USS Exultant (AM-441)
・ USS Exultant (AMc-79)
・ USS F-1 (SS-20)
・ USS F-2 (SS-21)
・ USS F-3 (SS-22)
・ USS F-4 (SS-23)
・ USS F. J. Luckenbach (ID-2160)
・ USS F. Mansfield and Sons Co. (SP-691)
USS Facility (AM-233)
・ USS Fahkee (1862)
・ USS Fahrion (FFG-22)
・ USS Fair (DE-35)
・ USS Fair American (1812)
・ USS Fairfax (DD-93)
・ USS Fairfax County (LST-1193)
・ USS Fairfield
・ USS Fairfield (1828)
・ USS Fairfield (AK-178)
・ USS Fairplay (1859)
・ USS Fairview (EPCE(R)-850)
・ USS Fairy (1861)
・ USS Falcon
・ USS Falcon (1846)


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USS Facility (AM-233) : ウィキペディア英語版
USS Facility (AM-233)

USS ''Facility'' (AM-233) was an built for the United States Navy during World War II. The ship was ordered and laid down as USS ''PCE-906'' but was renamed and reclassified before her June 1944 launch as ''Facility'' (AM-233). After earning three battle stars for service in the Pacific during World War II, she was decommissioned in September 1946 and placed in reserve. While in reserve, ''Facility'' was reclassified as MSF-233 in February 1955 but never reactivated. In October 1962, she was sold to the Mexican Navy and renamed ARM ''DM-04''. Her ultimate fate is not reported in secondary sources; she may have been out of service by April 1973 when another member of the ''Admirable'' class was acquired by the Mexican Navy and given the name ''DM-04''.
== U.S. Navy career ==
Initially named ''PCE-906'' and classed as a , the ship was laid down on 29 March 1944 at the Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company of Seattle. Renamed ''Facility'' and converted to an , she was launched by sponsor Miss Clara Lee Davis on 22 June 1944. After completion, she was commissioned on 29 November 1944, with Lieutenant C. R. Jennette, USNR, in command.
''Facility'' underwent shakedown training and proceeded to San Pedro, California, and thence to Pearl Harbor, arriving on 17 February. After escorting the minelayer to Eniwetok early in March, ''Facility'' began sweeping under the command of Task Group TG 52.5 preliminary to the assault landings on Okinawa on 1 April. She continued to support the operation until damaged by a near miss during a heavy suicide attack and was forced to put into Ulithi on 22 April for repairs. She resumed sweeping operations, and, after replenishing supplies in Buckner Bay, joined Task Group TG 52.4 to participate with TG 52.3 in clearing the approaches to Nagasaki, Japan.
Late in September she swept the Bungo Suido and other areas of the Inland Sea. The rest of the year was occupied in overhaul at Hiro Wan and in sweeping the Van Dieman Straits.

In the first two months of 1946 ''Facility'' journeyed from Sasebo to Saipan, Eniwetok, and Pearl Harbor before making her first return to the States. She underwent overhaul at San Pedro, California, transited the Panama Canal on 22 March, and on to Galveston, Texas. While she remained in reserve at Galveston, she was reclassified as a Fleet Minesweeper (Steel Hull), MSF-233 on 7 February 1955. She was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 1 May 1962 and sold to Mexico on 2 October. USS ''Facility'' received three battle stars for World War II service.

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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