< Revenge VI AM-110

Revenge VI AM-110

 

Revenge VI

(AM-110: dp. 890; 1. 221'3", b. 32'; dr. 10'9"; s. 18 k.; cpl.
100; a. 1 3", 2 40mm., 2 20mm.; cl. Auk)

The sixth Revenge (AM-110) was laid down as Right on 19 June 1942 by Winslow Marine Railway & Shipbuilding Co.,Seattle, Wash.; launched on 7 November 1942; renamed Revenge on 15 May 1943; and commissioned 21 July 1943 Comdr. F. F. Sima in command.

After outfitting at Puget Sound Navy Yard, Revenge underwent shakedown out of San Pedro and San Diego, Calif. She departed on 13 October 1943 for further training in the Hawaiian Islands, and on 10 November she set course for Makin Island, the Gilberts, arriving 2 days later. After 2 days of minesweeping, she commenced antisubmarine patrol off Makin and Tarawa.

Following Christmas and training at Pearl Harbor, Revenge sailed for Kwajalein Atoll and commenced minesweeping operations on 13 January 1944. For a brief period following the invasion, she alternated between antisubmarine patrol and harbor entrance control. From the end of February through mid-May, she was utilized as an escort vessel, traveling between the Marshalls, the Gilberts, and the Hawaiian Islands. She then returned to the west coast.

Upon completion of a short availability at Mare Island Navy Yard, Revenge again commenced escort duty out of Pearl Harbor. September brought the resumption of training exercises, this time at Hilo, after which she sailed for Manus, the Admuralties. On October 11th she headed for the Philippines and the invasion of Leyte.

The weather was exceedingly rough and, the night before the initial sweep, 20 foot seas were running. In spite of the weather, Mine Division Thirteen (of which Revenge was a unit) entered the Gulf at daybreak with gear streamed. No navigational plots could be kept, nor could the ships remain on station, as the weather had reached typhoon intensity. No enemy action was observed, but activities were made hazardous by the abundance of floating mines and the difficulties involved in maneuvering the craft. Weather abated somewhat the next day and sweeping operations were carried out in a more normal fashion. After 6 days Revenge was credited with the destruction of nearly 70 mines.

Once the beachead was secured and the anchorage made safe, the division continued clearance sweeps around Homohon and Samar. On 27 November purs~bit and Revenge made an exploratory sweep on the western side of Leyte.

Revenge was scheduled to participate in the invasion of Luzon early in Jamlary 1945, but, because of a damaged propeller shaft, she was ordered to Pearl Harbor for repairs. In February she was again assigned convoy duty, this time out of Ulithi, Western Carolines. Then, on March 19 she got underway with some 70 other minecraft for the invasion of Okinawa.

No early difficulties were encountered off Okinawa by Revenge. She operated just off the invasion beaches, where strong tides caused some anxiety, and these very tides caused Skylark to drift into unswept waters 28 March, where she struck a mine and sank. In the attendant rescue operations Revenge cleared a path to one side of Skylark while Sage cleared a path to the other. Rescue work was so efficient that only five men died in the stricken minesweeper, and they were killed in the initial explosion.

For 76 days Revenge remained on patrol off Okinawa. In March her gunners detected and sank a Japanese suicide boat as it attempted to run in under cover of darkness. Late in June relief was assigned and Revenge called at Guam for 2 weeks of availability.

In July Revenge returned to Okinawa, but soon departed with a small minesweeping group for the East China Sea. Then, on 27 August Revenge went alongside Ellyson to take aboard a Japanese pilot for the sweep of Tokyo Bay. The next morning Revenge led the group into Tokyo Bay. There was a fairly wide channel, and safe anchorages were quickly charted for the rest of the fleet. The minesweepers then shifted operations to the coastline. After a month of such operations and some additional time in Tokyo Bay, the minesweepers were ordered to Sasebo.

Operations out of Sasebo took Revenge and her sisters into the East China Sea and the Straits of Formosa. She spent Christmas of 1945 in Shanghai, and in January 1946 returned to Sasebo. In mid-January she sailed for San Pedro, Calif., and from there through the Panama Canal for Charleston S.C., for inactivation overhaul. Following inactivation on 18 htarch 1947, she was assigned to the Texas Group, Atlantic Reserve Fleet, Orange, Tex., where she remained until recommissioned 14 February 1951. She then provided training services along the east coast as well as in the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexieo. Reclassified MSF 110 on 7 March 1955, she decommissioned 2 days later and was assigned to the Florida Group, Atlantic Reserve Fleet, Green Cove Springs, Fla.

In 1961 Revenge was transferred to the Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility, Orange, Tex., where she remained until struck from the Navy list on 1 November 1966. She was sold for scrap in May 1967.

Revenge earned six battle stars during World War II.