Following the outbreak of
World War II, the
Swedish motor liner
Kungsholm was seized at
New York City, placed under the American flag and purchased by the U.S. government. The United States Lines were appointed agents by the
War Shipping Administration to run the ship as a troop transport and Anderson was selected to command her. The ship, renamed USAT
John Ericsson, left New York at the end of January 1942 in convoy with a full complement of 6,000 U.S. soldiers for Australia and
Noumea. Their ultimate mission was to garrison the island of
New Caledonia. Returning to the
Atlantic, the
John Ericsson resumed her mission and by the close of the war had safely transported some 300,000 troops to various theaters of war, despite frequent attacks by enemy
submarines and
aircraft. In 1940 Anderson took command of the , the second largest U.S. passenger liner of the time, and in 1949 he was named master of the 34,000-ton luxury liner , then the nation's largest and finest passenger liner. While in command of the
America, Anderson gained a reputation for outstanding seamanship, unfailing good nature and insistence on crew discipline and courteous service that helped dispel the myth that American passenger ships were inferior to European liners. == Postwar years ==