U.S.S. Yosemite


USS Yosemite (AD-19) was a destroyer tender which served with the United 
	States Navy during World War II through to the 1990s.
	The third USN ship to bear the name, Yosemite was laid down on 19 January 
	1942 by the Tampa Shipbuilding Company at Tampa, Florida; launched on 16 May 
	1943; sponsored by Mrs. Melville W. Powers; and commissioned on 25 March 
	1944, Capt. George C. Towner in command.
Between late March and mid-June, the destroyer tender was fitted out at 
	Tampa. On 21 June, she got underway for the Virginia Capes, steamed via Key 
	West, and arrived at Hampton Roads on the 26th. For the next 10 days, the 
	destroyer tender conducted shakedown training in Chesapeake Bay and then put 
	into Norfolk for additional outfitting and some modifications to her 
	below-deck spaces.
	Early in August, she made a voyage to Fort Pond Bay, New York, to load 
	torpedoes. On the 6th, she headed south to Guantanamo Bay and thence 
	proceeded to the Panama Canal Zone, transited the Panama Canal, and arrived 
	at Balboa on the 13th. From there, the ship continued her voyage west to 
	Hawaii and arrived in Pearl Harbor on 29 August.
As soon as she moored, Yosemite went to work. For the next six months, 
	the ship's company made repairs on over 200 ships. She remained at Oahu 
	until February 1945. On the 15th, she exited the harbor and set a course for 
	Eniwetok Atoll in the Caroline Islands. She arrived there on the 22d but 
	remained for only five days before moving farther westward to the forward 
	base at Ulithi Atoll. She entered the Ulithi anchorage on 3 March, and her 
	crew set again to work repairing the veteran ships of the war in the 
	Pacific.
	On 25 May, Yosemite departed Ulithi in a convoy bound for Leyte Gulf in the 
	Philippines. She arrived in San Pedro Bay on the 28th and resumed her work 
	supporting the Fleet in its march toward Japan. She remained at Leyte 
	through the end of the war but, soon thereafter, got underway for Japan.
 After hostilities
	The destroyer tender arrived in Sasebo on 22 September and began tending 
	ships assigned to the occupation forces in the Far East. That assignment 
	lasted until March 1946. On the 15th, she stood out of Yokosuka on her way 
	home. Yosemite transited the Panama Canal in mid-April and arrived in New 
	York on the 22nd.
Postwar service
	Soon after her arrival back in the United States, Yosemite became the 
	flagship for the Commander, Destroyers, Atlantic Fleet. Except for several 
	brief interruptions for shipyard overhauls, she served in that capacity from 
	17 June 1946 until the spring of 1962. During that 16-year period, she spent 
	most of her time in port at Newport, Rhode Island, though on occasion she 
	did make voyages to the West Indies.
	In addition, near the end of that stretch of time, the destroyer tender made 
	two overseas deployments. In June 1958, she voyaged to northern Europe for 
	the purpose of tending ships engaged in an exercise in the North Atlantic. 
	Later, on 17 March 1959, she again departed Newport for a brief tour of duty 
	tending the ships of the United States Sixth Fleet. She concluded that 
	assignment when she returned to Newport on 24 July and resumed duty as 
	tender to the Atlantic Fleet destroyers and as flagship for their type 
	commander.
Cuban missile crisis: On 1 April 1962, Yosemite's role changed somewhat when the Atlantic Fleet cruisers and destroyers were brought together into a single type command. At that time, she became flagship for the new command, Cruiser-Destroyer Force, Atlantic Fleet. Late that fall, during the Cuban missile crisis and the American quarantine of the island, Yosemite departed Newport for a time and headed south via Norfolk to Kingston, Jamaica, where she tended the ships engaged in that operation. In December, she returned to Newport and resumed her normal schedule.
Over the next six years, the destroyer tender remained at Newport except for occasional overhauls and for short voyages to the West Indies early each year to tend Atlantic Fleet ships participating in the annual "Springboard" exercise.
 Resumption of overseas deployments; In 1969, the complexion of her 
	operations changed somewhat. In April, she resumed overseas deployments 
	after a hiatus of 10 years. She departed Newport on 7 April and arrived in 
	Naples, Italy on the 19th. During that tour of duty in the Mediterranean, 
	she served as flagship for the Commander, Service Force, 6th Fleet. Grand 
	Canyon (AR-28) relieved her of tender duties on 14 August, the Service Force 
	commander shifted his flag to Mississinewa (AO-144), and Yosemite sailed for 
	the United States on the 15th.
	
	USS Yosemite in 1988.
On the voyage home, she took on board a badly burned West German seaman 
	from SS Sinclair Venezuela and transported him to the naval hospital at 
	Newport. On 24 October, Yosemite's home port was changed from Newport, R.I., 
	to Mayport, Florida; and the destroyer tender got underway for that city 
	three days later. The ship arrived at Mayport on the 30th and began tending 
	ships.
	Yosemite was then based at Mayport, serving as flagship for various units of 
	the Cruiser-Destroyer Force, Atlantic Fleet—notably Cruiser-Destroyer 
	Flotilla 2 and Cruiser Destroyer Group 12. She made two additional 
	deployments to the Mediterranean, one from July to December 1974 and the 
	second from September 1977 to March 1978. She resumed tender duties at 
	Mayport on 12 March 1978 and, as of October 1978, was engaged in those 
	duties.
Decommission: Yosemite was decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 27 January 1994, and from December 1999, was at the Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility (NISMF) at Portsmouth, Virginia awaiting sale to a foreign government. On 18 November 2003, Yosemite was expended as a target, sunk at location 35-54N7 070-04W, at a depth of 2340 fathoms.
