- USS Monroe County (LST-1038)
The USS "Monroe County" (LST-1038) was a sclass|LST-542|tank landing ship built for the
United States Navy duringWorld War II . Named after counties in seventeen U.S. States, she was the only U.S. Naval vessel to bear the name.Originally laid down as LST-1038 on
29 October 1944 by the Dravo Corporation ofPittsburgh, Pennsylvania ; launched6 January 1945 ; sponsored by Mrs. Elwood Printz; and commissioned atNew Orleans 5 February 1945 with Lieutenant Julius Wood in command. Following shakedown exercises along theFlorida gulf coast, LST-1038 returned to New Orleans for availability then steamed toGulfport, Mississippi andMobile, Alabama , taking on side-carry pontoons at the former and cargo ammunition at the latter. Loaded by15 March , she departed for thePanama Canal en route to the westernPacific . Steaming independently, she arrived atUlithi 4 May , departing again on the 8th with convoy UOL 11, then headed west to the embattledRyukyus . On16 May she sightedKerama Retto and, after reporting to CTG 31.15, commenced supplying ammunition to fleet units as necessary, primarily DDs and DMSs. The constant threat ofJapan ese air attack kept the crew alert at all times, bringing them to general quarters at least once every day for the next month. On10 June she shifted her operating area toNakagusuku Wan ,Okinawa where she carried out similar ammunition supply ship missions for CTG 31.19 until the end of the month. She then got underway forLeyte , arriving6 July to begin availability. Two days after the formalJapanese surrender inTokyo Bay ,2 September , LST-1038 clearedSubic Bay en route toLuzon where she took on personnel attached to headquarters, XI Army, for transportation toWakayama ,Honshū for occupation duty. Disembarking her passengers on the 25th, she returned to thePhilippines to take on further occupation troops. During the next 2 months she completed two more troop lifts, one from the Philippines, the other fromOkinawa . On27 December she sailed forSaipan , thence steamed toTinian where she took on cargo forGuam . Arriving there10 January 1946 she sailed again,2 February , heading for theRussells for temporary duty under ComMarianas in connection with rollup of ocean bases in that area. Detached from the Pacific Fleet in the spring, LST-1088 headed back toward the Panama Canal and duty on theAtlantic coast. In May she reported to the 3rd Naval District and for the next 3 years served as a training vessel for naval reservists in theNew York area. In 1949 she was ordered south for inactivation. Decommissioning in June, she entered the Atlantic Reserve Fleet, berthing atGreen Cove Springs, Florida . Renamed USS "Monroe County" (LST-1038)1 July 1955 , she remained in Florida until 1958, when she was struck from theNaval Vessel Register on1 November 1958 . Her final fate is unknown. LST-1038 received onebattle star for her World War II service.References
*
* cite web|title=LST-1038 "Monroe County"|work=Amphibious Photo Archive
url=http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/16/161038.htm|accessdate=August 17|accessyear=2007ee also
*
List of United States Navy LSTs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.