< Mainstay AM-261

Mainstay AM-261

 

Mainstay

A rope or cable which, as part of a ship's standing rigging, steadies a mainmast fore and aft and provides primary support for the angle of the mast; hence, the quality of furnishing chief support or strength.

(AM-261: dp, 530 1. 184'6" ; b. 33' ; dr. 9'9"; & 15 k.; cpl. 104; a. IS", 4 40mm. ; cl. Admirabk)

Mainstay (AM-261) was laid down by American Shipbuilding Co., Lorain, Ohio, 10 April 1943; launched 31 July 1943; sponsored by Mrs. J. A. Hughes; and commissioned 24 April 1944, Lt. Henry B. Clark, Jr., In command.

After steaming to the east coast, Mainstay underwent shakedown In Chesapeake Bay and Joined Mine Division 32 on 21 July. Three days later she departed for the Mediterranean, and, as escort for convoy UG"9, arrived Oran, Algeria 10 August. On the 15th she sailed for minesweeping operations in support of the Allied invasion of southern France on the coast of Provence. She closed the French coast 20 August, and during the next 2 months she swept for enemy mines from Marseilles, France, to San Remo, Italy. While sweeping coastal waters between Menton, France, and Ventimiglia, Italy, she came under fire from German shore batteries on 9 and 10 September and engaged the enemy guns with 3-inch gunfire. In addition, she helped repel an attack by submerged, one-man "human torpedoes" on gunfire support ships on the 10th.

Mainstay patrolled the Provence coast until 25 October; thence, after overhaul at Bizerte, Tunisia, she swept for enemy mines off Cagliari, Sardinia, and Palermo, Sicily. From 3 to 22 March 1945 she helped to salvage Swerve (AM-121), sunk at Anzio by a German mine 9 July 1944. After additional sweeps off Palermo, she sailed 12 April for Oran, joined convoy GUS--84 on the 17th, and arrived Norfolk 5 May.

With the war in Europe ended and Allied victory in the Pacific only weeks away, Mainstay sailed for the Pacific 5 July and reached Pearl Harbor 20 August Departing 1 September,. she steamed via Eniwetok and Saipan to Okinawa; and, after arriving 1 October, she put to sea the 7th to avoid an impending typhoon. During the next 3 days she battled heavy seas while typhoon "Louise," a most "furious and lethal storm" wreaked havoc at Okinawa with winds of 120 knots, She searched off Okinawa for survivors of this vicious storm until 15 October.

Mainstay reached Sasebo, Japan, 20 October, and during the next 2 months she destroyed numerous mines in waters southwest of Japan, west of the Ryukyus, and north of Formosa. Departing Wakayama 13 January 1946 she steamed via Eniwetok and Pearl Harbor and arrived San Pedro 15 February. She operated out of there and Pearl Harbor until arriving Bremerton, Wash., 16 September. She decommissioned 6 November 1946 and entered the Pacific Reserve Fleet.

Mainstay was placed In service 28 November 1947, Lt. D. H. Lane in charge. Assigned to Service Force, Pacific Fleet, she departed 10 January 1948 for the Far East. Sailing via San Francisco and Pearl Harbor, she reached Yokosuka, Japan, 29 March and was placed out of service 16 April 1948. She recommissioned I March 1949, Lt. (jg.) John S. Crow in command. Assigned to Mine Squadron 3, she arrived Sasebo 21 April and,, for 7 months, operated off Kyushu between Sasebo and Kokura. Returning to Yokosuka 23 November, she decomissioned 10 January 1950.

Mainstay recommissioned 12 December 1950, Lt. Thomas E. Reynolds in command. A week later she departed for the eastern coast of Korea, and on 2 January 1951 she began coastal patrols and mine sweeps in support of the Blockading and Escort Force. During the next month she cleared a path for Inshore fire support ships. As American and U.N. ground forces began their second drive up the peninsula, she swept for mines and fired at enemy shore positions during an amphibious feint on 30 and 31 January against the Communist-held Kangong-Kosong area. On 2 February she supported rescue operations after Partridge (AMS-31) struck a mine off Sokcho and sank.

After returning briefly to Sasebo 4 February, Mainstay resumed sweeping and patrol duty off Korea. She ranged the coastal waters from Pohang In the south to Songjin in the north, and between 21 February and 31 May she operated primarily off Wonsan supporting the siege and bombardment of the harbor. She departed, Korean waters 7 August, touched at Sasebo and Yokosuaka, and steamed for the west coast 20 August, arriving Long Beach 11 September 1951.

For. almost 2 years Mainstay operated along the California coast and in Hawaiian waters. She again deployed to the Far East 6 August 19M and resumed patrols off South Korea 22 September. Operating out of Sasebo, she cruised coastal waters from Pusan to Pohang during the remainder of 1953. She completed her final patrol 10 February 1954 and 2 days later departed Sasebo for Long Beach, where she arrived 11 March.

Mainstay remained at Long Beach and decommissioned there 21 September 1954. She entered the Pacific Reserve Fleet at San Diego, and while berthed there was reclassified MSP-261 on 7 February 1955. Her name was struck from the Navy list 1 December 1959 and she was sold for scrap to National Metal & Steel Corp. 8 August 1960.

Mainstay received two battle stars for World War II service and four battle stars for Korean service.