Skip to main content
Tags
Related Content
Topic
Document Type
  • Ship History
Wars & Conflicts
File Formats
Location of Archival Materials
Karin

(AF-33: dp. 3,139; l. 338'6"; b. 50'; dr. 21'1"; s. 11.5 k.; cpl. 85; a. 13", 6 20mm.; cl. Adira)

A minor planet revolving around the sun between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

Karin (AF-33) was launched 22 June 1944 by Pennsylvania Shipyard Inc., Beaumont, Tex., under a Maritime Commission contract; sponsored by Mrs. E. M. Ratcliff; acquired by the Navy and commissioned 3 February 1945, Lt. Richard C. Mallon in command.

After a brief shakedown in the Gulf of Mexico, Karin loaded cargo at Mobile, Ala., sailed through the Panama Canal, and arrived Pearl Harbor 23 March 1945. She departed 4 April with food for the Pacific Fleet and discharged cargo at Eniwetok and Saipan. For the closing months of the war, the store ship made two additional cruises from Pearl Harbor to Saipan and Ulithi.

After the end of the war, Karin carried supplies to occupation forces in the western Pacific. Early in November she steamed to the assistance of Bridge (AF-1) after the other store ship had struck a mine off Korea. After salvaging the ship's cargo and distributing it at Pusan and Jinsen, she got underway on the 22d for Seattle, arriving 21 December.

From 1946 to 1950 Karin made cruises from San Francisco to the mid-Pacific and the Far East, supplying the fleet with fresh and frozen provisions.

During the summer of 1950, Karin was in the Far East when Communist forces invaded South Korea. She remained in the area until January 1951, provisioning U.S. and U.N. ships operating there. After returning to San Francisco 19 February for overhaul at Mare Island, she resumed provisioning cruises to the Marshalls and Pearl Harbor.

On 7 January 1952 Karin departed San Francisco and resumed supply operations out of Japan in early February. She made runs between Sasebo and Yokosuka, and two cruises to Pusan and Inchon, Korea. Karin returned to San Francisco 18 December to prepare for provisioning duties in the mid-Pacific.

During 1954 her home port was changed from Mare Island to Pearl Harbor. She arrived Sasebo, Japan 17 June for operations in the Far East. While there, Karin was assigned to special duty in Indochina and from 25 August to mid October participated in Operation "Passage to Freedom." During this period more than 100,000 Vietnamese men, women, and children were evacuated from the Communist dominated North to the free world in the south. Karin assisted this gigantic population transfer by supplying many ships with fresh and frozen foods while providing the Vietnamese with rice and small essentials.

Karin returned Pearl Harbor 10 November to prepare for her regular duties. From 1955 to 1958 she made 18 cruises to the mid-Pacific with provisions and supplies. Karin departed Pearl Harbor 25 September 1958, arriving Astoria, Oreg., 6 October; and decommissioned there 15 December 1958. She was transferred to WSA and struck from the Navy list September 1961. She was placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet and at present is berthed at Puget Sound, Olympia, Wash.

Karin received two battle stars for Korean conflict service.

Published: Tue Jul 28 09:17:16 EDT 2015