USS Bougainville at Pearl Harbor, circa 1945
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History | |
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United States | |
Name |
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Namesake |
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Ordered | as a Type S4-S2-BB3 hull, MCE hull 1137[1] |
Awarded | 18 June 1942 |
Builder | Kaiser Shipyards |
Laid down | 3 March 1944 |
Launched | 16 May 1944 |
Commissioned | 18 June 1944 |
Decommissioned | 30 November 1946 |
Stricken | 1 May 1960 |
Identification | Hull symbol: CVE-100 |
Honors and awards | 2 Battle stars |
Fate | Sold for scrap, 29 August 1960 |
General characteristics [2] | |
Class and type | Casablanca-class escort carrier |
Displacement |
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Length | |
Beam |
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Draft | 20 ft 9 in (6.32 m) (max) |
Installed power |
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Propulsion | |
Speed | 19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph) |
Range | 10,240 nmi (18,960 km; 11,780 mi) at 15 kn (28 km/h; 17 mph) |
Complement |
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Armament |
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Aircraft carried | 27 |
Aviation facilities | |
Service record | |
Part of: |
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USS Bougainville (CVE-100) was the forty-sixth of fifty Casablanca-class escort carrier built for the United States Navy during World War II. She was named after the Bougainville campaign, a prolonged action against Japanese forces entrenched in the island of Bougainville off Papua New Guinea . The ship was launched in May 1944, and commissioned in June, and served as a replenishment carrier in support of the invasion of Iwo Jima and the Battle of Okinawa. She was decommissioned in November 1946, when she was mothballed in the Pacific Reserve Fleet. Ultimately, she was sold for scrapping in August 1960.