USS Sacramento (AOE-1), the lead ship of the Sacramento class fast combat support ships, was commissioned in March 1964 and served in the Pacific Fleet. Sacramento represented a major advance in underway replenishment capability as the Navy’s first one-stop shopping replenishment ship, combining fuel, ammunition, dry cargo, and refrigerated stores in a single fast hull capable of keeping pace with carrier battle groups. Sacramento provided replenishment support to carrier battle groups throughout the Pacific and Vietnam War era. Sacramento’s steam propulsion plant drove steam turbines capable of 26-knot speeds to keep pace with the carriers she supported. Commissioned in 1964, Sacramento incorporated asbestos-containing boiler insulation, steam pipe insulation, turbine insulation, and hull construction materials consistent with the mid-1960s construction period.

USS Sacramento Steam Plant and Construction Asbestos

Sacramento’s large steam propulsion plant and hull construction incorporated asbestos throughout:

  • Boiler insulation — Sacramento’s boilers were insulated with asbestos-containing boiler casing insulation consistent with mid-1960s construction specifications. The large engineering department required to operate Sacramento’s high-speed steam plant accumulated asbestos exposure through her Pacific Fleet service
  • High-pressure steam pipe insulation — the steam mains and extensive auxiliary steam piping throughout Sacramento’s engineering spaces incorporated asbestos-containing pipe insulation consistent with mid-1960s naval construction specifications
  • Propulsion turbine insulation — Sacramento’s main propulsion turbines incorporated asbestos-containing turbine casing insulation consistent with mid-1960s specifications
  • Cargo and working spaces — Sacramento’s ammunition magazines, fuel transfer stations, dry cargo holds, and crew berthing areas were constructed using hull construction materials of the mid-1960s building period incorporating asbestos-containing materials throughout

VA Claims for USS Sacramento Veterans

VA presumptive service connection under 38 CFR § 3.309(d) covers asbestos exposure from Navy replenishment ship service. Machinist’s Mates, Boilermen, Storekeeper ratings, and crew members who served aboard USS Sacramento and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer may qualify for VA disability benefits.

Navy Ratings Most Exposed to Asbestos Aboard Sacramento

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the public asbestos litigation record document that the following Navy ratings worked routinely in spaces where ACM was installed, maintained, ripped out, and replaced:

VA Presumptive Benefits — No Filing Deadline

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs recognizes mesothelioma, asbestos-related lung cancer, asbestosis, and pleural disease as conditions presumed to be service-connected for Navy veterans with documented asbestos exposure under 38 CFR § 3.309(d). No statute of limitations applies to VA disability compensation claims.

Available benefits may include monthly disability compensation, Dependency & Indemnity Compensation (DIC) for surviving spouses, priority VA healthcare enrollment, and Special Monthly Compensation for severe cases. Parallel claims against the asbestos bankruptcy trust funds established by the manufacturers of these products do not reduce VA compensation.

How to file a VA disability claim: VA claims are filed directly with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — not with a law firm. Start at VA.gov › Hazardous Materials Exposure, call 1‑800‑827‑1000, or get free help filing from a Veterans Service Organization: DAV, VFW, or American Legion.

VA Claims Guide on This Site › Compare: VA vs. Civil Lawsuit

Source notes: equipment-manifest entries (where shown) are sourced from public-record BUSHIPS (Bureau of Ships) documentation, NARA archives, and the public asbestos litigation record. Manufacturer attributions link to documented asbestos-product histories on AsbestosIndex.com where available. Nothing on this page constitutes medical or legal advice.