USS Portunus (ARC-1)

History
United States
Name: LSM–275
Laid down: 1 August 1944
Launched: 11 September 1944
Commissioned: 6 October 1944
Decommissioned: 30 April 1959
Renamed: Portunus 1953
Struck: 1 May 1959
Fate: transferred to Portugal, 16 November 1959
General characteristics
Class and type: LSM-1-class landing ship medium
Displacement: 1,095 tons (f.)
Length: 203 ft 6 in (62.03 m)
Beam: 34 ft 6 in (10.52 m)
Draft: 7 ft 4 in (2.24 m)
Speed: 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph)
Complement: 59
Armament:
  • 1 × 40 mm gun
  • 4 × 20 mm guns

USS Portunus (ARC-1) was an LSM-1-class landing ship medium acquired by the U.S. Navy for use during World War II as a landing craft for troops and, later, as a cable repair ship.

Portunus was laid down by the Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Co., Newark, New Jersey, as LSM–275 1 August 1944; launched 11 September 1944; and commissioned 6 October 1944.

World War II service

After shakedown off Norfolk, Virginia, LSM–275 steamed for Key West, Florida, the Panama Canal, and San Diego, California, before reaching Pearl Harbor 28 January 1945.

Landing troops in battle areas

After a trip to Guam she steamed from Pearl Harbor in task unit TU 51.13.4 via Eniwetok and Saipan to Okinawa to land troops and supplies on the “last stepping stone” to Japan. Departing in TU 51.29.22, 25 April while the battle for Okinawa was still going on, she steamed via Saipan to Ulithi, arriving 5 May. Departing 28 June she then put into Tulagi, the Russells, Eniwetok, Guam, and Saipan, before reaching Pearl Harbor 19 August, 5 days after the war’s end.

On 4 December she departed Pearl Harbor for San Diego. She steamed between San Diego, San Pedro, and San Francisco during the first half of 1946, then reported to Com 19th Fleet at San Diego 18 September; underwent inactivation overhaul; and decommissioned 21 April 1947 at San Pedro.

Recommissioned as a cable laying ship

Ordered activated in 1951, LSM–275 was redesignated as a cable laying and repair ship ARC–1 on 14 December, and recommissioned 2 July 1952. She operated off California ports for the next 11 months, then, on 1 June 1953, got underway for the U.S. East Coast. The ship was named Portunus 13 July 1953. Attached to the 3rd Naval District, she laid cable off Cape May, New Jersey, and off Bermuda before conducting ocean bottom surveys and cable operations off Colombia’s Atlantic and Pacific coasts, 13 October to 31 October.

Returning to New York, Portunus underwent overhaul and on 8 March 1954 resumed cable operations, first in the approaches to New York, off Sandy Hook, New Jersey, then off Bermuda. From 1955 to 1959 she continued to lay cable, off Key West, off Sandy Hook, off Bermuda, off Wood Island, Maine, off Nantucket Island, in the Narragansett area, and off Little Creek, Virginia. During this period she continued to base at the New York Shipyard, Brooklyn, and to periodically pick up cable at Newington, New Hampshire.

Decommissioning

She decommissioned at New York 30 April 1959, and her name was struck from the Navy List 1 May 1959. She was transferred to Portugal under the Military Assistance Program; delivered on 16 November 1959; and commissioned 18 November as Medusa (A 5214). Into 1970 she served in the Portuguese Navy.

Military awards and honors

Portunus earned one battle star for World War II service

See also

References

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.

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