< Azurlite

Azurlite

 

Azurlite

A blue, semiprecious gemstone derived from the mineral carbonate of copper.

(PY-22: dp. 1,200; 1. 210'11"; b. 34'; dr. 12'; s. 131/2 k.; cpl. 67; a. 2 3", 4 .50-cal. mg.)

Vagabondia--a yacht designed by Cox & Stevens, Inc., and constructed in 1928 at Kiel, Germany, by Germaniawerft-was urehased by the Navy on 9 December 1941 from Mr. William L.

,11,n, the Pittsburgh financier industrialist who founded and beaded the Gulf Oil Corporation; renamed Azurlite on 22 December 1941 and simultaneously designated PY-22; converted to naval use at the Marine Basin Co., Inc., at Brooklyn, N.Y.; and placed in commission on 16 March 1942, Lt. Philip H. Dermler, Jr., USNR, in command.

The converted yacht completed fitting out at New York and put to sea on 6 April. She touched at Norfolk the next day and then continued on to Charleston, S.C., where she was joined by Beryl (PY-23) and YP-209. She and her consorts stood out of Charleston on 16 April; proceeded to the Canal Zone; transited the Panama Canal on 27 April; and shaped a course for San Diego on the 28th. Azurlite arrived in San Diego on 9 May and remained there until 20 June when she weighed anchor for the Hawaiian Islands. The converted yacht arrived in Pearl Harbor on 28 June and reported for duty to the Conimarider, Sea Forces, Hawaiian Sea Frontier.

With the exception of two round-trip voya es to the Gilbert Islands, Azurlite spent the remainder of 'World War II operating in the Hawaiian Islands. At first, she conducted training exercises and escorted ships between the islands, as well as into and out of Pearl Harbor. Later, she added duty as a weather station ship west of the main islands and as an air/sea rescue ship. Her two absences from Hawaii came in the early part of 1944. Between 17 January and 6 February 1944, the yacht escorted a convoy to Abemama in the Gilberts and returned W Oahu. Between 20 February and mid-March, she conducted a similar mission, this time to Tarawa and back. Upon her return to Hawaii, Azurlite resumed her former duties with the Hawaiian Sea Frontier command.

She continued to be so engaged until late in the fall of 1945. Early in November, she departed Hawaii for the west coast. The converted yacht arrived in San Francisco on 15 November. She was decommissioned on 22 January 1946 at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard. Her name was struck from the Navy list on 25 February 1946. She was transferred to the War Shippin

Administration and was sold to Mr. Royal B. Bodden January 1947.