From Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships,
Vol. III.
(LPH-7: dp. 18,000 (f.); l. 592'; h 84'; ed. 105'; dr. 27'; cpl. 900; cl.
Iwo Jima)
The second Guadalcanal (LPH-7), an amphibious assault ship, was launched
by the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard 16 March 1963, sponsored by Mrs. David
Shoup, wife of the former Commandant of the Marine Corps; and commissioned
20 July 1963, Captain Dale K. Peterson in command.
Upon completion of sea trials and outfitting, Guadalcanal departed
Philadelphia to join the Amphibious Forces, United States Atlantic Fleet.
One of a new class of ships designed from the keel up to embark, transport,
and land assault marines by means of helicopters, she lends new strength
and flexibility to amphibious operations. After departing Norfolk 23 October
1963 for 6 weeks shakedown training at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, Guadalcanal
steamed to Onslow Beach, North Carolina, 6 December for practice amphibious
landings. She then carried on training and readiness operations with the
Atlantic Fleet, based in Norfolk until departing for Panama 11 February
1964. Following 2 months on station as flagship for Commander PhibRon 12
with the 12 Marine Expeditionary Unit embarked and ready to land anywhere
needed. Guadalcanal entered Philadelphia Naval Shipyard 26 May, but
was deployed again 7 October as a unit of Operation "Steel Pike 1",
a NATO landing exercise on the beaches of southern Spain.
Guadalcanal has continued to serve in the Atlantic Fleet into 1967.
One of the highlights of her career occurred 21 July 1966 when she recovered
Gemini X astronauts after their spacecraft landed in the Atlantic east of
Cape Kennedy.
NOTE: Guadalcanal was decommissioned 31 August 1994 and placed in indefinite storage in Philadelphia.