Trisha Shetty (Editor)

USS Jaguar (IX 120)

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Commissioned
  
15 December 1943

Fate
  
transferred to Panama

Draught
  
28 ft 4 in (8.64 m)

Length
  
135 m

Displacement
  
3.325 million kg

Decommissioned
  
10 June 1946

Beam
  
56 ft 11 in (17.35 m)

Launched
  
20 November 1943

Weight
  
3,724 tons

Draft
  
8.64 m

Laid down
  
18 October 1943, as SS Charles T. Yerkes

Uss jaguar ix 120 top 7 facts


USS Jaguar (IX-120), an Armadillo-class tanker designated an unclassified miscellaneous vessel, was the only ship of the United States Navy to be named for the jaguar, a large leopard-like mammal of wooded regions, typically yellowish brown marked with dark spots. Her keel was laid down as Charles T. Yerkes under Maritime Commission contract (Z-ET1-S-C3) by the California Shipbuilding Corporation, in San Pedro, California. She was launched on 20 November 1943, renamed Jaguar 27 October, acquired by the Navy 15 December 1943 and commissioned that day with Lieutenant Commander T. E. Hammond in command.

After shakedown out of San Pedro, California, Jaguar departed 19 January 1944 for duty as a floating storage ship in the Pacific islands. She arrived New Caledonia on 21 February via Wellington, New Zealand, and from there she transported vital diesel oil, aviation gasoline, and minesweeping gear to the New Hebrides and Solomon Islands. Jaguar returned to the West Coast early in 1946 and arrived Norfolk, Virginia, via the Panama Canal on 20 April. She decommissioned there 10 June 1946, and was turned over to the Maritime Commission. After serving as a tanker with various American lines under the name of Harry Peer in 1948 and Tini in 1949, the ship was transferred to Panamanian flag in February 1951.

References

USS Jaguar (IX-120) Wikipedia