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USS ''Windlass'' (ARS(D)-4), a Gypsy-class salvage lifting vessel of the United States Navy, was originally conceived as ''LSM-552'' and laid down on 27 August 1945 at Houston, Texas, by Brown Shipbuilding Corporation. Launched on 7 December 1945; and commissioned on 9 April 1946 in Houston at the Tennessee Coal and Iron Docks, Lieutenant Commander Rodney F. Snipes, USNR, in command. ==1945-1948== Following further alterations and trials, ''Windlass'' shifted to Galveston, Texas, on 13 December, en route to her home port, Charleston, South Carolina. The salvage ship operated locally out of Charleston into May 1947 when she shifted to Norfolk, Virginia in May to conduct a towing exercise with her sister ship, . The two ships departed the tidewater area for Bayonne, New Jersey, on 18 June, before they shifted to Narragansett Bay to salvage the tug — sunk in a collision in December 1946. ''Windlass'' and ''Salvager'' pooled their efforts to lift the sunken yard tug from 130 feet of water. One body still on board the sunken tug was recovered and taken ashore for burial. ''Windlass'' and her sister ship returned to Bayonne, New Jersey on 28 July, but sailed for Mexico early the next month. Arriving at Veracruz on 15 August, ''Windlass'' assisted ''Salvager'' in raising two sunken Mexican barges in a two-week operation. Both salvage vessels then headed northward, bound for Bayonne. After touching at Key West, Florida, and Norfolk, they conducted exercises in Chesapeake Bay before they reached Bayonne early in September. On 10 September, ''Windlass'', in company with ''Salvager'', began searching for the sunken patrol craft ''YP-387''. She located the wreck and began salvage operations while ''Salvager'' returned to Bayonne, apparently to get necessary equipment. ''Windlass'' apparently shifted briefly to Norfolk, for the same reason before both heavy-lifting salvage vessels returned to the site of the sunken YP off Hereford, New Jersey, on 1 October. Two days later, they placed demolition charges in the sunken "Yippie boat" and blew her up to prevent her from being a hazard to navigation. ''Windlass'' and her sister ship then returned to Bayonne. Later that month, though, ''Windlass'' and ''Salvager'' again went to sea via Charleston, this time to 31°19'N/80°58'W, to search for ''YTB-274''. Aided by a blimp, the two salvage vessels streamed sweep wires and eventually located the sunken wreck of the YTB on 21 October. ''Windlass'' and ''Salvager'' went into three-point moors over the sunken ship and commenced salvage operations. They recovered one body on 27 October before they blew up the wreck on 2 November to prevent its becoming a navigational menace. After exercises on their return voyage, the two salvage vessels made port at Bayonne on 3 November. ''Windlass'' underwent a regular overhaul at the Charleston Naval Shipyard in April 1948, during which time she received additional radio and electronic gear and heavier anchors. The yard also reinforced the hull and added various engineering features. Upon completion of those alterations, ''Windlass'' returned to her home berth at Bayonne in June and remained there until 5 August, when she and ''Salvager'' sailed for Norfolk. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「USS Windlass (ARS(D)-4)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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