USS Tarawa
1945 Essex-class aircraft carrier
Vessel Wikidata
* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
The USS Tarawa (CV-40) was an Essex-class aircraft carrier of the United States Navy, notable for its classic World War II-era design and service history. Built during the late stages of World War II, she was laid down on 11 March 1944 at Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth, Virginia, and launched on 12 May 1945. She was commissioned on 8 December 1945, just after the war's end, under the command of Captain Alvin Ingersoll Malstrom. Measuring 888 feet (270.7 meters) in length with a beam of 93 feet (28.3 meters) and an extreme width of 147 feet 6 inches (45.0 meters), Tarawa displaced approximately 27,100 tons (26,672 long tons). Her draft was 28 feet 7 inches (8.7 meters), and she could reach a top speed of 32.7 knots (60.6 km/h). Her armament comprised twelve 5-inch guns and seventy-two 40mm anti-aircraft guns, reflecting her World War II roots. She had a complement of 3,448 men and was classified as a "long-hull" Essex-class ship. Constructed at Norfolk Naval Shipyard, she was launched in May 1945 and commissioned later that year. Her initial deployments included shakedown training near Guantanamo Bay, followed by a Western Pacific tour in 1946, operating around Saipan, Japan, China, and Okinawa. She participated in fleet exercises and served in various operational capacities, including observing events in China during the Chinese Civil War and conducting a circumnavigation cruise. Reactivated in 1950 due to the Korean War, Tarawa was recommissioned but did not see combat in Korea. She was redesignated as an attack carrier (CVA-40) in 1952 and later as an antisubmarine warfare carrier (CVS-40) in 1955 after conversion. Throughout the 1950s, she primarily operated in the Atlantic and Caribbean, participating in exercises, patrols, and nuclear testing operations such as Operation Argus. Decommissioned in 1960, she was placed in reserve and redesignated AVT-12 in 1961. Her career concluded when she was struck from the Naval Vessel Register in 1967 and sold for scrap in 1968. Despite never seeing combat, USS Tarawa served as a representative of the classic Essex-class ships, contributing to Cold War maritime operations and naval exercises.
This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.