Henry Gibbins was acquired by the
U.S. Navy from the U.S. Army on 1 March 1950, and assigned to the Military Sea Transportation Service. During the
Korean War she transported men and equipment from
New York City to the
Caribbean and
Canal Zone ports, prior to their assignment in the
Pacific. In 1953,
Henry Gibbins operated on the New York to
Bremerhaven, Germany, and
Southampton, England, runs, making a total of 12 cruises to these
European ports. From 1954 until late 1959 the veteran transport steamed from New York to the Caribbean over 75 times, sailed to the
Mediterranean on 3 occasions and crossed the
Atlantic to
Northern Europe 8 times. During this time
Henry Gibbins shuttled thousands of troops and tons of supplies between the
United States and her foreign bases.
Henry Gibbins was transferred from MSTS to the
United States Maritime Administration 2 December 1959, at
Fort Schuyler, New York, for service with the New York Maritime College. The college named her TS
Empire State IV and she retained that name until being transferred to the
Massachusetts Maritime Academy in 1973. At that time she was renamed USTS
Bay State. During the winter of 1976–77, one of the coldest in fifty years, the
Bay State suffered serious ice damage to her hull at her berth in
Buzzards Bay at the southern end of the
Cape Cod Canal. The hull plates were repaired and the ship continued to serve as a training vessel for two more years. In the summer of 1977 she carried cadets to Europe. In the summer of 1978 she made a training cruise to the Mediterranean. The vessel was returned to the
Maritime Administration after her final training cruise in 1978. Between the hull damage she had sustained in 1977, her age, and an increase in Massachusetts Maritime Academy's enrollment, she no longer suited the academy's requirements. According to the U.S. Maritime Administration, the ship was scrapped in 1983 after suffering an engine room fire. ==References==