From: Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Vol. VII
A parish in Louisiana, incorporated in 1822, and
located on the gulf coast of the Mississippi delta.
(LST-1156: dp. 5,800 (f.), l. 384'0", b. 55'0", dr. 17'; cpl.
160; s. 15 k.; a. 6 3"; cl. Terrebonne Parish)
Terrebonne Parish (LST-1156) was laid down as LST-1156 on
2 January 1952 at Bath, Maine, by the Bath Iron Works, launched on 9 August
1952; sponsored by Miss Anne L. McCrea, and commissioned on 21 November
1952, Lt. Comdr. Henry L. Porter in command.
Following trials and shakedown, LST-1156 underwent post-shakedown
alterations at the Norfolk Navy Yard before commencing operations out of
Little Creek with Amphibious Forces, Atlantic Fleet, on 14 September 1953.
The ship then conducted training exercises out of Little Creek before entering
the Norfolk Navy Yard for conversion to an LST Flotilla flagship, involving
the installation of much new communications equipment. LST 1156 remained
on operations out of Little Creek through June 1955. On 1 July 1955, the
ship was named Terrebonne Parish, while retaining her designation
of LST-1156.
Following operations in the Caribbean and off North Carolina and overhaul
at the Charleston (S.C.) Naval Shipyarl, Terrebonne Parish conducted
a cruise to Lisbon, Portugal, and Port Lyautey, French Morocco before resuming
local operations out of Little Creek. She continued participating in exercises
and assault landings in the Caribbean and returned to Norfolk on 14 May
1957 to resume local operations and type training.
On 29 August 1957, Terrebonne Parish cleared Norfolk for Morehead
City, N.C., and, on the following day, embarked marines, vehicles, and cargo
for transport to the Mediterranean. The LST joined units of the 6th Fleet
at Taranto, Italy, on 16 September. During the subsequent tour, the ship
took part in NATO landing exercises at Saros Gulf, Turkey, and visited ports
in Turkey, Greece, Italy, Crete, and Sicily before returning to the United
States on 12 February 1958 and resuming local operations out of Little Creek.
Following overhaul and refresher training, she again deployed to the Mediterranean
with the 6th Fleet in September 1958, serving as part of Service Force,
Mediterranean, before returning westward once again to the United States
and operations off the east coast and in Caribbean waters.
On 16 June 1959, Terrebonne Parish commenced an inland seas cruise,
transiting the St. Lawrence Seaway and calling at Iroquois, Cape Vincent,
and Port Weller, Ontario; Ashtabula, Ohio; Kenosha, Wisc.; Chicago, Ill.;
Milwaukee, Wisc.; Cleveland, Ohio; Erie, Pa.; and Port Colburne and Rochester,
N.Y., before returning to her home base of Little Creek on 6 August. Also
in 1959, the ship participated in Exercise TRALEX -- one of the largest
amphibious exercises conducted in that year
Terrebonne Parish conducted yearly deployments to the Mediterranean,
with periodic overhauls and exercises, through 1961. In late October 1962,
after the presence of Soviet missiles was detected in Cuba, the United States
instituted a "quarantine"throwing a naval cordon around the island.
During these emergency preparations, the LST operated with the Atlantic
Fleet Amphibious Force through December, when the crisis finally subsided.
Attached to Amphibious Forces Atlantic Fleet, Amphibious Squadron 6, the
ship conducted operations off the Virginia Capes in January and February
1963 and then was overhauled in Jacksonville, Fla., before she again sailed
for the Mediterranean.
During her 1963 deployment with the 6th Fleet, Terrebonne Parish
participated in MEDLANDEX, a joint United States-Spanish exercise wherein
3,000 American and Spanish Marines were landed with support from carrier-based
aircraft. The ship remained in the Mediterranean into February 1964 before
returning to the United States for amphibious exercises in the spring at
Onslow Beach, N.C., and off Camp Pendleton, Va. She proceeded to New York
in July to visit the New York World's Fair before taking part in an amphibious
exercise with marines and midshipmen off Camp Pendleton.
Early in the autumn, she embarked the men and vehicles of "G"
Company, 1st Battalion, 2d Marines, and proceeded for Huelva, Spain, to
take part in Exercise "Steel Pike" -- where the ship became the
first LST to "marry" to an eighteen-section causeway for landing
her embarked vehicles. For the remainder of her deployment, the ship took
part in landing exercises off Sardinia and Corsica and made visits to ports
in Italy, France, and Spain, spending the Christmas holidays in Barcelona,
Spain, and New Year's at Valencia.
Returning home to the United States towards the end of March 1965, the ship
transported a Marine missile detachment to the Caribbean, and then underwent
extensive overhaul for four months by the Bethlehem Steel shipyard at Baltimore,
Md. After refresher training, Terrebonne Parish got underway for
the Caribbean on 3 March 1966 to begin a four-month deployment to participate
in exercises and operations involving beachings and landings. The ship next
made two lifts to the Dominican Republic in late August and early September.
During this Caribbean tour, a locking device was developed for the sand
flaps on the ship's bow doors, to keep them secure while underway. Tests
proved that these new devicesinstalled in January at San Juan, Puerto Ricowere
very efficient. As a result, this modification was approved for all LST's.
Terrebonne Parish commenced her 7th Mediterranean deployment on 30
March 1967 when she embarked marines of the 1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment,
at Morehead City and crossed the Atlantic in company with four minesweepers
of Mine Division 83. Upon arriving at Aranci Bay, Sardinia, on 19 April,
the ship joined Amphibious Squadron 6, Task Force 61, and soon participated
in Exercise "Fairgame Five" -- a Franco-American amphibious exercise
which brought together elements of the French Army, Navy, Commandos, and
Foreign Legion, as well as a joint Navy-Marine team.
The ship headed for the western half of the Mediterranean and proceeded
to Italy and Crete for further exercises. While the ship was at Taormina,
Sicily, in late July, volunteers from her ship's company and embarked troops
went ashore to battle a raging brush fire threatening the town of Giardini.
Leaving Taormina on 7 August and arriving at Porto Scudo, Sardinia, on 12
August, the ship took part in further amphibious exercises before she reembarked
her marines after field exercises and proceeded to Malaga, Spain, for further
amphibious training operations. The ship subsequently departed Rota, Spain
on 2 September for her return voyage to the United states.
Deploying to the Mediterranean in 1969, the ship moved to the Caibbean early
in the following year and also conducted exercises off the east coast before
returning to the Mediterranean, in late 1970, for her ninth deployment.
The following year, still homeported at Little Creek, Va., and operating
under command of Amphibious Forces, Atlantic, Terrebonne Parwh deployed
to the Caribbean for exercises and training activities. These included an
operation from 5 to 10 August 1971 in which United States Army and Panamanian
National Guard units participated.
Soon after returning from Panama, the ship began preparations for her upcoming
transfer to the Spanish government. On 29 October 1971, the ship was decommissioned
and turned over to the Spanish Navy at Little Creek, Va. Subsequently renamed
Velasco and designated L-11, the ship served Spain into 1980.