The TS Golden Bear is the training ship of the California State University Maritime Academy (CSUMA), a campus of the California State University. The first training ship of the then–California Nautical School was known as the Training Ship California State, then as the T.S. Golden State.[3] Since then, there have been three ships to bear the name T.S. Golden Bear.[2]
The third T.S. Golden Bear docked alongside the then–California Maritime Academy on February 17, 2007
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History | |
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United States | |
Name | Maury |
Port of registry | Naval Vessel Register |
Ordered | June 28, 1985 |
Builder | Bethlehem Steel |
Cost | US$65,000,000[1] |
Laid down | July 29, 1986 |
Launched | September 4, 1987 |
Commissioned | March 31, 1989 |
Out of service | September 1994, laid up in the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet |
Renamed | Golden Bear upon transfer to then–California Maritime Academy (CMA); previously named USNS Maury |
Fate | Transferred to MARAD in 1994 |
United States | |
Name | Golden Bear |
Namesake | California golden bear |
Owner | United States Maritime Administration |
Operator | California State Univ. Maritime Academy |
Reinstated | May 4, 1996 as TS Golden Bear |
Homeport | Vallejo, California |
Identification |
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Status | Active |
Notes | The former USNS Maury is the 3rd ship to bear the name Golden Bear, and the 4th training ship of the CSUMA |
Badge | |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | T-AGS |
Type | Training |
Tonnage | 10,939 long tons (11,115 t) |
Displacement |
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Length | 499 ft 10 in (152.35 m) |
Beam | 72 ft (22 m) |
Height | 151 ft (46 m) |
Draft | 30 ft 6 in (9.30 m) |
Propulsion | R5-V16 twin diesels,[2] 17,000 shp (12,677 kW), single five-blade propeller, 18 ft 7+1⁄2 in (5.68 m) diameter |
Speed | 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) |
Range | 17,820 miles (28,680,000 m) |
Capacity | 288 |
The current Training Ship Golden Bear was transferred to the United States Maritime Administration (MARAD) from the US Navy in 1994.[3] She was converted for use by the then–California Maritime Academy and transferred there in 1996.[3] Her sister ship, the TS State of Maine (formerly USNS Tanner) currently resides as the training ship of Maine Maritime Academy.[4]
TS Golden State
editThe first training ship of the California Maritime Academy was the T.S. Golden State. Originally planned to be named the SS Lake Fellowship, after construction, the ship was launched on October 18, 1919.[3] After completion, she was commissioned in November 1920 as the SS Henry County. In the mid-1920s, the SS Henry County was placed out of service in the James River Reserve Fleet.[3]
The Navy purchased the ship in 1930 and transferred it to the then-named California Nautical School.[3] Commissioned as the C.T.S. California State on January 23, 1931, the cadets who lived aboard quickly gave her the nickname "Iron Mother."[3] In December 1941, the ship was renamed the T.S. Golden State. She sailed on 12 major ocean cruises, including one around the world in 1933. She was also in service when the California Nautical School became the California Maritime Academy.
After being decommissioned on August 12, 1946, she was placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet in Suisun Bay, California. In 1948, she was sold into private trade, and was operated under various names including Isle of Patmos and Santa Rosa until she was scrapped in Brazil in August 1962.
First TS Golden Bear
editOn September 25, 1944, the keel was laid for the USS Mellena, the twelfth of the Artemis-class attack cargo ship, at the Walsh-Kaiser Company Shipyard in Providence, Rhode Island. She was hull #1893. After construction, she was launched on December 11, 1944, and commissioned as the USS Mellena (AKA-32) on January 10, 1945.
After serving the Navy in the Western Pacific during World War II, she was decommissioned on June 11, 1946, at Mare Island Naval Shipyard. Immediately after her decommissioning, she was transferred to the CMA and commissioned as the Training Ship Golden Bear on September 7, 1946.
After serving as the T.S. Golden Bear, and sailing on 24 major ocean cruises, the first Golden Bear was decommissioned on May 14, 1971, and then sold for scrap.
Second TS Golden Bear
editOriginally named the SS Delorleans, the ship was contracted on December 16, 1938, by Maritime Commission as a Type C3 ship hull #49. The keel was laid May 8, 1939, by the Bethlehem Steel Company, Sparrows Point Maryland, where she was launched on February 17, 1940, and delivered to Delta Lines on August 23, 1940.
This was the third of a series of six ships designed by the Mississippi Shipping Company, as a modification of the standard C3 design, to carry both passengers and cargo between New Orleans and Buenos Aires on the so-called "Coffee Run". Twenty six staterooms accommodated 67 passengers on the shelter deck.
The US Government requisitioned the SS Delorleans on June 3, 1941. The Navy assumed control on June 9, 1941, and stripped the ship to prepare her for war duty, and she was commissioned on October 10, 1941, as the USS Crescent City. After involvement in almost all the major campaigns in the Western Pacific during World War II, the USS Crescent City was redesignated as APA-21 in 1943. Before being decommissioned in San Francisco on April 30, 1948, she earned a Navy Unit Commendation and 10 battle stars for her service in WWII.
The ship was transferred to CMA in May 1971, for conversion to a training ship. She was commissioned in June 1971 as the T.S. Golden Bear, then sailed on 28 major ocean cruises, over 24 years. The "Golden Bear II" was decommissioned in 1995 and placed in the reserve fleet.
In 1999, the City of Oakland, California purchased the ship and renamed it "Artship" as part of a failed art colony project. She was sold for scrap in 2004, but dismantling was halted because of high PCB levels and because she was considered too historic. Thereafter, she was privately owned and plans were put in place to convert her into a culinary school and maritime museum.[5] She had been laid up at Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, California since 2004 pending these plans.
On November 7, 2011, she was publicly auctioned and sold to Esco Marine, Inc.[6] She was renamed Pacific Star and she departed Mare Island for scrapping at Brownsville, Texas on January 15, 2012.[6]
Third TS Golden Bear
editOn July 29, 1986, the keel was laid for hull #4667, ordered under a MARAD contract for the Navy, at Bethlehem Steel in Sparrows Point, Maryland. After launching on September 4, 1987, she was delivered to the Navy on March 31, 1989, and entered service as the USNS Maury (T-AGS-39). At the time, the USNS Maury was the fastest and largest oceanographic ship in the United States fleet. She also featured a number of advanced oceanographic tools and technologies, including a "multi-beam, wide-angle precision sonar for continuous charting of a broad strip of ocean floor under the ship's track." In addition, the main engines, two Enterprise R5 V-16 diesel engines, were mounted on "rafts", isolated from the hull by rubber cushions, similar in nature to the acoustic isolation aboard nuclear submarines.
The USNS Maury was placed "out of service" in September 1994, and laid up in the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet in California. On October 1, 1994, she was stricken from the Navy rolls and transferred to MARAD under agreement that she would be transferred to CMA after retrofitting. After conversion of the living spaces aboard, she was transferred to California Maritime Academy on May 4, 1996 and rechristened as the TS Golden Bear. Since that time, the ship has almost continuously undergone substantial repairs, remodeling and improvements, including periodic drydock inspections and overhauls. In early 2009, additional staterooms were installed, along with a supplemental MSD (Marine Sewage Device), and both the ship's gym and library were renovated. Current construction projects include an enclosed simulation laboratory for navigation training atop the 04 deck and refurbishment of the cadet living quarters on the 01 and 02 decks.
Sister ship
editThe sister ship of the USNS Maury, the USNS Tanner, was transferred to the Maine Maritime Academy after a similar conversion, where it is now known as the TS State of Maine.[4]
Commanding officers
editThe current Commanding Officer of the Training Ship is a commissioned as a Captain in the United States Maritime Service. Ten alumni have returned to serve in this position including one alumni of Massachusetts Maritime Academy
Assumed command | Relieved | Name | Rank/Service | Notes |
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May 11, 1930 | February 14, 1934 | Emil Topp | LCDR, USN (ret.) | |
February 15, 1934 | June 30, 1937 | Richard C. Dwyer[a] | ||
July 1, 1937 | June 30, 1940 | Neil E. Nichols | CAPT, USN (ret.) | |
July 1, 1940 | October 1, 1941 | Claude B. Mayo[b] | CAPT, USN (ret.) | |
October 1, 1941 | February 1, 1942 | Bennett M. Dodson | CAPT, USN (ret.) | XO[c] |
February 1, 1942 | 1943 | Hugh Severin | LCDR, USNR | XO[c] |
1944 | May 6, 1945 | Edwin C. Miller | LCDR, USNR | 1LT[c] |
May 7, 1945 | May 31, 1946 | Lester Martin | CDR, USNR | |
June 1, 1946[d] | August 9, 1957 | Ralph M. G. Swany | CAPT, USNR (ret.) | '33-D CMA Graduate |
September 12, 1957 | October 11, 1957 | Raymond G. Russell | LCDR, USNR | '34-D CMA Graduate; never sailed as CO |
October 14, 1957 | April 15, 1958 | John W. Anderson | ||
May 29, 1958 | March 17, 1960 | Edward A. Turpin | CDR, USNR | Died at sea |
June 6, 1960 | October 1, 1971 | Carl G. Bowman | CAPT, USCG (ret.) | |
October 1, 1971 | November 30, 1976 | William H. Aguilar | ‘34-D CMA Graduate | |
January 3, 1977 | August 31, 1982 | William D. Craig | CAPT, USN (ret.) | |
September 1, 1982 | September 18, 1992 | John M. Keever | CAPT, USMS | ‘70-D CMA Graduate |
March 1993 | July 1993 | Justin D. Johnson | CAPT, ARCO Marine | ‘76-D CMA Graduate; for cruise only |
October 15, 1993 | October 17, 1993 | Dick Crane | CAPT, Matson, Inc. | '59-D CMA Graduate; for mini-cruise only |
April 1994 | July 1994 | Bruce P. Butterfield | CAPT, MSC | '70-D CMA Graduate; for cruise only |
March 15, 1995 | January 15, 1996 | Peter G. Bonebakker | '68-D CMA Graduate | |
January 16, 1996 | April 21, 2008 | John M. Keever | CDRE, USMS | '70-D CMA Graduate |
April 21, 2008 | August 22, 2018 | Harry Bolton | COMMO, USMS | '78-D CMA Graduate |
August 22, 2018 | September 2022 | Sam Pecota | ||
September 2022 | Present | Samaro Bannister-Schneider[7] | MSC | '00-D CMA Graduate[e][8] |
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See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Keel-Laying Ceremony Held At Bethlehem-Sparrows Point Yard For First of Two Navy Survey Vessels" (PDF). Maritime Reporter. October 1986. p. 9. Retrieved March 4, 2022.
- ^ a b "Golden Bear (#1)". Old Tacoma Marine. Archived from the original on March 4, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g "History of the Training Ship Golden Bear". California State University Maritime Academy. Archived from the original on November 26, 2020. Retrieved March 4, 2022.
- ^ a b "Training Ship State of Maine". Maine Maritime Academy. Archived from the original on March 7, 2015. Retrieved March 4, 2022.
- ^ "Artship From The Web". Artship. Archived from the original on March 4, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2022.
- ^ a b Cox, Martin (January 17, 2012). "PACIFIC STAR, ex ARTSHIP, To The Breakers". Maritime Matters. Archived from the original on February 9, 2018.
- ^ https://www.csum.edu/campus-news/2022/tsgb-captain-bannister-22.html Retrieved October 10, 2022.
- ^ https://www.csum.edu/campus-news/2022/tsgb-captain-bannister-22.html Retrieved October 10, 2022.