- USS Boxer (CV-21)
The fifth USS "Boxer" (CV-21) (also CVA-21, CVS-21, LPH-4) was a
United States Navy Sclass|Essex|aircraft carrier.She was launched 14 December 1944 by Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co.
Newport News, Virginia , sponsored byRuth D. Overton (daughter ofJohn H. Overton , Senator fromLouisiana ), and commissioned 16 April 1945, CaptainD. F. Smith in command.Attack carrier service (1945-1956)
Completed too late to take part in
World War II , "Boxer" joined the Pacific Fleet atSan Diego in August 1945. From September 1945 to 23 August 1946 she operated out ofGuam asflagship of TF 77 in the Western Pacific. During this tour she visitedJapan ,Okinawa , thePhilippines andChina . She returned toSan Francisco 10 September 1946 and operated off the west coast engaged in normal peacetime duty. On 10 March 1948 she was the site of the first landing of a Navy jet aircraft (the FJ-1 Fury) aboard an aircraft carrier. She departed for the Far East 11 January 1950. After service with the7th Fleet in the Far East during the first half of 1950, she returned to San Diego, arriving25 June .Korean War
With the outbreak of the
Korean War she was pressed into service to carry planes to the fighting. During14 July –22 July 1950 she made a record crossing of the Pacific, 8½ days, with 150 Air Force and Navy planes and a thousand troops. On her return trip (27 July –4 August ), she cut the record to 7 days, 10 hours, and 36 minutes. After fast repairs she departed for the Far East24 August , this time to join TF 77 in giving air support to the troops. Her planes supported the landing atInchon (15 September 1950 ) and other ground action until November, when she departed for the west coast and overhaul. "Boxer" departed San Diego for her second Korean tour 2 March 1951. Again she operated with TF 77 supporting the ground troops. She returned to San Francisco 24 October 1951. Sailing 8 February 1952 for her third tour in Korea, "Boxer" again served with TF 77. During23 June –24 June her planes took part in the heavy strikes against the North Korean hydro-electric complex and on5 August she had nine men killed and two seriously injured in a fire which swept thehangar deck . After emergency repairs atYokosuka , Japan (11 August –23 August ), "Boxer" returned to duty off Korea. She arrived at San Francisco25 September andunderwent repairs until March 1953.The carrier departed for the Far East 30 March 1953 and went into action a month later. She took part in the final actions of the Korean conflict and remained in Asiatic waters until November. Since the end of the Korean fighting Boxer cruised off the west coast and has made three cruises to the Far East. Boxer was reclassified CVA-21 in October 1952.
Anti-submarine carrier (1956-1957)
Converted to an anti-submarine warfare aircraft carrier (CVS) in early 1956, she made a final Western Pacific tour in that role during 1956-57.
Helicopter carrier (1958-1969)
Later in 1957, "Boxer" operated briefly as an experimental assault helicopter aircraft carrier, an indication of things to come for her, the Navy and the Marine Corps. In 1958, she was flagship for
Operation Hardtack , a nuclear weapons test program in the Central Pacific. Late in that year, she was transferred to the Atlantic Fleet as an "interimamphibious assault ship " and was formally redesignated LPH-4 on 30 January 1959.For the next decade, "Boxer" and her "main battery" of Marines and transport helicopters were vital components of the United States' amphibious warfare capabilities. She mainly operated in the Caribbean area, including participation in the 1962Cuban Missile Crisis and the 1965Dominican Republic intervention. She deployed to European waters in late 1964 to participate inOperation Steel Pike . In mid-1965, "Boxer" served as an aircraft transport, carrying more than two hundred Army helicopters and airplanes toVietnam as part of the deployment of the 1st Cavalry Division (Air Mobile). She was the prime recovery vessel for theAS-201 mission, the first flight of the Apollo Command and Service Modules, which was recovered 26 February 1966. The "Boxer" was also on station in the West Atlantic and scheduled to be the prime recovery vessel for theGemini 8 mission in March, 1966. This opportunity was missed, however, when Gemini 8 had an in-flight emergency and landed in the WesternPacific instead. She then made a second trip to Vietnam, this time carrying Marine Corps aircraft."Boxer" decommissioned in December 1969 and was sold for scrapping in February 1971.
"Boxer" received eight
battle star s for her service in Korea.External links
* [http://www.ussboxer.com USS "Boxer" Veterans Association]
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-b/cv21.htm Navy photographs of "Boxer" (CV-21)]
* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/telstar/2265110/in/set-56935/ USS "Boxer" in drydock] atHunter's Point Naval Shipyard
* [http://www.hullnumber.com/LPH-4 LPH-4 Personnel Roster at HullNumber.com]
* [http://www.hullnumber.com/CV-21 CV-21 Personnel Roster at HullNumber.com]See also
*
List of aircraft carriers
*List of aircraft carriers of the United States Navy
*List of World War II ships
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