- USS Leo (AKA-60)
USS "Leo" (AKA-60), an "Andromeda"-class
attack cargo ship , was named for the constellation Leo. She is the only ship of theUnited States Navy to hold this name. USS "Leo" served as a commissioned ship for 10 years and 5 months."Leo" (AKA-60) was laid down
17 March 1944 byFederal Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. inKearny, New Jersey , underMaritime Commission contract; launched on29 July 1944 , sponsored by Mrs.Ogden Mills , wife of the formerSecretary of the Treasury ; acquired by the Navy on29 August 1944 ; and commissioned on30 August 1944 , withCommander T. E. Healey in command.After
shakedown inChesapeake Bay , the new attack cargo ship departedNorfolk, Virginia , forHawaii on13 October 1944 , arriving atPearl Harbor on4 November . After a month of training off Maui, Hawaii, Leo steamed forPort Hueneme, California , arrived on12 December , loaded cargo, and returned to Pearl Harbor onChristmas Eve .After a month of intensive amphibious training, "Leo" steamed on
27 January 1945 for the assault onIwo Jima with Amphibious TF 51 underVice Admiral Richmond Kelly Turner. After brief calls atEniwetok andSaipan , the ship arrived off the beaches of Iwo early morning, D-Day,19 February . Debarking her troops the first hour, "Leo" then offloaded her high-priority cargo oftruck s, freshwater , andammunition intoboat s alongside. For the next 9 days, the ship evacuated casualties and continued sending crucial war material ashore.Steaming to the
Marianas fromKwajalein , the ship prepared for the Okinawa landing. She departed Saipan on27 March with Rear Admiral Wright's Demonstration Force for simulated landings on the southeastern beaches of Okinawa. Arriving at dawn1 April , the demonstration group received more attention from Japanese aircraft than did the actual landing group.About 0550
1 April a Japanesekamikaze crashed "Hinsdale" (APA-120), killing 24 and wounding 21. Completing her mission, "Leo" sent all herLCVP s to "Hinsdale" to pick up survivors, after which she retired for night steaming. The next 3 days Leo moved in and out from the southeast beaches as a decoy, drawing fire from the shore. She was detached from Admiral Wright's group4 April and steamed for transport area “Baker” and an actual landing off the northern beaches of Okinawa. Arriving the next day, she transferred "Hinsdale" survivors to a hospital ship and commenced offloading cargo.Gunfire from the ship's starboard 40 mm mount destroyed a low-flying Japanese aircraft as it swooped down on the formation the afternoon of
6 April . Despite constant air raid, "Leo" offloaded all cargo by14 April and steamed that afternoon for Ulithi, towing "Hinsdale". They arrived23 April . She departed for Saipan25 April and through the rest of the war transported cargo between the Marianas and the Solomons. She completed two voyages from Saipan via Guam to Guadalcanal and Tulagi.Departing Guam
26 August , she steamed for Manila, arrived1 September , and loaded troops and equipment of the 43d Division, 8th Army, designated for occupation duty in Japan. Arriving15 September off Yokosuka, "Leo" debarked the Army troops, loaded troops and equipment of the 6th Marine Division, rode out a typhoon until the 18th, and departed next day for Tsingtao, China. She arrived Tsingtao, which was headquarters for U.S. naval forces in the western Pacific after World War II, and had put the marines ashore by18 October ."Leo" steamed for Manila and arrived
23 October . After a fast cargo run to Haiphong, French Indochina, "Leo" departed the Orient10 November and arrived Puget Sound 15 days later. Until the outbreak of theKorean War , "Leo" operated with the Naval Transportation Service in the Pacific.After the
North Korea ns invadedSouth Korea "Leo" steamed from San Francisco for Sasebo, Japan, with ammunition for the 7th Fleet. She arrived Japan19 September 1950 and supplied ammunition to ships deploying to Korean waters. The AKA steamed for Korea9 November with ammunition, stores, and mail for the ships engaged in the siege of Wonsan. Departing14 November , she returned to Sasebo for 10 days and then left for San Francisco19 December .She was again underway for Sasebo
9 January 1951 , and she spent that year operating between Japan and Korea. She arrived Sasebo27 January , rearmed ships there, then steamed for Korea10 March and replenished ships at Pusan, Pohang, and Wonsan.Because of the buildup of heavy combatants off Korea and the logistical demands attendant to keeping them on the line, "Leo" operated between Sasebo and various rendezvous points in the
Sea of Japan for the next 9 months. Logistical problems diminished as "Leo" and her sister ships practiced night underway replenishment techniques. By25 January 1952 , when "Leo" departed Sasebo for San Francisco, the logistics team was able to replenish a fast carrier task force in only 9 hours.Upon arrival San Francisco on
9 February , "Leo" underwent overhaul and then steamed to Alaska on a cargo run during July and August. Between7 October and8 December she carried cargo from Oakland toEniwetok . "Leo" also served as a transport forOperation Ivy , a series of American nuclear tests conducted at Eniwetak, Kwajalein, and Bikini Atoll in November 1952. [ [http://www.dtra.mil/documents/rd/DNATR8298.pdf Analysis of Radiation Exposure for Navy Personnel at Operation Ivy] ]As a unit of MSTS the ship made three more voyages to the Eastern Asian coast plus another run to Alaska during the next 2 years. "Leo" steamed from Oakland to Long Beach on
15 October 1954 where she was decommissioned on11 February 1955 and transferred to thePacific Reserve Fleet ,San Diego . Subsequently transferred to the Maritime Administration, her name was struck from theNavy list on1 July 1960 and she entered theNational Defense Reserve Fleet atSuisun Bay, California . On19 July 1976 "Leo" was sold for scrap. [ [http://www.pmars.imsg.com/detail.asp?Ship=2995 Maritime Administration Ship Record Detail: "Leo"] ]"Leo" received two
battle star s for World War II service and five battle stars for Korean service.References
External links
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/02060.htm NavSource Online: AKA-60 "Leo"]
* [http://unitpages.military.com/unitpages/unit.do?id=700843 Military.com: USS "Leo"]
* [http://ussrankin.org/id352.htm 51 Years of AKAs]
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