From Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships,
Vol. VI (1976), pp. 239
A river in Missouri and Arkansas, and another in Maine.
(LSMR-525: dp. 994; l. 206', b. 35'6"; dr. 9', s. 12 k.; cpl. 141;
a. 10 rkt., 1 5", 2 40mm., 4 20mm., 4 4.2' M.; cl. LSMR-501)
LSMR-525 was laid down on 19 May 1945 by the Brown Shipbuilding Co.,
Inc., Houston, Texas; Iaunched on 16 June 1945; and commissioned on 14 August
1945.
Ordered inactivated after shakedown, LSMR-525 reported to the Atlantic
Reserve Fleet on 25 October and was decommissioned on 28 March 1946. She
was berthed at Green Cove Springs, Fla., until ordered activated after the
outbreak of hostilities in Korea. Recommissioned on 16 September 1950, LSMR-525
entered the Korean combat zone on 17 July 1951, firing rockets at enemy
positions at Wonsan. Operating out of Japan, she continued to carry out
fire support missions against Wonsan into the fall. In mid-December, she
returned to San Diego and remained on the west coast during 1952. Departing
San Diego on 12 January 1953, she arrived off Korea on 24 March, and served
as gunfire support ship for the defense of Sok To, an island located on
the west coast of Korea southwest of Pyongyang and Chinampo. After the truce,
she returned to San Diego, arriving on 28 August. A little over a year later,
on 20 September 1954 she sailed west again for her first post-Korean Conflict
deployment. Routine operations took her into 1955; when, in February, she
covered the evacuation of the Tachen Islands. Returning to the west coast,
LSMR-525 resumed 1st Fleet duties, and, on 1 October, she was named
St. Francis River. Decommissioned on 21 November that year, she entered
the Pacific Reserve Fleet.
Recommissioned on 18 September 1965 at San Franeisco, she departed San Diego
on 8 February 1966 and sailed for her new homeport of Yokosuka, Japan. From
Japan, she steamed south and arrived at Danang, South Vietnam, on 19 April,
to begin operations in support of Allied forces fighting along the coast
and in the Mekong Delta area. Rearmed regularly at Cam Rahn Bay and overhauled
periodically at Yokosuka, St. Francis River provided rocket fire
in support of Allied forces in South Vietnam from 1966 through 1969. During
that period, her ability to coordinate her operations with the tactical
situation ashore resulted in an impressive number of successful support
missions.
Reclassified as an LFR on 1 January 1969, St. Francis River was decommissioned
and struck from the Navy list on 17 April 1970. She was sold in November
1970 to Nissho-Iwai American Corp., Sasebo, Japan, for scrapping.
LSMR-525 received three battle stars for Korean service and 10 campaign
stars for Vietnam service.