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USS Williamsburg
US Navy gunboat and presidential yacht
US Navy gunboat and presidential yacht
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| section1 | {{Infobox ship/image |
| image | USS Williamsburg (AGC-369) in 1950.jpg |
| image_caption | USS Williamsburg in 1950 |
| section2 | {{Infobox ship/career |
| country | United States |
| flag | |
| name | Aras |
| owner | Hugh J. Chisholm, Jr. |
| builder | Bath Iron Works |
| laid_down | 19 March 1930 |
| launched | 8 December 1930 |
| acquired | 15 January 1931 |
| fate | Acquired by the US Navy, 24 April 1941 |
| section3 | {{Infobox ship/career |
| hide_header | title |
| country | United States |
| flag | |
| name | USS Williamsburg |
| namesake | City of Williamsburg, Virginia |
| acquired | 24 April 1941 |
| commissioned | 7 October 1941 |
| reclassified | *Patrol gunboat, 23 June 1941 |
| identification | *Callsign: NASN |
| section4 | {{Infobox ship/career |
| hide_header | yes |
| decommissioned | 30 June 1953 |
| struck | 1 April 1962 |
| fate | Transferred to National Science Foundation, 9 August 1962 |
| section5 | {{Infobox ship/characteristics |
| header_caption | (in US Navy service) |
| displacement | 1805 LT full load |
| length | 243 ft |
| beam | 36 ft |
| draft | 14 ft |
| power | 1100 bhp |
| propulsion | 2 × Winton diesel engines |
| speed | 13.5 kn |
| complement | 81 |
| armament | *2 × 3 in gun mounts |
| section6 | {{Infobox ship/career |
| hide_header | title |
| country | United States |
| flag | |
| name | Anton Bruun |
| namesake | Anton Frederik Bruun |
| operator | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution |
| acquired | 9 August 1962 |
| fate | *Sold 1971 |
-
General communications vessel, 10 November 1945
-
Hull number: PG-56 (23 June 1941) AGC-369 (10 November 1945)
-
6 × .50 in caliber Browning machine guns
-
2 × .30 in caliber Lewis machine guns
-
2 × depth charge tracks
-
1 × "Y" gun
-
Small arms; 16 rifles and 10 pistols
-
Scrapped in La Spezia, Italy, in March 2016
'*USS *Williamsburg''''' was a US Navy gunboat. A former private yacht, it also served as a presidential yacht from 1945 to 1953.
Private yacht
The steel-hulled, diesel-powered yacht Aras was laid down on 19 March 1930 by the Bath Iron Works; launched on 8 December 1930, and delivered to wood-pulp magnate Hugh J. Chisholm, Jr., on 15 January 1931, who named it for his wife, the former Sara Hardenbergh.
Aras displaced 1805 LT fully loaded; with a length of 243 ft; a beam of 36 ft; and a draft of 14 ft. Her two Winton diesel engines generated 1100 bhp, with a speed of 13.5 kn.
The US Navy acquired Aras on 24 April 1941 and renamed her Williamsburg. The former pleasure craft entered the Brewer Drydock and Repair Co., of Brooklyn, New York, on 23 June, for conversion into a gunboat.
National Science Foundation

Williamsburg was transferred to the National Science Foundation on 9 August 1962, undergoing a change from a presidential yacht to an oceanographic research vessel at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. During the overhaul, the presidential staterooms and other yacht-like trappings were removed, and special facilities were installed. Among the modifications was a seawater aquarium for preserving live specimens and a lab equipped with microscopes and other instruments for examining and classifying samples of marine life. Two winches and a small crane were fitted for dredging and deep sea work, while a small side deck platform was added to permit long-line fishing. The ship's engines, too, were reconditioned, and her bilge keels were modified to make the ship more stable.
Renamed Anton Bruun, in honor of the noted Danish marine biologist, the ship made ten scientific cruises in the Indian Ocean, conducting broad sample studies of bottom, midwater, and surface life. She caught specimens of plankton; did long-line fishing and trawling in deep water; conducted meteorological observations; and periodically obtained water samples. A multinational assemblage of scientists from the United States, India, Thailand, Brazil, and Pakistan worked on board the ship during this cruise.
Upon the conclusion of the Indian Ocean expedition, Anton Bruun returned to the United States in February 1965. Eight months later, she sailed for the Pacific Ocean to make a series of eight cruises in the Southeastern Pacific Oceanographic Program, conducting biological research in the area of the Humboldt Current and the other regions of the southeastern Pacific. Anton Bruun subsequently continued her oceanographic voyages until 1968.
During that year, while laid up for repairs in a floating drydock, the ship suffered extensive damage when the drydock sank unexpectedly. Anton Bruun was slated to be transferred to the Indian government. Restoration, given the apparent damage suffered in the drydock mishap, appeared uneconomical.
Subsequent disposition
Offered for sale by the Maritime Administration, the former gunboat, presidential yacht, and oceanographic vessel was acquired by a commercial concern whose intention was to use the ship as a combination floating hotel-restaurant-museum to be permanently berthed in Pennsville Township on the Salem River, in New Jersey.
The Williamsburg was towed up the Salem River, where she was placed in a berth originally meant to accommodate a dredge at the former Bright's Marina, renamed the Marlboro Marina. The shallow water depth resulted in the ship firmly grounded in the mud. There the yacht remained in the southern end of Pennsville Township, in Salem County, New Jersey, and for several years after that as a restaurant before being sold to new owners.
In 1993, the former Williamsburg was transferred to Genoa, Italy, for conversion into a luxury cruise ship. These plans were never realized, and the former yacht faced imminent scrapping at La Spezia, Italy, but an urgent appeal to the Italian government saved her. The "USS Williamsburg Preservation Society" was formed to return Williamsburg to the United States for restoration and preservation. Two former White House staffers began a Kickstarter campaign to raise the funds to restore the "Williamsburg" and return her to the U.S. Navy for use by future Presidents; however, the campaign failed to raise the goal of $40 million.
Williamsburg was laid up at the Navy wharf in La Spezia, Italy while offered for sale by Camper & Nicholsons International of Monaco.
The ship sank at her moorings, in La Spezia harbor, in 2015.
On 19 January 2016, the Port Authority of La Spezia authorised the operation for the removal of the ship. Her wreck was scrapped in situ in March.
|File:Williamsburg.jpg| |File:Williamsburg 3.jpg| |File:Williamsburg 2.jpg|
Awards
- American Defense Service Medal
- American Campaign Medal
- European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal
- World War II Victory Medal
- National Defense Service Medal
References
Bibliography
References
- Nelson, Stewart B. (1971). "Oceanographic Ships Fore and Aft". Office of the [[Oceanographer of the Navy]].
- Byrne, Diane M.. (20 February 2012). "Former Presidential Yacht Williamsburg in Woeful, but Hopeful, State". Megayacht News.
- Miller, Kevin. (10 October 2015). "Nonprofit launches campaign to save President Truman's floating White House from the scrap heap". Portland Press Herald.
- (2014). "1930 Bath Iron Works Motor yacht Power Boat For Sale". yachtworld.com.
- (2015). "Photo by Carlo Martinelli on July 04, 2015". shipspotting.com.
- (2016). "Al via la rimozione dello yacht Williamsburg, fu nave presidenziale Usa". cittadellaspezia.com.
- (2016). "Photo by Carlo Martinelli on March 24, 2016". shipspotting.com.
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