- USS Armstrong County (LST-57)
The USS "Armstrong County" (LST-57) was an sclass|LST-1|tank landing ship built for the
United States Navy duringWorld War II . Named for counties inPennsylvania ,South Dakota , andTexas , she was the only U.S. Naval vessel to bear the name.LST-57 was laid down on
24 October 1943 atNeville Island, Pennsylvania by the Dravo Corporation and launched on4 December 1943 , sponsored by Mrs. Edward Mays. Placed in "reduced commission" on1 January 1944 at her builder's yard, she went toNew Orleans, Louisiana where she was commissioned on15 January 1944 . Following her fitting out atPensacola and shakedown training out ofPanama City, Florida LST-57 returned to New Orleans where she took on board LCT-855 and a cargo of diesel fuel. Clearing the "Crescent City" on25 February 1944 LST-57 proceeded independently toNew York City . Spending five days there (during which time she embarked two Navy doctors and 40 corpsmen) the tank landing ship proceeded toDavisville, Rhode Island where the tank deck was loaded with 358 tons of pontoons: "no better a cargo for the sub-infested Atlantic"," observed the ship's historian wryly. After an overnight stay atBoston , LST-57 joined a convoy bound for Halifax,Nova Scotia . Reaching her destination on21 March , the tank landing ship remained there until the 29th. Sailing thence with "slow convoy" SC-156, LST-57 began her voyage to theOld World , although for a time her crew wondered if they would ever get away from the New. Three events occurred before she even left Halifax harbor that presaged an "eventful" crossing. The wait for a frozen boatdavit to thaw delayed recovery of one of the ship's landing craft, a tug ripped a hole in her port bow several feet above the waterline, and a steering casualty stopped her a few hundred feet from the antisubmarine nets causing the ship to-block the convoy sortie until it could be corrected. Once at sea, LST-57 and the convoy encountered dense fog that rendered visibility difficult for more than 48 hours, and another LST nearly collided with the ship. The fact that the other ship was known to be carrying ammunition "didn't quiet anyone's nerves"," as LST-57s' chronicler, recounts. No sooner had the fog cleared but an ice field was encountered. Two emergency changes of course to avoid the ice caused the convoy "...to lose all semblance of order...for several hours." Preoccupied by accidents and natural hazards, LST-57's crewmen almost forgot the War untilU-302 rudely reminded them. At 0228 on6 April theU-boat torpedo ed two merchantmen on LST-57's port side. The tank landing ship went to general quarters but did not engage the enemy or participate in the rescue operation. One of the escorts, HMS "Swale", sank U-302, and snips closer to the two victims picked up survivors. LST-57 reachedMilford Haven ,Wales , on14 April , only to be directed to proceed toSouthampton immediately. She overtook a slow coastal convoy to that port and reached her destination on the 16th, mooring at theFawley oil dock, downstream from Southampton, to discharge thediesel oil cargo. Later, at Southhampton the tank deck was unloaded and the LCT launched. Over the next few weeks, LST-57 visitedPlymouth , Falmouth, Dartmouth,Salcombe , andBrixham as planning for the invasion of the continent of Europe proceeded apace. On2 June , at Brixham, LST-57 took on board six tanks, several "Long Toms" (155-millimeter guns), and "...a handful of Army quartermasters and a reserve company of airborne infantry. It was a conglomeration," noted the tank landing ship's chronicler, "but the Army was careful in its loading and did not want to lose an LST full of one type of soldier." After bad weather forced the invasion force to postpone its scheduled departure on4 June , LST-57 started towardFrance the following day as part of a slow convoy. LST-57 discharged her initial cargo and passengers atUtah Beach in the American sector of theNormandy Beach head. Over the ensuing months, she visited all five of the Allied beaches: "Utah," "Omaha," "Juno Beach ," "Gold," and "Sword," delivering vital supplies and reinforcements from a variety of ports in southernEngland . After the Allied breakout atSt. Lo late in July, the ship also carried supplies to the beach atSt. Michael-en-Grieve on theBrittany Peninsula. After November, LST-57 transported men and equipment from England to the French ports ofCherbourg ,Rouen , andLe Havre and returned to England with Allied casualties and German prisoners of war. On16 April 1945 LST-57 stood out of Plymouth, England, on her way back to the United States. Steaming by way of ppHampton Roads, Virginia] , the tank landing ship reachedHouston, Texas in mid-May. She carried out substantial repairs at the Brown Shipbuilding Company at Houston before proceeding toGulfport, Mississippi to load cargo. Then, following a brief repair period atMobile, Alabama , LST-57 set sail for thePanama Canal on2 July . After transiting the canal, she departed the west coast ofPanama on13 July . The tank landing ship touched briefly atManzamllo, Mexico before heading out across thePacific Ocean . LST-57 arrived inPearl Harbor on2 August but resumed her voyage west on the 9th. While en route fromHawaii to theMarshall Islands , she received word of the Japanese capitulation. The tank landing ship arrived atEniwetok on21 August but tarried there only three days before getting underway on the 24th. She discharged cargo atGuam and then returned to sea on her way to thePhilippines . In September and October, LST-57 visitedLeyte andSan Fernando in the Philippines before setting out forJapan to support the postwar occupation. In November and December, she made a circuitous voyage fromHiro Wan , Japan, toSaipan andPeleliu , returning toTokyo on27 December 1945 . Decommissioned on24 January 1946 LST-57 was turned over to the Shipping Control Administrator, Japan (SCAJAP), for operation by a Japanese crew, under the designator Q-Q28. Returned to the Navy in November 1950, LST-57 was assigned to the Pacific Reserve Fleet atTacoma, Washington on9 November 1950 where she remained in reserve into the mid-1950s. Though named USS "Armstrong County" (LST-57) on1 July 1955 , she never performed any active service under that name. Her name was struck from theNaval Vessel Register on21 September 1955 and she was sunk as a target the following year.LST-57 was awarded one
battle star for her World War II service.ee also
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List of United States Navy LSTs References
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* cite web|title=LST-57 "Armstrong County" |work=Amphibious Photo Archive
url=http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/16/160057.htm|accessdate=2007-04-02
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