Search the Site with 
General Characteristics Crew List Memorabilia Cruise Books History Image Gallery to end of page

USS Attu (CVE 102)

- formerly ELBOUR BAY -
- decommissioned -


Sorry,
no coat of arms
available.

USS ATTU was the 48th CASABLANCA - class escort aircraft carrier and the first ship in the Navy to bear the name. Decommissioned at Norfolk, Va., on June 8, 1946, the ATTU was struck from the Navy list on July 3, 1946, and was sold on January 3, 1947.

General Characteristics:Awarded: 1942
Keel laid: March 16, 1944
Launched: May 27, 1944
Commissioned: June 30, 1944
Decommissioned: June 8, 1946
Builder: Kaiser Shipbuilding Co., Vancouver, Wash.
Propulsion system: four boilers
Propellers: two
Length: 512.5 feet (156.2 meters)
Flight Deck Width: 108 feet (32.9 meters)
Beam: 65 feet (19.9 meters)
Draft: 22.6 feet (6.9 meters)
Displacement: approx. 10,400 tons full load
Speed: 19 knots
Catapults: one
Aircraft: 28 planes
Armament: one 5-inch L/38 gun, 16 40mm guns, 20 20mm guns
Crew: 860


Back to topback to top  go to endgo to the end of the page



Back to topback to top  go to endgo to the end of the page

Crew List:

This section contains the names of sailors who served aboard USS ATTU. It is no official listing but contains the names of sailors who submitted their information.


back to top  go to the end of the page



Back to topback to top  go to endgo to the end of the page

USS ATTU Cruise Books:


Back to topback to top  go to endgo to the end of the page

History of USS ATTU:

ELBOUR BAY (CVE 102) was renamed ATTU 6 November 1943. She was laid down on 16 March 1944 at Vancouver, Wash., by the Kaiser Shipbuilding Co. under a Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 1139); launched on 27 May 1944; sponsored by Mrs. George W. Steele; and commissioned on 30 June 1944, Capt. H. F. MacComsey in command.

Following shakedown along the west coast, ATTU got underway from San Diego on 7 August with numerous aircraft and personnel for transportation to Pearl Harbor. After a two-day stop in Hawaii, ATTU continued on to Guadalcanal and Espiritu Santo to deliver replacement aircraft and personnel. The escort carrier then got underway on 31 August to return to the United States.

She reached San Diego on 13 September and, shortly thereafter, began post-shakedown availability at Terminal Island, Calif. This work was completed on 28 September; and ATTU sailed for Alameda, Calif. to load fuel, provisions and aircraft.

The escort carrier departed the west coast on 1 October and reached Finschhafen, New Guinea, on the 18th. She later made a stop in Seeadler Harbor at Manus Island before reversing her course and heading back, via Pearl Harbor, to Alameda. Following a two-week availability period, ATTU sailed for Pearl Harbor on 23 November. She shuttled supplies and troops between Guam and Pearl Harbor before returning to San Diego on 4 January 1945.

The next day, ATTU began an availability and was ready to sail once again on the 20th. The ship reached Pearl Harbor on the 27th and began gunnery exercises and flight operations off Oahu. On 1 February, the vessel sailed for Eniwetok. After pausing there briefly on the 10th, she moved on to Ulithi. The ship departed the atoll on 16 February to rendezvous with ships of Task Force 50. ATTU was assigned the role of supplying replacement aircraft and pilots to the fast carrier task forces operating in the forward area. After discharging her cargo to the carriers, ATTU sailed to Guam for replenishment. The escort carrier continued her logistics support role for the carrier forces through early July.

At that time, ATTU returned to San Diego for repairs. On 24 July, the ship sailed back to the Pacific theater of operations. ATTU was steaming in a fueling area south of the Japanese home islands when word of Japan’s capitulation arrived.

The carrier sailed back to the west coast on 11 November and, on the 25th, began her participation in Operation “Magic Carpet.” In this capacity, ATTU made voyages to numerous points in the Pacific. She steamed over 38,000 miles and returned over 4,000 service men to the United States.

In May 1946, ATTU was slated for disposal. The escort carrier sailed to Norfolk, Va., via the Panama Canal and Jacksonville, Fla. ATTU decommissioned at Norfolk on 8 June 1946, and her name was struck from the Navy list on 3 July 1946. She was sold on 3 January 1947.

ATTU earned two battle stars for her World War II service.


Back to topback to top  go to endgo to the end of the page


Back to topback to top



Back to Escort Carrier List. Back to Ships List. Back to selection page. Back to 1st page.