< Teton AGC-14

Teton AGC-14

 

Teton
(AGC-14: dp. 13,910 1. 459'2", b. 63'; dr. 24'; s. 16.4
k.; cpl. 633; a. 2 5'/, 8 40mm.; cl. Mount McKinley)

Teton (AGC-14) was laid down under Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 1363) as Water Witch on 9 November 1943 at Wilmington, N.C., by the North Carolina Shipbuilding Corp., launched on 5 February 1944 sponsored by Mrs. C. E. Shimp renamed Teton on 1 February 1944; acquired by the Navy on 18 October 1944; and commissioned the same day at Brooklyn, N.Y., Capt. Donald Rex Tallman in command.

Following shakedown in the Chesapeake Bay, the amphibious force flagship, escorted by Barr (APD-39), steamed south; transited the Panama Canal; proceeded, via the Mare Island Navy Yard, to Hawaii; and arrived at Pearl Harbor on 19 January 1945. Four days later, Rear Admiral John L. Hall, Commander, Amphibious Group 12, Amphibious Forces, Pacific Fleet, hoisted his flag as his staff came on board

Teton was attached to a convoy that got underway for the Philippines on 28 January. After stops at Eniwetok, Ulithi, and the Palaus, the force reached Leyte on 21 February. Teton next began rehearsals as flagship of Task Force 44 for the forthcoming assault against the Ryukyus. Commodore Clifford Greer Richardson, commanding Transport Squadron 14, and Major General John Hodge, commanding the XXIV Army Corps, embarked with their staffs. On 27 March Teton got underway as flagship of Task Unit 51.13.1 and arrived off Okinawa on 1 April, the day the assault began. She remained there for 72 days controlling the landing operations on the Hagushi beaches and then providing standby control of offensive and defensive air operations. On 11 June the ship got underway in a convoy bound for the Philippines.

Teton arrived at Subic Bay on the 15th of June and remained there until 17 August. When news of Japan's surrender arrived, Admiral Hall and his staff left the ship to transfer to Hansford (APA-106). Teton embarked Army forces for the occupation of Japan and proceeded to Honshu, arriving in Tokyo Bay on 29 August.

Teton stood out of Tokyo Bay on 25 September and headed for Guam to embark approximately 750 passengers for transportation to the United States. The ship reached San Francisco on 16 October, disembarked her passengers; and steamed west again three days later.

Teton continued duty with the "Magic-Carpet" Fleet, returning servicemen from Pacific bases to the United States until early 1946. She began inactivation at San Diego in March 1946 and was decommissioned there on 30 August 1946. Teton was struck from the Navy list on 1 June 1961 and sold for scrap in March 1962 to Union Minerals and Alloys Corp., New York N.Y.

Teton received one battle star for World War II service.