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©1944 United States Navy Domain of The Golden Dragon Award Certificate
Item #k017
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This item is already sold©1944 United States Navy Domain of The Golden Dragon Award Certificate
United States   America   American   Americana   U.S. Navy   Sailor   U.S. Army. Soldier   Prisoner of War   War   Korea   Vietnam   Domain of The Golden Dragon   Dragon   Woman   Ceremony   Award   Certificate   Military   War   Transportation   Transport   Travel   Ship   U.S.N.S. General Nelson M. Walker   U.S.S. Admiral H. T. Mayo   AP-125   Nostalgic   Paper   Ephemera   History   Historic
The picture shows a view of this ©1944 United States Navy Domain of The Golden Dragon Award Certificate. This colorful certificate was awarded From the U.S.N.S. General Nelson M. Walker on 12 July 1950 to a Harry M. Cook. It was awarded for crossing the International Date Line. PLEASE NOTE: This may be a color copy of the original that someone made, but we can not tell for certain. The certificate has dragons, nude women, chains starfish, and more. it is ©1944 Lloyd Wofford of San Francisco, California. The certificate measures 11'' x 8-1/2''. It appears to be in very good condition as pictured with some light wrinkling from handling. As stated above, we can not tell if this is a color copy of an original or not. It is just how we found it. Below here, for reference, is some history of this ship:

U.S.S. Admiral H. T. Mayo (AP-125)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Career (USA)

Name: U.S.S. Admiral H. T. Mayo (AP-125)
Namesake: Admiral Henry T. Mayo, U.S. Navy
Commissioned: April 1945
Renamed: U.S.A.T. General Nelson M. Walker, circa 1948
Namesake: General Nelson M. Walker, U.S. Army
Renamed: U.S.N.S. General Nelson M. Walker (T-AP-125), 1 March 1950
Struck: January 1959
Reinstated: August 1965
Decommissioned: July 1971
Fate: Scrapped in 2005

General characteristics
Class & type: Admiral W. S. Benson class transport
Displacement: 9,676 tons
Propulsion: turbo electric transmission, twin screw

U.S.S. Admiral H. T. Mayo (AP-125) was a United States Navy Admiral W. S. Benson class transport that entered service at the end of World War II. She partook in Operation Magic Carpet before being transferred to the U.S. Army for a short period, who renamed her USAT General Nelson M. Walker, before returning to the Navy. She was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register in January 1981 before being scrapped in 2005.

History
U.S.S. Admiral H. T. Mayo (AP-125)
Built at Alameda, California to the Maritime Commission's P2-SE2-R1 design, she was commissioned in April 1945. After shakedown she steamed to the Atlantic and, in June, carried 5,819 released prisoners of war from Le Havre, France, to Boston. Her next voyage took her to Marseilles, France, where she embarked 4,888 quartermaster and engineer troops and transported them to Okinawa, arriving in September. Admiral H. T. Mayo then began the first of several ''Magic Carpet'' trips, bringing servicemen home from the Western Pacific. The ship completed the last of these voyages in November 1947 from Jinsen Korea and sailed for New York, where she was decommissioned and transferred, via the Maritime Commission, to the U.S. Army.

USAT General Nelson M. Walker
The Army operated the ship with a civilian crew as part of its water transportation service and soon renamed her General Nelson M. Walker. In mid 1948 she received upgraded accommodations for military dependents.

First Return to Navy Service
Returned to the Navy in March 1950 when most of the Army's larger ships became part of the newly created Military Sea Transportation Service. Still civilian manned and retaining her ''General'' name, the ship made numerous crossings of the Pacific in support of the Korean War. To increase her troop capacity, in early 1952 she was refitted as an ''austerity'' transport, with most amenities removed. Later in 1952 she carried Greek and Turkish troops from their homelands to Korea, and in August 1953 she brought the first group of 328 returning American prisoners of war home from Korea. General Nelson M. Walker continued to operate in the Pacific until January 1957, when she transited to the Atlantic and carried out a single round trip voyage to Bremerhaven, West Germany. Placed in ready reserve status in February 1957, she was berthed in the Maritime Administration's Hudson River reserve fleet from June 1957 to June 1958 and again after January 1959, when she was transferred to the Maritime Administration and stricken from the Navy List.

Second Return to Navy service
In August 1965 the Navy reacquired the General Nelson M. Walker, reinstating her on the Navy List with the prefix U.S.N.S. to support the buildup of U.S. forces in Vietnam. On 21 July 1966 the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment of Ft. Lewis Washington, boarded the General Nelson M. Walker for deployment to Vietnam. After seventeen days at sea she docked at Naha, Okinawa. On 6 August 1966, the General Nelson M. Walker dropped anchor in Qui Nhon harbor in South Vietnam. The 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment was airlifted by C-130 or by ground convoy transport to the 4th Infantry Division near Dragon Mountain, later renamed Camp Enari.

In July 1967, the General Nelson M. Walker departed from San Francisco transporting the 1st Battalion of the 1st Cavalry Regiment to Vietnam arriving in Da Nang harbor in August 1967. Upon arrival in Da Nang, troops boarded LSTs and were transported to the Americal Division in Chu Lai. The General Nelson M. Walker carried out troop lifts to Southeast Asia through the end of 1967 and was again inactivated at New York in early 1968.

Final Years
She joined the Maritime Administration's National Defense Reserve Fleet on the James River, Virginia in April 1970 and was formally transferred to the Maritime Administration in July 1971. The transport was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register in January 1981 to clear the way for transfer to a private organization for operation as a hospital ship, but the transfer did not materialize. In December 1994 the Navy passed full ownership of the ship to the Maritime Administration, which put her on indefinite hold for possible use in civil emergencies. The hold was lifted in September 1998 and the ship was ready for disposal by June 2001. In January 2005, nearly a half century after completion, General Nelson M. Walker was towed out of the Reserve Fleet en route to All Star Metals of Brownsville, Texas, where she was broken up for scrap.

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©1944 United States Navy Domain of The Golden Dragon Award Certificate


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