
Auxiliary motor minesweepers were small wood-hulled
minesweepers commissioned by the
United States Navy for service during
World War II. The vessels were numbered, but unnamed. The auxiliary motor minesweepers were originally designated yard minesweepers (YMS) and kept the abbreviation YMS after being re-designated. The type proved successful and eventually became the basis for the AMS type of United States Navy minesweeper.
Origin of the YMS
The
Henry B. Nevins Shipyard, Inc., at
City Island, Bronx, designed the YMS and
laid the keel of the first one, , on 4 March 1941.
Launched on 10 January 1942, ''YMS-1'' was completed two months later on 25 March 1942. From keel-laying to completion, the yard built ''YMS-1'' in one year and three weeks.
The "Y" designation
The first wooden minesweeper of this class was to gain prominence in all theaters during World War II. A total of 561 were built at various U.S. yards. Originally a class of "motor minesweepers" (MS), "Y" was added to distinguish them from other minesweeper types; sources disagree on whether "Y" stood for "yardcraft" – indicating a type of craft assigned for duty within a navy shipyard or naval base and not expected to go beyond waters adjacent to the base – or to indicate they were built by
yacht-builders; YMSs were built at 35
yacht yards, rather than at larger
shipyards, 12 on the
United States East Coast, 19 on the
United States West Coast, and four in yards on the
Great Lakes.
Use as minesweepers
Records show that YMSs were used in the
United States Navy to sweep mines laid by enemy
submarine
A submarine (or sub) is a watercraft capable of independent operation underwater. It differs from a submersible, which has more limited underwater capability. The term is also sometimes used historically or colloquially to refer to remotely op ...
s as early as 1942 off the ports of
Jacksonville, Florida, and
Charleston, South Carolina
Charleston is the largest city in the U.S. state of South Carolina, the county seat of Charleston County, and the principal city in the Charleston–North Charleston metropolitan area. The city lies just south of the geographical midpoint o ...
. Many served in the Pacific.
One of their greatest losses occurred on 9 October 1945, when seven U.S. Navy YMSs were sunk in a
typhoon off
Okinawa.
The wood-hulled YMS proved to be one of the U.S. Navys more durable and versatile types through a quarter-century of service, filling a variety of roles for a number of navies.
Characteristics
All 481 ships of this type had the same general characteristics. The only significant variation within the type was one of appearance; ''YMS-1'' through ''YMS-134'' had two stacks, ''YMS-135'' through ''YMS-445'', ''YMS-480'', and ''YMS-481'' had one, while ''YMS-446'' through ''YMS-479'' had none.
History
Originally rated as service craft, they were used during World War II for inshore sweeping to prepare the way for
amphibious
Amphibious means able to use either land or water. In particular it may refer to:
Animals
* Amphibian, a vertebrate animal of the class Amphibia (many of which live on land and breed in water)
* Amphibious caterpillar
* Amphibious fish, a fish ...
assaults. Surviving YMSs were reclassified as AMS in 1947, given names, and re-rated as
mine warfare Mine warfare refers to the use of different types of explosive devices:
*Land mine, a weight-triggered explosive device intended to maim or kill people or to disable or destroy vehicles
*Minelaying, deployment of explosive mines at sea
**Naval mine ...
ships; in 1955 they received the new type symbol MSC(O), changed to MSCO in 1967. These ships bore much of the mine warfare burden in Korea, formed a major portion of U.S. Navy minecraft strength through the 1950s, and provided underway training for
Naval Reservists in the 1960s.
A number of YMSs were transferred to other navies during or after the war. During
Project Hula, the United States secretly transferred 31 of them to the
Soviet Union between 17 May and 3 September 1945, and some of these saw action in the
Soviet Navy during
Soviet military operations against the Japanese between 9 August and 5 September 1945. The transfer of five more was canceled when transfers halted on 5 September 1945. One, ''T-610'' (ex-), sank in 1945 while in Soviet service, and the Soviet Union transferred two, ''T-605'' (ex-) and ''T-611'' (ex-), to the
People's Republic of China after striking them from the Soviet Navy list in 1955; during 1955 and 1956 the other 28 were scrapped by the Soviet Union or destroyed off its coast by mutual agreement between the two countries.
[Russell, Richard A., ''Project Hula: Secret Soviet-American Cooperation in the War Against Japan'', Washington, D.C.: Naval Historical Center, 1997, , pp. 29, 35, 37-38, 40.] Five YMSs served in the
German Navy in different functions for tests, trials, and training; all of them had a civilian crew and were decommissioned between 1975 and 1988.
[Siegfried Breyer, Gerhard Koop; Die Schiffe und Fahrzeuge der deutschen Bundesmarine 1956 - 1976; München 1978; (German)]
''YMS-327'' last YMS in service
, originally ''YMS-327'', the last of her kind in U.S. service, was struck from the
Navy List in November 1969.
See also
*
YMS-1-class minesweeper
*
BYMS-class minesweeper
References
External links
Auxiliary Motor Minesweeper (YMS)
{{Project Hula ships
Mine warfare vessel classes
Minesweepers of the United States Navy
Auxiliary
City Island, Bronx
Ships built in City Island, Bronx