Neosho-class oiler explained

The Neosho-class oiler was a class of oilers of the United States Navy. They were in commission between 1954 and 1992.

Development

Neosho-class oilers were built in the 1950s by two shipyards, Bethlehem's Fore River Shipyard and New York Shipbuilding Corporation. The lead ship, USS Neosho, entered service in 1954. Her sister ships were commissioned in the following years.

In the mid-1970s, the Military Sealift Command took over the vessels, and they were redesignated from USS to USNS. The Neosho-class and Mispillion-class oilers were replaced by the Henry J. Kaiser class, with its lead ship, USS Henry J. Kaiser, entering service in 1986.[1] [2]

Ships in the class

Neosho class!!Name!Builder!Laid down!Launched!Commissioned!Decommissioned
AO-143 / T-AO-143NeoshoBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation2 September 195210 November 195324 September 195425 May 1978
AO-144 / T-AO-144MississinewaNew York Shipbuilding Corporation4 May 19532 June 195418 January 195515 November 1976
AO-145 / T-AO-145Hassayampa13 July 195312 September 195415 April 19552 October 1991
AO-146 / T-AO-146Kawishiwi5 October 195311 December 19546 July 1955September 1992
AO-147 / T-AO-147Truckee 21 December 195310 March 195518 November 195530 January 1980
AO-148 / T-AO-148Ponchatoula1 March 19549 July 195512 January 19565 September 1980

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Neosho Class Naval Fleet Oiler . 2021-06-21 . 2021-06-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210624202608/http://navy.memorieshop.com/Neosho/Class.html . dead .
  2. Web site: AO-143 Neosho. 2021-06-21. www.globalsecurity.org.