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USNS Narragansett

USNS Narragansett (T-ATF-167) is a Powhatan-class fleet ocean tugboat of the US Navy. She was launched in 1979 and inactivated in 1999, but has since been employed in a number of roles. She is still in service as of 2023 as a training support vessel for Carrier Strike Group 4.

History
United States
NameUSNS Narragansett (T-ATF-167)
NamesakeThe Native American Narragansett tribe
BuilderMarinette Marine, Marinette, Wisconsin
Laid down5 May 1977
Launched12 May 1979
Acquired9 November 1979
Out of service18 October 1999
Stricken5 June 2002
Identification
Fatein service as a training vessel
General characteristics
Class and typePowhatan-class tugboat
Displacement2,260 long tons (2,296 t) fully loaded
Length226 ft (69 m)
Beam42 ft (13 m)
Draft15 ft (4.6 m)
Propulsion2 × GM EMD 20-645F7B diesels (5.73 MW sustained), two shafts, bow thruster, 300 hp (224 kW)
Speed15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph)
Complement16 civilians, 4 navy (communications unit)

Construction and characteristics edit

The ship was laid down on 5 May 1977 by the Marinette Marine Corp. of Marinette, Wisconsin. Narragansett was launched on 12 May 1979, and delivered to the Navy on 9 November 1979.

Her hull was built of welded steel plates. She is 225 feet 11 inches (68.86 m) long at the waterline and 240 feet 1 inch (73.18 m) overall, with a beam of 42 feet (13 m), and a draft of 15 feet (4.6 m). She displaces 2,260 tons fully loaded.[1]

As originally built, Narragansett had two controllable-pitch Kort-nozzle propellers for propulsion. She had two 20-cylinder Diesel engines, GM EMD 20-645F7B,[2] which provided 4,500 shaft horsepower. These would drive the ships at 15 knots. She also had a 300-horsepower bow thruster to improve maneuverability.[1][3]

Electrical power aboard the ship was provided by three 400 Kw generators. These were powered by three Detroit Diesel 8v-71 engines.[2]

Powhatan-class tugs had global range in order to support the U.S. fleet across oceans. Narragansett's tankage was consequently large. She can carry 206,714 U.S. gallons (782,500 L) of Diesel oil, 6,100 U.S. gallons (23,000 L) of lube oil, and 6,000 U.S. gallons (23,000 L) of drinking water.[2] Her unrefueled range at 13 knots was 10,000 miles (16,000 km)[1]

 
Narragansett under construction in 1978

Narragansett's aft deck is largely open to accommodate a number of different roles. It offers 4,000 square feet (370 m2) of working space.[4] One of the missions of a fleet tug was to tow damaged warships back to port. She is equipped with a SMATCO 66 DTS-200 towing winch for service as a towboat.[2] The towing system can accommodate either wire rope or synthetic-fiber hawsers and produce as much as 90 short tons of bollard pull.[5][6][4] She has a 10-ton capacity crane for moving loads on the aft deck.[3] There were connections to bolt down shipping containers and other equipment.

Like all MSC ships, Narragansett was crewed by civilian mariners. At launch, her complement was 16 civilian crew and a 4-person military detachment of communications specialists. The ships could accommodate an additional 16 people aboard for transient, mission-specific roles.[1][3]

All the ships of the Powhatan-class were named after Native American tribes.[6] Narragansett was named after the Narragansett people, which had their historical center in the Rhode Island area.

Military Sealift Command service (1979—1999) edit

 
Narragansett was harassed by Soviet ships, including this guided missile cruiser, while searching for the wreckage of Korean Airlines Flight 007.

Narragansett was dispatched from Pusan, South Korea to assist in the search for the black box flight recorders of the downed Korean Air Lines Flight 007 in the Fall of 1983. Special electronic equipment was embarked to listen for the beacon signals produced by the flight recorders, as well as a deep-diving remotely controlled submersible. The tug was harassed by Soviet ships while executing her search patterns and was ultimately unsuccessful in recovering the flight recorders.[7]

In April 1984 the ship assisted in refloating USS Barbour County which was beached at the Silver Strand Amphibious Boat Area in Coronado, California.[8]

Narragansett towed the Ocean Construction Platform Seacon from Panama to San Diego in July 1984.[9]

Narragansett rescued a family of six who had been drifting helplessly in a small sailboat for 32 days near Hawaii in October 1988.[10]

 
Narragansett tows ex-Missouri out of Long Beach Harbor in 1992

In 1990 she assisted in the investigation of another aircraft incident. Nine people were killed when the cargo door of United Airlines Flight 811 blew off shortly after the plane took off from Hawaii. The door fell into the sea and a search was initiated to find this important piece of evidence. Narragansett laid out a grid of eight transponders on the sea bed which were used to chart the movements of a Navy submersible hunting for the door.[11] Narragansett also searched the area with an Orion side-scan sonar system which was embarked for this mission.[12]

The ship accompanied USNS Navajo as she towed ex-New Jersey from Long Beach to the Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility in Bremerton, Washington in April 1991.[13] In 1992, Narragansett towed ex-Midway from San Diego,[14] and ex-Missouri from Long Beach[15] to Bremerton, Washington.

The ship was placed out of service on 18 October 1999, and assigned to the inactive reserve. She was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 5 June 2002,[16] and technically became the property of the U.S. Maritime Administration.[17] Narragansett was loaned by her new owner back to the Navy on 2 August 2002.[16]

Naval Air Weapons Command service (2002—2015) edit

The Naval Air Weapons Command leased Narragansett to CSC Corporation, which in turn, subleased the vessel to Donjon Marine Company, Incorporated.[18] Donjon Marine was also the lessee of a sister ship, Powhatan. The company was responsible for crewing, maintenance, and operations of the ship.[19] Narragansett was used to tow ex-Tripoli to various points in the Pacific where she launched missiles as part of the development and testing programs for the THAAD ballistic missile defense program, the Navy's sea-based terminal missile defense program, and the Israeli Arrow missile program.[20][21] During this period, Narragansett and ex-Tripoli were based at Pearl Harbor, Mare Island,[22] and finally Pier 80, San Francisco.

In March of 2015, Narragansett towed ex-Tripoli through the Panama Canal to be stored with the Beaumont Reserve Fleet.[23]

Carrier Strike Group 4 service (2016—present) edit

 
TSV-4 Narragansett during a training exercise in 2019

By 2016, Narragansett had been assigned to the training support vessel squadron of Carrier Strike Group 4[16][24] and is now based at JEB Little Creek.[25] Her role is to provide realistic training scenarios for Navy and Marine units about to deploy.[26]

Narragansett was reclassified from a fleet ocean tug (ATF) to a boat in 2009. While she retained her name, her hull number was changed from T-ATF-167 to 226NS7901.[16] Boats do not typically display their hull numbers on their bows. Narragansett displays "TSV-4" on her bow today, a locally-assigned pennant number.

Civilian mariners have continued to crew the ship, and private contractors have continued to operate and maintain her. PAE Applied Technologies, LLC was the first, while two other contractors ran the other ships in the training support vessel squadron.[27] On 9 March 2018 Great Eastern Group, Inc. was awarded a contract to crew, maintain, and operate all the ships of the training support vessel squadron.[28][29] On 12 April 2021 Great Eastern Group was awarded a new five-year contract for all the ships in the squadron, including Narragansett.[26]

Narragansett underwent $7.6 million of maintenance in a Norfolk, Virginia shipyard in 2017.[30] In June 2022, Lyon Shipyard in Norfolk, Virginia won a $13.5 million contract for maintenance. The work was expected to be complete by April 2023.[31]

Honors and awards edit

Narragansett and her crew earned a number of honors and awards during her service. These include:[32]

Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal in 1994 for her service in Operation Restore Hope in Somalia

Navy Expeditionary Medal in 1980, and 1981 for service in the Iran/Indian Ocean area

Navy "E" Ribbon in 1983, 1984, and 1987

Meritorious Unit Commendation in 1983, for her service searching for the wreckage of Korean Airlines Flight 007.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Polmar, Norman (1997). Ships and Aircraft of the United States Fleet (16th ed.). Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. p. 252. ISBN 1-55750-686-8.
  2. ^ a b c d "T-ATF-167 'USNS Narragansett'". TugboatInformation.com. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
  3. ^ a b c Ships, Aircraft, and Weapons of the United States Navy. United States Navy Department, Office of Information. 1980.
  4. ^ a b Paulus, Chris (2020). USNS NAVAJO (T-ATS 6) Class Towing, Salvage, and Rescue Ship (PDF).
  5. ^ "USNS Narragansett (T-ATF 168)". www.navysite.de. Retrieved 2023-05-06.
  6. ^ a b Granger, Louis R. (January 1979). "USNS Powhatan Leads Way For New Class of Tugs". Military Sea Transportation Service Magazine. XXIX (1).
  7. ^ "Sailors recall the futile search for Korean plane's 'black box'". Oakland Tribune. 22 January 1984. p. 27.
  8. ^ "Barbour County". public1.nhhcaws.local. Retrieved 2023-05-07.
  9. ^ "SEACON deploys to West Coast". Navy Civil Engineer. Fall 1984. p. 21.
  10. ^ Mariani, Jeanne (18 October 1988). "Nightmare at sea ends". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. p. 1.
  11. ^ "Search for jet door continues". Evansville Press. July 24, 1990. p. 3.
  12. ^ "Large metal piece found in search for cargo door". Danville News. 31 July 1990. p. 10.
  13. ^ "New Jersey's Coming". Kitsap Sun. 25 April 1991. p. 9.
  14. ^ "National Archives NextGen Catalog". catalog.archives.gov. Retrieved 2023-05-07.
  15. ^ "National Archives NextGen Catalog". catalog.archives.gov. Retrieved 2023-05-07.
  16. ^ a b c d "NARRAGANSETT (ATF 167)". Naval Vessel Register.
  17. ^ ANNUAL REPORT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2017 (PDF). OFFICE OF SHIP DISPOSAL PROGRAMS. 2018. p. 49.
  18. ^ "U.S. Navy Proposes Five Year Charter of Fleet Salvage Tug". MarineLink. 1999-07-12. Retrieved 2023-05-08.
  19. ^ Witte, J. Arnold (2013). Proposal (PDF). Hillside, New Jersey: Donjon Marine Company, Inc.
  20. ^ Cole, William (5 November 2007). "Ex-warship now a launch platform for missile testing". Honolulu Advertiser. p. 14.
  21. ^ "Amphib USS Tripoli Finishes Final Voyage". The Maritime Executive. Retrieved 2023-05-08.
  22. ^ Rohrs, Sarah (14 November 2008). "Tripoli takes break at M.I. dock". Times-Herald. Retrieved 2023-05-08.
  23. ^ "USNS Narragansett (T-ATF-167)". 26 March 2015.
  24. ^ Murphy, Lt j.g. Michael (11 July 2016). "Mahan conducts VBSS boarding exercises". Military News. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  25. ^ "ABS Certified Surveys, Inspections, and Maintenance Oversight N00181922Q0141". govtribe.com. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  26. ^ a b "NAVSUP Fleet Logistics Center Norfolk Awards Training Vessel Support Contract". United States Navy. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  27. ^ "Presolicitation Notice". 31 August 2017.
  28. ^ Office, U. S. Government Accountability. "Trinity Ship Management, LLC | U.S. GAO". www.gao.gov. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  29. ^ "Award Notice". 9 March 2018.
  30. ^ "Colonna's Shipyard wins $7.6 million Navy contract by Colonna's Shipyard IncNauticExpo". trends.nauticexpo.com. Retrieved 2023-05-07.
  31. ^ "Lyon Shipyard Wins USNS Narragansett Repair Work". MarineLink. 2022-06-13. Retrieved 2023-05-07.
  32. ^ MASTER LIST OF UNIT AWARDS AND CAMPAIGN MEDALS (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Department of the Navy. 2002.

usns, narragansett, other, ships, with, same, name, narragansett, powhatan, class, fleet, ocean, tugboat, navy, launched, 1979, inactivated, 1999, since, been, employed, number, roles, still, service, 2023, training, support, vessel, carrier, strike, group, hi. For other ships with the same name see USS Narragansett USNS Narragansett T ATF 167 is a Powhatan class fleet ocean tugboat of the US Navy She was launched in 1979 and inactivated in 1999 but has since been employed in a number of roles She is still in service as of 2023 as a training support vessel for Carrier Strike Group 4 HistoryUnited StatesNameUSNS Narragansett T ATF 167 NamesakeThe Native American Narragansett tribeBuilderMarinette Marine Marinette WisconsinLaid down5 May 1977Launched12 May 1979Acquired9 November 1979Out of service18 October 1999Stricken5 June 2002IdentificationIMO number 8834902 MMSI number 367214000 Callsign WDB2452Fatein service as a training vesselGeneral characteristicsClass and typePowhatan class tugboatDisplacement2 260 long tons 2 296 t fully loadedLength226 ft 69 m Beam42 ft 13 m Draft15 ft 4 6 m Propulsion2 GM EMD 20 645F7B diesels 5 73 MW sustained two shafts bow thruster 300 hp 224 kW Speed15 knots 28 km h 17 mph Complement16 civilians 4 navy communications unit Contents 1 Construction and characteristics 2 Military Sealift Command service 1979 1999 3 Naval Air Weapons Command service 2002 2015 4 Carrier Strike Group 4 service 2016 present 5 Honors and awards 6 ReferencesConstruction and characteristics editThe ship was laid down on 5 May 1977 by the Marinette Marine Corp of Marinette Wisconsin Narragansett was launched on 12 May 1979 and delivered to the Navy on 9 November 1979 Her hull was built of welded steel plates She is 225 feet 11 inches 68 86 m long at the waterline and 240 feet 1 inch 73 18 m overall with a beam of 42 feet 13 m and a draft of 15 feet 4 6 m She displaces 2 260 tons fully loaded 1 As originally built Narragansett had two controllable pitch Kort nozzle propellers for propulsion She had two 20 cylinder Diesel engines GM EMD 20 645F7B 2 which provided 4 500 shaft horsepower These would drive the ships at 15 knots She also had a 300 horsepower bow thruster to improve maneuverability 1 3 Electrical power aboard the ship was provided by three 400 Kw generators These were powered by three Detroit Diesel 8v 71 engines 2 Powhatan class tugs had global range in order to support the U S fleet across oceans Narragansett s tankage was consequently large She can carry 206 714 U S gallons 782 500 L of Diesel oil 6 100 U S gallons 23 000 L of lube oil and 6 000 U S gallons 23 000 L of drinking water 2 Her unrefueled range at 13 knots was 10 000 miles 16 000 km 1 nbsp Narragansett under construction in 1978Narragansett s aft deck is largely open to accommodate a number of different roles It offers 4 000 square feet 370 m2 of working space 4 One of the missions of a fleet tug was to tow damaged warships back to port She is equipped with a SMATCO 66 DTS 200 towing winch for service as a towboat 2 The towing system can accommodate either wire rope or synthetic fiber hawsers and produce as much as 90 short tons of bollard pull 5 6 4 She has a 10 ton capacity crane for moving loads on the aft deck 3 There were connections to bolt down shipping containers and other equipment Like all MSC ships Narragansett was crewed by civilian mariners At launch her complement was 16 civilian crew and a 4 person military detachment of communications specialists The ships could accommodate an additional 16 people aboard for transient mission specific roles 1 3 All the ships of the Powhatan class were named after Native American tribes 6 Narragansett was named after the Narragansett people which had their historical center in the Rhode Island area Military Sealift Command service 1979 1999 edit nbsp Narragansett was harassed by Soviet ships including this guided missile cruiser while searching for the wreckage of Korean Airlines Flight 007 Narragansett was dispatched from Pusan South Korea to assist in the search for the black box flight recorders of the downed Korean Air Lines Flight 007 in the Fall of 1983 Special electronic equipment was embarked to listen for the beacon signals produced by the flight recorders as well as a deep diving remotely controlled submersible The tug was harassed by Soviet ships while executing her search patterns and was ultimately unsuccessful in recovering the flight recorders 7 In April 1984 the ship assisted in refloating USS Barbour County which was beached at the Silver Strand Amphibious Boat Area in Coronado California 8 Narragansett towed the Ocean Construction Platform Seacon from Panama to San Diego in July 1984 9 Narragansett rescued a family of six who had been drifting helplessly in a small sailboat for 32 days near Hawaii in October 1988 10 nbsp Narragansett tows ex Missouri out of Long Beach Harbor in 1992In 1990 she assisted in the investigation of another aircraft incident Nine people were killed when the cargo door of United Airlines Flight 811 blew off shortly after the plane took off from Hawaii The door fell into the sea and a search was initiated to find this important piece of evidence Narragansett laid out a grid of eight transponders on the sea bed which were used to chart the movements of a Navy submersible hunting for the door 11 Narragansett also searched the area with an Orion side scan sonar system which was embarked for this mission 12 The ship accompanied USNS Navajo as she towed ex New Jersey from Long Beach to the Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility in Bremerton Washington in April 1991 13 In 1992 Narragansett towed ex Midway from San Diego 14 and ex Missouri from Long Beach 15 to Bremerton Washington The ship was placed out of service on 18 October 1999 and assigned to the inactive reserve She was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 5 June 2002 16 and technically became the property of the U S Maritime Administration 17 Narragansett was loaned by her new owner back to the Navy on 2 August 2002 16 Naval Air Weapons Command service 2002 2015 editThe Naval Air Weapons Command leased Narragansett to CSC Corporation which in turn subleased the vessel to Donjon Marine Company Incorporated 18 Donjon Marine was also the lessee of a sister ship Powhatan The company was responsible for crewing maintenance and operations of the ship 19 Narragansett was used to tow ex Tripoli to various points in the Pacific where she launched missiles as part of the development and testing programs for the THAAD ballistic missile defense program the Navy s sea based terminal missile defense program and the Israeli Arrow missile program 20 21 During this period Narragansett and ex Tripoli were based at Pearl Harbor Mare Island 22 and finally Pier 80 San Francisco In March of 2015 Narragansett towed ex Tripoli through the Panama Canal to be stored with the Beaumont Reserve Fleet 23 Carrier Strike Group 4 service 2016 present edit nbsp TSV 4 Narragansett during a training exercise in 2019By 2016 Narragansett had been assigned to the training support vessel squadron of Carrier Strike Group 4 16 24 and is now based at JEB Little Creek 25 Her role is to provide realistic training scenarios for Navy and Marine units about to deploy 26 Narragansett was reclassified from a fleet ocean tug ATF to a boat in 2009 While she retained her name her hull number was changed from T ATF 167 to 226NS7901 16 Boats do not typically display their hull numbers on their bows Narragansett displays TSV 4 on her bow today a locally assigned pennant number Civilian mariners have continued to crew the ship and private contractors have continued to operate and maintain her PAE Applied Technologies LLC was the first while two other contractors ran the other ships in the training support vessel squadron 27 On 9 March 2018 Great Eastern Group Inc was awarded a contract to crew maintain and operate all the ships of the training support vessel squadron 28 29 On 12 April 2021 Great Eastern Group was awarded a new five year contract for all the ships in the squadron including Narragansett 26 Narragansett underwent 7 6 million of maintenance in a Norfolk Virginia shipyard in 2017 30 In June 2022 Lyon Shipyard in Norfolk Virginia won a 13 5 million contract for maintenance The work was expected to be complete by April 2023 31 Honors and awards editNarragansett and her crew earned a number of honors and awards during her service These include 32 Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal in 1994 for her service in Operation Restore Hope in SomaliaNavy Expeditionary Medal in 1980 and 1981 for service in the Iran Indian Ocean areaNavy E Ribbon in 1983 1984 and 1987Meritorious Unit Commendation in 1983 for her service searching for the wreckage of Korean Airlines Flight 007 References edit a b c d Polmar Norman 1997 Ships and Aircraft of the United States Fleet 16th ed Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press p 252 ISBN 1 55750 686 8 a b c d T ATF 167 USNS Narragansett TugboatInformation com Retrieved 2023 04 23 a b c Ships Aircraft and Weapons of the United States Navy United States Navy Department Office of Information 1980 a b Paulus Chris 2020 USNS NAVAJO T ATS 6 Class Towing Salvage and Rescue Ship PDF USNS Narragansett T ATF 168 www navysite de Retrieved 2023 05 06 a b Granger Louis R January 1979 USNS Powhatan Leads Way For New Class of Tugs Military Sea Transportation Service Magazine XXIX 1 Sailors recall the futile search for Korean plane s black box Oakland Tribune 22 January 1984 p 27 Barbour County public1 nhhcaws local Retrieved 2023 05 07 SEACON deploys to West Coast Navy Civil Engineer Fall 1984 p 21 Mariani Jeanne 18 October 1988 Nightmare at sea ends Honolulu Star Bulletin p 1 Search for jet door continues Evansville Press July 24 1990 p 3 Large metal piece found in search for cargo door Danville News 31 July 1990 p 10 New Jersey s Coming Kitsap Sun 25 April 1991 p 9 National Archives NextGen Catalog catalog archives gov Retrieved 2023 05 07 National Archives NextGen Catalog catalog archives gov Retrieved 2023 05 07 a b c d NARRAGANSETT ATF 167 Naval Vessel Register ANNUAL REPORT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2017 PDF OFFICE OF SHIP DISPOSAL PROGRAMS 2018 p 49 U S Navy Proposes Five Year Charter of Fleet Salvage Tug MarineLink 1999 07 12 Retrieved 2023 05 08 Witte J Arnold 2013 Proposal PDF Hillside New Jersey Donjon Marine Company Inc Cole William 5 November 2007 Ex warship now a launch platform for missile testing Honolulu Advertiser p 14 Amphib USS Tripoli Finishes Final Voyage The Maritime Executive Retrieved 2023 05 08 Rohrs Sarah 14 November 2008 Tripoli takes break at M I dock Times Herald Retrieved 2023 05 08 USNS Narragansett T ATF 167 26 March 2015 Murphy Lt j g Michael 11 July 2016 Mahan conducts VBSS boarding exercises Military News Retrieved 2023 05 09 ABS Certified Surveys Inspections and Maintenance Oversight N00181922Q0141 govtribe com Retrieved 2023 05 09 a b NAVSUP Fleet Logistics Center Norfolk Awards Training Vessel Support Contract United States Navy Retrieved 2023 05 09 Presolicitation Notice 31 August 2017 Office U S Government Accountability Trinity Ship Management LLC U S GAO www gao gov Retrieved 2023 05 09 Award Notice 9 March 2018 Colonna s Shipyard wins 7 6 million Navy contract by Colonna s Shipyard IncNauticExpo trends nauticexpo com Retrieved 2023 05 07 Lyon Shipyard Wins USNS Narragansett Repair Work MarineLink 2022 06 13 Retrieved 2023 05 07 MASTER LIST OF UNIT AWARDS AND CAMPAIGN MEDALS PDF Washington D C Department of the Navy 2002 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to IMO 8834902 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USNS Narragansett amp oldid 1182628614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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