From Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships,
Vol. V (1979), pp. 328
A county in California.
(LST-1083: dp. 3,960; l. 328'0"; b. 50'0"; dr. 11'2"; s.
12 k.; cpl. 119; a. 2 40mm.; cl. LST 511)
Plumas County (LST-1083) was laid down by the American Bridge Corp.,
Ambridge, Penn. 22 November 1944; launched 14 January 1945; and commissioned
as LST-1083 at New Orleans, La. 13 February 1945, Lt. Ronald W. Homes
in command.
After shakedown LST-1083 departed 22 March for the Panama Canal and
Guam, where she picked up troops and supplies and transported them to Saipan
and Okinawa. On V-J Day she was back at Guam, and loaded troops of the 4th
Marines for Tokyo Bay. After participation in the initial occupation of
the Japanese homeland, LST-1083 transported passengers from Guam
to San Francisco, arriving 12 January 1946. In August she was placed out
of commission, in reserve, berthed at Astoria, Oreg
LST-1083 recommissioned 8 September 1950, and after shakedown departed
for Korea 19 December 1950 to shuttle troops and supplies from Japan to
Inchon. After a period on the west coast LST-1083 returned to Korea
22 March 1952 to resupply islands off the northwestern Korean Coast and
pick up Prisoners of War. She returned to the United States in December,
but departed again for Korea in September 1953 for further supply lifts,
returning to San Diego in July 1954.
During the years following the Korean Conflict, LST-1083 alternated
amphibious operations off the California coast with deployments to the western
Pacific. Her name was changed to Plumas County 1 July 1955. She deployed
to the western Pacific in 1956, 1958, 1959, and 1960 when she participated
in joint amphibious exercises with Nationalist China and Korea. On 22 August
1961 she was placed out of commission, in reserve, at Sasebo, Japan. She
was assigned to MSTS in December 1965, where she remains into 1970.
Plumas County received one battle star for World War II service and
three battle stars for Korean War service.