Admirable-class minesweeper

The Admirable class was one of the largest and most successful classes of minesweepers ordered by the United States Navy during World War II. Typically, minesweepers detected and removed naval mines before the rest of the fleet arrived, thereby ensuring safe passage for the larger ships. They were also charged with anti-submarine warfare (ASW) duties with rear-mounted depth charge racks and a forward-firing Hedgehog antisubmarine mortar. Their job was essential to the safety and success of U.S. naval operations during World War II and the Korean War. These minesweepers were also employed as patrol vessel and convoy escorts. The only remaining ship of this class is located at Freedom Park, Omaha, NE.

The PCE-842-class patrol craft of patrol craft escorts was based on the Admirable-class design.

Service in other Navies
As a part of Project Hula – a secret 1945 program that transferred 149 U.S. Navy ships to the Soviet Navy at Cold Bay, Territory of Alaska, in anticipation of the Soviet Union joining the war against Japan – the U.S. Navy transferred 24 Admirable-class minesweepers to the Soviet Navy between May and August 1945. At least some of them saw action in the Soviet offensive against Japanese forces in Northeast Asia in August 1945. The Soviet Union never returned them to the United States.

After World War II, the United States transferred Admirable-class minesweepers to the Republic of China Navy, the Republic of China's Chinese Maritime Customs Service, the Republic of Korea Navy, the Republic of Vietnam Navy, and the Dominican, Mexican, Myanmar, and Philippine navies.

USS Hazard (AM-240) survives as a museum ship on dry land in Omaha, Nebraska. USS Inaugural (AM-242) was a museum ship on the Mississippi River in St. Louis, until she sank during the Great Flood of 1993. USS Scuffle (AM-298) was scuttled off the coast of Cozumel, Mexico in 1999. It is now a popular site for scuba diving.



Production

 * Tampa Shipbuilding Company, Tampa, FL (24)
 * USS Admirable (AM-136) ... USS Bombard (AM-151)
 * USS Crag (AM-214) ... USS Diploma (AM-221)
 * Willamette Iron and Steel Works, Portland, OR (23)
 * USS Bond (Am-152) ... USS Counsel (AM-165)
 * USS Creddock (AM-356), USS Dipper (AM-357), USS Drake (AM-359)
 * USS Dunlin (AM-361) ... USS Harrier (AM-366)
 * Savannah Machine & Foundry, GA (9)
 * USS Implicit (AM-246) ... USS Invade (AM-254)
 * Winslow Marine Railway and Shipbuilding Company, Puget Sound, WA (13)
 * USS Garland (AM-238) ... USS Inaugural (AM-242)
 * USS Salute (AM-294) ... USS Shelter (AM-301)
 * Gulf Shipbuilding Madisonville, LA (16)
 * USS Notable (AM-267) ... USS Rampart (AM-282)
 * General Engineering & Dry Dock Company, Alameda, CA (7)
 * USS Ransom (AM-283) ... USS Report (AM-289)
 * Associated Shipbuilders, Puget Sound, WA (14)
 * USS Signet (AM-302) ... USS Superior (AM-311)
 * USS Execute (AM-232) ... USS Fixity (AM-235)
 * American Ship Building Company, Lorain, OH (17)
 * USS Jubilant (AM-255) ... USS Nimble (AM-266)
 * USS Disdain (AM-222) ... USS Embattle (AM-226)

Engines

 * Two 855shp ALCO 539 diesel engines, Farrel-Birmingham single reduction gear, two shafts. (30)
 * AM-136 ... AM-165
 * Two 855shp Cooper Bessemer GSB-8 diesel engines, National Supply Co. single reduction gear, two shafts (84)
 * AM-214 ... AM-226, AM-232 ... AM-235, AM-240 ... AM-242
 * AM-246 ... AM-291, AM-294 ... AM-311
 * Two 855shp Busch-Sulzer 539 diesel engines, Farrel Birmingham single reduction gear, two shafts (9)
 * AM-356, AM-357, AM-359, AM-361 ... AM-366
 * ref: