UNderway REPlenishment by
the VEGA
with inserted comments
by Herchell Stinnett

USS VEGA was the second and last ship in the RIGEL - class of
store ships. Both ships in that class were designed to primarily carry
refrigerated goods. USS VEGA was named after the star of the first magnitude in
the constellation Lyra which is frequently used by navigators. The VEGA was the
third ship to carry this name.
The Navy would make two ship alike one would
go to West and the other would go to the East coast.
The USS VEGA was both decommissioned and stricken from the Navy list on April
29, 1977. On December 1, 1977, the ship was
sold to a fishing company in Seattle Wash.
General Characteristics:
| : | Keel laid: June 7, 1954 |
| Launched: April 28, 1955 | |
| Commissioned: November 10, 1955 | |
| Decommissioned: April 29, 1977 | |
| Builder: Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp., Pascagoula, Miss. | |
| Propulsion system: two boilers | |
| Propellers: one | |
| Length: 502 feet (153 meters) | |
| Beam: 72 feet (22 meters) | |
| Draft: 28.8 feet (8.8 meters) | |
| Displacement: approx. 15,500 tons | |
| Speed: 20 knots | |
| Capacity: approx. 4,650 tons of cargo | |
| Aircraft: helo platform only | |
| Armament: two dual 3-inch/50-caliber gun mounts
|
|
| Crew: 350-Most of boys were only 18 to 28 years old. |
History of USS VEGA:
USS VEGA was laid down on 7 June 1954 at Pascagoula, Miss., by the Ingalls
Shipbuilding Corp.; launched on 28 April 1955; sponsored by Mrs. Theodore C.
Lonnquest; and commissioned on 10 November 1955, Capt. Floyd T. Thompson in
command.
Following shakedown, VEGA sailed for the west coast and duty with the Pacific
Fleet. Between January 1956 and mid-1964, VEGA made 13 deployments to the Far
East, usually about six months in length. During this time, the versatile
store ship sailed an average of over 30,000 miles per year and routinely visited
Yokosuka and Sasebo, Japan; Hong Kong; Subic Bay, Philippines; and Kaohsiung,
Formosa, with an occasional run to Kobe and Iwakuni, Japan. In 1956, VEGA set a
record for ships of her type when she provisioned aircraft carrier
SHANGRI-LA (CVA 38) at a rate of 218 tons per
hour. In 1963, the VEGA again proved herself to be the Navy's fastest working
store ship as she delivered 117 tons of provisions to
RANGER
(CVA 61) in just 27 minutes, giving her a transfer rate of 245 tons per hour.
From October 1964 to January 1966, VEGA participated in Fleet operations off the
coast of Vietnam before she returned to the United States in February 1965. Returning to Vietnamese waters in the late spring, she once more supported 7th
Fleet units. While underway in the South China Sea on 8 September 1965, VEGA was
the scene of an unusual change of command, when Capt. T. A. Melusky relieved
Capt. R. E. Hill as commanding officer. The ceremony took place at 0128, on the
port wing of the bridge, by the light of red-filtered flashlights, with the ship
darkened during an underway replenishment of
CONSTELLATION (CVA 64). The storeship returned to
the United States in October 1965. The
cab driver dropped me off at the gate about 2:30 A.M.and i ask where is the
USS VEGA,and the MP said oh just go down that road
and you'll see it the big ship AF59 so here i am with
a sea bag 80 lb.and about 1/4 mile to go. That
was along 1/4 mile walk with 80 lb. on your back.
Buddy Stinnett came on board February 10 1967
at 03.00 A.M. in the morning and the Lt. said you just maded it your going to
go to Vietnam at 07.00.A.M.
VEGA was again deployed to the 7th Fleet from February of
1967. During this time, the
ship replenished her first two nuclear-powered ships, frigate
BAINBRIDGE (DLGN 25) and aircraft carrier
ENTERPRISE (CVAN 65).
Later, during her next WestPac tour, VEGA conducted 125 underway and 26 in port
replenishments--more than during any other deployment. Besides her normal
Japanese ports of call, she also visited Danang and An Thoi, Vietnam, while
calling for the first time at Singapore.
As American involvement in Vietnam deepened, VEGA's deployment schedule
reflected this increase in operations. While deployed in the summer of
1967, VEGA steamed in company
with repair ship HECTOR (AR 7), oiler ASHTABULA (AO 61), ammunition ship
PARRICUTIN (AE 18), and seaplane tender CURRITUCK (AV 7). From 22 August to 21
November, she supported "Yankee-Station" and "Market-Time" operations.
She remained thus employed, with regular deployments to WestPac through 1969. In
between her deployments to the "Yankee-Station" or to "Market-Time" zones, VEGA
maintained a regular schedule of local operations, overhauls, and refresher
training upon return to the west coast. Homeported at San Francisco, Calif.,
VEGA continued her unglamorous but vital duty of providing the necessary
supplies to keep the Fleet and its men in top operating condition.
After loading at Oakland, Calif., from 24 March to 4 April 1969, VEGA sailed on
5 April for Yokosuka, Japan.
Her normal routine of operations was interrupted later that month, when North
Korean MiG fighters shot down an American EC-121 surveillance aircraft over the
Sea of Japan. As tensions rose between Pyongyang and Washington, the 7th Fleet
responded to the crisis by dispatching a task force which included the nuclear
attack carrier
ENTERPRISE to the
vicinity. Note by Buddy Stinnett: There were two other carriers out there too.
I'm thinking at this time. Here we go again
another Vietnam. I'll never get out of the Navy. They took the
ship out of Vietnam at 110 degs weather to 40 degs weather and it was cold as
hell.
VEGA joined Task Group (TG) 73.7 on 24 April in support of Task
Force (TF) 71 in the Sea of Japan and performed
17 underway replenishments so
what does that tell you, 17 ships that's alot
of guns, between the 24th and the 29th.
With the relaxation of tensions, VEGA was detached on the latter date and
resumed her regular WestPac replenishment operations to the 7th Fleet. VEGA
began her first line period for 1969 on 9 May and
replenished 22
ships before returning to Subic
Bay on the 16th. On 31 May, the refrigerator ship commenced a
37-hour replenishment operation with combat stores ship
NIAGARA FALLS (AFS 3) in Subic Bay, delivering
some 1,057.5 tons of provisions.
On 9 June, VEGA got underway to support "Market Time" operations. She
replenished in port at An Thoi on 13
June, at Vung Tau on the 15th, Camranh Bay on
the 16th, and at Danang on the 17th, before carrying out nine underway
replenishments on "Yankee Station," over the next six days.
Returning to Subic Bay on 27 June, the ship remained there until 6 July, when
she sailed for Yankee Station--as bad weather had grounded all COD (carrier
onboard delivery) aircraft, and supplies needed to be delivered to the Fleet.
She arrived on station on 8 July and, alongside
ORISKANY
(CVA 34) four days later, conducted her longest underway replenishment, from
1737 on 12 July to 0105 on the 13th--a period
of seven hours and 28 minutes. Thank God it was raining on and off. I only
steer the Vega for 2 hours shift this time. You have a lot of
people counting on you with both ships that close and
cables back and fourth. This takes team work - 100%!
Soon thereafter, VEGA shifted to Hong Kong, where her commanding officer became
the administrative Senior Officer Present Afloat (SOPA) on 23 July. She and
destroyer ROWAN (DD 782) got underway on the 27th to avoid typhoon "Viola" which
was then swirling its way up the China coast. Returning two days later, VEGA
resumed her SOPA duties and continued to carry them out until she departed that
port on 8 August bound for Sasebo. There, the supply ship loaded Fleet freight
and soon sailed for the west coast of the United States, arriving at San
Francisco, Calif., on 6 September, where she remained for the rest of 1969.
Buddy Stinnett got out of the Navy Oct 15,1969
and started to work for G.E. and Honeywell, (Bull I.NC.) in Phoenix, Arizona
for 34 years.
The USS VEGA went for an overhaul:
After entering the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard on 2 January 1970 for her
regular overhaul, VEGA spent three months in dockyard hands before she emerged
on 2 April to commence refresher training out of San Diego. She trained in
the southern California operating area into the summer, before shifting on 21
August to the Army Refrigerator (Reefer) Piers at Oakland, Calif. There,
she conducted a pre-deployment loadout of goods for shipment to the western
Pacific.
VEGA again got underway on 11 September, bound for Subic Bay, and crossed the
160th meridian on 26 September to commence officially her WestPac tour.
After evading typhoon "Hope" en route, VEGA stopped briefly at Subic Bay before
she pressed on 8 October for her first line tour of the deployment on Yankee
Station off the coast of Vietnam. She returned to Subic on 22 October.
During this tour, she transferred over 226 tons of foodstuffs during underway
replenishments.
Her second line period saw the ship transfer 290 tons of provisions to ships
with TF-77 on Yankee Station. Bangkok, Thailand, provided welcome relief
for liberty parties before the ship returned to the line a third time on 29
November. Operating in support of "Market Time," VEGA transferred some 392
tons of food--Christmas supplies--to ships engaged in the daily interdiction
patrols of the sea lanes. Further, the ship delivered some 67 tons of
supplies to Danang, Camranh Bay, Con Son, An Thoi, and Hon Choi--all in South
Vietnam.
After visiting Hong Kong from 13 to 21 December, VEGA spent Christmas at
Kaohsiung, Taiwan, and then returned to Subic Bay to load supplies. Before the
year was out, the supply ship was underway again--for her fourth line period off
Vietnam. During this swing, the ship transferred 300 tons of food to ships on
"Yankee Station" and "Market Time" patrols. Many sailors on the ships she
supplied probably enjoyed the fresh fruit acquired on Taiwan during the ship's
visit there prior to deploying off the Vietnam coastline.
The supply vessel conducted two more swings on the patrol line in the sea lanes
off Vietnam into early 1971. Extremely difficult weather conditions
hampered such operations on 29 and 30 January 1971, but the men on the ships
involved rose to the occasion and accomplished the successful transfer of 100
tons of food without incident.
Offloading 342 tons of supplies at the Naval Supply Depot, Subic Bay, from 8 to
10 March, the ship departed the Philippines to visit Japan. While en
route, however, VEGA was dispatched to search for a Japanese fishing vessel in
distress off Yonakuni Jima. Conducting the search in heavy seas and
beneath leaden gray overcast skies, VEGA's efforts were uncrowned with success
as she found no trace of the distressed ship.
VEGA eventually visited Sasebo, from 17 to 20 March, before she got underway for
Pearl Harbor, en route to her ultimate destination of Alameda, Calif.
Making port at the Naval Air Station, Alameda, on 6 April, VEGA later served
from 13 to 17 May as host ship at San Francisco for destroyer HMCS TERRA NOVA
(DDE 259). VEGA then entered Triple "A" Shipyard, San Francisco, on 27 May
for a restricted availability which increased the ship's transfer capabilities.
Completing these modifications on 23 July, the ship conducted a program of type
training off the California coast from the 26th through the 30th, before she
sailed north to call at the annual Sea Fair at Seattle, Wash.
During a subsequent refit, again carried out at San Francisco's Triple "A"
Shipyard in the summer and again in the fall of 1971, VEGA received
modifications that further improved her cargo-handling capacities. Specifically,
number 3 hold was modified to handle pre-palletized cargo; and existing
helicopter facilities were upgraded. In addition, a 4,000-pound pallet conveyor
belt was added, as well as battery-charging facilities and a new forklift
garage. In between yard periods, the cargo vessel participated in local
operations and type training exercises.
From 1972 through 1974, VEGA continued fulfilling her primary mission of
supplying units afloat and ashore with necessary food and cargo. She regularly
deployed to the far reaches of the western Pacific operating area and conducted
replenishments to ships at sea on "Yankee Station" and "Market Time"
patrols and carried out support operations with the
Mobile Logistics Support Force. The tempo of the Vietnam War, however,
began to change. By the spring of 1973, American involvement on the southeast
Asian mainland was drawing to a close.
After deploying to the line three times in early 1975, VEGA sailed from Subic
Bay on 22 March 1975, to provide logistics services for TG 76.4, standing by in
the Gulf of Thailand to execute Operation
"Eagle Pull," the evacuation of Cambodian refugees fleeing the communist
takeover of that country. She conducted replenishment operations
with a wide variety of ships. Returning to Subic Bay to
reload on 31 March, she set sail for the second increment of "Eagle Pull,"
rejoining the forces in the Gulf of Thailand on 5 April. After conducting
replenishments with tank landing ship
FREDERICK (LST 1184), attack cargo ship DURHAM (LKA
114), nuclear powered guided missile cruiser
LONG
BEACH (CGN 9), ocean escort
REASONER (DE 1063), amphibious command ship
BLUE
RIDGE (LCC 19), amphibious assault ship
OKINAWA
(LPH 3), and dock landing ship THOMASTON (LSD 28), she arrived at Phu Quoc
Island to provide supply support for Cambodian refugees, and transferred some
12.4 tons of refugee subsistence items to amphibious transport dock
DUBUQUE (LPD 8) and
PEORIA (LST 1183). Rendezvousing with TG 76.4 on
the 9th, the busy supply vessel again returned to Phu Quoc on the 10th and to
Subic Bay on the 13th.
Underway from Subic Bay on 23 April, VEGA
sailed for the coast of South Vietnam. By this juncture, the government of South
Vietnam was collapsing, leaving tons of American-supplied equipment intact for
the communist forces. Operation "Frequent Wind" was launched to evacuate
Vietnamese fleeing the onslaught, lest they be left behind and fall into
communist hands. For the next few days, VEGA replenished United States and
South Vietnamese Navy ships, delivered passengers and mail, and transferred
refugee supplies to vessels loaded with fleeing South
Vietnamese. Underway at sea from 25 to 30 April, the supply ship arrived off
Vung Tau on 1 May and replenished South Vietnamese naval units YFU-69, HQ-3,
HQ-800, and HQ-801 as well as conducted a vertical fleet supply replenishment
with
MARS (AFS 1) and
fleet supplies and mail for five other Navy ships.
Heading for Subic Bay, VEGA served as escort
for the "New Life" flotilla, heavily laden with Vietnamese refugees and their
belongings. Arriving at Subic Bay on the 6th, she stood in with the first
contingent of refugee vessels--some 70 craft in all, of all shapes and sizes.
Underway for a resumption of escort duties later that day,
VEGA stood out to sea; she subsequently refueled from oiler
TALUGA (T-AO 62) on the 7th before conducting underway replenishments over the
next two days with
MIDWAY (CVA 41),
ocean escort
BADGER (DE 1071),
and oiler ASHTABULA (AO 51).
Arriving at Subic Bay on 10 May to load supplies, she got underway soon
thereafter, in company with ocean escort
HAROLD
E. HOLT (DE 1074), for refugee vessel escort
duties. NOTE FROM BUDDY STINNETT: 41 MEN DIED IN THIS
OPERATION.
On 13 May, communist Cambodian forces seized
the American-owned containership, SS MAYAGUEZ, off Koh Tang Island, Cambodia.
Both VEGA and
HAROLD E. HOLT
made full speed ahead for the area, while American forces soon mobilized for
quick and decisive strikes to gain the release of the ship and its crew from the
hands of the Cambodians. Arriving on the 15th, VEGA stood by to provide
services while
HAROLD E. HOLT
moved in and delivered a detachment of marines, who boarded the containership.
While the incident was brought to a conclusion by the swift recapture of the
ship and her crew, the routine task of conducting underway replenishments to
ships of the 7th Fleet in southeast Asian waters continued unabated in the wake
of the fall of Vietnam and Cambodia.
VEGA returned to San Francisco, Calif., on 4 August, following a circuitous
route via Cebu and Subic Bay, Philippines; Hong Kong, British Crown Colony;
Buckner Bay, Okinawa, and Pearl Harbor. A tally of the ships' activities on her
most eventful WestPac cruise showed the ship to have completed some 105
underway, 15 boat, and 38 vertical replenishments--the last utilizing the
capabilities of helicopters for rapid and increased transport of supplies from
ship to ship. A total of some 2,848.9 tons of provisions, including 136.8 tons
of refugee supplies, were transferred. The ship then underwent restricted
availability from 18 to 19 August.
For the remainder of the ship's active service career with the United States
Navy, VEGA operated off the west coast, conducting local operations, and later
deployed to the Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, and Okinawa for her final
WestPac deployment. She arrived at San Francisco on 21 December 1976 and
immediately commenced leave and upkeep.
On 21 January 1977, VEGA shifted to berth 23 south Mare Island Naval Shipyard,
to commence stand down prior to inactivation. She was decommissioned on 29 April
1977 and struck from the Navy list the same day.
USS VEGA AF59 earned 10 battle stars for her
service to units of the 7th Fleet during the Vietnam War.
Buddy Stinnett end up with five metals after fourteen
months in Vietnam. The only thing I have to say is
if you have to go to war take along a Indian to cover
your back. Kee was good with a knife.
HERCHELL (BUDDY) STINNETT AND KEE
ELSISE
US VEGA AF59 1967 TO 1969
By HERCHELL STINNETT

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