- USS Calvert (APA-32)
USS "Calvert" (APA-32) was a "Crescent City "-class
attack transport that served with theUnited States Navy duringWorld War II and theKorean War . In addition to her tenbattle stars , "Calvert" was awarded aNavy Unit Commendation ."Calvert" was launched
22 May 1942 as "Del Orleans" byBethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard under aMaritime Commission contract. Acquired by the Navy30 September 1942 , she became the second Navy ship named afterCalvert County, Maryland , designated transport AP-65. She was commissioned the next day, Captain D. W. Loomis in command. She was reclassified as attack transport APA-32, on1 February 1943 .World War II
Mediterranean Theatre
"Calvert" began the consistently superior service which was to win her a
Navy Unit Commendation when she sailed fromNorfolk, Virginia on25 October 1942 for the invasion of North Africa. She landed her troops at Safi,French Morocco , on8 November , and six days later sailed for Norfolk to train troops inChesapeake Bay for other invasions. On8 June 1943 she departed for theMediterranean and her second major assault landing, the invasion of Sicily. She put her troops ashore atScoglitti ,Sicily , on12 July .Pacific Theater
By
3 August 1943 , "Calvert" was back at Norfolk, a veteran of assault landings in theAtlantic , and nowPacific -bound for stepping stone invasions to the Japanese homeland. She arrived atPearl Harbor on26 September to train and land troops of the 27th Infantry Division on Makin,Gilbert Islands ,20 November . Her busy schedule took the transport back to the west coast the following month to train troops for forthcoming amphibious assaults, and in January 1944 she was underway for the Marshalls where on1 February her troops stormed ashore on Kwajalein for another successful invasion."Calvert"'s next operation was in the Marianas, where she conducted diversionary landings off
Tanapag Harbor atSaipan (15–24 June) andTinian (24 July ), an effort which added to the success of the main assault on Saipan. She returned to Pearl Harbor in August carrying 420 Japanese and Korean prisoners of war, and the following month was again westward bound to take part in the invasion of the Philippines.On
20 October 1944 "Calvert" was off Leyte dispatching her troops for the initial landings. She made a quick turn around and was back on18 November to pour more men and equipment fromNew Guinea into thePhilippines to ensure the Allied advance. AtCape Gloucester she embarked troops for another assault on the Philippines (9 January 1945 ) atLingayen Gulf to begin the capture of Luzon. The following month, with troops embarked atBiak , "Calvert" successfully landed her assault waves atMindoro on9 February .The veteran "Calvert" was now ordered to the west coast for overhaul and conversion to an amphibious
flagship , arriving Bremerton on26 March ."Calvert" completed her conversion as the war ended in the Pacific, and on24 August 1945 cleared for the Philippines to lift troops toHiro Wan for theoccupation of Japan . "Magic Carpet" duty, returning troops home to the west coast, was her assignment between7 November 1945 and31 May 1946 ."Calvert" arrived at Norfolk where she was placed out of commission in reserve
26 February 1947 .Korean War
With the outbreak of the
Korea War in the summer of 1950, "Calvert" was recalled to active service and recommissioned18 October 1950 . During her two tours in theFar East she trained troops in Japan andKorea , redeployed Korean troops, and transported troops to and from Korea from the west coast.Peacetime operations
Following this war "Calvert" remained on active service with the fleet, alternating west coast operations with cruises to the western Pacific, continuing through 1960.
During this service she took part in the "Passage to Freedom" operation in the summer of 1954 when she lifted over 6,000 Indochinese civilians from
Communist -surroundedHaiphong to southernVietnam .Between 1954 and 1957 she served as the flagship for Comphibron 5, and made two cruises to the far east, including troop training landings on
Iwo Jima and in the Philippines. Ports of call includedYokosuka ,Nagoya ,Shimoda ,Kobe , Nagasaki, Sasebo, and Kure,Japan ,Okinawa ,Subic Bay ,Manila ,Hong Kong and Pearl Harbor.Fact|date=February 2008In 1958 during the Middle East crisis and
Lebanon landings by the 6th Fleet, "Calvert", combat-loaded, stood ready with the 7th Fleet, alert for any extension of trouble in the Pacific.Vietnam War
"Calvert" also participated in the
Vietnam War , from November 1965 to January 1966.Final years
"Calvert" was decommissioned at
Hunter's Point Naval Shipyard inSan Francisco on18 May 1966 . She was then moved to the Naval Supply Center,Oakland , Traffic Management School for use as a training hulk until 1976."Calvert" was struck from the Naval Register on
1 August 1966 . She was sold for scrapping on14 February 1977 to Levin Metals ofSan Jose, California , which broke her up at their facility inRichmond, California .Awards and decorations
In addition to her
Navy Unit Commendation , "Calvert" received eightbattle star s for service inWorld War II and two for service in theKorean War .References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/c2/calvert-ii.htm
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/auxil/ap65.htm USS "Calvert" (APA-32)] , DANFS Online.
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/03/03032.htm APA-32 "Calvert"] , Navsource Online.
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