Mine planter service (19091922) The ship was assigned to the North Atlantic Coast Artillery District. As one of the few mine planters on the East and Gulf Coasts of the United States, she traveled widely to inspect, maintain, and train soldiers to use mine defenses. The brand-new USAMP
General Royal T. Frank took
Secretary of War Jacob M. Dickinson and Major General
Leonard Wood aboard for a tour of coast defense posts in the northeast states ending in
New York Harbor on 4 July 1909. During 1910, the ship sailed the east and Gulf coasts with
Brigadier General Arthur Murray, Chief of Coast Artillery, aboard. Murray inspected a number of Coast Artillery posts on the East and Gulf Coasts. During her career as a mine planter, she visited ports as far north as Portland, Maine, and as far west as New Orleans.
General Frank ran aground near
Plum Island, New York during training maneuvers in July 1909. While undergoing repairs, she suffered a fire in her hold on 3 August 1909. She was dry-docked in Jersey City for repairs. The ship was back in service by the end of August 1909. The ship did a number of other jobs amidst its work as a mine planter. For example, on 6 January 1918 USAMP
General Royal T. Frank assisted in dynamiting ice to restore navigation on the
Fore River. In December 1918, after the armistice that ended
World War I,
General Frank removed the
anti-submarine netting at
Boston Harbor. In the general demobilization after World War I there was a glut of all ship types.
General Frank was decommissioned on 30 September 1922 and placed in reserve at the Richard T. Green Company shipyard in
Chelsea, Massachusetts. The work was reported to have cost about $60,000. Among the changes made was to convert her from coal-burning to oil-burning. After her shipyard visit,
General Frank sailed for
Fort Mason in San Francisco, and thence to Honolulu. She arrived in Hawaii on 7 June 1929.
General Royal T. Frank no longer maintained mine defenses for the
Coastal Artillery Corps, but became an inter-island transport operated by the Quartermaster's Department. In this new role she carried a wide variety of cargoes and passengers among the Hawaiian Islands. She carried troops among Army bases, and to the Army's
Kilauea Military Camp for rest and recreation. She brought the mail to Hilo. The ship transported regrigerated food.
Loss of General Royal T. Frank In the aftermath of the
Pearl Harbor attack, USAT
General Royal T. Frank had a busy January 1942. She was at sea 18 of the first 26 days of the month sailing on her inter-island routes. At 0650 on 27 January 1942
General Frank left Honolulu bound for Hilo with a stops at
Kaunakakai and
Kahului. She had on board 26
Hawaii Army National Guard soldiers from the
299th Infantry Regiment fresh from boot camp at
Schofield Barracks on
Oahu who were on their way home.
General Frank sailed in convoy with the cargo ship
Kalae, which was towing a barge carrying heavy construction equipment, and with
USS Trever which acted as an escort. Nineteen civilian crew members of USAT
General Royal T Frank were awarded the
Merchant Marine Combat Bar with Silver Star. The ship's wheel was recovered during the rescue of her crew and is now at the Army Transportation Museum at
Joint Base Langley-Eustis. The torpedoing of
General Frank was reported to have taken place at , about 30 miles north of
Upolu Point, in the
ʻAlenuihāhā Channel that separates the islands of Hawaii and Maui. The wreck has never been found. On 28 January 2026, a memorial to the soldiers lost on the torpedoed ship was unveiled at the Keaukaha Military Reservation in Hilo. ==References==