Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

USNS Rose Knot (T AGM 14)

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Name
  
USNS Rose Knot

Completed
  
May 1945

Length
  
103 m

Tons burthen
  
5.525 million kg

Namesake
  
A name retained

In service
  
c. 1958

Tonnage
  
3.054 million kg

Builder
  
Beaumont

USNS Rose Knot (T-AGM-14) wwwnavsourceorgarchives095309531401jpg

Laid down
  
date unknown, as a type (C1-M-AV1) hull, MC hull 2466

Acquired
  
by the U.S. Navy in 1964

USNS Rose Knot (T-AGM-14) was a missile range instrumentation ship which operated as USAFS Rose Knot on the U.S. Air Force's Eastern Test Range during the late 1950s and early 1960s. Rose Knot operated under an Air Force contract with Pan American Airways Guided Missile Range Division headquartered in Cocoa Beach, Florida.

Contents

Rose Knot, assigned to the South Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean area, provided the Air Force with metric data on intercontinental ballistic missiles launched from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (CCAFS) in Florida.

Rose Knot functioned as a telemetry station located off the coast of Africa at 5N 10W for Mercury Atlas 6, the mission in which John Glenn became the first American to orbit earth. For the Gemini Program, it served as a primary tracking station (call sign RKV) off the coast of Peru.

Rose Knot operated in the intercontinental ballistic missile re-entry area near Ascension Island, and was home-ported out of Recife, Brazil.

Acquisition by the Navy

Rose Knot was acquired from the U.S. Air Force by the U.S. Navy in 1964.

Operational data

Operational data while on U.S. Navy service on this vessel is lacking at DANFS.

Inactivation

Rose Knot was struck from the Navy List 9 October 1969, and was disposed of by MARAD on 28 June 1977.

References

USNS Rose Knot (T-AGM-14) Wikipedia