SS Mauna Loa

SS West Conob shortly after completion in 1919. She was renamed Mauna Loa in 1934.
SS West Conob shortly after completion in 1919. She was renamed Mauna Loa in 1934.
History
Name
  • West Conob
  • 1928: Golden Eagle
  • 1934: Mauna Loa
NamesakeMauna Loa
Owner
Operator
Builder
Yard number14[2]
Launched1 December 1918
CompletedMay 1919[2]
IdentificationUS Official number: 218048[1]
FateBombed and sunk 19 February 1942 in the Bombing of Darwin[6]
General characteristics
TypeDesign 1013 ship
Tonnage
Length
Beam54 ft 6 in (16.61 m)[1]
Draft24 ft (7.3 m)[7]
Propulsion
Speed10.5 knots (19.4 km/h)[1]

SS Mauna Loa was a steam-powered cargo ship of the Matson Navigation Company that was sunk in the bombing of Darwin in February 1942. She was christened SS West Conob in 1919 and renamed SS Golden Eagle in 1928. At the time of her completion in 1919, the ship was inspected by the United States Navy for possible use as USS West Conob (ID-4033) but was neither taken into the Navy nor commissioned.

West Conob was built in 1919 for the United States Shipping Board (USSB), part of the West series of ships—steel-hulled cargo ships built on the West Coast of the United States for the World War I war effort—and was the 14th ship built at Los Angeles Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company in San Pedro, California. She initially sailed for the Pacific Mail Steamship Company and had circumnavigated the globe twice by 1921. She began sailing to South America for Swayne & Hoyt Lines in 1925, and then, to Australia and New Zealand. When Swayne & Hoyt's operation was taken over by the Oceanic and Oriental Navigation Company a few years later, she sailed under the name Golden Eagle until 1934, when she was transferred to Oceanic and Oriental's parent, the Matson Navigation Company. Matson renamed her Mauna Loa, after the large shield volcano on the island of Hawaii, and put her into service between Hawaii and the U.S. mainland.

Shortly before the United States' entry into World War II, Mauna Loa was chartered by the United States Department of War to carry supplies to the Philippines. The ship was part of an aborted attempt to reinforce Allied forces under attack by the Japanese on Timor in mid-February 1942. After the return of her convoy to Darwin, Northern Territory, Mauna Loa was one of eight ships sunk in Darwin Harbour in the first Japanese bombing attack on the Australian mainland on 19 February. The remains of her wreck and her cargo are a dive site in the harbor.

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "West Conob". Miramar Ship Index. R.B.Haworth. Retrieved 23 September 2008.
  2. ^ a b Colton, Tim. "Todd Pacific Shipyards, San Pedro CA". Shipbuildinghistory.com. The Colton Company. Archived from the original on 22 September 2008. Retrieved 23 September 2008. Colton refers to the ship as West Cohob. (Todd Pacific Shipyards bought the Los Angeles Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company in 1945.)
  3. ^ a b Drake, Waldo (15 March 1930). "Case-oil rush to Australia underway". Los Angeles Times. p. 6.
  4. ^ "Tribute to ship built at harbor". Los Angeles Times. 17 April 1921. p. I-7.
  5. ^ "Shipping and Los Angeles Harbor news". Los Angeles Times. 15 December 1925. p. 19.
  6. ^ Cite error: The named reference DANFS was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  7. ^ a b c d Jordan, p. 404.

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