Arrow-class oil tanker
{{Short description|Class of American steam oil tankers}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}
{{Infobox ship begin
| infobox caption = | display title = | sclass = 2 }} {{Infobox ship image | Ship image = DixieArrowDesign.jpg | Ship image size = | Ship caption = Blueprints of the last four ships built by New York Shipbuilding | image alt = }} {{Infobox ship class overview | Name = Arrow class | Operators = * Standard Oil Company of New York
| Built range = 1916–1921 | In service range = 1916–1959 | Total ships completed = 12 | Total ships lost = 5 | Builders = * New York Shipbuilding Corporation | Total ships scrapped = 7 | Total ships planned = 14 | Total ships cancelled = 2 | Class before = Bark | Class after = T2 }} {{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header = | Header caption = | Ship type = Steam oil tanker | Ship displacement = | Ship length = Between {{cvt|467.6 |
468.3|ft}}
| Ship beam = {{cvt|62.7|ft}} | Ship draught = | Ship draft = {{cvt|26.0|ft}} | Ship propulsion = One triple-screw propeller | Ship speed = {{convert|11|kn}} | Ship range = | Ship complement = | Ship sensors = | Ship EW = | Ship armament = | Ship armour = | Ship armor = | Ship aircraft = | Ship aircraft facilities = | Ship notes = | Ship tons burthen = | Ship tonnage = Between 7,749 and 8,403 tons | Ship boats = 4 | Ship depth = {{cvt|72|–|89|ft}} | Ship capacity = Between {{cvt|82148 |
99742|oilbbl}}
}} |
Construction
Following the outbreak of World War I, Socony began designing a new class of oil tanker designed to replace an aging class of barks that had been made for the company at the turn of the century. Named the Arrow-class, the ships were designed by naval architect and head of Socony's Marine Transportation Department, Nicholas J. Pluymert.{{Cite web |last=Department of the Interior |first=United States |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form |url=https://web.kamihq.com/web/viewer.html?state=%7B%22ids%22%3A%5B%221PASTmwURvljyGa5xHOB-IQ6J1Xc3j5GY%22%5D%2C%22action%22%3A%22open%22%2C%22userId%22%3A%22116323042245880596608%22%7D&filename=undefined&kami_user_id=19085093 |access-date=February 7, 2025 |via=National Park Service}} The tankers were designed for the foreign petroleum trade between California and the Far East, with a handful of ships occasionally conducting circumnavigations. The first four of them were built by the New York Shipbuilding Corporation in Camden, New Jersey.{{cite book |last=Gordon |first=Arthur |date=1991 |title=The Mobil Book of Ships: A Century at Sea |publisher=Mobil Shipping Company |location=London}}
In late 1920, the United States Shipping Board authorized Standard Transportation Company to finance the construction of ten more Arrow-class tankers under the provisions of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920. The construction of four other tankers were contracted to the Bethlehem Steel Company in Quincy, Massachusetts, and four more were contracted to the New York Shipbuilding Corporation.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Mobil Tankers |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id31.htm |access-date=March 10, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}{{Cite web |last=Hurdy |first=Paul M. |title=Wreck of the Dixie Arrow |url=http://www.nc-wreckdiving.com/WRECKS/DIXIE/DIXIE.HTML |access-date=2024-10-03 |website=www.nc-wreckdiving.com}} The construction of two more ships was permitted, with one to be built in Sparrows Point, Maryland, and the other in San Francisco, California. However, neither of these ships would be built.{{Cite book |last=Exchange |first=New York Stock |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Listing_Statements_of_the_New_York_Stock/5KMrTbGB_EYC?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=%22Dixie+Arrow%22&dq=%22Dixie+Arrow%22&printsec=frontcover |title=Listing Statements of the New York Stock Exchange |date=1926 |publisher=F. E. Fitch, Incorporated |language=en}}
There were minimal differences between the ships, as designing one ship would serve as a standard for the others in her class, saving on production costs, construction time, materials, and crew training. The largest difference was in the gross register tonnages of each of the ships, which varied even between different ships built at the same yard.{{cite book |editor-last=Gardiner |editor-first=Robert |date=2000 |title=The Golden Age of Shipping: The Classic Merchant Ship 1900-1960 |publisher=Chartwell Books |location=Edison, NJ.}} The Arrow-class was praised, with some considering the ships "to have reached the height of the reciprocating-engine ship in efficiency and all-round tanker performance."
= Specifications =
The first four ships built by New York Shipbuilding—Standard Arrow, Royal Arrow, Sylvan Arrow, and Broad Arrow—all measured {{convert|467.6|ft}} long and {{convert|62.7|ft}} wide. While both Standard Arrow and Royal Arrow had a gross register tonnage of 7,794, Broad Arrow added three tons, and Sylvan Arrow added four. The cargo capacity for each of these tankers was initially {{convert|99742|oilbbl|lk=in}} , but Royal Arrow{{'}}s would be decreased to {{cvt|82148|oilbbl}} after being commandeered by the US government in World War I.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |date= |title=Royal Arrow (1) - (1916-1946) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id627.htm |access-date=March 11, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
In 1919, Socony decided to construct four more Arrow-class tankers. This batch of ships—China Arrow, Japan Arrow, Java Arrow, and India Arrow—were constructed by Bethlehem Steel Company in Quincy. All of them were {{convert|468.3|ft}} long and 62.7 feet wide. China Arrow had a gross register tonnage of 8,403, while the other three had a smaller gross register tonnage of only 8,327.
The final four ships to be constructed were ordered in late 1919, and all of them were built by New York Shipbuilding: Yankee Arrow, Empire Arrow, Levant Arrow, and Dixie Arrow. Each of these ships measured 468.3 feet long and 62.7 feet wide. Each of these ships had a tonnage of 8,046 and a cargo capacity of 99,742 barrels.
Ships
= ''Broad Arrow'' =
Work on SS Broad Arrow began when her keel was laid by the New York Shipbuilding Corporation on April 26, 1917. She was launched on December 22 of that year. The tanker was acquired by the US Navy and given to the Naval Overseas Transportation Service on March 12, 1918 and her prefix changed to USS. Broad Arrow carried fuel between the United States and France for the next eleven months, being returned to her owners on February 24, 1919.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Broad Arrow - (1919-1943) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id539.htm |access-date=March 10, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
Broad Arrow{{'}}s service was standard for tankers of the time, not having any notable incidents up until her entry into service during World War II. The ship departed Port of Spain, the capital of the British territory of Trinidad and Tobago, on January 5, 1943. She was bound for Rio de Janeiro, the second-largest city in Brazil. Close to midnight on January 8, the tanker was torpedoed by the {{ship|German submarine|U-124|1940|6}}. The first torpedo struck the aft magazine and created a massive explosion, causing the ship to flood rapidly and settle by the stern.{{Cite web |last=Helgason |first=Guðmundur |date=1995 |title=Broad Arrow |url=https://uboat.net/allies/merchants/ship/2577.html |access-date=March 10, 2025 |website=uboat.net}}
The second torpedo lit the cargo hold aflame, and the fire soon spread to the ship and the rest of the convoy that Broad Arrow was traveling in. All crew in the engine room and on the bridge were killed by the explosions. The remainder of the crew abandoned ship roughly five minutes after the explosions, without orders, leaving others who were still aboard or in the water. The crew in the lifeboats were picked up by {{USS|PC-577}} and taken to Paramaribo, capital of Surinam, the next day. Two survivors then died aboard PC-577 and were buried in the city.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=SS Broad Arrow the Loss |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id1139.htm |access-date=March 10, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
= ''China Arrow'' =
{{Main article|SS China Arrow}}
Construction of SS China Arrow was contracted to the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation in Quincy, Massachusetts, in 1920. She was launched on September 2, 1920, sponsored by Fredericka H. Fales.{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/30753134/the_boston_globe/ |title=Oil Tanker China Arrow Launched at Fore River |newspaper=The Boston Globe |date=September 2, 1920 |p=4 |access-date=April 19, 2019 |via=Newspapers.com}} The tanker was completed on September 30, conducting her sea trials the next day in Massachusetts Bay.{{cite journal |title=China Arrow Latest Type of Tank Ship |journal=The Nautical Gazette |volume=99 |number=20 |date=November 13, 1920 |p=10}}
China Arrow{{'}}s first voyage had her depart from Port Arthur, Texas, on October 12, 1920. The tanker carried 10,640 tons of oil bound for several Chinese ports."Movement of Vessels". Galveston Daily News. October 13, 1920. p. 9. The ship sailed through the Panama Canal, briefly stopping in San Francisco before arriving in China, reaching Tianjin on December 4. China Arrow returned to San Francisco with ballast on January 6, 1921, successfully completing her maiden voyage. The tanker would conduct three more similar trips before being laid up with several other vessels in August 1921 due to a shortage of cargo.{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/30770124/the_san_francisco_examiner/ |title=Tankers to Basin |newspaper=The San Francisco Examiner |date=August 13, 1921 |p=19 |access-date=April 19, 2019 |via=Newspapers.com}} She was reactivated in September, remaining in the Far East for the next year. Aside from visiting her namesake country, China Arrow also visited Hong Kong and several ports in Imperial Japan.
China Arrow was removed from the Far East service in 1928, having a largely uneventful career in North America aside from an incident on July 26, 1938. The tanker nearly collided with fishing trawler Dorchester while rounding Graves Light off of Nahant. The two ships narrowly avoided collision, going just slow enough as to scrape one another's sides. It was planned to retire her in January 1939, but she was pressed back into service following severe shipping losses in the early stages of World War II. China Arrow was rebuilt for a cost of $450,000 by the Maryland Drydock Company.{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/30836375/the_baltimore_sun/ |title=Tanker Being Rebuilt at Cost of $450,000 |newspaper=The Baltimore Sun |date=February 27, 1940 |p=6 |access-date=April 21, 2019 |via=Newspapers.com}} The tanker traveled twice to Vladivostok to deliver oil and motor fuel to the Soviet Union before being reassigned to her original route, where she would remain for the rest of her career."News of Shipping in N.Y. And Phila.:Arrived Yesterday". The Philadelphia Inquirer. August 9, 1041. p. 20.
At the end of January 1942, China Arrow departed Beaumont, Texas, carrying {{cvt|81773|oilbbl}} of fuel oil to New York. On the morning of February 5, about {{convert|90|nmi|lk=in}} off the Virginia coast, {{GS|U-103|1940|2}} fired two torpedoes, striking the ship in holds 8, 9, and 10. While the firefighting system extinguished fires in two holds, it failed in hold 8, prompting Captain Paul Browne to order the crew to abandon ship.{{cite book |last=Browning, Jr. |first=Robert M. |date=2011 |title=United States Merchant Marine Casualties of World War II |publisher=McFarland |p=31 |isbn=978-0786446001}} Three lifeboats were launched, leaving only the captain and the ship’s wireless operator who improvised an SOS after China Arrow{{'}}s antenna was destroyed. After U-103 surfaced nearby, they left in a fourth lifeboat before the submarine shelled the tanker, sinking her stern-first."[https://www.newspapers.com/clip/30836775/daily_news/ U-Boat Sinks Tanker in Daylight; 37 Saved]". Daily News. February 9, 1942. p. 2 & 13. Retrieved April 21, 2019 – via Newspapers.com. A United States Army Air Forces B-25A aircraft spotted the survivors and attacked the submarine, while the United States Navy patrol boat PE-56 and United States Coast Guard cutter Nike were dispatched. The lifeboats stayed together for three days before Nike rescued the crew on February 7, bringing them to Lewes, Delaware.
= ''Dixie Arrow'' =
{{Main article|SS Dixie Arrow}}
SS Dixie Arrow was ordered on November 1, 1919, laid down in Camden on January 24, 1921, making her the last ship of the class to be built. Sponsored and christened by Isabelle Brown of Dallas, Texas, she was launched on September 29. The ship underwent her sea trials on November 23, and was handed over to Socony on November 29.Pacific Marine Review 1922:88; Philadelphia Inquirer November 24, 1921.{{cite news |title=Tanker Has Trial |newspaper=Philadelphia Inquirer |date=November 30, 1921 |location=Philadelphia}}
Dixie Arrow initially served in the Far East like her sisters, carrying various vegetable oils to Manila after dropping her cargo off in Hong Kong. She carried these oils in her tween deck during her return voyage to the United States.Galveston Daily News. October 6, 1922. After serving only two years in this capacity, Dixie Arrow was rerouted to all of North America to service ports in New England, Texas, and California. The tanker carried general freight in addition to her regular cargo, occasionally carrying bunker fuel to the Panama Canal for use by transiting vessels.National Industrial Conference Board. 1930. Oil Conservation and Fuel Oil Supply. National Industrial Conference Board, Inc., New York, NY. Retrieved February 18, 2025. California was removed from the Dixie Arrow{{'}}s route in 1931, and she began to regularly carry case oil up and down the east coast of the United States. Following the United States' entry into World War II, the tanker began carrying oil to be used in the production of war matériel.{{cite book |last=Duffus |first=Kevin |date=2012 |chapter=10: Growl you Go, but Go you Must |title=War Zone: World War II Off the North Carolina Coast |edition=1st |location=Raleigh, North Carolina |publisher=Looking Glass Productions, Inc. |isbn=1888285427}}
On March 19, 1942, Dixie Arrow left Texas City, Texas, bound for the city of Paulsboro, New Jersey. She carried {{cvt|86136|oilbbl}} of crude oil to be used for the Allied war effort, following a {{convert|40|fathom|adj=on|spell=in}} curve off Cape Hatteras due to the captain's concerns about the shallow depth of the water.{{cite book |last=Hickam Jr. |first=Homer H. |date=1989 |title=Torpedo Junction: U-Boat War Off America’s East Coast 1942 |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis, MD}} The tanker soon sailed into the hunting grounds of German U-boats, and was torpedoed thrice on March 26 by {{GS|U-71|1940|2}} just around 9:00 AM. Dixie Arrow broke in two due to the explosions.{{cite web |url=http://www.nc-wreckdiving.com/WRECKS/DIXIE/DIXIE.HTML |title=Wreck of the Dixie Arrow |website=nc-wreckdiving.com |access-date=October 3, 2024}} Able seaman Oscar Chappell turned the ship into the wind to save crewmen trapped by fire on the bow, but was killed by the flames in doing so.{{cite news |last=Ruane |first=Michael E. |date=February 15, 2016 |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/agency-seeks-sanctuary-for-wwii-shipwrecks-off-cape-hatteras/2016/02/15/67960be4-d370-11e5-b195-2e29a4e13425_story.html |title=Agency seeks sanctuary for WWII shipwrecks off Cape Hatteras |work=The Washington Post |access-date=February 24, 2025}} Only one of the ship's lifeboats safely made it away, the other three either being destroyed in the initial explosions or being succumbed by the fire that had engulfed the ship. The crew was never able to send a distress signal.{{cite web |last=Claes |first=Johnny |date=October 10, 2007 |url=https://wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?15438 |title=SS Dixie Arrow (+1942) |website=wrecksite.eu |access-date=October 3, 2024}}
The US Navy destroyer {{USS|Tarbell}} arrived around 9:30 AM, roughly half an hour after Dixie Arrow had been torpedoed. She had been guided by a US Navy seaplane sent from Naval Operating Base Norfolk, which itself had been sent to the scene by a US Coast Guard aircraft that had witnessed the ship's torpedoing. The destroyer dropped multiple depth charges in hopes of sinking the submarine, though none of them did anything to harm it. USS Tarbell rescued 22 of the ship's 33-man crew, taking them to Morehead City, North Carolina. The survivors were later transferred to Norfolk, Virginia, for better conditions.{{cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id630.htm |title=Dixie Arrow - (1921-1942) |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site |access-date=February 6, 2025}}
= ''Empire Arrow'' =
{{Main article|SS Empire Arrow}}
File:Empire Arrow launch 24 May 1921.pngThe keel of SS Empire Arrow was laid on September 14, 1920. She was launched on May 24, 1921, from New York Shipbuilding Corporation's South Yard Slipway No. 2 in Camden, New Jersey. The tanker was commissioned on August 7 and completed in September of that year.{{cite web |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090813165541/http://yorkship.home.comcast.net/~yorkship/firsts.htm |title=First and Last by Shipway |website=Yorkship |url=http://yorkship.home.comcast.net/~yorkship/firsts.htm |archive-date=August 13, 2009 |access-date=January 11, 2009}}
Empire Arrow{{'}}s first voyages were complete circumnavigations, sailing from both the east and west coasts of the United States while bound for the Philippines, China, Japan, and other places in the Far East. The tanker refueled and reloaded her cargo in the Dutch East Indies before conducting backhauls to mainland Europe and the United Kingdom. She was withdrawn from foreign service in 1933, carrying oil from Beaumont, Texas, to New York.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Empire Arrow - (1921-1939) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id629.htm |access-date=March 11, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
The tanker was in the waters off of New England in 1938 when a hurricane struck, severely damaging the ship. After being sold in December of that year to Northern Metals Company, the ship was sent to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where she arrived on January 1, 1939. The ship was broken up that year.{{csr|register=MSI|id=2221600|shipname=Empire Arrow |access-date=February 11, 2020}}
= ''India Arrow'' =
{{Main articles|SS India Arrow}}
SS India Arrow was laid by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Company down on March 3, 1920, and launched in the Fore River early the next year on January 28, 1921. She was sponsored by Mrs. Harry Dundas, wife of the manager of Standard Transportation Company's British India branch. The ship conducted her sea trials in Massachusetts Bay on February 25 and 26, and was transferred to her owners on March 17.{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-boston-globe/31003690/ |title=Oil Tanker India Arrow Launched at Fore River |newspaper=The Boston Globe |date=January 29, 1921 |p=3 |access-date=April 27, 2019 |via=Newspapers.com}}{{cite web |last=Colton |first=Tim |url=http://shipbuildinghistory.com/shipyards/large/bethquincy.htm |title=Bethlehem Quincy, Fore River Shipbuilding |website=ShipbuildingHistory |access-date=September 14, 2021}}
India Arrow was docked in Boston for six months due to an overabundance of ships and a scarcity of cargo. Once underway, however, the tanker sailed from New York to the Far East via the Panama Canal, making backhaul stops in Sumatra's Dutch oil fields and then to Rotterdam via the Suez Canal. Then, after arriving in New York, the ship would complete the same voyage in reverse. In September 1923, the tanker stumbled across a damaged Standard Arrow in the Pacific Ocean, and towed her sister ship {{convert|800|mi}} to Yokahama, Japan. India Arrow was transferred to the oil service up and down the east coast in 1930, with an occasional voyage through the Panama Canal to the west coast.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=India Arrow - (1921-1942) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id545.htm |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
On her final voyage, India Arrow was bound for Carteret, New Jersey, sailing from Corpus Christi, Texas. On the evening of February 4, she was torpedoed {{convert|35|mi|spell=in}} east of Five Fathom Bank by U-103. The tanker caught fire and began to sink from the stern, the crew sending out a distress signal but not the ship's location. The U-boat began shelling India Arrow from about {{convert|250|yd}}, firing a total of seven shells at two-minute intervals. Only one lifeboat was successfully launched, with the others either catching fire or flipping over in the oily water. The twelve survivors were picked up by the fishing skiff Gitana and taken to Ocean City, New Jersey, on February 6.{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/81099346/the-daily-american/ |title=12 Tanker Survivors |newspaper=The Daily American |date=February 7, 1942 |pp=1-2 |access-date=July 9, 2021 |via=Newspapers.com}}
= ''Japan Arrow'' =
{{Main article|USS Chotauk}}
The tanker SS Japan Arrow was launched by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Company on October 23, 1920, and entered service on November 24. The ship did not operate in the Far East until August 1925, when she departed the US bound for India via the Suez Canal. Japan Arrow carried oil to nearly all of the countries in the Far East save for her namesake, Japan. Her only experience in the country was when she ran aground near Fuzhou, China, in April 1921 and was towed to Yokahama for fuel and repairs.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Japan Arrow - (1920-1942) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id636.htm |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
She was transferred to the east coast in 1930, carrying oil from Texas to New England save for one voyage in 1939. On that voyage, Japan Arrow carried a fractionating column from New Jersey to Beaumont Texas, to be used in an oil refinery owned by Magnolia Petroleum Company. Cradles were welded to the side of the tanker, and her port list was compensated for by extra ballast in the cargo tanks on the starboard side.
In early 1942, Japan Arrow was renamed to American Arrow to avoid any association with the country and its ideas.{{Cite web |date=20 May 1942 |title=Memo confirming name change of the American Arrow, 20th May 1942 |url=https://hec.lrfoundation.org.uk/archive-library/documents/lrf-pun-w997-0208-l |access-date=May 2, 2025 |website=Lloyd's Register Foundation}} She was acquired by the War Shipping Administration in March 1942 and placed into war service, sailing from Abadan, Iran, to ports in South Africa, Australia, and India. After ownership of American Arrow was given to the US government in September 1944, the tanker's name changed once more, this time to Chotauk. The ship served in the Pacific for the remainder of the war, receiving three campaign medals for her service.{{Cite web |date=December 19, 1998 |title=Chotauk |url=https://www.hazegray.org/danfs/ix/ix188.htm |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=Haze Gray |via=American Naval Fighting Ships}}{{Cite web |last=Priolo |first=Gary P. |date=September 22, 2023 |title=USS Chotauk (IX-188) |url=https://www.navsource.org/archives/09/46/46188.htm |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=navsource.org}} After being decommissioned on February 7, 1946, Chotauk was sold to the M. S. Kaplan Company for scrapping, The tanker was broken up at New Orleans in May 1947 by the Southern Shipwrecking Company.
= ''Java Arrow'' =
Constructed by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Company, SS Java Arrow was launched on April 30, 1921, and entered service on May 24 of that year. The ship's very first voyage was to India via the Suez Canal, with a backhaul stop in Balikpapan, a city in the Dutch East Indies. Java Arrow sailed the Far East many times until 1931, when she was transferred to the American east coast.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Java Arrow - (1921-1943) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id637.htm |access-date=March 11, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
In February 1926, Java Arrow was sailing from Singapore to the United States when it discovered Daishin Maru No. 3, a wrecked Japanese cargo ship. After her 17 crew members were rescued, the wreck was later located by the Japanese government and taken to Yokohama for repairs.{{Cite news |date=February 19, 1926 |title=Steamer's Crew. Some Rescued Starving, Others Believed Lost. |work=The Sydney Morning Herald}}"Casualty reports" The Times (London). Wednesday, January 27, 1926. Issue 44180, col F, p. 5.
Java Arrow was taken by the War Shipping Administration (WSA) in 1942 and pressed into service with the United States Merchant Marine. During her first voyage, on May 5, 1942, Java Arrow was torpedoed by a German U-boat {{convert|8|mi|spell=in}} off the Florida coast.U. S. Naval Operation's "Survivor Reports" (Java Arrow and W.D. Anderson). National Archives, Washington, DC. The ship was damaged but not sunk, and was towed to Port Everglades in June. She was later taken to Norfolk, Virginia, for permanent repairs. She was renamed Celtic in US Navy service, later Karry Patch under the US Coast Guard, and survived through the remainder of the war. She served in multiple capacities during the Pacific theater of the war.
The veteran tanker of two world wars was decommissioned on February 6, 1946, in Mobile, Alabama. She was transferred once more to the WSA for her planned disposal on Christmas Eve of that year.{{Cite web |date=January 26, 1999 |title=Celtic |url=https://www.hazegray.org/danfs/ix/ix137.htm |access-date=March 11, 2025 |website=Haze Gray |via=Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships}} For unknown reasons, Celtic{{'}}s decommissioning was delayed until 1948, where she was purchased by Radocean Tanker Corporation and renamed Radketch. The tanker changed owners and names several times over the coming years: She was known as Gale under Soc. Armadora Valenciana and Commander Trading Corporation in 1949 and 1952, and then as Sugar under Marine Charters Inc. in 1955. She was finally sold in January 1959 to Cantieri Navali del Golfo, and broken up at La Spezia in March.
= ''Levant Arrow'' =
The tanker SS Levant Arrow was ordered on April 1, 1920, and her keel was laid on November 4 of that year. She was launched on July 25, 1921, by New York Shipbuilding Corporation, and completed in October 1921.{{Cite web |date=2025 |title=ST LEVANT ARROW |url=https://www.shipvault.com/ships/21501 |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=ShipVault}}
The ship's route took her from New England, through the Panama Canal, to west coast cities like San Pedro, and then across the Pacific to Chinese ports such as Dalian. No notable incidents occurred over the course of Levant Arrow{{'}}s seventeen-year career. The tanker arrived in Philadelphia for scrapping on December 12, 1938, and was broken up by Northern Metals Company in early 1939.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Levant Arrow - (1921-1938) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id631.htm |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
= ''Royal Arrow'' =
SS Royal Arrow was the second Arrow-class tanker to be built, launched by New York Shipbuilding Corporation on October 30, 1916. She was completed on December 16, and handed over to Socony shortly after.
The tanker sailed for six round trips from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and New York, before being sent to the Pacific Ocean for the foreign petroleum trade there. She stayed in the Pacific for the remainder of World War I, being commandeered by the US government to carry coconut oil and copra from the Philippines to the mainland US. Royal Arrow returned to the east coast of the United States in 1922, transferred back to Socony, and would remain there for 19 years, carrying oil between Texas and New England.{{cite book |last=Mooney |first=James L. |date=1976 |title=Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships |volume=R Through S, Appendices |location=Washington, D.C. |publisher=Department of Defense, Navy, Naval History Division |p=705 |isbn=0-16-002030-1}} On August 24, 1940, the Federal Maritime Commission approved the sale of Royal Arrow and her sister, Sylvan Arrow, to the Petroleum Shipping Company of Panama, a subsidiary of Socony-Vacuum Oil. This came after the passage of the Neutrality Act in November 1939, where many shipping companies transferred ownership of their vessels to a neutral registry in order to bypass the limitations of the act. Royal Arrow was further transferred to Brilliant Transportation Company in April 1941, and her registry was changed to Panamanian.{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/27473263/the_san_francisco_examiner/ |title=Commission Approves Sale of Two Tankers |newspaper=The San Francisco Examiner |date=August 25, 1940 |p=67 |access-date=January 20, 2019 |via=Newspapers.com}}
Upon the US entry into World War II, the tanker was requisitioned for the conflict by the WSA. A gun was installed on the ship's bow, and she carried war materiel from places like Iran, Australia, and India.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |last2=Wilson |first2=Derek |title=The gun crew of the SS Royal Arrow in 1943 |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id1058.htm |access-date=March 11, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}} She returned to the US in December 1945, still flying the Panamanian flag. When the ship's final year-by-year certificate expired in December 1946, she was sold as a "going unit" to Corrada Societa Di Navigazione of Genoa, Italy. The tanker was renamed to Laura Corrado, serving the Italian company in the Adriatic.{{Cite book |last=Register of Shipping |first=Lloyd's |url=https://web.kamihq.com/web/viewer.html?state=%7B%22ids%22%3A%5B%221_VYTD_Y9xoMi_c_V8ARCUrzElMpzfu9j%22%5D%2C%22action%22%3A%22open%22%2C%22userId%22%3A%22116323042245880596608%22%7D&filename=undefined&kami_user_id=19085093 |title=Merchant Ships Totally Lost, Broken Up, Etc. |date=October 1959 |publisher=Lloyd's Register of Shipping |location=London |page=42}} She arrived at the breakers yard at La Spezia, Italy, on July 7, 1959. There, she was scrapped by Cantieri Navali del Golfo.
= ''Standard Arrow'' =
{{Main article|USS Standard Arrow}}
File:SS Standard Arrow (1916).jpg
SS Standard Arrow was the first Arrow-class ship to be built, constructed in May 1916 and first operated by Standard Transporation Company. She was acquired by the US Navy on a bareboat charter and commissioned on August 22, 1917. The tanker was given to the Naval Overseas Transportation Service on January 9, 1918, and assigned to duty in the Atlantic. She departed New York on bound for Devonport, England, arriving on February 4. That same day, she collided with a fellow American tanker, SS Norman Bridge. Standard Arrow discharged her cargo to the ship {{USS|Maumee|AO-2|6}}, returned to New York, and was placed in drydock until February 25. The ship reacquired her cargo and made six more trips to Europe before being decommissioned, returned to the Shipping Board, and handed back over to Socony on February 13, 1919.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Standard Arrow - (1916-1917 & 1919-1944) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id538.htm |access-date=March 11, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
In September 1923, Standard Arrow was damaged in a storm while sailing through the Pacific Ocean. She was located by her younger sister, India Arrow, and was towed {{convert|800|mi}} to Yokahama, Japan, for repairs.
Standard Arrow was taken by the US Navy on April 4, 1944. She was commissioned on the same date and renamed USS Signal, supporting the war in the Pacific and carrying oil for Service Squadron 10, which was based at the Majuro and Ulithi atolls. The tanker would remain in service with the Navy until February 20, 1946, where she was returned to her owners and renamed Standard Arrow. She was struck from the Navy's register on March 12, and continued merchant service for roughly a year. The tanker was sold to H. H. Buncher company in early 1947. She was broken up in Mobile, Alabama, in April 1947, by Liberty Industrial Salvage Inc.
= ''Sylvan Arrow'' =
{{Main article|SS Sylvan Arrow}}
File:SS Sylvan Arrow (1917).jpgSS Sylvan Arrow was launched on October 16, 1917, and commissioned on January 5, 1918. The ship was immediately pressed into war service, making three transatlantic voyages with war materiel before being acquired by the Naval Overseas Transportation Service in July 1918. She conducted three voyages under the US Navy, carrying oil and biplanes before she was decommissioned on January 21, 1919, and returned to Socony.{{cite book |last=Mooney |first=James L. |date=1976 |title=Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships |volume=6: R Through S, Appendices |location=Washington, D.C. |publisher=Department of Defense, Navy, Naval History Division |p=705 |isbn=0-16-002030-1}}
The tanker conducted eleven long hauls in the Pacific, transferred to the east coast in 1930. She continued this service until April 1941, when both she and Royal Arrow were transferred to the Brilliant Transportation Company. Shortly after, Sylvan Arrow began flying the Panamanian flag.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Sylvan Arrow (1) - (1919-1942) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id537.htm |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
In April 1942, the ship was requisitioned by the WSA while docked in Norfolk, Virginia. She sailed to the Caribbean, joining a convoy of tankers leaving Curaçao bound for Cape Town. On May 20, 1942, Sylvan Arrow was torpedoed by the {{GS|U-155|1941|6}}. The tanker proceeded to catch fire and was abandoned. A majority of the crew escaped and were picked up by the US destroyer {{USS|Barney|DD-149|6}}. The tanker continued to sail, burning, and was spotted by a returning convoy on May 26. A salvage tug began to tow Sylvan Arrow, before the ship began to fold in the middle and sank on May 28, {{convert|75|mi}} from Trinidad.{{cite book |last1=Bertke |first1=Donald |first2=Smith |last2=Gordon |last3=Kindell |first3=Don |date=2014 |title=World War II Sea War |volume=6: The Allies Halt the Axis Advance |publisher=Bertke Publications |pp=138, 140 |isbn=978-1937470098}}
= ''Yankee Arrow'' =
File:Yankeearrowamericanflag.jpg
SS Yankee Arrow was launched by New York Shipbuilding Corporation on May 10, 1921, and was completed on August 2 of the same year. The tanker had no notable incidents during her pre-World War II service. After the war's outbreak, she began carrying oil to support the Allies, joining the North African campaign in 1942.{{Cite web |last=Visser |first=Auke |title=Yankee Arrow - (1921-1943) |url=https://www.aukevisser.nl/mobil/id628.htm |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=Auke Visser's MOBIL Tankers & Tugs Site}}
On August 2, 1943, the tanker was sailing in a convoy from Annaba, Algeria, to Bizerte, Tunisia. The convoy began forming a single column to enter the Tunisian port. Sailing off Cape Bon, Yankee Arrow suddenly struck a naval mine off her port bow. The ship was engulfed by a fire that was brought under control about half an hour later. Her crew did not abandon ship, though the initial blast blew several sailors overboard. Yankee Arrow was heavily damaged and deemed unfit for further war service, being purchased by the WSA and serving as fuel storage off Sicily for several years.{{Cite web |date=March 10, 2020 |title=SS Yankee Arrow |url=https://www.militaryimages.net/media/ss-yankee-arrow.140511/ |access-date=March 12, 2025 |website=militaryimages.net}} The tanker was finally laid up in the port of Marseille, France, in July 1945. In 1948, she was sold to F. Heuvelmans in Antwerp, Belgium. Yankee Arrow was scrapped towards the end of the year.
See also
- {{sclass|Arrow|gunvessel|1}}, Royal Navy ships of a class sharing the same name
- {{sclass|Cedric|patrol boat|1}}, a class of ships originally named the Arrow-class
- T2 tanker, class of oil tanker built in the US during World War II