From Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships,
Vol. VI (1976), pp. 251
A county in Maryland.
(APA-126: dp. 14,833, 1. 465'3", b. 61'1"; dr. 28'1"; s.
17 k.; cpl. 536; trp. 1,562; a. 1 5", 12 40mm., 10 20mm; cl. Haskell;
T. VC2-S-AP5)
The fourth St. Mary's (APA-126) was laid down under Maritime Commission
contract (MCV hull 40) on 29 June 1944 by the California Shipbuilding Corp.,
Wilmington, Calif.; launched on 4 September 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Arthur
S. Tode, acquired by the Navy on loan charter and delivered on 14 November
1944; and commissioned on 15 November 1944, Capt. Edward R. Glosten, USNR,
in command.
Assigned to Transport Squadron 17 (TransRon 17) following shakedown, St.
Mary's departed Los Angeles on 1 January 1945; loaded bulldozers, airplane
engines, bomb service trucks and other equipment at San Diego, and, on the
4th, sailed for Manus, Admiralty Islands. Arriving in Seeadler Harbor on
the 21st, she offloaded her cargo and steamed to Humboldt Bay, New Guinea,
whence she carried troops to Leyte, 31 January to 6 February.
During the remainder of February and most of March, she trained with units
of the 77th Division for Operation "Iceberg," the assault on Okinawa.
On 21 March, she cleared Leyte Gulf with TG 51.1 and headed north. Five
days later, she landed some of her troops on Kerama Retto, then stood by
to take on casualties. On 13 April, she shifted to the Hagushi anchorage
area, and on the 16th, sent troops ashore on Ie Shima. On the 19th, she
moved around to Okinawa's southern coast for a diversionary landing; then
returned to Hagushi to discharge the remainder of her cargo and troops.
On 26 April, St. Mary's departed the kamikaze target area. Three
weeks at Ulithi followed. On 24 May, she steamed for Guam; exchanged landing
boats; and got underway to return to the Philippines. From 31 May to 26
June, she remained in the Subic Bay-Manila
Bay areas. In July, she trained with units of the 81st Division at Leyte;
and, in early August, trained with other troops off Iloilo.
In mid-August, hostilities ended. St. Mary's embarked occupation
troops and sailed for Japan, arriving in Tokyo Bay on 2 September, just
prior to the signing of the official surrender documents. Two days later,
she disembarked troops of the 1st Cavalry Division at Yokohama, then returned
to the Philippines. From Mindanao, she lifted troops to Kure, then steamed
to Okinawa; whence, as a unit of the "Magic Carpet" fleet, she
carried veterans back to the United States.
In December, the APA returned to Okinawa for a second group of returning
servicemen. Departing Buckner Bay on the 19th, she developed engine trouble
on 3 January 1946, 450 miles from her destination. Nashville, however,
took her in tow, and she reached San Francisco on 6 January 1946.
Six days later, St. Mary's reported for inactivation. On 15 February,
she was decommissioned and returned to the Maritime Commission. Her name
was struck from the Navy list on the 21st.
St Mary's earned one battle star for World War II service.