ARA Suboficial Castillo

ARA Suboficial Castillo in Antarctic waters
History
United States
Name: Takelma
Namesake: The Takelma people
Builder: United Engineering Co.
Laid down: 7 April 1943
Launched: 18 September 1943
Commissioned: 3 August 1944
Struck: 28 January 1992
Motto: We Can Hack It !
Honours and
awards:
Fate: Transferred to Argentine Navy, 1993
Argentina
Name: Suboficial Castillo
Namesake: Marine Julio Castillo
Acquired: 30 Sep 1993
Commissioned: 7 Jun 1994
Fate: In active service as of 2017
General characteristics
Displacement: 1675 tons (full)
Length: 205 ft (62 m)
Beam: 38.5 ft (11.7 m)
Draft: 15.33 ft (4.67 m)
Propulsion: Diesel-electric, single screw, 3,600shp,
Speed: 16.5 knots (30.6 km/h)
Complement: 85
Armament:

ARA Suboficial Castillo (A-6) is an Abnaki-class tug/patrol boat of the Argentine Navy. She previously served in the US Navy as USS Takelma (ATF-113) from 1944 to 1992.

Suboficial Castillo is used as support ship for both the Argentine Submarine Force and during the summer campaigns in Antarctica in the Patrulla Antártica Naval Combinada (English: Joint Antarctic Naval Patrol) with the Chilean Navy to guarantee safety to all touristic and scientific ships that are in transit within the Antarctic Peninsula.

US Navy service – USS Takelma

Takelma was laid down on 7 April 1943 by the United Engineering Co., Alameda, Ca.; launched on 18 September 1943; and commissioned on 3 August 1944.[1]

WWII Service

Takelma arrived at Pearl Harbor on 5 January 1945 and was routed westward to Eniwetok. The fleet ocean tug towed vessels between various Pacific bases such as Ulithi, Leyte, Hollandia, Subic Bay, Manus, Espiritu Santo, and Milne Bay until she returned to Pearl Harbor in June 1946.

Post War Service

During 1946–52 Takelma operated out of numerous locations including San Diego, Pearl Harbor, Adak, and Subic Bay at various times. She cruised over much of the Pacific Ocean with port calls at locations such as Midway, Balboa, Coco Solo, Wake, Kwajalein, Japan, and Korea.

One of Takelma's more noteworthy missions was supporting Operation Crossroads, the atomic bomb tests at Bikini. In February 1947 she was ordered to begin towing target ships from various ports to the Marshall Islands. In December 1947 she began to tow surviving target ships from the Bikini Atoll following the tests. Among the ships she towed were the battleship New York and the cruisers Salt Lake City and Pensacola.

Korean War Service

Takelma operated out of Sasebo and Yokosuka, Japan during the Korean War. The tug operated in Korean waters from 20 August to 17 September 1952, serving at Sokcho, Pusan, and Wonsan, before returning to Sasebo. From 2 to 30 December she again sailed to the Korean ports of Cho Do and Yongyong Do. Takelma left Sasebo in January 1953 to return to the combat zone. She remained there from 19 to 24 January. Her last service during the Korean War began when she arrived at Wonsan on 30 January. She departed for Sasebo on 18 February 1953.

From 1954 to mid-1968, the ship operated from her home port at Pearl Harbor or on deployments to the Far East.[2]

Vietnam Service

The fleet tug Takelma (ATF-113) off Oahu early in 1967. (KN 14013)
The fleet tug Takelma (ATF-113) off Oahu early in 1967. (KN 14013)

During American combat operations in Vietnam, Takelma was at "Yankee Station" in the Gulf of Tonkin from 8 July to 15 August 1968 performing special operations for the 7th Fleet, and she returned to that task again from 18 October until 12 November 1968 when she sailed for Hawaii.

Takelma operated from Pearl Harbor until October 1976 when her home port was shifted to San Diego.

On 1 June 1979, Takelma commenced service as a naval reserve training ship.

Decommissioned and struck from the Naval Register, 28 January 1992

Takelma received two battle stars for Korean service and two campaign stars for service in Vietnam.

Transferred to Argentina, 30 September 1993, under the Security Assistance Program, renamed ARA SubOficial Castillo (A-6)[1]

Argentine service – ARA Suboficial Castillo

The ship was acquired in 1993 by the Argentine Navy and classified as aviso.

It is the first ship to bear the name of Argentine Marines's Sub-Officer Julio Saturnino Castillo, an Argentine Nation to the Heroic Valour in Combat Cross recipient killed during the Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de las Malvinas).

On 25 May 1995 captured the LW9579 trawler for illegal fishing in the Argentine Sea.[3]

On January 1998, she transported a French team to the Isla de los Estados island which install a replica of Jules Verne's The Lighthouse at the End of the World.[4]

On 19 August 1998 after finishing a naval exercise with the Chilean Navy and docked at the port of Ushuaia the ARA Comodoro Somellera sank following a collision with her during a storm.[5]

On 2007 she participated on the rescue of the ARA Almirante Irizar after the icebreaker caught fire.[6]

As of 2010 she is homebased at Mar del Plata naval base.

References

  1. 1 2 "USS Takelma (ATF-113))". Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  2. http://www.koreanwar.org/html/units/navy/uss_takelma.htm
  3. Remolcador de Mar/Aviso A.R.A. Suboficial Castillo A-6
  4. El fin del mundo tendrá su faro
  5. Se hundió un buque argentino
  6. Remolcan el Irízar hasta Puerto Belgrano
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