Please report any broken links or trouble you might come across to the Webmaster. Please take a moment to let us know so that we can correct any problems and make your visit as enjoyable and as informative as possible.


NavSource Online:
Section Patrol Craft Photo Archive

Maui (ID 1514)


Maui served both the U. S. Navy during World War I and the Army during World War II.

Transport: Built in 1917 by the Union Iron Works, San Francisco, CA; Acquired by the Navy and commissioned Maui (ID 1514), 6 March 1918; Decommissioned, September 1919 and returned to her owner; Operated by the Army as USAT Maui in 1942/1943; Transferred to the Maritime Administration in 1945; Scrapped in 1948.

Specifications: Displacement 9,730 t.; Length 501'; Beam 58'; Draft 30' 2"; Speed 18 kts.; Complement unknown; Armament two 1-pounders and two
machine guns.


Click On Image
For Full Size Image
Size Image Description Source
Maui 83k Photo of Maui from a Post Card. Randle M. Biddle
Maui 71k Photographed in 1917 in Matson Line colors, possibly while on trials.
US Navy Photo NH 102021
Naval Historical Center
Maui 79k Off New York City with troops on board, 25 January 1919.
Courtesy of the Caraway Company, Rutterford, New Jersey, 1936.
US Navy Photo NH 60645
Naval Historical Center
Maui 72k Maui is greeted by local coin divers as she arrives at a Pacific Ocean port, circa the mid-1920s.
Courtesy of Mrs. Donald Shull, 1976.
US Navy Photo NH 85125
Naval Historical Center
Maui 103k Photographed on 15 November 1922.
Courtesy of the San Francisco Maritime Museum, San Francisco, California, 1972.
U.S. Navy Photo NH 76071
Naval Historical Center
Maui 137k Pearl Harbor, Oahu, Hawaii. Aerial view, looking west, with the supply depot in upper center, 13 October 1941. Part of the Submarine Base is at lower left; the Navy Yard is in the upper left; and Ford Island is in the top right.USS Holland is at left, at the Submarine Base. Alongside her are submarines Sturgeon (SS-187), Spearfish (SS-190), Saury (SS-189), Seal (SS-183) and Sargo (SS-188). USS Niagara (PG-52) is alongside the wharf, ahead of Holland. Ships docked at the supply depot, upper center, are USS Oglala (CM-4) and the S.S. Maui. Among the ships at the piers in the extreme upper left are USS Indianapolis (CA-35), USS San Francisco (CA-38) and USS Antares (AG-10). The two battleships moored by Ford Island, in upper right, are (left) USS Oklahoma (BB-37) and (right) USS Arizona (BB-39).
Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives.
US Navy Photo 80-G-451131
Naval Historical Center

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships:

Maui

An island in the south-central Hawaiian group named for the chief mythological hero of the Polynesians. Maui is credited with snaring the sun, controlling the winds, introducing fire, and fishing up the eastern Pacific island group from the sea.

The first Maui, a troop transport, was built by Union Iron Works, San Francisco, Calif., in 1917; acquired by the Navy from the Matson Navigation Co., San Francisco, 6 March 1918 ; and commissioned the same day.

Assigned to transatlantic duty, Maui served with the Cruiser and Transport Force through World War I, carrying troops to France and returning from Europe with passengers and the sick and wounded, Following the Armistice. she decommissioned and was returned to her owner.

During World War II Maui operated under the Quartermaster Corps, U.S. Army, from 1942 into 1943 before she was turned over to the Maritime Administration for disposal by 1945.

(Addendum to DANFS): Maui, a 9730-ton (gross) passenger steamship, was built in 1917 at San Francisco, California. After less than a year's service on her intended route between the U.S. west coast and Hawaii she was taken over by the Navy in March 1918 and commissioned as USS Maui (ID # 1514). Returned to her owners in September 1919, she resumed her eastern Pacific voyages, as an important part of Hawaii's link to the U.S. mainland. The depressed economic conditions of the 1930s caused her to be laid up at San Francisco, California, in 1933. A year later she was converted to a freighter.

In November 1941, Maui suffered a collision in San Francisco Bay and a month later was purchased by the U.S. Army became the USAT Maui. She began Army transport work late in 1941 with a trip to Honolulu, and continued operations in the Pacific through World War II. In addition to voyages to Hawaii, she carried personnel and cargo to Alaska, the south and southwest Pacific, the Philippines and Japan. Maui completed this work in early 1946 and was laid up in mid-year at Olympia, Washington. She was scrapped in 1948.


Back To The Main Photo Index Back To the Patrol Craft/Gunboat/Submarine Chaser Ship Type Index Back to the Identification Numbered Vessel (ID) Photo Index

Comments, Suggestions, E-mail Webmaster

This page created and maintained by Joseph M. Radigan
© 2005 Joseph M. Radigan © 1996 - 2005 NavSource Naval History. All Rights Reserved.