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Xanthus (AR-19)

1945-1962

In Greek mythology, Achilles' horse, which spoke with a human voice.

(AR-19: displacement 10,920 (full load); length 441'6"; beam 56'11"; draft 22'0"; speed 12.5 knots; complement 525; armament 1 5-inch, 3 3-inch, 4 40 millimeter, 12 20 millimeter; class Xanthus; type EC2-S-C1)

Hecla was laid down under a Maritime Commission contract (M.C.E. Hull 2664) on 6 June 1944 at Baltimore, Md., by the Bethlehem-Fairfield Shipyard, Inc.; launched on 31 July 1944; sponsored by Mrs. J.W.A. Waller; delivered to the Navy on a loan basis on 16 August 1944; renamed Xanthus and designated AR-19 on 6 December 1944; and commissioned on 9 May 1945, Cmdr. Stanley G. Nichols in command.

Following training operations and a transit of the Panama Canal, Xanthus arrived at Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii, on 20 July 1945 to serve there as a repair ship. On 11 August, she sailed for Adak, Territory of Alaska, to join forces massing there for the projected assaults on the Kurils and northern Japan. The Japanese capitulation, however, obviated such operations. Instead of an invasion, there was now an occupation.

As part of Task Group (TG) 40.2, Xanthus proceeded to Japan and arrived at Ominato on 9 September 1945 - the same date that Japanese forces there surrendered to Vice Adm. Frank Jack Fletcher. The ship remained at Ominato through 21 November, serving as flagship for the commander of TG 56.2, the repair and logistics group. Subsequently reporting for duty with Service Squadron 104, the ship operated out of Okinawa through late January 1946.

On 10 February 1946, Xanthus sailed for Tsingtao, China, and helped to stabilize troubled conditions there in the wake of the Japanese withdrawal. As Communist and Nationalist Chinese jockeyed for position in the volatile situation in their country, Xanthus supported U.S. naval activities in that port until sailing for home on 8 April 1946.

Subsequently arriving at Norfolk, Va., in the spring of that year, the repair ship was laid up at the Maritime Commission berthing area in the James River, Va., in an "on hand" status until being transferred to the custody of the Reserve Fleet at 1:00 p.m. on 11 January 1961. On 1 September 1962, the ship was stricken from the Navy list, and was transferred to permament custody of the Maritime Administration at 12:01 a.m. that day.

Sold for scrap to Luria Brothers & Company, Inc. on 15 July 1974, ex-Xanthus was removed from the Reserve Fleet and physically delivered to her purchaser at 2:00 p.m. on 15 August 1974 to begin her voyage to the scrappers.

Updated, Robert J. Cressman

23 November 2021

Published: Tue Nov 23 13:11:55 EST 2021