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History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Name | USS Paloverde |
Namesake | paloverde tree |
Builder | Snow Shipyards, Inc., Rockland, Maine |
Laid down | 19 July 1943 |
Launched | 2 September 1944 |
Sponsored by | Miss Patricia Adams |
Commissioned | 17 December 1944 as USS ATA-215 |
Decommissioned | March 1946 |
Reclassified | net laying ship (AN-65), 20 January 1944; auxiliary fleet tug (ATA-215), 15 May 1944 |
Stricken | December 1948 |
Fate | Sunk off Newfoundland, 15 April 1963 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | ATA-214-class tug |
Displacement | 1,275 tons |
Length | 194 ft 6 in (59.28 m) |
Beam | 34 ft 7 in (10.54 m) |
Draft | 14 ft 1 in (4.29 m) |
Propulsion | diesel-electric engines, single screw |
Speed | 12.1 knots |
Complement | 57 officers and enlisted |
Armament | Two 40 mm gun mounts |
USS ATA-215 was an ATA-214-class tug of the United States Navy built near the end of World War II. Originally laid down as Paloverde (YN-86), a net tender of the Ailanthus class, she was redesignated as AN-65, a net layer, before launch. Before completion, the name Paloverde was cancelled and the ship was named ATA-215, an unnamed auxiliary ocean tug. Post-war she was assigned to the Finn Ronne Antarctic Expedition where she became stuck in the ice for 12 months before returning to the United States for decommissioning.