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Index - Part-2
Agawam
T1-MT-M1
Patapsco Class Gasoline Tanker:
Laid down, 7 September 1942, as a Maritime Commission type (T1-MT-M1) tanker hull, under a Maritime
Commission contract at Cargill Inc., Savage, MN.
Launched, 6 May 1943
Commissioned USS Agawam (AOG-6), 18 December 1943, at New Orleans, LA.
Decommissioned, 31 January 1957, at San Diego, CA.
Transferred to the Maritime Commission for lay up in the National Defense Reserve Fleet, Olympia, WA.
Struck from the Naval Register, 1 July 1960
Final Disposition, sold for scrapping in October 1975 to Levin Metals.
( See photos below )
Specifications:
Displacement 1,783 t.(lt) 4,130 t.(fl)
Length 310' 9"
Beam 48' 6"
Draft 15' 8"
Speed 15.5 kts.
Complement 131
Armament four 3"/50 dual purpose guns, twelve 20mm guns
Cargo Capacity 2,210 DWT
Propulsion four GE diesel electric engines, twin shafts, 3,300hp

View the Agawam (AOG-6)
DANFS history entry located on the Hyperwar US Navy in WWII web site.

The Miramar Ship Index for "AGAWAM"
IDNo:
6114669
Year:
1943
Name:
AGAWAM
Launch Date:
06.05.1943
Type:
Tanker
Date of completion:
18.12.1943
Flag:
USA
Keel:
07.09.1942

DWT:
2638
Yard No:
2
Length overall:
94.7
Ship Design:
T1-MT-M1
LPP:
89.0
Country of build:
USA
Beam:
14.8
Builder:
Cargill
Material of build:
Location of yard:
Savage
Number of screws/Mchy/Speed(kn):
2DE-14.5

Subsequent History:
-

Disposal Data:
 Scrapped in October 1975 to Levin Metals.

History :
ON
LR/IMO
ID
Year
Name
Tons
Change
Registered Owner
AOG-6
6114669
1943
AGAWAM
2762
-
U.S. Navy

Agawam (AOG-6) II
A small river in eastern Massachusetts which empties into the Altantic at the northwestern end of Buzzards Bay; and a town in Hampden County, Mass. Agawam is an Indian word meaning lowland, marsh, or meadow.

The second Agawam (AOG-6) was laid down on 7 September 1942 at Savage, Minn., by Cargill, Inc.; launched on 6 May 1943; sponsored by Mrs. George F. Jacobs; and commissioned at New Orleans, La., on 18 December 1943, Lt. John W. Foster in command.
After a period of alterations and fitting out, the gasoline tanker left Galveston, Tex., on 24 January 1944, bound for the Pacific. She arrived at Espiritu Santo on 1 March and continued on to Tulagi. As a member of Service Squadron (ServRon) 8, Agawam was based at that island in the Solomons for the next 10 months servicing Allied facilities located throughout the island group.
In September, Agawam began a 27-day availability at Espiritu Santo and resumed her operations at Tulagi on 25 October. The gasoline tanker was detached from ServRon 8 on 28 January 1945 and got underway for Lingayen Gulf, Philippines. Upon her arrivalthere on 1 March, she was assigned to Service Force, 7th Fleet, and for the next month engaged in routine operations between Manila, Subic Bay, and Lingayen Gulf.
On 1 April, Agawam was transferred, on loan, to the Army for the support of its land-based forces. She delivered aviation and motor gasoline to Army forces for two months in lower Lingayen Gulf and subsequently performed the same services at Manila for three months.
A fortnight after Japan capitulated, the tanker was ordered to Tokyo. Routed via Okinawa, she reached Yokohama on 18 Sep-tember and spent the next month there fueling Army installations ashore. On 25 October, the ship reported to Shanghai, China, for fueling operations at bases located along the Huang-p'u River. She got underway to return to Japan on 26 November and moored at Nagasaki on the 28th.
The gasoline tanker remained actively engaged in logistic support of the occupation forces in Japan through January 1946. The ship was then returned to Navy custody and got underway on the 28th for the voyage back to the United States.
Upon her arrival at San Pedro, Calif., Agawam entered a shipyard for overhaul. Back in top shape, she sailed for Guam on 1 July and served as a station ship at that island until June 1949. During this period she made voyages to various ports in Japan; to Saipan; to Iwo Jima; to Shanghai, China; and to Truk.
In June 1949, Agawam switched her base of operations to Pearl Harbor. She carried gasoline to Alaska and various islands in the Central Pacific. On 13 November 1953, the tanker sailed for the Philippine Islands and served in that archipelago through April 1954.
Agawam then returned to Pearl Harbor and continued operating from that base supporting American installations throughout the Central Pacific. On 22 November 1956, Agawam left Hawaii, bound for San Diego, Calif. Upon her arrival, she began a preinactivation overhaul. Agawam was placed out of commission, in reserve, at San Diego on 31 January 1957. Her name was struck from the Navy list on 1 July 1960, and the ship was transferred to the Maritime Administration, and she was placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet and laid up at Olympia, Wash. She was sold to Levin Metals in October 1975, presumably for scrapping.

PCU (Pre-Commissioning Unit) Agawam (AOG-6) on the building ways,
prior to launching, at Cargill Inc., Savage, MN., 6 May 1943.
   
USS Agawam (AOG-6) underway, date and place unknown.
 
USS Agawam (AOG-6) passing under the Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, CA., 1951.

 
PCU Agawam (AOG-6) at the fitting out dock, Cargill Inc., Savage, MN.
View is aft-midship from the forecastle deck, 4 September 1943.
 
PCU Agawam (AOG-6) at Mississippi in River Lock No. 15, in tow of the Federal Barge Line's
Towboat Huck Finn, 12 November 1943. while enroute from her builder's yard at Savage, MN. to
New Orleans, LA.
( Photo thanks to John Fitzgerald, Archivist, USACE, Rock Island District )
 USS Agawam (AOG-6) anchored, date and location unknown.
 USS Agawam (AOG-6) anchored, date and location unknown.
 USS Agawam (AOG-6) underway, date and location unknown.
 USS Agawam (AOG-6) anchored, date and location unknown.