Towaliga AOG-42
Towaliga
(AOG-42: dp. 2,270; 1. 220'6", b. 37'0" dr. 13'1"s. 10 k. (tl.), cpl. 62; a. 1 3", 2 40mm., cl. Mettawee;T. T1-M-A2)
Towaliga (AOG-42) was laid down under Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 2068) on 29 September 1944 at Bayonne, N.J., by the East Coast Shipyard Inc.; launched on 29 October 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Michael Canose; acquired by the Navy on 6 December 1944; and commissioned on 14 December 1944, Lt. Robert H. Smith in command.
The gasoline tanker called at Norfolk on 9 January 1945 and began shakedown training in the Chesapeake Bay the next day. On 11 February, she joined a convoy bound for the West Indies and arrived at Aruba, Netherlands Antilles, 10 days later. After filling her cargo tanks, the ship proceeded through the Panama Canal to the west coast, spent 14 and 15 March at San Diego, and sailed for Hawaii on the 16th. She reached Pearl Harbor on 28 March and, for the next four months, shuttled diesel oil and aviation gasoline from Hawaii to Johnston Island. In mid August, while the ship was undergoing an overhaul in dry dock at Pearl Harbor, hostilities ended.
Upon completion of the yard work, Towaliga got underway for Japan and, after stops at Eniwetok and Saipan, arrived at Osaka on 9 October 1945. The ship operated from Osaka until 16 August 1946 when she was ordered to China. She arrived at Tsingtao on the 19th and was placed in a standby status with a reduced crew, preparatory to being decommissioned. On 6 December, the ship's complement was filled, and she began training Chinese crews. Towaliga was decommissioned on 10 May 1947 and transferred to the Republic of China under the lend-lease program. The ship was nominally returned to the United States on 17 February 1948 but simultaneously transferred permanently to China.
Towaliga was struck from the Navy list on 12 March 1948.