Name USS Pasig Acquired 22 January 1943 Decommissioned 25 September 1943 Construction started 1917 Length 157 m | Laid down 1917 Commissioned 22 January 1943 Struck 11 October 1943 Launched 1917 Builder Newport News Shipbuilding | |
USS Pasig (AO-89) was a fleet replenishment oiler in the service of the United States Navy. The lone ship in her class, she was the first of only two U.S. Naval vessels to be named for the Pasig River which flows through Manila on the Philippine Island of Luzon.
Service history
Originally built in 1917 by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Company of Newport News, Virginia, she served the Atlantic Refining Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as SS J. C. Donnell. Acquired by the US Navy through the War Shipping Administration on 22 January 1943, and commissioned the same day, as USS Pasig (AO–89).
Pasig was intended for use as a storage tank in the South Pacific near New Caledonia, but was replaced by concrete barges. She decommissioned and was delivered to WSA on 25 September 1943, and was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 11 October 1943.
Returned to her owner, Pasig reverted to her original name and served as SS J.C. Donnell until scrapped in 1947.