USS Card was an American Bogue-class escort carrier that saw service in World War II. She was named for Card Sound, a continuation of Biscayne Bay, south of Miami, Florida. She was the flagship of Task Group 21.14, a hunter-killer group formed to destroy German submarines in the North Atlantic.
USS CARD - Report of operations in the ferrying of aircraft and personnel from San Diego, California to Pearl Harbor, T H 9-9-24-45 - DPLA - b85bd8b79141c3619b691f1c2fc68f1f (page 1)
USS CARD - Report of operations in the ferrying of aircraft and personnel from San Diego, California to Pearl Harbor, T H 9-9-24-45 - DPLA - b85bd8b79141c3619b691f1c2fc68f1f (page 2)
USS CARD - Report of operations in the ferrying of aircraft and personnel from San Diego, California to Pearl Harbor, T H 9-9-24-45 - DPLA - b85bd8b79141c3619b691f1c2fc68f1f (page 3)
USS CARD - Report of operations in the ferrying of aircraft and personnel from San Diego, California to Pearl Harbor, T H 9-9-24-45 - DPLA - b85bd8b79141c3619b691f1c2fc68f1f (page 4)
USS CARD - Report of operations in the ferrying of aircraft and personnel from San Diego, California to Pearl Harbor, T H 9-9-24-45 - DPLA - b85bd8b79141c3619b691f1c2fc68f1f (page 6)
USS CARD - Report of operations in the ferrying of aircraft and personnel from San Diego, California to Pearl Harbor, T H 9-9-24-45 - DPLA - b85bd8b79141c3619b691f1c2fc68f1f (page 5)
U.S. Navy reserve ships at the Bayonne Naval Supply Depot, 15 April 1953 (80-G-480262)
U.S. Navy reserve ships at the Bayonne Naval Supply Depot, 15 April 1953 (80-G-480262) (cropped)