- USS Salerno Bay (CVE-110)
USS "Salerno Bay" (CVE-110) (ex-"Winjah Bay") was laid down on
7 February 1944 by the Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Co., Tacoma,Washington ; launched on26 September 1944 ; sponsored by Mrs. Ward Gilbert; transferred to the Commercial Iron Works, Portland, Oreg., for completion on29 September 1944 ; and commissioned on19 May 1945 , Capt. W. C. Holt in command.Operational history
World War II
The sixth of the line of Commencement Bay class escort carriers with improvements dictated by that class's operating experience, Salerno Bay embarked her first air group, MCVEG-5, at the end of June. With that group, comprised of Marine Fighter Squadron 514 (
VMF-514 ) and Marine Torpedo Bombing Squadron 144 (VTMB-144 ), she trained off southernCalifornia . Two days afterJapan 's mid-August capitulation, she sailed west with Composite Squadron 68 (VC-68 ) embarked as passengers. She conducted further training operations, including night qualification of her Marine air group, in Hawaiian waters, then continued west. On21 September , she anchored inBuckner Bay ,Okinawa . Later shifting to theHagushi anchorage, she put to sea in early October to ride out a typhoon. On the 12th, she returned to Hagushi only to depart again on the 14th to support the mid-month occupation of Formosa by troops of the Chinese Army. From that island, the CVE headed east, toSaipan . She remained at Saipan for three weeks; then, detached from the 7th Fleet, she shifted toGuam ; embarked veterans as passengers; and set a course for Pearl Harbor andSan Diego . She arrived at the latter in early December. At mid-month, she proceeded to the Panama Canal Zone, whence she continued on to Norfolk, Va., arriving on the 23rd.Assigned to the Atlantic Fleet and engaged primarily in qualifying carrier pilots, "Salerno Bay" operated along the eastern seaboard and in the
Caribbean into 1947. In the spring of that year, she was ordered inactivated; and, in June, she sailed north, from Norfolk toBoston , to prepare for decommissioning and mothballing.Korean War
Decommissioned on
4 October , she remained in the reserve fleet until recommissioned on20 June 1951 . Shakedown training followed; and, in October, she commenced operations with Carrier Division 18. During November and early December, she conducted exercises off theVirginia Capes and in the Caribbean. On18 December , she returned to Norfolk; but, on7 January 1952 , she again sailed south for operations in the Caribbean. Back at Norfolk in early February, she operated offPuerto Rico in March and off theVirginia and Carolina coasts from April to July. She then prepared for European deployment. On26 August , she departed Norfolk; joined TF 173 en route; and, during September, participated inNATO exercises offNorway . In early October, she proceeded toGibraltar , thence sailed into the Mediterranean for operations with the 6th Fleet. At the end of November, she retransited theStrait of Gibraltar ; and, on7 December , she arrived back at Norfolk to resume local, western Atlantic, and Caribbean exercises, which she continued into 1953.Decommissioning
In the spring of that year, as the war in
Korea moved toward a truce, the CVE was again ordered inactivated. On8 June , she returned to Boston, where she was decommissioned a second time on16 February 1954 . Reclassified AKV-10 in 1959, "Salerno Bay" remained in the Atlantic Reserve Fleet until struck from the Navy list on1 June 1961 . She was sold on30 October to Revalorizacion de Materiales, S.A., through their agent Jacq. Pierot, Jr., and Sons,New York , and removed from Naval custody on14 December 1961 .References
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