USS Mount Hood (AE-29)

Mount Hood heading out of San Diego Bay on 30 September 1997
History
United States
Name Mount Hood (AE-29)
Namesake Mount Hood
Awarded 28 January 1966
Builder Bethlehem Steel Corporation
Laid down 8 May 1967
Launched 17 July 1968
Sponsored by Mrs. Robert A. Frosch
Commissioned 1 May 1971
Decommissioned 10 August 1999
Stricken 10 August 1999
Motto Arma Pro Armada
Nickname(s) "The Good Hood"
Fate Scrapped
General characteristics
Class and type Kilauea-class ammunition ship
Displacement
  • Light: 10,312 tons
  • Full load: 18,664 tons
Length 564 ft (172 m)
Beam 81 ft (25 m)
Draft 27 ft (8.2 m)
Propulsion 3 Foster-Wheeler boilers; 600 psi; 870 °F; 1 turbine, 22,000 hp; Automated Propulsion System (APS); One six-bladed propeller
Speed 20 knots (37 km/h)
Complement
  • 28 officers
  • 390 enlisted
Armament .50-caliber, 25 mm Chain Gun
Aircraft carried 2 CH-46 Sea Knight helicopters

USS Mount Hood (AE-29) was a Kilauea-class ammunition ship in the United States Navy. She was the second Navy munitions ship to be named after Mount Hood, a volcano in the Cascade Range in Oregon.

Mount Hood was laid down 8 May 1967 by Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Sparrows Point, Maryland; launched 17 July 1968; sponsored by Mrs. Robert A. Frosch, wife of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research and Development; and commissioned on 1 May 1971. She was homeported in Concord, California.

Unlike her seven sister ships of the Kilauea class, she was never transferred to the Military Sealift Command. She was decommissioned in August 1999 and held in reserve at Bremerton, Washington, before being moved in October 1999 to Suisun Bay, California.

She was sold for scrapping on 21 August 2013 and placed under tow 5 September 2013 to Brownsville, Texas, to be dismantled.