From Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships,
Vol. VI (1976), pp. 237-238
Counties in Alabama, Illinois, Michigan and Missouri; a parish in Louisiana.
(LST-1096: dp. 1,653; l. 328'; b. 50'; dr. 11'; s. 12 k.; cpl. 226; trp.
147; a. 8 40mm., 12 20rnm.; cl. LST-511)
LST-1096 was laid down on 27 November 1944 by the Jeffersonville
Boat and Machinery Co., Jeffersonville, Ind., Iaunched on 10 January 1945;
sponsored by Mrs. Elizabeth L. Middleton, and commissioned on 2 February
1945, Lt. Lester W. Sperberg in command.
Following shakedown off Florida, LST-1096 prepared for duty in the
Pacific. In early March, she took on pontoons and ammunition as cargo, and,
on the 11th, sailed for the Panama Canal. From there, she continued on to
the Marshalls, the Marianas, and the Western Carolines, arriving at Ulithi
in early May. For the next two months, she supported operations in the Ryukyus;
then, on 1 July, headed south to the Philippines. Most of July was spent
in the Leyte area. At the end of the month, she moved up to Luzon to prepare
for further amphibious operations, but, with the Japanese surrender, she
returned to Okinawa with occupation troops. Further occupation duties followed;
and, into November, she carried troops and supplies from the Philippines
and Okinawa to Japan. In December, carrying returning veterans as passengers
and heavy equipment including one LCT as cargo, she headed east and arrived
at San Francisco in mid-January 1946.
Ordered deactivated, she moved to Astoria, Oreg., in May for "mothballing."
The ship was decommissioned on 24 August and berthed with the Reserve Fleet
where she remained through the end of the decade.
In June 1950, the North Korean People's Army crossed the 38th parallel into
the Republic of Korea in an attempt to unify the divided country by force.
As a part of the American build up of military and naval forces to repel
this Communist thrust, LST-1096 was ordered activated in August.
She was recommissioned on 3 October; and, after a month at Bremerton, she
moved down the coast to her home port, San Diego.
For the next two months, the LST trained out of San Diego; and, in mid-February
1951, she headed for Hawaii, Japan, and Korea. March was spent in exercising
in Hawaiian waters; and, at the end of April, she arrived in Yokosuka to
take up duties supporting United Nations operations in Korea. She conducted
amphibious training exercises in Japanese waters, shuttled cargo and personnel
between Japan and Korea; and transported prisoners of war from the South
Korean mainland to the camps on the offshore islands. In November, she completed
her last run and headed home.
In mid-December, LST-1096 arrived at San Diego. Overhaul, type exercises,
and coastal cargo runs occupied the next eight months; and, in September
1952, the ship got underway for the Far East. By mid-October, she had arrived
at Yokosuka and, a fortnight later, was conducting amphibious training exercises
on the Honshu coast. She then returned to carrying cargo and personnel to
Korea. She also was busy returning prisoners of war, scheduled to be exchanged,
to the Korean peninsula.
After the truce agreement was reached in July 1953, LST-1096 continued
her POW shuttle runs, from the camps to the mainland, and completed her
last run, from Koje Do to Pusan, on 10 August. Three days later, she returned
to Japan, then continued east, arriving at San Diego at the end of September.
In October, the LST shifted to Long Beach where she remained for repairs
and overhaul into 1954. In January, she returned to San Diego; put back
to Long Beach for further work in early February; then commenced refresher
training. In April, she began moving west again, and, on the 25th, arrived
in Yokosuka to begin her first peacetime western Pacific (WestPac) deployment.
Through most of the summer, she conducted exercises in Japanese, Korean,
and Okinawan waters. In mid-August, she was ordered south, and for three
months, participated in Operation "Passage to Freedom," the transportation
of people from the newly created Democratic (Communist) Republic of Vietnam,
north of the 17th parallel, to the National State of Vietnam, south of that
line. Operating between Haiphong and Tourane (now Danang), she completed
her last run from north to south in mid-November; visited Hong Kong; then
returned to Japan. In February 1955, she returned to San Diego; and, for
the next eleven months, remained on the west coast.
Named St. Clair County (LST-1096) in July 1955 she sailed west again
in February 1956. Training operations in Japanese, Korean, and Okinawan
waters were interrupted only once, by a cruise to the Philippines in July,
during her WestPac stay. In September, she moved east; and, in October,
reached California.
Through the end of the 1950's and into 1960, St. Clair Countv rotated regularly
between training exercises, cargo runs, and overhauls on the west coast
and similar exercises and cargo operations with the 7th Fleet in the western
Pacific. During 1960, she also participated in the making of two motion
pictures: one in May while deployed to WestPac; the other in December in
California coastal waters.
>From 1961 to 1963, St. Clair County's schedule was altered, and her
annual deployments took her only to the mid-Pacific, where she participated
in amphibious exercises and conducted cargo operations for Service Force,
Pacific. A FRAM II overhaul and refresher training occupied most of 1964.
In January 1965, the LST resumed WestPac operations. Only briefly deployed,
she departed her home port to participate in a west coast operation and
ended by carrying marines and their equipment via Hawaii to Okinawa. In
May, after a visit to Japan, she returned to San Diego. From mid-August
to November, she retraced the itinerary she had followed from January to
May. Then, through the end of the year, she remained on the west coast.
The LST sailed west again on 14 January 1966, and, late in February, commenced
logistic support duty for combat operations in her third war. On 25 February
after a stop at Okinawa, she offloaded miscellaneous cargo, vehicles, and
personnel at Chu Lai, RVN, then proceeded to Subic Bay. She briefly remained
there for upkeep and loading before returning to Vietnam to operate as a
unit of TF 76 in that embattled country's coastal waters.
In March, she offloaded ammunition cargo at Danang; took on vehicles at
Qui Nhon; and transported them to Vung Tau. On the 30th, she moved up to
Saigon, and, on 4 April, returned to Vung Tau, whence she transited the
Mekong and Bassac rivers to call at Can Tho. There, she discharged cargo
and loaded damaged vehicles which she carried to Saigon. After another run
to Can Tho, she returned to the Philippines for availability; and, in June,
resumed operations in Vietnam. Through that month, she shuttled cargo between
Chu Lai and Danang. In July, she underwent repairs in the Philippines; and,
in August, she got underway to return to San Diego via Hong Kong, Sasebo,
Yokosuka, and Pearl Harbor.
Arriving back at her home port on 23 September, St. Clair County
underwent voyage repairs, then resumed exercises off the southern California
coast. In the spring of 1967, she participated in exercises in Hawaiian
waters, then returned to the west coast for a three-month overhaul. In November,
she resumed local exercises; and, early in 1968, completed her first "over-the-beach-hi-line"
evolution. In June, she headed west.
The LST remained in WestPac through the remainder of the year, ferrying
troops and cargo between Cua Viet and Danang and providing logistic support
to riverine forces in the Mekong Delta. On 26 January she completed the
cruise. Repairs and local operations followed her return to San Diego. During
the summer, she conducted amphibious exercises at San Clemente and Oceanside;
visited British Columbia, then retulned to San Diego to prepare for inactivation.
Ordered to Bremerton, she moved north and was decommissioned there on 26
September 1969. Into 1974, she remains at Bremerton as a unit of the Pacific
Reserve Fleet.
LST-1096 earned one battle star for her World War II service, three
during the Korean Conflict; and two for service off Vietnam.