Troops and Cargo Transported During World War II under U.S. Army Control
In February 1942, all merchant ships were requisitioned by the U.S. government. Commercial shippping ceased, and the War Shipping Administration made all decisions regarding cargo and destinations. Merchant ships carried ammunition, airplanes, aviation fuel, explosives, tanks, trucks, medicines, landing craft, locomotives, food to all theaters of war. they also brought raw material needed to make the airplanes, tanks, and ammunition. The "customers" for merchant ships were: 75% Army/Navy and 25% Allies. The Army also had its own fleet of ships, the Water Division of the Army Transportation Corps (ATS), with "civilian" seamen contract employees. (History of the Army Transport Service) The following data includes troops and supplies carried on merchant ships and on ATS ships.
Cargo Shipped by Army by Water: Dec. 1941 to Dec. 1945Includes cargo shipped to Army commanders overseas on vessels operated by or allocated to the Army, on vessels operated by or allocated to the Navy, and on commercial vessels for the military forces or for civilian relief; also lend-lease supplies shipped on vessels operated by or allocated so the Army. Figures do not include lend-lease supplies procured by the War Department and shipped on vessels not under Army control.
Measurement Tons of Forty Cubic Feet
Overseas Area |
Dec. 1941 |
1942 | 1943 | 1944 | 1945 | Total |
Atlantic Areas |
123,102 | 6,117,903 | 17,995,497 | 31,916,244 | 23,476,658 | 79,629,397 |
|
26,757 | 526,795 | 300,366 | 240,474 | 611,817 | 1,706,209 |
|
75,041 | 1,443,770 | 1,050,775 | 425,556 | (a) | 2,995,142 |
|
18,456 | 2,401,872 | 6,523,170 | 20,616,125 | 17,180,332 | 46,739,955 |
|
0 | 1,019,807 | 9,295,760 | (b) 10,328,387 | (b) 5,684,502 | 26,328,456 |
|
2,848 | 725,659 | 825,426 | (b) 305,702 | (b) | 1,859,635 |
Pacific Areas |
160,921 | 5,717,092 | 10,504,729 | 16,596,701 | 19,510,693 | 52,490,136 |
|
45,978 | 1,742,367 | 3,118,381 | 1,663,920 | 363,276 | 6,933,922 |
|
77,756 | 1,556,563 | 1,504,413 | (c) 4,371,513 | (c) 6,769,444 | 14,279,689 |
|
0 | 802,577 | 1,620,935 | (c) 1,336,951 | (c) | 3,760,463 |
|
37,187 | 1,385,297 | 2,807,046 | 6,601,933 | 10,076,141 | 20,907,604 |
|
0 | 230,288 | 1,453,954 | 2,622,384 | 2,145,856 | 6,452,482 |
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 155,976 | 155,976 |
All Areas |
284,023 | 11,834,995 | 28,500,226 | 48,512,945 | 42,987,344 | 132,119,533 |
(a) Latin America tonnage is combined with North America tonnage in 1945.
(b) Central Africa and Middle East tonnage is combined with Mediterranean and North Africa beginning November 1944.
(c) South Pacific tonnage is combined with Central Pacific beginning August 1944.Chart Showing Percentage of Total Cargo Shipped Each Year (based on data above)
Shipped to Overseas Destinations by Principal Army Ports: Dec. 1941 to Dec. 1945
Includes cargo shipped to Army commanders overseas on vessels operated by or allocated to the Army, on vessels operated by or allocated to the Navy, and on commercial vessels for the military forces or for civilian relief; also lend-lease supplies shipped on vessels operated by or allocated so the Army. Figures do not include lend-lease supplies procured by the War Department and shipped on vessels not under Army control.
Measurement Tons of Forty Cubic Feet
Port |
Dec. 1941 |
1942 | 1943 | 1944 | 1945 | Total |
Boston | 160 | 600,612 | 1,959,969 | 3,953,680 | 2,967,359 | 9,481,780 |
New York | 75,257 | 3,717,884 | 10,116,328 | 15,861,674 | 8,753,402 | 38,524,545 |
Philadelphia | 346 | 4,541 | 743,729 | 2,772,146 | 2,431,408 | 5,952,170 |
Baltimore | 0 | 51,290 | 1,028,166 | 2,811,494 | 2,974,692 | 6,865,643 |
Hampton Roads | 7,277 | 337,900 | 3,020,069 | 5,464,725 | 4,125,763 | 12,955,734 |
Charleston | 5,543 | 386,242 | 672,139 | 1,092,313 | 1,518,851 | 3,675,088 |
New Orleans | 41,058 | 972,863 | 883,486 | 2,002,136 | 4,055,943 | 7,954,767 |
Los Angeles | 2,423 | 485,346 | 1,495,561 | 3,293,091 | 3,887,943 | 9,164,364 |
San Francisco | 101,645 | 3,486,401 | 5,555,283 | 7,711,629 | 8,173,801 | 25,028,759 |
Seattle | 50,314 | 1,791,916 | 3,025,496 | 3,550,057 | 4,098,900 | 12,516,683 |
Total all ports | 284,023 | 11,834,995 | 28,500,226 | 45,512,945 | 42,987,344 | 132,119,533 |
The ports shown are the eight at which the Army operated ports of embarkation and the two (Philadelphia and Baltimore) at which the Army operated cargo ports. While the greater part of the cargo was loaded directly at these ports, some was loaded also at officially designated subports and at other ports located near and supervised by the principal ports. Of the unnamed ports, the larger tonnages were Loaded at Searsport, Maine (470,000 Measurement Tons, a subport of Boston; Prince Rupert, British Columbia (950,000 Measurement Tons.), a subport of Seattle; and Portland, Oregon (1,800.000 Measurement Tons, a subport of San Francisco through August 1944 and a subport of Seattle thereafter. The cargo included is the same as above.
Shipped by Water by Services within the Armed Forces: Dec. 1941 to Dec. 1945
Includes cargo shipped to Army commanders overseas on vessels operated by or allocated to the Army, on vessels operated by or allocated to the Navy, and on commercial vessels for the military forces or for civilian relief; also lend-lease supplies shipped on vessels operated by or allocated so the Army. Figures do not include lend-lease supplies procured by the War Department and shipped on vessels not under Army control.
Measurement Tons of Forty Cubic Feet
|
Dec. 1941 | 1942 | 1943 | 1944 | 1945 | Total |
Army Air Forces | 40,929 | 1,163,639 | 4,147,644 | 9,067,968 | 5,287,561 | 19,707,741 |
Chemical Warfare Service | 1,513 | 52,636 | 313,888 | 519,452 | 188,693 | 1,076,182 |
Corps of Engineers | 84,638 | 2,525,795 | 4,542,403 | 6,531,115 | 5,476,319 | 19,160,270 |
Medical Department | 2,237 | 137,064 | 259,407 | 440,012 | 304,368 | 1,143,088 |
Ordnance Department | 13,906 | 1,552,370 | 7,840,785 | 12,494,933 | 8,847,774 | 30,749,768 |
Quartermaster Corps | 113,338 | 5,349,574 | 6,621,593 | 12,080,088 | 13,329,330 | 37,493,923 |
Signal Corps | 6,617 | 182,062 | 568,509 | 980,768 | 804,998 | 2,542,954 |
Transportation Corps | (a) | (a) | 844,564 | 1,309,061 | 1,123,953 | 3,277,578 |
Army, Miscellaneous (b) | 11,920 | 738,804 | 2,870,279 | 4,446,134 | 7,102,113 | 15,169,250 |
Navy (c) | 8,925 | 133,051 | 491,154 | 643,414 | 522,235 | 1,798,779 |
All Services | 284,023 | 11,834,995 | 28,500,226 | 48,512,945 | 42,987,344 | 132,119,533 |
(a)Transportation Corps materiel included with "Miscellaneous" through 1942.
(b)Includes lend-lease and civilian relief supplies shipped on vessels operated by or allocated to the Army, Coast Artillery Corps shipments, troop baggage, household goods and other personal property of military personnel changing stations, Army Exchange and Special Services shipments, and some other items.
(c)Includes naval supplies shipped on vessels operated by or allocated to the Army. The Navy also transported Army materiel on vessels operated by or allocated to it.
Army-Procured Ammunition And High Explosives Shipped Overseas from Army-Controlled Piers at U.S. Ports: Dec. 1941 to Aug. 1945
Tonnage in Short Tons
Port Army Lend-Lease Total Tonnage Searsport, ME435,573 0 435,573 Boston457,426 200 457,626 New York1,532,306 1,180,974 2,713,280 Earle, NJ513,753 215 513,968 Philadelphia1,063,326 280,981 1,344,307 Baltimore773,803 356,411 1,130,214 Hampton Roads, VA1,282,130 2,141 1,284,271 Charleston, SC455,743 1,480 457,223 Mobile, AL(a)3,240 1,920 5,160 New Orleans444,164 25,080 469,244 San Jacinto, TX168,971 0 168,971 Atlantic and Gulf 7,130,435 1,849,402 8,979,837 Los Angeles354,664 13,800 368,464 San Francisco1,298,374 12,340 1,310,714 Portland230,846 62,225 293,071 Seattle374,764 40,908 415,672 Prince Rupert, BC99,588 0 99,588 Pacific 2,358,236 129,273 2,487,509 All Ports 9,488,671 1,978,675 11,467,346 Tonnage in Short Tons calculated by converting carloads on the basis of forty tons to a carload through July 1944, thereafter forty-live tons to a carload.
The table excludes small arms ammunition. In addition to tonnage shown here, 60,000 tons of Army explosives and 340,000 tons of lend-lease explosives were shipped from piers not under Army control at New York. Philadelphia, Norfolk, Savannah, Jacksonville, Miami. Tampa, and Seattle.
(a) The explosives pier and storage facilities built by the Army at Mobile (Theodore) were turned over to the Navy in May 1944.
Aircraft Dispatched to the Army Air Forces Overseas by Sea and by Air, Crated and Uncrated: Jan. 1942 To July 1945
Sea Heavy Bombers
Medium Bombers
Light Bombers
Fighters
Gliders
Transport
& Misc.Total Aircraft
1942 0 0 73 2,607 0 163 2,843 1943 0 0 822 6,396 3,228 979 11,425 1944 0 0 680 13,774 4,264 4,286 23,004 1945 (Jan.-July) 0 0 89 6,369 I, 256 2,865 10,579 Total by Sea 0 0 1,664 29,146 8,748 8,293 47,851
Air
Heavy Bombers
Medium Bombers
Light Bombers
Fighters
Gliders
Transport
& Misc.Total Aircraft
1942
910 710 95 433 0 393 2,541 1943
4,794 2,314 219 396 0 1,632 9,355 1944
11,258 2,830 678 61 0 3,417 18,244 1945 (Jan.-July) 3,688* 631 822 368 0 1,647 7,156 Total by Air 20,650 6,485 1,814 1,258 0 7,089 37,296 Total Sea & Air 20,650 6,485 3,478 30,404 8,748 15,382 85,147 Data does not include aircraft assigned to other nations under lend-lease, which numbered over 44,000.
*Includes 1,175 very heavy bombers dispatched in 1945.
Army Aircraft Transported Overseas Under the Cognizance of the Committee on Aircraft Transportation: March 1943 to April 1945
The committee was established in March 1943 to increase the transportation of assembled aircraft overseas.
Types of Vessels Assembled Crated Total Tankers 15,795 3,758 19,553 Escort Aircraft Carriers 4,175 0 4,175 Aircraft Transports (ZEC's) 1,943 128 2,071 Cargo Ships 3,407 (a) 3,407 All Types 25,320 3,886 29,206 (a) Crated aircraft shipped on cargo vessels did not come under the cognizance of the committee.
Motor Vehicles Transported to the Oversea Commands: Jan. 1943 to June 1945
Data for other war months not available. Motor vehicles shipped under lend-lease to Allied nations are not included.
Period Boxed
Unboxed
Total Vehicles
Number
Percent
Number
Percent
1943
376,388 76 118,813 24 495,201 1944
342,313 61 219,901 39 562,214 1945 (Jan.-June) 188,731 60 125,390 40 314,121 Total (30 Months) 907,432 66 464,104 34 1,371,536
Other Cargo Transported Overseas Under Army Control
(Mules, war dogs, locomotives, Christmas mail)
Mules, Army use in Burma and Italy 7,800
Mules, Lend Lease for Great Britain 3,500
War dogs 1,900
Locomotives 2,030
Christmas '44 mail from New York, sacks 2,600,000
Christmas '44 mail from San Francisco, sacks 750,000
War Brides and Dependents Transported Through Sept. 1946
Atlantic 48,408 Pacific 7,806 Adults 41,502 Infants 14,712 Total 56,214
Passengers Embarked by Principal Army Ports: Dec. 1941 to Dec. 1945
Figures include military personnel of the Army, Navy, and Allied nations, civilians, and prisoners of war.
Port
Dec. 1941 1942 1943
1944 1945 Total Boston
0 26,747 116,476
456,651 169,024 768,898 New York
3,399 421,756 910,658
1,400,486 536,710 3,273,009 Hampton Roads
1,135 55,489 234,872
372,368 100,975 764,839 Charleston, SC
1,981 25,556 2,069
447 6,601 36,654 New Orleans
6,172 58,139 41,069
42,470 26,801 174,651 Los Angeles
0 1,940 46,418
74,782 94,746 217,886 San Francisco
15,084 289,637 456,998
534,018 450,252 1,745,989 Seattle
2,068 75,491 49,777
178,760 273,113 579,209 Portland
0 0 0
0 47,194 47,194 Prince Rupert, BC
0 547 12,783
12,145 5,687 31,162 Total
29,839 955,302 1,871,120
3,072,127 1,711,103 7,639,491
- Embarkations by cargo ports and subports on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts are combined with embarkations at the ports of embarkation to which they were sub-ordinate.
- Number of passengers embarked at Halifax, a subport of Boston, is not available.
- Boston was a subport of New York until July 1942.
- New York includes 225 passengers embarked at the Philadelphia cargo port in 1943, and 250 in 1944. Hampton roads includes 295 passengers embarked at the Baltimore cargo port in 1942, 1,044 in 1943, 84 in 1944, and 11 in 1945.
- Hampton Roads was a subport of New York until June 1942.
- Charleston was a subport of New York until January 1942.
- New Orleans includes 751 passengers embarked during 1942 at Miami, Key West, and Galveston. Los Angeles was a subport of San Francisco until October 1943.
- San Francisco includes 17,048 passengers embarked at Portland, as a subport of San Francisco, through August 1944.
- Seattle includes 4,838 passengers embarked at Portland, as a subport of Seattle, September to December 1944.
- Seattle was a subport of San Francisco until January 1942.
- Portland continued as a subport of Seattle during 1945, although its embarkations are shown separately.
- Prince Rupert was a subport of Seattle.
Passengers Embarked Monthly by Army at U.S. Ports for Overseas Destination: Dec. 1941 to Dec. 1945
Atlantic areas include North and Latin America, Greenland, Iceland, United Kingdom, Europe, Mediterannean, Africa, and Middle East.
Pacific areas include western Canada, Alaska, Central Pacific, South Pacific, southwest Pacific, western Pacific, India, Burma, Japan, and Korea.
Oversea Destinations for Passengers Embarked by the Army: Dec. 1941 to Dec. 1945
The grouping into Atlantic and Pacific areas indicates that the passengers were embarked mainly but not exclusively at Atlantic and Gulf ports or at Pacific ports.
Destination
Dec-41 1942 1943
1944 1945 Total North America1,243 14,601 15,326
7,512 30,564 214,026 Latin America
9,071 74,267 32,475
28,967 Mediterranean
0 102,860 491,399
342,615 104,918 1,116,047 Central Africa-Middle East
327 41,794 32,134
European
2,046 289,145 678,941
1,800,225 690,807 3,461,164 Total Atlantic Areas
12,687 522,667 1,250,275
2,179,319 826,289 4,791,237 North America
2,068 82,054 100,335
46,831 19,213 250,501 Central Pacific
15,084 109,300 115,494
398,375 380,407 1,213,684 South Pacific
0 77,936 117,088
Southwest Pacific
0 149,494 194,286
341,566 439,522 1,124,868 Asiatic
0 13,851 93,642
106,036 45,672 259,201 Total Pacific Areas
17,152 432,635 620,845
892,808 884,814 2,848,254 Total All Areas
29,839 955,302 1,871,120
3,072,127 1,711,103 7,639,491
- North America includes bases in Canada, Newfoundland, Greenland, and Bermuda.
- Latin America includes Panama Canal Zone, Caribbean, South America, and South Atlantic.
- Mediterranean includes North Africa, Sicily, and Italy.
- Middle East includes Egypt, Red Sea, and Iran.
- European includes Iceland, United Kingdom, and continental Europe.
- North America includes Alaska and western Canada.
- Central and South Pacific were combined into Pacific Ocean Areas in 1944.
- Southwest Pacific includes embarkations for western Pacific, Japan, and Korea after those areas were occupied by U.S. forces.
- Asiatic includes India, Burma, and China.
Percentage of Troops Embarked from U.S. Ports in Vessels under British and U.S. Control: May 1944 To Dec. 1945
Operating Arrangement | May-Dec
1944 |
1945 |
Vessels Under U.S. Control | 71.8 | 88.9 |
Army transports owned or chartered by the Army |
11.9 | 9.7 |
Naval transports and combatant vessels |
20.6 | 34.5 |
WSA vessels operated by WSA agents on Army schedules |
29.8 | 24. 0 |
WSA vessels operated by the Navy on Army schedules |
9.4 | 19.1 |
WSA vessels operated by WSA agents in commercial services |
0.1 | 1.6 |
Vessels Under British Control | 28.2 | 11.1 |
Name | Speed knots |
Patient Capacity |
Date First Voyage | Destination First Voyage |
Acadia | 16 |
787 | 06/05/43 | North Africa |
Shamrock | 14 |
543 | 09/04/43 | North Africa |
Seminole | 14 |
454 | 09/20/43 | North Africa |
Algonquin | 14 |
454 | 02/02/44 | North Africa |
Chateau Thierry | 13 |
484 | 03/05/44 | North Africa |
Thistle | 15 |
455 | 04/08/44 | North Africa |
St. Mihiel | 13 |
504 | 05/10/44 | North Africa |
John L. Clem | 14 |
286 | 06/15/44 | North Africa |
Comfort | 14 |
702 | 06/21/44 | Australia |
Blanche F. Sigman | 11 |
590 | 07/07/44 | United Kingdom |
Emily H. M. Weder | 13 |
738 | 07/12/44 | Italy |
Ernest Hinds | 14 |
288 | 07/14/44 | Italy |
Wisteria | 11 |
588 | 07/16/44 | United Kingdom |
Marigold | 13 |
758 | 07/19/44 | Italy |
Dogwood | 11 |
592 | 07/21/44 | United Kingdom |
John J. Meany | 11 |
582 | 07/27/44 | Italy |
St. Olaf | 11 |
586 | 08/12/44 | United Kingdom |
Larkspur | 10 |
592 | 08/31/44 | United Kingdom |
Mercy | 14 |
702 | 08/31/44 | Southwest Pacific |
Jarrett M. Huddleston | 11 |
582 | 09/07/44 | United Kingdom |
Charles A. Stafford | 16 |
706 | 09/21/44 | United Kingdom |
Hope | 14 |
702 | 09/23/44 | Southwest Pacific |
Louis A. Milne | 12 |
952 | 03/19/45 | United Kingdom |
Ernestine Koranda | 13 |
722 | 04/13/45 | United Kingdom |
Aleda E. Lutz | 15 |
778 | 04/18/45 | United Kingdom |
Frances Y. Slanger | 19 |
1,628 | 06/30/45 | United Kingdom |
Patients Evacuated from Overseas by Water and Debarked at Army Ports in United States: 1943 to 1945Includes Army, Navy, and Allied military patients debarked at Army ports indicated.
Port | 1943 | 1944 |
1945 |
Boston | 5,931 | 8,296 | 35,383 |
New York | 17,810 | 39,850 | 127,748 |
Hampton Roads | 3,814 | 12,807 | 14,800 |
Charleston | 1,128 | 31,148 | 41,299 |
New Orleans | 1,261 | 971 | 656 |
Los Angeles | 1,945 | 3,528 | 15,417 |
San Francisco | 30,545 | 45,380 | 55,789 |
Seattle | 4,961 | 2,943 | 7,925 |
Total | 67,395 | 144,923 | 299,017 |
In addition 168 patients were debarked at Baltimore cargo port in 1943 and 1 in 1944.
Source:
United States Army in World War II, The Technical Service, The Transportation Corps: Movements, Training, and Supply, Chester Wardlow, Washington, DC: Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of the Army, Government Printing Office,1956, 1978, 1990History of the Army Transport Service
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11/16/06