USS Republic

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USAT Republic at Hunter's Point, post-WWII
History
NameUSS Republic (AP-33)
BuilderHarland and Wolff, Ireland
ChristenedSS President Grant
Completed1907
AcquiredSeized from Germany, 6 April 1917
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Navy: 2 Aug 1917 - Oct 1919
Army: 6 Oct 1919 - Mar 1921
Commercial: Mar 1921 - 1931
Army: 1931 - Jul 1941
Navy: 22 Jul 1941 - 27 Jan 1945
Army: Feb 1946 - May 1949
RenamedUSS President Grant (ID-3014) (1917), USAT Republic (1919), USS Republic (AP-33) (1941), USAHS/USAT Republic (1945)
StrickenFrom the Navy: 2 February 1945
FateSold for scrap, 11 March 1952
General characteristics
Displacement33,000 tons
Length599 ft
Beam68 ft 2 in
Draft34 ft
PropulsionSteam turbine
Speed14.5 knots
Complement712
Armament(WWII) 4 x 5"/38 caliber dual purpose gun, 2 x 1-pdr guns, 2 x machine guns

USS Republic (AP-33) was a troop transport that served with the US Navy during World War II. In World War I she served with the Navy as USS President Grant (ID-3014) before being turned over to the Army and named Republic.

The third ship named for Ulysses S. Grant was the former SS President Grant which was built in 1907 by Harland and Wolff, Ltd. of Belfast, Ireland for the Hamburg-American Packet Steamship Company. After several years of trans-Atlantic passenger service, she was interned at New York City in 1914 and seized there on 6 April 1917 when the United States entered World War I.

World War I

Turned over to the Navy, she was commissioned USS President Grant (SP-3014) on 2 August 1917, Comdr. J. P. Morton in command. During her operations as a troop transport she made sixteen round trips between New York and ports of France, carrying a total of 40,104 servicemen on her eastbound passage, and a total of 37,025 servicemen on her westbound returns to New York.

Between the wars

President Grant was transferred to the Army 6 October 1919. During the period January to November 1920, she served as the United States Army Transport Republic and made two voyages repatriating Czechoslovakian troops from Siberia to Trieste. After a trip to France, she was delivered to the USSR by the Army in March 1921. Until 1924 she lay at Norfolk, Virginia and then was placed on North Atlantic passenger service with United States Lines.

In 1931 she reverted to Army control as a troopship. After alterations, USAT Republic made three trips to San Francisco, Hawaii, and Manila. She later made two visits to China and one to Japan. In 1932 Far Eastern ports were excluded and she was confined to a regular New York-Honolulu run until June 1941.

USAT Republic was again taken over by the Navy and commissioned as USS Republic (AP-33) 22 July 1941 Comdr. G. Clark in command. Her armament consisted of one 5" and four 3" mounts. After a crossing from New York to Iceland, Republic sailed for San Francisco and in November left for the Southwest Pacific.

World War II

From December 1941 to February 1942 she visited the Fiji Islands and Brisbane and Sydney, Australia. Between March and November 1942 she served on the San Francisco-Honolulu run, completing a total of seven voyages. During 1943 and 1944 Republic operated out of San Francisco, transporting troops and supplies to Honolulu and the Southwest Pacific. She called at Fiji, Samoa, Noumea, Guadalcanal, Sydney, Funafuti, Hollandia and other ports.

Republic returned home in early 1945 and decommissioned at New Orleans 27 January 1945. She was struck from the Navy Register 2 February 1945 and turned over to the Army for conversion to a hospital ship, designated USAHS Republic.

Postwar service

Republic was overhauled by the Waterman Steamship Company at Mobile, Alabama until August. In September 1945 she proceeded to Los Angeles where she was altered before departing for Honolulu. The Army cancelled her designation as a hospital ship while she was enroute to Manila in February 1946. As USAT Republic, she embarked war veterans at Tacloban and Leyte bringing them back to San Francisco in late March 1946.

In May 1949, she was decommissioned by the Army Transport Service and returned to the Maritime Commission, after which she was laid up in the National Defense Reserve Fleet at Olympia, Washington. She was sold for scrap to the Bethlehem Steel Company on 11 March 1952.

References