USS Cocopa

Summary

USS Cocopa (ATF-101) was an Abnaki-class fleet ocean tug that served on active duty with the U.S. Navy from 1944 to 1978, seeing action in World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. After thirty-four years of service, she was sold to the Mexican Navy, where she was still in service as of 2009.[1]

USS Cocopa moored dockside. U.S. Navy photo, date and photographer unknown.
USS Cocopa (ATF-101) at Sasebo, Japan, likely 1969 or 1972.
History
United States
NameUSS Cocopa
BuilderCharleston Drydock and Shipbuilding Company, Charleston, SC
Launched5 October 1943
Sponsored byMiss Z. Williams
Commissioned25 March 1944
Decommissioned30 September 1978
Stricken30 September 1978
IdentificationATF-101
MottoService - Salvage - First and Finest
Honors and
awards
FateSold to Mexico, 30 September 1978
Mexico
NameARM Seri
Acquired30 September 1978
IdentificationRE-03
StatusIn active service as of 2017
General characteristics
Class and typeAbnaki-class fleet ocean tug
Displacement1,240 long tons of standard displacement
Length205 ft (62 m)
Beam38.5 ft (11.7 m)
Draft15.33 ft (4.67 m)
PropulsionDiesel-electric, single screw, 3,600 shp (2,685 kW)
Speed16.5 knots (30.6 km/h; 19.0 mph)
Complement85
Sensors and
processing systems
Radar
Armament

World War II edit

Cocopa was named after an Arizona Indian tribe. She began her naval career with the Atlantic fleet during the waning months of World War II, making two passages across the Atlantic with barges in tow, followed by a third passage to Trinidad. Her second convoy was attacked by a German U-boat, with Cocopa barely escaping destruction.[2] Cocopa was next ordered to the Pacific theater, witnessing the final days of the war between July and August of that year. V-J day found the ship in Leyte, Philippines.[3]

Interwar service edit

Following World War II, Cocopa shuttled between the Philippines, Shanghai, Okinawa and Hong Kong on occupation duty, before returning to Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in January 1947 for an overhaul. From 1948–49 she plied Alaskan waters.[2]

June 30, 1951, having returned to the Far East, Cocopa accepted what many writers have termed the last Japanese surrender from World War II. Lieutenant Commander James B. Johnson accepted the capitulation of Captain Katsusaburo Usui and nineteen other Japanese soldiers who had been living on the island of Anatahan, in the Northern Mariana Islands since June 12, 1944. The ship repatriated these men and their personal effects to Guam, from whence they were ultimately returned to Tokyo, Japan on July 6, 1951.[3] However, other Japanese holdouts continued to surrender over the next few decades, though in much smaller numbers.

Korean War edit

Cocopa saw action in the Korean War during the summer of 1953. During this period she served off both Korean coasts; in one operation, she towed HMCS Huron, a Royal Canadian Navy destroyer that had run aground on the island of Pang Yang-Do, just off the North Korean coast well north of enemy-held Wonsan harbor. At the time of the armistice, she went to Wonsan to aid in the removal of a Marine garrison occupying a small islet at the harbor's mouth. During the Korean War, USS Cocopa received one battle star for her service.[4]

After the war, Cocopa conducted numerous Pacific Ocean and Alaskan cruises. Her home port was changed from Pearl Harbor to San Diego in 1961.[2]

Operation Castle edit

In March 1954, Cocopa was one of the ships tasked to support Operation Castle, a series of high-energy (high-yield) nuclear tests by Joint Task Force SEVEN (JTF-7) at Bikini Atoll. Official reports indicated that crewmembers suffered the highest doses (2.2 rem) of radiation endured by any of the navy ships present at this operation.[5]

Vietnam War edit

 
USS Cocopa in Vietnamese waters in 1967.

During the Vietnam War, Cocopa saw service in five campaigns: Advisory (1963), Vietnam Defense (1965), Counteroffensive Phase II (1967), Summer-Fall 1969, and Ceasefire (1972). In 1965, Cocopa hosted Detachment Charlie of Beach Jumpers Unit One, Team Twelve, operating as the "Yankee Station Special Surveillance Unit". This outfit consisted of one officer and five enlisted men, whose mission was to jam Soviet electronic intelligence trawlers monitoring U.S. operations in the Gulf of Tonkin. Team members utilized random wave jamming with noises (including bagpipe recordings) to counteract Russian SIGINT activities. Cocopa also assisted in towing, recovery and similar operations throughout her tours in Vietnam.[6]

Awards edit

[4]

Mexican Navy service edit

On 30 September 1978, Cocopa was decommissioned and sold to Mexico under the Security Assistance Program, where she was recommissioned in the Mexican Navy as ARM Seri (RE-03). As of 2009 the ship remains on active duty with that force.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "USS Cocopa (ATF-101)". NavSource.org. 30 January 2009. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  2. ^ a b c ""Welcome Aboard!"". Photobucket.com. Retrieved 2 November 2018. Leaflet produced for sailors on USS Cocopa, circa 1973–77
  3. ^ a b "The Last Surrender of World War II". CNMI Guide. Retrieved 27 November 2009.
  4. ^ a b "Cocopa". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History & Heritage Command. 2015. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  5. ^ Thomas, Charles; Goetz, Jerald; Klemm, Jeffrey & Ortlieb, Edward (October 1991). Analysis of Radiation Exposure for Additional Naval Personnel at Operation CASTLE-Supplemental Report (PDF) (Report). Alexandria, Virginia: Defense Nuclear Agency. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  6. ^ "CUS Navy Beach Jumpers". Psywarrior.com. Retrieved 26 November 2009.

Bibliography edit

  • Task Force 77. Contains brief, detailed info on Cocopa's Korean War service.
  • Official Damage Report of the Grounding of HMCS Huron. Describes role of the Cocopa (referred to in this report as "the tug") in towing the damaged Huron.
  • This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.

External links edit

  • USS Cocopa. Offers several photos from the Cocopa's service, circa 1952-78.
  • Last Defenders of the Japanese Empire. Photo of 19 Japanese soldiers on Anatahan surrendering to Lt. Cmdr. J.B. Johnson, captain of the Cocopa.
  • My Journey to Vietnam, by Steven Karoly. Personal account by a Cocopa cook of a stormy voyage to Vietnam in 1972.
  • Adventures of the Cocopa Personal photographs taken by the ship's electronic technician, 1973 to 1978.