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MV Cape Hudson

Coordinates: 37°46′23″N 122°22′53″W / 37.7730888°N 122.3814327°W / 37.7730888; -122.3814327
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37°46′23″N 122°22′53″W / 37.7730888°N 122.3814327°W / 37.7730888; -122.3814327

MV Cape Hudson on 19 July 1991
History
United States
NameCape Hudson
NamesakeCape Hudson
OwnerUnited States Department of Transportation United States Maritime Administration
BuilderTangen Verft
Launched20 September 1978
Completed1979
AcquiredDecember 1986
Commissioned15 August 1990
Renamedfrom Barber Taif
Identification
FateStill in Govt. Service under MARAD as of 2024
StatusLaid in San Francisco, in ROS-5 status
General characteristics
Class and typeCape H-class roll-on/roll-off
Tonnage39,889 GT
Displacement51,007 long tons
Length749 feet
Beam105 feet inches
Draft35 feet
PropulsionDiesel, single propeller
Speed17.4 knots
RangeNot Disclosed
Complement27 civilian mariners
Armamentnone
Armornone
Aircraft carriednone

MV Cape Hudson (T-AKR-5066) was originally built as a commercial ship in 1979 and sold to the Wilhelmsen Line with the name Barber Taif. She has two sister ships named MV Cape Henry and MV Cape Horn.

Construction and career

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It served as a merchant ship until it was purchased by the US Department of Transportation, Maritime Administration in December 1986.

On 15 August 1990, she was reactivated for Operation Desert Storm and Operation Desert Shield until 20 May 1992.[1]

She conducted anchor tests south of Angel Island, San Francisco Bay on 28 July 2007.

From there it was later transferred to the Maritime Administrations Ready reserve fleet and assigned to San Francisco.

As of 2024 the vessel is still in service under the United States Maritime Administration (MARAD)

Further reading

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References

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  1. ^ "The Military Sealift Command-chartered vehicle cargo ship CAPE HUDSON (T-AKR-5066) lies tied up at the pier during unloading operations. The CAPE HUDSON transported the tanks and other equipment back from the Persian Gulf region, where they were used in Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm". The U.S. National Archives. 19 July 1991. Retrieved 15 April 2021.