Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
USS Hope (AH-7) was a Comfort-class hospital ship launched under Maritime Commission contract by Consolidated Steel Corporation, Wilmington, California, 30 August 1943; sponsored by Miss Martha L. Floyd; acquired by the Navy the same day for conversion to a hospital ship by U.S. Naval Dry Dock, Terminal Island, Calif.; and commissioned 15 August 1944.
SS Hope was a hospital ship operated by Project HOPE. [1] This vessel was originally a US Navy hospital ship, USS Consolation (AH-15). Consolation was donated to Project Hope in 1958, and under its new name served from 1960 until 1974, when she was retired. Hope was not replaced, and the emphasis of Project HOPE switched entirely to land-based ...
These ships all were commissioned in the US Navy, and had a US Navy Crew, but the hospital was operated by the US Army. These ships, unlike the Navy hospital ships, were intended for evacuation and transport of patients after primary care had been given. USS Comfort (AH-6) (1944–1946) USS Hope (AH-7) (1944–1946) USS Mercy (AH-8) (1944–1946)
The Comfort-class hospital ships were a United States Navy World War II-era hospital ship design. Three vessels ( Comfort , Hope , and Mercy ) were built using these specifications. All ships were constructed in 1943 by the Consolidated Steel Corporation before being decommissioned in 1946.
USS Hope may refer to the following ships of the United States Navy: USS Hope (1861), was a Civil War gunboat purchased by the US Navy in November 1861 and sold 25 October 1865; USS Hope (AH-7), was a hospital ship commissioned 15 August 1944
Three of the Navy hospital ships, USS Comfort, USS Hope, and USS Mercy, were less elaborately equipped than other Navy hospital ships, medically staffed by Army medical personnel and similar in purpose to the Army model. [19] Britannic (youngest sister of Titanic and Olympic) after conversion to a hospital ship during World War I.
The USNS Comfort — the US Navy's 1,000-bed hospital ship with decades of providing aid around the world — will be departing New York after being stationed in the city for three weeks. "The ...
Pages in category "Hospital ships of the United States Army" The following 28 pages are in this category, out of 28 total. ... USS Hope (AH-7) J. USAT John L. Clem; L ...