History of the West Point
| A military post in New York state, located on the west bank of the Hudson
River below Poughkeepsie. West Point is the site of the United States Military Academy. II (AP-23: dp. 35,400; l. 723'; b. 93'3"; dr. 32'9"; s. 17.6 k.; cpl. 969; trp.
7,678; a. 4 6", 4 Although initially slated for the North Atlantic trade, America was deployed instead on
the New York to West Indies cruise routes, because the war in Europe had resulted in the
invocation of the West Point soon proceeded to New York City and, while anchored off the Staten Island
quarantine station on 16 July, took on board 137 Italian citizens and 327 Germans from the
consulates of those nations in the United States which had been c losed. West Point got
underway at 1455 on the 16th, bound for Portugal, and arrived at Lisbon on the 23d. While
there, the ship was visited by Portuguese naval and diplomatic dignitaries; and she
transferred supplies to the Coast Guard cutter Returning to New York on 1 August, West Point discharged her passengers and headed
south for an On 3 November, she sailed from Carolina waters and arrived at Halifax Nova Scotia, on the 5th. There, on 8 and 9 November she embarked 241 officers and 5,202 men of the 55th Brigade, Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Battalions, and 100 men of an American Ar my Field Service company. On the 10th, West Point-in company with five other transports: Wakefield, Mount Vernon, Orizaba (AP-24), Leonard Wood (AP-25), and Joseph T. Dickman (AP -25)[sic]-got underway for India as Convoy HS-124. En route, they were joined by Ranger (CV-4), Vincennes (CA-44), Quincy (CA-39), and a division of destroyers. Reaching Capetown on 9 December, West Point and Wakefield were detached on 23 December to form Task Group (TG) 14.1, while Leonard Wood and Joseph T. Dickman formed TG 14.2. Escorted by the British h eavy cruiser HMS Dorsetshire, the convoy proceeded uneventfully toward India until 0700 on the 27th, when TG 14.1 was detached to speed up and arrive at Bombay ahead of the other ships. Wakefield commenced discharging her embarked troops at 1900 at the Ballard Piers,
completed her Due to prevailing low-water conditions at Bombay at this point, neither West Point nor
Wakefield could go alongside piers in the harbor to either load equipment or troops. Thus,
the embarkation and West Point sailed for Singapore at 1300 on 9 January, in a "15-knot" convoy,
with Capt. Kelley Led by British cruiser HMS Exeter, the ships slowed to 10 knots, and, streaming
paravane gear, During the passage, Dutch Consolidated PBY Catalinas patrolled overhead. No enemy
aircraft were The screen's commander, Capt. Oliver L. Gordon, R.N., commanding Exeter, desired to arrive at Singapore with as many ships as possible by dawn on 29 January, and thus split the convoy up, sending the faster vessels-West Point, Wakefield, and Empress of Japan-ahead at increased speed under escort of cruisers HMS Exeter, Durban, Dragon, and destroyers Express and Electra. Proce eding to Singapore via Berhala Strait, Durian Strait, and Philips Channel, the group steamed through these bodies of water in bright moonlight which made navigational aids unnecessary. Upon their arrival off Singapore, the ships lay to in an exposed posit ion, beyond the range of shore-based antiaircraft guns, until pilots could be obtained to bring the ships in. Since the naval base came under daily heavy air raids, the transports thence proceeded to Keppel Harbor-the commercial basin-where they could dis charge their troops and cargo. Securing abreast godowns (warehouses) 52, 53, and 54, West Point commenced off-loading At about 0940 on 30 January, seven Japanese bombers appeared over the city and were
engaged by Later that morning, Capt. Kelley attended a conference with British authorities, who
informed Clearing Singapore, West Point and Wakefield headed due west, escorted by HMS Durban.
Overcast and squally weather covered their departure and permitted them to transit the
Banka Strait British authorities requested the American ships to evacuate personnel to Bombay. Accordingly, West Point took on board eight men, 55 women, and 53 children, as well as 670 troops, for passage to India. Wakefield, despite her weakened condition caused by the direct hit on 29 January, embarked two naval ratings, six RAF personnel, and 25 men and one officer of a British Bofors gun detachment. The two ships departed Colombo on 8 February and, escorted by the Greek destroyer Queen Olga, proceeded at 20 knots. Capt. Kelley later highly praised the operations of this sole escort. Although heavy weather was encountered en route, the elderly Greek destroyer acquitted herself well, continuing to patrol her station "at all times at high speed ahead of our zig-zag." After discharging her evacuees at Bombay, West Point parted company with Wakefield and proceeded to Suez where she picked up Australian troops who were being withdrawn from the North African front to fight the Japanese in southeast As ia. Meanwhile, one disaster after another had plagued the Allied forces. Singapore fell on 15 February; Java on 4 March. West Point carried her embarked troops to Australia and disembarked them at Adelaide and Melbourne before heading across the Pacific toward San Francisco. As the Allies built up for the long road back, West Point participated in the effort to
aid America's allies in the southwest Pacific with massive contingents of troops.
Accordingly, the transport carried After two voyages to the United Kingdom, West Point sailed for India, via the South Atlantic route, and arrived at Bombay on 29 November, before pushing on for Auckland, New Zealand, the following month. The transport returned via Noumea, Ne w Caledonia, to San Francisco on 31 January 1943. She remained on the west coast until 16 February, when she got underway for the South Pacific and retraced her route to Wellington, New Zealand, and Australian ports. She then continued west-calling at Bom bay, Massawa, Aden, and Suez-and stopped briefly at Capetown en route to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Eventually arriving at New York on 4 May, the ship subsequently made two voyages to Casablanca, French Morocco, before sailing for Bombay via the southern Atl antic route. Calling at Rio de Janeiro and Capetown en route, the big transport continued, via Bombay and Melbourne, on for the west coast of the United States. Soon thereafter, West Point began transporting troops to Australia and continued making
voyages In 1944, the transport continued her vital workhorse duties, departing San Francisco on 12 January, bound for Noumea and Guadalcanal; and from San Pedro, Calif., on 22 February, bound for Noumea and Milne Bay. She sailed from the latter port and steamed v ia the Panama Canal to Boston, Mass., where she arrived on 12 June. She conducted five successive voyages to the United Kingdom before departing Boston on 6 December 1944 for Oran, Algeria,
Casablanca, In 1945, West Point voyaged to Italian and French ports, via Oran or Gibraltar, staging from Hampton Roads, Va., Boston, or New York. After Germany surrendered, she took part in some of the initial "Magic Carpet" voyages, bringing home Ameri can troops from the European battlefronts. Following her last European voyage-to Le Havre, France-West Point was transferred to the Pacific Fleet. She departed Boston on 10 December 1945, transited the Panama Canal, and proceeded to Manila, Philippines, via Pearl Harbor. Retracing the same route, she returned to New York on 7 February 1946 and soon got underway for Hampton Roads, where she was released from troop-carrying service on 22 February, Washington's Birthday. Six days later, the shi p was decommissioned and transferred to the Maritime Commission's War Shipping Administration. West Point was struck from the Navy list on 12 March 1946. Carrying a total of over 350,000 troops during her naval service, West Point had the
largest Returning to her builder's yard at Newport News West Point reacquired her old
name-America-and With the advent of stiffer international competition in the transoceanic shipping business and the launching of the new United States Lines' flagship-the larger, more luxurious United States-America was sold to the Chandris Shipping Line, a Greek firm, in October 1964. Renamed Australis, the erstwhile transport and flagship of the United States Lines operated as a passenger liner into 1977 on cruises to the Far East and South Pacific. Acquired by an American cruise ship firm in early 1978, the ship's maiden voyage for her new owners was financially unsuccessful, and the ship began a major refit soon thereafter. To view her Record of Cruises, look here. On Board
The USS West Point |