Name USS Chiron Commissioned 23 March 1945 In service 1945 Launched 10 March 1945 Weight 4,166 tons Draft 3.4 m | Laid down 16 December 1944 Decommissioned 20 February 1946 Construction started 16 December 1944 Length 100 m Displacement 3.719 million kg Beam 15 m | |
Builder Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. |
Uss chiron agp 18 top 5 facts
USS Chiron was a Portunus-class Motor Torpedo Boat Tender which saw brief service with the United States Navy during World War II. Laid down as Landing Ship, Tank LST-1133 by Chicago Bridge and Iron Company on 16 December 1944, she was launched on 10 March 1945 and placed into reduced commission on 23 March 1945. On 17 April 1945, she was decommissioned for her conversion into a Motor Torpedo Tender. With the conversion taking place in Baltimore, Maryland, it was complete by 18 September 1945, and she was recommissioned into active service as USS Chiron (AGP-18) with LCDR. Paul L. Mangold, USNR, in command. The ship had a brief naval career, spending only 5 months and 27 days in naval service. She was decommissioned on 20 February 1946, and on 28 March 1946 she was struck from the Naval Register.
Contents
- Uss chiron agp 18 top 5 facts
- Transfer to merchant service
- Ship Commissioning Officers
- Ship awards
- References
Transfer to merchant service
On 19 May 1947, she was sold to Argentina and placed into Merchant Service by 1948 under the name M/V Altamar, reflagged as Argentinian. 22 years later, on 30 March 1960, she was lost at sea by unknown cause while carrying grain from Cabedello to Belem. The ships wreck was found on Manoel Luis Reef, at 0°46′S 44°20′W.