YOG–42 explained

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Ship Image:File:Yog42a-139.jpg
Ship Caption:USS YOG-42 in May 1943
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Ship Owner:United States Navy
Ship Operator:United States Navy
Ship Builder:Concrete Ship Constructors, National City, California
Ship Yard Number:5
Ship Laid Down:December 6, 1942
Ship Launched:March 23, 1943
Ship Acquired:May 23, 1943
Ship Out Of Service:1949
Ship Identification:YOG-42, YOGN-42
Ship Fate:Beached on Lānaʻi, Hawaiian Islands, 1949–1950
Ship Class:Non-self-propelled Maritime Commission type (B7-A2) barge hull (MC 638)
Ship Type:Tanker
Ship Displacement:5,410 t.(lt) 6,600 t.(fl)
Ship Length:375feet
Ship Beam:56feet
Ship Draft:26.6feet
Ship Propulsion:None
Ship Crew:Approximately 22
Ship Notes:Armament four Oerlikon 20 mm cannon as built
USS YOG-42 was a gasoline barge built by Concrete Ship Constructors, in National City, California. She was launched on March 23, 1943. Acquired by the United States Navy on May 23, 1943. She was assigned to the Asiatic-Pacific Theater, and survived the war. Re-designated YOGN-42 in May 1946, she was struck from the Naval Register on August 15, 1949. Sometime the next year, she was intentionally beached on the north coast of Lānaʻi in the Hawaiian Islands.

Construction

USS YOG-42 was built by Concrete Ship Constructors, in National City, California as Concrete No. 5[1] a non-self-propelled, Maritime Commission, type B7-A2, barge- hull (MC 638).[2] She was laid down on December 6, 1942, and launched on March 23, 1943. Acquired by the United States Navy on May 23, 1943,[3] USS YOG-42 was assigned to the Asiatic-Pacific Theater.[4]

Service in World War II

Tug, towing gasoline barge YOG-42, was sunk by Japanese submarine I-39, 150 miles east of Espiritu Santo on September 12, 1943. YOG-42 was undamaged and recovered by . On December 31, 1943, reported 22 men assigned to YOG-42. [5] YOG-42 survived the Pacific War and continued to supply gasoline throughout the conflict.

Shipwreck

Re-designated YOGN-42 in May 1946, she was struck from the Naval Register on August 15, 1949. Sometime the next year, she was intentionally beached on the north coast of Lānaʻi in the Hawaiian Islands, where she can be seen to this day.[6] The United States Navy has recommended the wreck of YOGN-42 for protected status in the National Register of Historic Places for cultural preservation as a Lānaʻi tourist attraction.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Log. July 1943.
  2. Web site: Yard Oiler (YOG) Photo Index.
  3. Web site: The Log. July 1943.
  4. Web site: Yard Oiler (YOG) Photo Index.
  5. Web site: Page 12 WWII Navy Muster Rolls.
  6. Web site: The Story of Lanai's Fascinating Shipwreck Beach. 2 January 2018.
  7. https://www.history.navy.mil/content/dam/nhhc/research/underwater-archaeology/PDF/UA_ResourcesMgt.pdf pages 368, 373-374