TICONDEROGA differed somewhat from the earlier
ESSEX-class ships in that she was 16 ft (4.9 m) longer to accommodate
bow-mounted anti-aircraft guns. Most subsequent ESSEX-class carriers
were completed to this "long-hull" design and they were
later referred to as the TICONDEROGA class. At the end of her career,
after a number of modifications, she was said to be in the
HANCOCK-class according to the Naval Vessel Register.
TICONDEROGA
was decommissioned in 1973 and sold for scrap in 1975.
History
The
ship was laid down as HANCOCK on 1 February 1943 at Newport News,
Virginia, by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., then
renamed TICONDEROGA on 1 May 1943, and launched on 7 February 1944.
Sponsored by Miss Stephanie Sarah Pell, she was commissioned CV-14 at the
Norfolk Navy Yard on 8 May 1944, Captain Dixie Kiefer in
command.
F6F Hellcats of VF-80, June 1944
TICONDEROGA remained at Norfolk for almost two
months outfitting and embarking Air Group 80. On 26 June 1944, the
carrier set a course for the British West Indies. She conducted air
operations and drills en route and reached Port of Spain, Trinidad,
on the 30th. For the next 15 days, TICONDEROGA trained intensively to
weld her air group and crew into an efficient wartime team. She
departed the West Indies on 16 July and headed back to Norfolk where
she arrived on the 22nd for post-shakedown repairs and alterations.
On 30 August, the carrier headed for Panama. She transited the Panama
Canal on 4 September and steamed up the coast to Naval Base San Diego
the following day. On the 13th, the carrier moored at San Diego where
she loaded provisions, fuel, aviation gas, and an additional 77
planes, as well as the Marine Corps aviation and defense units that
went with them. On the 19th, she steamed for Hawaii where she arrived
five days later.
TICONDEROGA remained at Pearl Harbor for
almost a month. She and USS CARINA (AK-74) conducted experiments in
the underway transfer of aviation bombs from cargo ship to aircraft
carrier. Following those tests, she conducted air operations day
and night landing and antiaircraft defense drills until 18
October, when she exited Pearl Harbor and headed for the western
Pacific. After a brief stop at Eniwetok, TICONDEROGA arrived at
Ulithi in the Western Caroline Islands on the 29th. There she
embarked Rear Admiral Arthur W. Radford, Commander, Carrier Division
6, and joined Task Force 38 (TF 38) as a unit of Rear Admiral
Frederick C. Sherman's Task Group 38.3 (TG 38.3).
World
War II
Philippine
Campaign:
The
carrier sortied from Ulithi with TF 38 on 2 November 1944. She joined
the other carriers as they resumed their extended air cover for the
ground forces supporting the Battle of Leyte. She launched her first
air strike on the morning of the 5th. The planes of her air group
spent the next two days pummeling enemy shipping near Luzon and air
installations on that island. Her planes bombed and strafed the
airfields at Zablan, Mandaluyong, and Pasig. They also joined those
of other carriers in sinking the heavy Japanese cruiser NACHI. In
addition, TICONDEROGA pilots claimed six Japanese aircraft shot down
and one destroyed on the ground, as well as 23 others
damaged.
Around 16:00 on the 5th, the enemy retaliated by
sending up a flock of kamikaze planes. Two of the suicide planes
succeeded in slipping through the American combat air patrol and
antiaircraft fire to crash into USS LEXINGTON (CV-16). TICONDEROGA
emerged from that airborne banzai charge unscathed and claimed a
tally of two splashes. On 6 November, the warship launched two
fighter sweeps and two bombing strikes against the Luzon airfields
and enemy shipping in the vicinity. Her airmen returned later that
day claiming the destruction of 35 Japanese aircraft and attacks on
six enemy ships in Manila Bay. After recovering her planes, the
carrier retired to the east for a fueling rendezvous.
She
refueled and received replacement planes on the 7th and then headed
back to continue pounding enemy forces in the Philippines. Early on
the morning of 11 November, her planes combined with others of TF 38
to attack a Japanese reinforcement convoy, just as it was preparing
to enter Ormoc Bay from the Camotes Sea. Together, the planes
accounted for all the enemy transports and four of the seven
escorting destroyers. On the 12th-13th, TICONDEROGA and her sisters
launched strikes at Luzon airfields and docks and shipping around
Manila. This raid tallied an impressive score: light cruiser KISO,
four destroyers, and seven merchant ships. At the conclusion of the
raid, TF 38 retired eastward for a refueling breather. TICONDEROGA
and the rest of TG 38.3, however, continued east to Ulithi where they
arrived on the 17th to replenish, refuel, and rearm.
On 22
November, the aircraft carrier departed Ulithi once more and steamed
back toward the Philippines. Three days later, she launched air
strikes on central Luzon and adjacent waters. Her pilots finished off
the heavy cruiser KUMANO, damaged in the Battle off Samar. Later,
they attacked an enemy convoy about 15 miles (24 km) southwest of
Dasol Bay. Of this convoy, the NING HAI-class cruiser YASOSHIMA, a
merchantman, and three landing ships went to the bottom.
TICONDEROGAs air group rounded out their day of destruction
with an aerial rampage which cost the Japanese 15 planes shot down
and 11 destroyed on the ground.
While her air group busily
pounded the Japanese, TICONDEROGAs company also made their
presence felt. Just after noon, a torpedo launched by an enemy plane
broached in the wake of USS LANGLEY (CVL-27), announcing the approach
of an air raid. TICONDEROGAs gunners raced to their battle
stations as the raiders made both conventional and suicide attacks on
the task group. Her sister ship USS ESSEX (CV-9) erupted in flames
when one of the kamikazes crashed into her. When a second suicide
plane tried to finish off the stricken carrier, TICONDEROGAs
gunners joined those firing from other ships in cutting his approach
abruptly short. That afternoon, while damage control parties dressed
ESSEXs wounds, TICONDEROGA recovered the damaged carrier's
homeless airmen as well as two USS INTREPID (CV-11) pilots in similar
straits. The following day, TF 38 retired to the east.
TF
38 stood out of Ulithi again on 11 December and headed for the
Philippines. TICONDEROGA arrived at the launch point early in the
afternoon of the 13th and sent her planes aloft to blanket Japanese
airbases on Luzon while Army planes attacked those in the central
Philippines. For three days, TICONDEROGA airmen and their comrades
wreaked havoc with a storm of destruction on enemy airfields. She
withdrew on the 16th with the rest of TF 38 in search of a fueling
rendezvous. While attempting to find calmer waters in which to
refuel, TF 38 steamed directly through a violent, but unheralded,
typhoon. Though the storm cost Admiral William Halsey's force three
destroyers and over 800 lives, TICONDEROGA and the other carriers
managed to ride it out with a minimum of damage. Having survived the
battle, TICONDEROGA returned to Ulithi on 24 December, Christmas
Eve.
Repairs occasioned by the typhoon kept TF 38 in the
anchorage almost until the end of the month. The carriers did not
return to sea until 30 December 1944 when they steamed north to hit
Formosa and Luzon in preparation for the landings on the latter
island at Lingayen Gulf. Severe weather limited the Formosa strikes
on 34 January 1945 and, in all likelihood, obviated the need for
them. The warships fueled at sea on the 5th. Despite rough weather on
the 6th, the strikes on Luzon airfields were carried out. That day,
TICONDEROGAs airmen and their colleagues of the other air
groups increased their score by another 32 enemy planes. The 7th
brought more strikes on Luzon installations. After a fueling
rendezvous on the 8th, TICONDEROGA sped north at night to get into
position to blanket Japanese airfields in the Ryūkyūs during the
Lingayen assault the following morning. However, foul weather, the
bugaboo of TF 38 during the winter of 1944 and 1945, forced TG 38.3
to abandon the strikes on the Ryūkyū airfields and join TG 38.2 in
pounding Formosa.
South
China Sea Combat:
During
the night of 910 January, TF 38 steamed boldly through the Luzon
Strait and then headed generally southwest, diagonally across the
South China Sea. TICONDEROGA provided combat air patrol coverage on
the 11th and helped to bring down four enemy planes which attempted
to snoop the formation. Otherwise, the carriers and their consorts
proceeded unmolested to a point some 150 to 200 mi (240 to 320 km)
off the coast of Indochina. There, on the 12th, they launched their
approximately 850 planes and made a series of anti-shipping sweeps
during which they sank an incredible 44 ships, totaling over 300,000
long tons.
After recovering planes in the late afternoon,
the carriers moved off to the northeast. Heavy weather hindered
fueling operations on the 13th14th, and air searches failed to
turn up any tempting targets. On the 15th, fighters swept Japanese
airfields on the Chinese coast while the flattops headed for a
position from which to strike Hong Kong. The following morning, they
launched anti-shipping bombing raids and fighter sweeps of air
installations. Weather prevented air operations on the 17th and again
made fueling difficult. It worsened the next day and stopped
replenishment operations altogether, so that they were not finally
concluded until the 19th. The force then shaped a course generally
northward to retransit Luzon Strait via Balintang Channel.
Attacks
on South Japanese Islands:
The
three task groups of TF 38 completed their transit during the night
of 2021 January. The next morning, aided by favorable flight
conditions, their planes hit airfields on Formosa, in the Pescadores,
and at Sakishima Gunto. While it allowed American flight operations
to continue through the day, it also allowed for Japanese kamikaze
operations.
Just after noon, a single-engine Japanese
plane scored a hit on LANGLEY with a glide-bombing attack. Seconds
later, a kamikaze swooped out of the clouds and plunged toward
TICONDEROGA. He crashed through her flight deck abreast of the No. 2
5 in (130 mm) mount, and his bomb exploded just above her hangar
deck. Several planes stowed nearby erupted into flames. Death and
destruction abounded, but the ship's company fought valiantly to save
the threatened carrier. Captain Kiefer conned his ship smartly.
First, he changed course to keep the wind from fanning the blaze.
Then, he ordered magazines and other compartments flooded to prevent
further explosions and to correct a 10° starboard list. Finally, he
instructed the damage control party to continue flooding compartments
on TICONDEROGAs port side. That operation induced a 10° port
list which neatly dumped the fire overboard. Firefighters and plane
handlers completed the job by dousing the flames and jettisoning
burning aircraft.
The other kamikaze then pounced on the
carrier. Her antiaircraft gunners struck back with ferocity and
quickly shot three down into the sea. A fourth plane slipped through
her barrage and smashed into the carrier's starboard side near the
island. His bomb set more planes on fire, riddled her flight deck,
and injured or killed another 100 sailors, with Captain Kiefer one of
the wounded. Yet TICONDEROGAs crew refused to submit. Spared
further attacks, they brought her fires completely under control not
long after 1400; and TICONDEROGA retired.
TICONDEROGA listing, 21 January 1945
Repair
and Relaunch:
The
stricken carrier arrived at Ulithi on 24 January but remained there
only long enough to move her wounded to the hospital ship USS
SAMARITAN (AH-10), to transfer her air group to HANCOCK, and to
embark passengers bound for home. TICONDEROGA cleared the lagoon on
28 January and headed for the U.S. The warship stopped briefly at
Pearl Harbor en route to the Puget Sound Navy Yard where she arrived
on 15 February. Captain William Sinton assumed command in February
1945.
Her repairs were completed on 20 April, and she
cleared Puget Sound the following day for the Alameda Naval Air
Station, Alameda, California. After embarking passengers and aircraft
bound for Hawaii, the carrier headed for Pearl Harbor where she
arrived on 1 May. The next day, Air Group 87 came on board and, for
the next week, trained in preparation for the carrier's return to
combat. TICONDEROGA stood out of Pearl Harbor and shaped a course for
the western Pacific. En route to Ulithi, she launched her planes for
what amounted to training strikes on Japanese-held Taroa in the
Marshalls. On 22 May, the warship arrived in Ulithi and rejoined the
Fast Carrier Task Force as an element of Rear Admiral Radford's TG
58.4.
Preparing
for the Japan Campaign:
Two
days after her arrival, TICONDEROGA sortied from Ulithi with TF 58
and headed north to spend the last weeks of the war in Japanese home
waters. Three days out, Admiral Halsey relieved Admiral Raymond
Spruance, the 5th Fleet reverted to 3rd Fleet, and TF 58 became TF 38
again for the duration. On 23 June, TICONDEROGA fighters struck at
airfields on Kyūshū in an effort to neutralize the remnants of
Japanese air power particularly the kamikaze and to relieve
the pressure on American forces at Okinawa. During the following two
days, TICONDEROGA rode out her second typhoon in less than six months
and emerged relatively unscathed. She provided combat air patrol
cover for 6 June refueling rendezvous, and four of her fighters
intercepted and destroyed three Okinawa-bound kamikazes. That
evening, she steamed off at high speed with TG 38.4 to conduct a
fighter sweep of airfields on southern Kyūshū on the 8th.
TICONDEROGAs planes then joined in the aerial bombardment of
Minami Daito and Kita Daito islands before the carrier headed for
Leyte where she arrived on the 13th.
During the two-week
rest and replenishment period she enjoyed at Leyte, TICONDEROGA
changed task organizations from TG 38.4 to Rear Admiral Gerald F.
Bogan's TG 38.3. On 1 July, under the flag of Rear Admiral Clifton
Sprague, she departed Leyte with TF 38 and headed north to resume
raids on Japan. Two days later, a damaged reduction gear forced her
into Apra Harbor, Guam, for repairs. She remained there until the
19th when she steamed off to rejoin TF 38. On the 24th, her planes
joined those of other fast carriers in striking ships in the Inland
Sea and airfields at Nagoya, Osaka, and Miko.
During those
raids, TF 38 planes found the sad remnants of the once-mighty
Japanese Fleet and bagged battleships ISE, HYUGA, and HARUNA as well
as an escort carrier, KAIYO, and two heavy cruisers. On 28 July, her
aircraft directed their efforts toward the Kure Naval Base, where
they pounded an aircraft carrier, three cruisers, a destroyer, and a
submarine. She shifted her attention to the industrial area of
central Honshū on the 30th, then to northern Honshū and Hokkaidō
on 910 August. The latter attacks thoroughly destroyed the
marshaling area for a planned airborne suicide raid on the B-29 bases
in the Marianas. On the 13th and 14th, her planes returned to the
Tokyo area and helped to subject the Japanese capital to another
severe drubbing.
On the morning of 16 August, TICONDEROGA
launched another strike against Tokyo. During or just after that
attack, word reached TF 38 to the effect that Japan had
capitulated.
The shock of peace, though not so abrupt as
that of war almost four years previously, took some getting used to.
TICONDEROGA and her sister ships remained on a full war footing. She
continued patrols over Japanese territory and sent reconnaissance
flights in search of camps containing Allied prisoners of war so that
air-dropped supplies could be rushed to them. On 6 September four
days after the formal surrender ceremony aboard USS MISSOURI (BB-63)
TICONDEROGA entered Tokyo Bay.
Post-War
Her
arrival at Tokyo ended one phase of her career and began another. She
embarked homeward-bound passengers and put to sea again on the 20th.
After a stop in Pearl Harbor, the carrier reached Alameda, on 5
October. She disembarked her passengers and unloaded cargo before
heading out on the 9th to pick up another group of veterans.
TICONDEROGA delivered over a thousand soldiers and sailors to Tacoma,
Washington, and remained there through the 28th for the Navy Day
celebration. On 29 October, the carrier departed Tacoma and headed
back to Alameda. En route, all of the planes of Air Group 87 were
transferred ashore so that the carrier could be altered to
accommodate additional passengers in the Operation Magic Carpet
voyages to follow.
Following the completion of those
modifications at the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard in November, she
headed for the Philippines and arrived at Samar on 20 November. She
returned to Alameda on 6 December and debarked almost 4,000 returning
servicemen. The carrier made one more Magic Carpet run in December
1945 and January 1946 before entering the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard
to prepare for inactivation. Almost a year later on 9 January 1947,
TICONDEROGA was placed out of commission and berthed with the
Bremerton Group of the Pacific Reserve Fleet.
Redeployment
in the Pacific:
On
31 January 1952, TICONDEROGA came out of reserve and went into
reduced commission for the transit from Bremerton to New York. She
departed Puget Sound on 27 February and reached New York on 1 April.
Three days later, she was decommissioned at the New York Naval
Shipyard to begin the extensive SCB-27C conversion. During the
ensuing 29 months, the carrier received numerous modifications
steam catapults to launch jets, a new nylon barricade, a new
deck-edge elevator and the latest electronic and fire control
equipment necessary for her to become an integral unit of the
fleet. Having been redesignated CVA-14 on 1 October 1952, she was recommissioned on 11 September 1954, at New
York, Captain William A. Schoech in command.
In January
1955, the carrier shifted to her new home port Naval Station
Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia where she arrived on the 6th. Over the
next month, she conducted carrier qualifications with Air Group 6 in
the Virginia Capes operating area. On 3 February, she stood out of
Hampton Roads for shakedown near Cuba, after which she returned via
Norfolk to New York for additional alterations. During the late
summer, the warship resumed carrier qualifications in the Virginia
Capes area.
She visited Philadelphia over Labor Day
weekend to participate in the International Air Show. To demonstrate
the power of her new steam catapults, on three consecutive days she
launched North American AJ-1 Savages while standing at anchor in the
Delaware River. The TICONDEROGA next participated in tests of four
new planes the A-4D Skyhawk, F4D Skyray, F7U Cutlass, and F3H
Demon. TICONDEROGA then returned to normal operations along the East
Coast until 4 November when she departed Naval Station Mayport,
Florida, and headed for Europe. She relieved INTREPID at Gibraltar 10
days later and cruised the length of the Mediterranean during the
following eight months. On 2 August 1956, TICONDEROGA returned to
Norfolk and entered the shipyard to receive an angled flight deck and
an enclosed hurricane bow as part of the SCB-125 program.
Those
modifications were completed by early April 1957, and she got
underway for her new home port back in Alameda. She reached her
destination on 30 May, underwent repairs, and finished out the summer
with operations off the California coast. On 16 September, she stood
out of San Francisco Bay and shaped course for the Far East. En
route, she stopped at Pearl Harbor before continuing west to
Yokosuka, Japan, where she arrived on 15 October. For six months,
TICONDEROGA cruised Oriental waters from Japan in the north to the
Philippines in the south. Upon arriving at Alameda on 25 April 1958,
she completed her first deployment to the western Pacific since
recommissioning.
Vietnam
Pre-conflict
Operations:
From
19581963, TICONDEROGA made four more peacetime deployments to the
western Pacific. During each, she conducted training operations with
other units of the 7th Fleet and made goodwill and liberty port calls
throughout the Far East. Early in 1964, she began preparations for
her sixth cruise to the western Pacific and, following exercises off
the west coast and in the Hawaiian Islands, the carrier cleared Pearl
Harbor on 4 May for what began as another peaceful tour of duty in
the Far East. The first three months of that deployment brought
normal operations-training and port calls.
Initial
Actions:
On
2 August, while operating in international waters in the Gulf of
Tonkin, USS MADDOX (DD-731) reported being attacked by units of the
(North) Vietnam People's Navy. Within minutes of her receipt of the
message, TICONDEROGA dispatched four, rocket-armed F-8E Crusaders to
the destroyer's assistance. Upon arrival, the Crusaders launched Zuni
rockets and strafed the North Vietnamese craft with their 20 mm
cannons. After the efforts of TICONDEROGA and MADDOX, one boat was
left dead in the water and the other two damaged.
Two days
later, late in the evening of the 4th, TICONDEROGA received urgent
requests from USS TURNER JOY (DD-951), by then on patrol with MADDOX,
for air support in resisting what the destroyer alleged to be another
torpedo boat foray. The carrier again launched planes to aid the
American surface ships, and TURNER JOY directed them. The Navy
surface and air team believed it had sunk two boats and damaged
another pair.
President Lyndon Johnson responded with a
reprisal to what he felt at the time to be two unprovoked attacks on
American seapower and ordered retaliatory air strikes on selected
North Vietnamese motor torpedo boat bases. On 5 August, TICONDEROGA
and USS CONSTELLATION (CVA-64) launched 60 sorties against four bases
and their supporting oil storage facilities. The USN attacks
reportedly resulted in the destruction of 25 PT-type boats, severe
damage to the bases, and almost complete razing of the oil storage
depot. For her quick reaction and successful combat actions on those
three occasions, TICONDEROGA received the Navy Unit
Commendation.
Stand-down:
After
a return visit to Japan in September, TICONDEROGA resumed normal
operations in the South China Sea until winding up the deployment
late in the year. She returned to the Naval Air Station North Island,
California, on 15 December 1964. Following post-deployment and
holiday stand-down, TICONDEROGA moved to the Hunter's Point Naval
Shipyard on 27 January 1965 to begin a five-month overhaul. She
completed repairs in June and spent the summer operating along the
coast of southern California. On 28 September, the aircraft carrier
put to sea for another deployment to the Orient. She spent some time
in the Hawaiian Islands for an operational readiness exercise then
continued on to the Far East. She reached "Dixie Station"
on 5 November and immediately began combat air operations.
196566
Deployment:
TICONDEROGAs
winter deployment of 1965 and 1966 was her first total combat tour of
duty during American involvement in the Vietnam War. During her six
months in the Far East, the carrier spent a total of 116 days in air
operations off the coast of Vietnam dividing her time almost evenly
between "Dixie" and "Yankee Stations, the carrier
operating areas off South and North Vietnam, respectively. Her air
group delivered over 8,000 short tons (7,300 t) of ordnance in more
than 10,000 combat sorties, with a loss of 16 planes, but only five
pilots. For the most part, her aircraft hit enemy installations in
North Vietnam and interdicted supply routes into South Vietnam,
including river-borne and coastwise junk and sampan traffic as well
as roads, bridges, and trucks on land. Specifically, they claimed the
destruction of 35 bridges as well as numerous warehouses, barracks,
trucks, boats, and railroad cars and severe damage to a major North
Vietnamese thermal power plant located at Uong Bi north of Haiphong.
After a stop at United States Fleet Activities in Sasebo, Japan, from
25 April-3 May 1966, the warship put to sea to return to the United
States. On 13 May, she pulled into port at San Diego to end the
deployment.
On 5 December 1965, a Douglas A-4 Skyhawk was
lost overboard while the aircraft carrier was 80 miles (130 km) from
one of the Ryukyu Islands, Okinawa. The aircraft was being rolled
from a hangar bay onto an elevator. The aircraft had mounted on it a
B43 nuclear bomb. The pilot, LTJG Douglas Webster, the A-4E Skyhawk,
Bu.No. 151022, of Attack Squadron VA-56 Champions, and the nuclear
weapon were all lost. No public mention was made of the incident at
the time and it would not come to light until a 1981 United States
Department of Defense report revealed that a one-megaton bomb had
been lost. Japan then asked for details of the incident.
196667,
196768 Deployments:
Following
repairs she stood out of San Diego on 9 July to begin a normal round
of West Coast training operations. Those and similar evolutions
continued until 15 October, when TICONDEROGA departed San Diego,
bound via Hawaii for the western Pacific. The carrier reached
Yokosuka on 30 October and remained there until 5 November when she
headed south for an overnight stop at U.S. Naval Base Subic Bay in
the Philippines on the 10th and 11th. On the 13th, TICONDEROGA
arrived in the Gulf of Tonkin and began the first of three combat
tours during her 19661967 deployment. She launched 11,650 combat
sorties, all against enemy targets located in North Vietnam. Again,
her primary targets were logistics and communications lines and
transportation facilities. For her contribution and that of Air Wing
Nineteen to Operation Rolling Thunder, TICONDEROGA was awarded her
second Navy Unit Commendation.
She completed her final
line period on 27 April 1967 and returned to Yokosuka, from which she
departed again on 19 May to return to the United States. Ten days
later, the carrier entered San Diego and began a month-long,
post-deployment stand-down. At the beginning of July, she shifted to
Bremerton, Washington, where she entered the Puget Sound for two
months of repairs. Upon the completion of yard work, she departed
Bremerton on 6 September and steamed south to training operations off
the coast of southern California.
On 28 December 1967,
TICONDEROGA sailed for her fourth combat deployment to the waters off
the Indochinese coast and arrived on Yankee Station in January 1968.
TICONDEROGA was on Yankee Station for the beginning of the 1968 Tet
Offensive. Nearly coincidental with the Tet Offensive, the siege of
Khe Sanh began and USS PUEBLO (AGER-2) was seized by the North
Koreans and taken to Wonsan harbor. USS RANGER (CV-61) was
immediately deployed to the coast of North Korea. Approximately a
week later, RANGER was relieved off Korea by TICONDEROGA and returned
to Yankee Station. USS ENTERPRISE (CVN-65) joined TICONDEROGA and
strikes were planned against seven MiG airfields with approximately
200 MiGS. These strikes were never executed and TICONDEROGA returned
to Yankee Station to resume her role in the Tet Offensive. Between
January 1968 and July 1968, TICONDEROGA was on the line off the coast
of Vietnam for five separate periods totaling 120 days of combat
duty. During that time, her air wing flew just over 13,000 combat
sorties against North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces, most
frequently in the continuing attempts to interdict the enemy lines of
supply. Between line periods, she regularly returned to Subic Bay and
Naval Air Station Cubi Point for rest and replenishment. She also
made port visits at Singapore and Hong Kong. On 9 July, during her
fifth line period, LCDR John B. Nichols claimed TICONDEROGAs
first MiG kill. The carrier completed that line period and entered
Subic Bay for upkeep on 25 July. TICONDEROGA then proceeded for her
homeport in NAS North Island, Coronado, California, arriving on 17
August 1968 after one days delay in the fog off San Diego in the San
Clemente Channel. Shortly thereafter, TICONDEROGA moved to the Long
Beach Naval Shipyard for repairs and certain conversions to handle
the A-7 Corsair attack jet and to prepare for her fifth combat cruise
in February 1969.
Final
Deployments:
During
the first month of 1969, TICONDEROGA made preparations for her fifth
consecutive combat deployment to the Southeast Asia area. On 1
February, she cleared San Diego and headed west. After a brief stop
at Pearl Harbor a week later, she continued her voyage to Yokosuka
where she arrived on the 20th. The carrier departed Yokosuka on the
28th for the coast of Vietnam where she arrived on 4 March. Over the
next four months, TICONDEROGA served four periods on the line off
Vietnam, interdicting communist supply lines and making strikes
against their positions.
During her second line period,
however, her tour of duty off Vietnam came to an abrupt end on 16
April when she was shifted north to the Sea of Japan. North Korean
aircraft had shot down a Navy reconnaissance plane in the area, and
TICONDEROGA was called upon to beef up the forces assigned to the
vicinity. However, the crisis abated, and TICONDEROGA entered Subic
Bay on 27 April for upkeep. On 8 May, she departed the Philippines to
return to Yankee Station and resumed interdiction operations. Between
her third and fourth line periods, the carrier visited Sasebo and
Hong Kong.
The aircraft carrier took station off Vietnam
for her last line period of the deployment on 26 June and there
followed 37 more days of highly successful air sorties against enemy
targets. Following that tour, she joined TF 71 in the Sea of Japan
for the remainder of the deployment. TICONDEROGA concluded the
deployment - a highly successful one, for she received her third Navy
Unit Commendation for her operations during that tour of duty - when
she left Subic Bay on 4 September.
Post-Vietnam
service
TICONDEROGA
arrived in San Diego on 18 September. After almost a month of
post-deployment stand-down, she moved to the Long Beach Naval
Shipyard in mid-October to begin conversion to an antisubmarine
warfare (ASW) aircraft carrier. Overhaul and conversion work began on
20 October, and TICONDEROGA was redesignated CVS-14 the following day. She
completed overhaul and conversion on 28 May 1970 and conducted
exercises out of Long Beach for most of June. On the 26th, the new
ASW support carrier entered her new home port, San Diego. In
JulyAugust, she conducted refresher training, refresher air
operations, and carrier landing qualifications. She operated off the
California coast for the remainder of the year and participated in
two exercises-HUKASWEX 470 late in October and COMPUTEX 2370
between 30 November and 3 December.
During the remainder
of her active career, TICONDEROGA made two more deployments to the
Far East. Because of her change in mission, neither tour of duty
included combat operations off Vietnam. Both, however, included
training exercises in the Sea of Japan with ships of the Japanese
Maritime Self Defense Force. The first of these two cruises also
brought operations in the Indian Ocean with units of the Thai Navy
and a transit of Sunda Strait during which a ceremony was held to
commemorate the loss of USS HOUSTON (CA-30) and HMAS PERTH (D-29) in
March 1942 at the Battle of Sunda Strait.
Apollo 16 crew exits recovery SH-3G Sea King onboard TICONDEROGA, 27 April 1972
In between
these two last deployments, she operated in the eastern Pacific and
participated in the recovery of the Apollo 16 moon mission capsule
and astronauts near American Samoa during April 1972. The second
deployment came in the summer of 1972, and, in addition to the
training exercises in the Sea of Japan, TICONDEROGA also joined ASW
training operations in the South China Sea. That fall, she returned
to the eastern Pacific and, in November practiced for the recovery of Apollo 17. The next month, TICONDEROGA recovered her second set of
space voyagers near American Samoa. The carrier then headed back to
San Diego where she arrived on 28 December. On 22 June 1973,
TICONDEROGA recovered the Skylab 2 astronauts near San
Diego.
TICONDEROGA remained active for nine more months,
first operating out of San Diego and then making preparations for
inactivation. On 1 September 1973, the aircraft carrier was
decommissioned after a Board of Inspection and Survey found her to be
unfit for further naval service. Her name was struck from the Navy
list on 16 November 1973, and arrangements were begun to sell her for
scrap. She was sold for scrap 1 September 1975.
Source: Naval History and Heritage Command
Deployments:
Month/Year |
Embarked |
AOR |
November 1955 - August 1956 |
Carrier Air Group 3 (CVG-3) |
Mediterranean Sea |
September 1957 - April 1958 |
Carrier Air Group 9 (CVG-9) |
Western Pacific |
October 1958 - February 1959 |
Air Task Group 1 (ATG-1) |
Western Pacific |
March 1960 - October 1960 |
Carrier Air Group 5 (CVG-5) |
Western Pacific |
May 1961 - January 1962 |
Carrier Air Group 5 (CVG-5) |
Western Pacific |
January 1963 - July 1963 |
Carrier Air Group 5 (CVG-5) |
Western Pacific |
April 1964 - December 1964 |
Carrier Air Wing 5 (CVW-5) |
Western Pacific, Vietnam |
September 1965 - May 1966 |
Carrier Air Wing 5 (CVW-5) |
Western Pacific, Vietnam |
October 1966 - May 1967 |
Carrier Air Wing 19 (CVW-19) |
Western Pacific, Vietnam |
December 1967 - August 1968 |
Carrier Air Wing 19 (CVW-19) |
Western Pacific, Vietnam |
February 1969 - September 1969 |
Carrier Air Wing 16 (CVW-16) |
Western Pacific, Vietnam |
March 1971 - July 1971 |
Carrier Anti-Submarine Air Group 59 (CVSG-59) |
Western Pacific, Vietnam |
April 1972 - May 1972 |
Recovery Apollo 16 |
South Pacific |
May 1972 - July 1972 |
Carrier Anti-Submarine Air Group 53 (CVSG-53) |
Western Pacific |
November 1972 - December 1972 |
Recovery Apollo 17 |
South Pacific |
June 1973 - July 1973 |
Recovery Skylab 2 |
East Pacific |
Unit Awards, Campaign and Service Medals and Ribbons