- SS Conte Grande
The SS "Conte Grande" (Italian for "Large") was a
Lloyd Sabaudo Line ocean liner built in 1927 byStabilimento Tecnico Triestino inTrieste ,Italy , to service thetransatlantic passenger line betweenGenoa ,Italy , andNew York City . Launched on 29 June 1927, her maiden voyage was from Genoa toNaples to New York City, which occurred on 13 April 1928. In 1932, after acquisition by theItalian Line , she was transferred to theSouth America service but was laid up in Santos,Brazil in 1940.During
World War II , she was captured by theUnited States and was used as an American troopship -- renamed USS Monticello (AP-61) in 1942. After the war, in 1947, she was returned to the Italian Line and renamed the "Conte Grande". After a two year hiatus, in 1949, she resumed service to South America. In 1960, she was transferred from the Italian Line to Lloyd Triestino (also chartered by Italian Line), where she served for another year until being scrapped in 1961. Her sister ship was the "SS Conte Biancamano ".Beginnings
"Conte Grande" was built by
Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino atTrieste, Italy as an Italian-flagged passenger ship capable of carrying 7,798 persons. She was launched on 28 June 1927 and entered service withLloyd Sabaudo ofGenoa atCantieri San Marco for service on theNorth Atlantic tourist and passenger trade. In 1933 she transferred to theSouth America n tourist trade. Early in June, 1940 the "Conte Grande" was inSantos, Brazil , on one of her regular South American cruises. Here her officers held her awaiting developments afterMussolini 's attack onFrance on 10 June 1940. On 27 February 1942 she was transferred toBrazil ian registry and a Brazilian crew replaced the Italian crew who were interned. She was purchased on 16 April 1942 by theUnited States and renamed USS Monticello. She was commissioned the same day atSao Paulo in Brazil under the command of Captain Morton L. Deyo, USN.World War II
The "USS Monticello" sailed north under the escort of the USS|Lansdale|DD-426 to
Philadelphia for conversion to a troop transport which was completed 10 September 1942. She leftNew York on 2 November forOperation Torch , the invasion ofNorth Africa , carrying troops toCasablanca . Returning to New York, she sailed again on 25 December, carrying men for the various commands of theChina -Burma -India Theater toKarachi , by way of thePanama Canal ,Australia , andCeylon .The transport returned to New York on 24 April 1943, carried reinforcements to
Oran on two voyages, then sailed fromAfrica toSan Francisco by way of the Panama Canal. Through the first half of 1944, she carried men from San Francisco toCalifornia n ports, Australia,Hawaii , and the burgeoning bases of theSouth Pacific . In June 1944, she began the first of a series of transatlantic voyages bringing men to win victory inEurope . She reported to New York for an eight-week availability on 20 July 1945 and while there her Navy crew transferred off and were replaced by a Coast Guard crew beginning on 21 July 1945. Her first Coast Guard commanding officer was Commander George R. Leslie. He took command on 6 August 1945 and was replaced the next day by Captain R. S. Patch, USCG.Postwar service
The vessel remained under repair at
Todd's Shipyards ,Brooklyn , until 2 October. During this time all of herarmament was removed. She departed New York, bound forNaples , on 8 October 1945, with 176 Italian officers, 5,590 Italian Army enlisted men, 13U.S. Army officers and 34 Army enlisted men, a total of 5,813. She arrived atNaples safely on 19 October. She departed Naples on 22 October and arrived inNorfolk, Virginia on 3 November 1945. She departed Norfolk on 8 November and arrived atLe Havre, France on the 17th. She departed Le Havre on 19 November and arrived back at her home port of New York on 27 November. She then departed New York on 10 December, bound forMarseilles , arriving there on 20 December. She departed Marseilles on 22 December, arriving at New York on 1 January 1946.Decommission and transfer
She decommissioned at Norfolk on 22 March 1946 and returned to the
War Shipping Administration for disposal on 27 May 1946. She was returned to the Italian government in June 1947, redubbed "Conte Grande", and after being laid up for two years, resumed service as a passenger vessel in South America. She was scrapped in 1961.Awards
"Monticello" earned one
battle star for theWorld War II service. [ [http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/22/22061.htm "Monticello"] , Navsource Online.]Footnotes
References
* [http://www.uscg.mil/history/webcutters/AP61_Monticello.html USS "Monticello" AP-61] ,
United States Coast Guard website.
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/auxil/ap61.txt "Monticello" AP-61] - DANFS Online.
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/22/22061.htm AP-61 "Monticello] , Navsource Online.
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/m14/monticello-ii.htmExternal links
* [http://www.istrianet.org/istria/navigation/sea/immigrant/contegrande.htm Istria on the Internet]
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