The ship was returned to the USSB which operated the vessel until sold in 1927 to McCormick Steamship Company. In 1940 Absaroka was sold to Pope & Talbot, Inc. which operated it until sold foreign in April 1946. On 24 December 1941 the ship was torpedoed and damaged by torpedo off the California coast. During World War II the War Shipping Administration (WSA) took control of all oceanic shipping with Absaroka delivered to WSA 9 May 1942 to be operated by Pope & Talbot for WSA under Army and general standard agreements. On 9 April 1946 the ship was redelivered to Pope & Talbot and sold 14 April 1946 to the Greek government and then operated as Prima Vista or Primavista until 1948. The ship was then sold to other foreign interests operating as Panenterprise to 1952 and finally Maryland until broken up in 1954.
The USSB took delivery of Absaroka on completion in February 1918 for operation.[3][2] On 17 September 1918 the ship was taken over by the Navy on a bare boat charter basis, assigned identification number IX-2581 and commissioned USS Absaroka under the command of Lieutenant commander O. W. Hughes for operation in the Naval Overseas Transportation Service (NOTS).[2]
Between October 1918 and February 1919, the ship made two transatlantic voyages carrying Army cargo to ports in France, England, and the Netherlands. During her second trip, Absaroka rescued the captain and crew of the disabled British steamer War Marvel and landed them safely at Falmouth, England.[2]
The ship arrived in New York City on 12 February 1919 and was immediately drydocked for overhaul. Absaroka was decommissioned on 4 March 1919 and returned to the United States Shipping Board.[3][2] The USSB sold the ship with requirements for specified alterations and improvements to the McCormick Steamship Company for $131,000 before 30 June 1927.[6] From 1927 to 1940 Absaroka was operated by McCormick which in 1935 was acquired by Pope & Talbot, Incorporated to become legally identified as the Pope & Talbot-McCormick Steamship Division. From 1940 the ship was operated as a lumber carrier under the Pope & Talbot identity.[3][2][7][8][note 1]
The ship was delivered to the War Shipping Administration on 9 May 1942 for operation by Pope & Talbot as the administration's agent. The operating agreement was for Army Transportation Corps requirements until 16 August 1943 when it was changed to a General Agency Agreement. On 9 April 1946 Absaroka was delivered to Pope & Talbot as owner at San Francisco.
Post-war service
On 14 April 1946 Pope & Talbot sold Absaroka to the Greek government.[16] It passed into the ownership of J A Cosmas, and was registered in Panama as Primavista or Prima Vista under the registered ownership of Compañia Marítima Samsoc Limitada S.A., Panama.[16][17][18][note 2] In 1948 the vessel was sold to Primavista Compañia de Navegación S.A., under the management of Pietro Ruggiero, and remaining under the Panamanian flag as Panenterprise.[17][18] In 1948-49 the ship made at least three trips from Europe to Buenos Aires and brought a small number of immigrants.[3][4][19] The ship was again sold in 1952, again with Panamanian registration, and renamed Maryland in the ownership of The Tidewater Commercial Company Inc., based in Baltimore, Maryland, though controlled by the Italian shipowner Albert Ravano.[17][18][20]
The ship was broken up in 1954, either by Patapsco Scrap Company at Baltimore, or by Shipbreaking Industries Ltd, Faslane, Scotland, arriving on 9 April.[3][17][18][21]
Footnotes
^Both McCormick Steamship and Pope & Talbot originated in the Pacific Northwest lumber business. See the article Port Gamble, Washington sections Sale of Puget Mill Company and the next section Creation of Pope & Talbot Co. for some of the background. In 1946 the McCormick Steamship name, legally identified as the Pope & Talbot-McCormick Steamship Division, itself was absorbed into the Pope & Talbot identity.
^Sources vary of whether it was Prima Vista or Primavista with MARAD and DANFS using Prima Vista, while Lloyd's Register of Shipping and later sources have Primavista.
^Red Sea Space Charter Rates. Hearings Before the Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries, House of Representatives (Report). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. 1944. p. 165. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
^"The Battle of Los Angeles". California State Military History and Museums Program. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
^ abYoung, Donald J. (July 1998). "West Coast War Zone". Historynet. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
^Screening Level Risk Assessment Package — Camden(PDF) (Report). Washington, D.C.: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of National Marine Sanctuaries. March 2013. Retrieved 13 July 2021.