From: Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
Towhee
A North American bird of the finch family.
(AM-388: dp. 890; 1. 221'1"; b. 32'2", s. 18.1 k.; cpl. 117; a. 1 3", 2 40mm.; cl. Auk)
Towhee (AM-388) was laid down on 21 March 1944 at Cleveland, Ohio, by the American Shipbuilding Co.; launched on 6 January 1945; sponsored by Mrs. C. E. Conners; and commissioned on 18 May 1945, Lt. T. N. Humble, USNR, in command. [sic; Lt. Howard L. Rich, Jr. was the first commanding officer of Towhee.]
Towhee departed Cleveland on 26 May, bound for the Massachusetts coast, via the Canadian ports of Montreal and Halifax, Nova Scotia, and arrived at Boston on 10 June. The minesweeper remained at this port through 23 July, undergo ing a major overhaul before proceeding to Little Creek, Va., for a continuation of overhaul and shakedown.
Leaving the Norfolk area on 21 September, Towhee headed south for Panama, transited the Panama Canal and joined the Pacific Fleet on 30 September. A short availability at Craig Shipyard, San Pedro, Calif., in October prepared the ship for her departure from the west coast; and she got underway for Pearl Harbor on 3 November and arrived eight days later. On the 21st the minesweeper departed the Hawaiian Islands, but an engineering casualty on the following day forced her return to Pearl Harbor
After spending a month under repair, Towhee again sailed for Japan on 28 December and proceeded via Eniwetok, Saipan, Guam, and Samar in the Philippines. Escorting YMS's, the minesweeper reached Sasebo on 1 February 1946 and comm enced a short availability alongside Nereus (AS-17) for voyage repairs.
Departing Sasebo for Saishu To, she spent one week in those waters and then shifted her operations to Tsushima before returning to Sasebo. Assigned as flagship, Task Unit 96.6.2, she participated in part of the gigantic minesweeping ope rations designed to clear the waters around the Japanese home islands of mines sown during the war and commenced her sweeps in Tsushima Strait on 17 March.
After a month of operations, Towhee departed Sasebo on 22 April, bound for the west coast, via Eniwetok and Pearl Harbor. Towhee stood into San Diego on 20 May before proceeding on to transit the Panama Canal on 9 June and rejoin the Atlantic Fleet. After a two-day layover at Coco Solo, Canal Zone, the minesweeper got underway north and arrived at Charleston, S.C., on 17 June.
Towhee remained on active duty with the Atlantic Fleet through 1953 and was decommissioned and laid up at Orange, Tex., in March 1954. On 7 February 1955 a fleet-wide redesignation of minecraft resulted in Towhee being red esignated as MSF-388. The minesweeper remained inactive through November of 1963. In December of that year, the ship proceeded to Philadelphia for activation and conversion to an oceanographic survey ship to replace Requisite (AGS-18). She was reco mmissioned on 1 April 1964 and redesignated AGS-28. Assigned to Service Force, Atlantic Fleet, and homeported in Norfolk, Va., the ship completed underway training by July at Guantanamo Bay Cuba. Towhee then commenced a series of five oceanographic survey operations through the summer of 1965 before assisting in builder's trials for a nuclear submarine in the late summer.
Navigational difficulties caused a premature return from the ship's sixth survey operation in late October necessitating a tender availability alongside Cadmus (AR-14) before the survey ship departed Norfolk on 6 December and dep loyed once more for survey operations in the western Atlantic.
The ship remained with the Atlantic Fleet through May 1966, when she underwent a tender availability alongside Amphion (AR-13) to prepare for shifting her operations back to the Pacific. Upon completion of the tender availability , Towhee entered the Norfolk Naval Shipyard for installation of new communications equipment and air conditioning. She departed the shipyard on 1 July and the Norfolk area six days later, bound for Pearl Harbor. After stopovers at the Canal Zone an d at Mazatlan, Mex., Towhee made port at Pearl Harbor on 12 August.
Assigned to ServRon 5, the oceanographic survey vessel underwent voyage repairs soon after arriving in Hawaiian waters and continued availability through September. From 18 October to 5 November, the ship conducted underway training ope rations and refresher training. On 9 November, the ship got underway for her first Far Eastern deployment.
After layovers at Guam in the Marianas and at Subic Bay in the Philippines, Towhee dropped anchor in Touraine Bay, off Danang, South Vietnam, on 9 December. Survey operations conducted between the time of her arrival and her depa rture on 12 January 1967 were frequently hampered by gale winds and high seas. The ship subsequently returned, via Subic Bay and Guam, to Hawaiian waters and reached Pearl Harbor on 6 February.
Following a survey in the vicinity of Midway Island the ship entered the naval shipyard at Pearl Harbor for 10 days of upkeep. Towhee then conducted underway training prior to entering ARD-30 for routine predeployment unde rwater hull inspection. On 18 September, Towhee departed Pearl Harbor, bound for the ship's second WestPac deployment, and stopped briefly at Guam en route to the Gulf of Thailand. Arriving off the western coast of Vietnam for survey operations dur ing the latter part of October, Towhee's operations continued into December, when she made a visit to Bangkok, Thailand, over Christmas 1967. Towhee headed for Hawaii in April and conducted local operations in the Hawaiian area until 25 Nove mber 1968, when the survey ship headed for the west coast.
Towhee underwent a material inspection on 19 and 20 March 1969 at the conclusion of her west coast deployment, and the surveying board found the ship unfit for further service. Towhee was decommissioned on 30 April 1969, a nd custody was transferred to the Inactive Ship Facility at Vallejo, Calif. On 1 May 1969, Towhee was struck from the Navy list and sold to the Learner Co. of Oakland, Calif., on 6 March 1970, for scrapping.