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USS Ariel (AF-22)
Cargo ship of the United States Navy
Cargo ship of the United States Navy
| Field | Value | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| section1 | {{Infobox ship/image | |||||
| image | USS Ariel (AF-22) underway, circa in 1942.jpg | |||||
| section2 | {{Infobox ship/career | |||||
| name | **Segovia* (1931) | |||||
| namesake | Ariel in Shakespeare's *The Tempest* | |||||
| owner | *United Mail Steamship Co (1933–37) | |||||
| operator | *United Fruit Company (1933–42, 1946–1957) | |||||
| flag | ||||||
| registry | New York | |||||
| ordered | August 1930 | |||||
| builder | Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co | |||||
| yard_number | 354 | |||||
| laid_down | 9 March 1931 | |||||
| launched | *15 August 1931 | |||||
| acquired | *Delivered: 24 February 1933 | |||||
| maiden_voyage | 2 March 1933 | |||||
| in_service | 1933 | |||||
| out_of_service | 1969 | |||||
| identification | *U.S. Official Number: 232139 | |||||
| fate | Scrapped 1969 | |||||
| notes | Name *Ariel* struck from Navy list 3 July 1946 | |||||
| section3 | {{Infobox ship/characteristics | |||||
| header_caption | ||||||
| class | *"Mail class" passenger/cargo (United Fruit) | |||||
| tonnage | , | |||||
| displacement | *7068 LT light | |||||
| *{{convert | 11875 | LT | t | 0 | abbr | on}} full load |
| length | *447 ft (LOA) | |||||
| *{{cvt | 415.4 | ft | m | 1 | abbr | on}} (Registry) |
| beam | 60.2 ft | |||||
| draft | 26 ft | |||||
| depth | 24 ft | |||||
| power | 4 oil fired Babcock & Wilcox header-type boilers, 350 psi 230° superheat driving GE generator sets for main propulsion and auxiliary power | |||||
| propulsion | 2 GE 4,200 kw, 5,500 hp at 125 rpm, twin 15 ft, 3 blade screws | |||||
| speed | *17.5 knots (Contract service speed) | |||||
| *{{convert | 18.5 | kn | lk | in}} | ||
| capacity | *Commercial: | |||||
| crew | Commercial: 113 | |||||
| complement | Navy: 238 | |||||
| armament | *1 × [5"/38 caliber gun](5-38-caliber-gun)s |
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Peten (1932–37)
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Jamaica (1937–42, 1946–1957)
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Ariel (1942–46)
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Blumenthal (1957–1969)
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United Fruit Company United Fruit Company (1937– )
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Union-Partenreederei ( –1969)
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United States Navy (1941–46)
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Union-Partenreederei (1957–1969)
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Note: Ship christened Peten 15 August 1932, anniversary of original christening, after fire, rebuilding and renaming.
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Navy: 24 March 1942 ( bareboat charter through WSA)
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Signal KDCY
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Navy:
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11875 LT full load
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415.4 ft (Registry)
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18.5 kn
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Passengers: design 113, postwar 95
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196000 cuft
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3 × 3"/50 caliber guns
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12 × 20 mm guns USS Ariel (AF-22) was the United Fruit Company cargo and passenger liner Peten, renamed Jamaica in 1937, that served as a United States Navy in World War II.
As Segovia it was launched on 15 August 1931 the same day as , both ships christened by First Lady Lou Henry Hoover using water gathered from Central American rivers. Segovia burned at the fitting out pier and was almost completely destroyed. It was rebuilt under a different hull number and renamed Peten by Mrs. Hoover on the anniversary of the first, 15 August 1932. Peten was delivered to the company's United Mail Steamship Company subsidiary in February 1933. The ship served on the company's Atlantic routes between New York and Panama. In 1937 the ship was transferred to the direct ownership of the parent company and renamed Jamaica.
In March 1942 Jamaica was delivered to the War Shipping Administration (WSA) under bareboat charter and delivered to the Navy under sub bareboat charter to be commissioned Ariel named after the "airy and playful spirit" Ariel in William Shakespeare's play The Tempest. 21 June 1946 Ariel was de-commissioned and returned to WSA for re-conversion as Jamaica to commercial service. The ship was returned to United Fruit in December 1947 and operated for that company until sold to a German company in 1957 to be renamed Blumenthal. The ship was scrapped in 1969.
Construction
The Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company of Newport News, Virginia built the ship as Peten for United Fruit Company's United Mail Steamship Company subsidiary. Peten was one of six UFC sister ships with General Electric turbo-electric transmission ordered in August 1930 to be built under the Merchant Marine Act of 1928. The other ships were Talamanca, first of the six to be launched,See Talamanca for additional design background. and from Newport News Shipbuilding and , and from Bethlehem Shipbuilding at Quincy, Massachusetts. The company designated the ships as its "Mail class" due to their design to meet requirements for mail carriage subsidies.
The basic design, implemented in Talamanca and the Newport News ships and with small modifications in the Bethlehem ships, was a ship of 446 ft overall length, 430 ft length on 24 ft waterline, 415 ft length between perpendiculars, 60 ft molded beam, 36 ft depth molded to upper deck, 24 ft molded maximum draft, 11,345 tons displacement at maximum draft, , , 196000 cuft cargo capacity, 1,450 tons of fuel oil and 626 tons fresh water capacity.
The prospective name for the ship had been Segovia, keel laid 9 March 1931 as hull #345, with launch on 15 August 1931. The launch was on the same day as Talamanca (hull #344) in a ceremony in which First Lady Lou Henry Hoover christened the ships with water gathered from Central American rivers. Segovia was almost completely destroyed by fire at the outfitting pier as it neared completion in December 1931. In the early morning of 20 December fire in one of the holds spread into the passenger areas. Water fighting the fires caused the ship to roll onto her starboard side.See photo of ship, still smoking. The ship was rebuilt as hull #354 and christened 15 August 1932 as Peten, again by First Lady Hoover. Peten was delivered on 24 February 1933. The company's ships were named for mountain ranges, cities and provinces in Central and South America with Petén being a political region in Guatemala.
The ship was registered with U.S. Official Number 232139, signal KDCY at , , registry length of 415.4 ft, 60.2 ft beam, 24 ft depth, 10,500 horsepower, 113 crew with home port of New York and owner as United Mail Steamship Company.
Commercial service
On 2 March 1933 Peten made her maiden voyage from New York to Caribbean ports. Peten, Quirigua and Veragua operating on a New York, Havana, Kingston, Cristobal, Limón and return to New York omitting Kingston as a port of call. The other three, Antigua, Talamanca and Chiriqui meanwhile operated on a San Francisco to Balboa route with return to San Francisco via Puerto Armuelles and Los Angeles. An intercoastal service for passengers and cargo was formed by the ships connecting in Panama. That schedule remained through 1936. In January 1939 all the ships operated on the New York to Panama route.
In 1937 she was transferred to United Fruit's direct ownership and renamed Jamaica.
Post-war service
Jamaica returned to liner work for United Fruit but later was sold to new owners. In April 1957 the ship was converted to a refrigerator type. Jamaica was sold in December 1957 to Union-Partenreederei T/S of Bremen, Germany, which also acquired her United Fruit sister ship Chiriqui. Union-Partenreederei changed Jamaicas name to D/S Blumenthal. She was scrapped in 1969 in Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
Footnotes
References
Bibliography
References
- (January 1932). "Important Addition to Pacific Shipping". J.S. Hines.
- (May 1947). "S.S. ''Quirigua'' Rejoins the Great White Fleet". Miller Freeman Publications of California.
- (July 1947). "Cruise Queen Conversion (Bethlehem Advertisement noting particulars)". J.S. Hines.
- McKinnon, H. C.. (September 1931). "American Shipbuilding: Twin Launching". J.S. Hines.
- Cogar, William B.. (2020). "Chesapeake Bay Shipwrecks". Arcadia Publishing.
- (January 1932). "Fire on Segovia". J.S. Hines.
- (June 1932). "Naming the Great White Fleet". J.S. Hines.
- (1934). "Merchant Vessels of the United States, Year ended June 30, 1934". Department of Commerce, Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection.
- Larsson, Björn. (June 22, 2019). "United Fruit Company". Maritime Timetable Images.
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