- USS Warren (APA-53)
USS "Warren" (APA-53) was a "Sumter"-class
attack transport that served with theUS Navy duringWorld War II ."Jean Lafitte" - named for the legendary pirate of
Barataria, Louisiana , who assisted GeneralAndrew Jackson in defendingNew Orleans against the British in 1815 - was a C2-S-E1-typemerchant ship laid down under aMaritime Commission contract (MC hull 415) on19 April 1942 atChickasaw, Alabama , by theGulf Shipbuilding Corporation . She was launched on7 September 1942 ; renamed "Warren" and classified a transport, AP-98; redesignated as an attack transport, APA-53, on1 February 1943 ; and placed in commission, in ordinary, on19 February 1943 .Taken to the
Key Highway plant of theBethlehem Steel Corporation soon thereafter, the ship was decommissioned on10 March 1943 ; and was recommissioned on2 August 1943 , CDR William A. McHale, USNR, in command.World War II
"Warren" soon sailed south to the
Norfolk Navy Yard , where the work converting her to an attack transport was completed and she was fitted out for service. She next conducted her shakedown and type training in the waters ofChesapeake Bay . In intensive exercises, the ship practiced the amphibious tactics and techniques that she would soon be putting into practice.On
1 November 1943 , "Warren" departedHampton Roads and headed forPanama , reaching the Canal Zone on the 5th after a brief stop atGuantanamo Bay ,Cuba , en route. Following her transit of thePanama Canal , "Warren" pushed on forSan Diego and reached thatCalifornia port on 17 November. The ship subsequently underwent repairs and adrydock ing atLong Beach before she returned to San Diego for more amphibious training. From26 November 1943 to13 January 1944 , "Warren" landed troops of the 4th Marine Division in practice assaults atAliso Canyon andSan Clemente Island .Invasion of Kwajalein
On the latter day, Friday
13 January 1944 , "Warren" sailed for theCentral Pacific with men of the 1st Battalion, 25th Marine Regiment, 4th Marine Division, embarked. Steaming via theHawaiian Islands , the attack transport arrived off the northern islets ofKwajalein Atoll in the Marshalls at dawn on 31 January.The marines embarked in "Warren" were assigned the task of taking two small islands in the
atoll , nicknamed "Ivan" and "Jacob." Those isles lay to the south of Roi and amur, two heavily fortified areas of the atoll. Her marines were to secure both a guarded passage into thelagoon andartillery bases from which to soften up the defenses on the main islands,Roi andNamur , in support of the landings slated to take place the following day. The initial men ashore encountered minor opposition, and the casualties sustained were very light."Warren" eased into the lagoon on 1 February and continued the process of discharging
munitions and cargo for her troops ashore. After a channel had been blasted through thecoral , the attack transport's beach party supervised the arrival of supplies on "Ivan." "Warren" herself remained in the lagoon with other ships from her division for the next five days. "Warren" departed Kwajalein on 4 February, leaving the island still smoking "and reeking with the stench of unburied dead." As the ship's commanding officer later wrote, "we knew now the horror of war."Sailing southward, the attack transport reached
Funafuti in theEllice Islands on 9 February, before she continued onward, arriving atNoumea, New Caledonia , on 19 February. She ultimately weighed anchor from New Caledonian waters on 7 March and got underway forGuadalcanal - the scene of once-bitter fighting. She arrived offLunga Point on the morning of the 10th and spent the majority of her days over the next three months in the Guadalcanal-Tulagi area. The only exceptions were trips to Kwajalein to pick up marines from the 22nd Marine Regiment and toCape Gloucester --where she landed the troops from elements of the Army's 40th Infantry Division and returned to the Russells with men of the 1st Marine Division embarked.Invasion of Guam
At the end of May, "Warren" completed the loading of the men of the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, and headed north in convoy--her objective
Guam , where she was to debark the marines after their comrades had landed atSaipan in the Marianas.However, because of the fierceness of the Japanese resistance on Saipan, "Warren" 's mission was aborted; and she therefore spent over a week cruising off that island, standing by with her marines forming a reserve force. Ultimately, however, "Warren"'s
leatherneck s were not needed, and the ship returned toEniwetok , to commence a three-week stay in the Marshall Islands."Warren" finally received the nod to go into action once more, and she accordingly sailed for Guam, sending boatloads of marines from the 3rd Marine Division ashore on 20 July. Over the ensuing five days, "Warren" remained off the bitterly contested beaches, her beach party lying pinned-down in their
foxhole s ashore. "So perilous was the position on the "Warren" beach - the left flank of the assault", wrote "Warren" 's commanding officer, "that supplies could not be landed there." Time and time again, "Warren"'s hospital corpsmen exposed themselves to enemy fire evacuating wounded marines and the ship's boat crews went to the reef's edge to pick up the precious cargo of human lives beneath the enemy's mortar fire.Invasion of Peleliu
After departing Guam on 25 July, "Warren" evacuated marine casualties to Espiritu Santo. She then shifted to the
Russell Islands in the Solomons, where she embarked men of the 1st Battalion, 1st Regiment, 1st Marine Brigade - combat veterans of the Guadalcanal campaign. The attack transport then took those combat-hardened marines to the island ofPeleliu in thePalau s. Despite the carrier-based air strikes and intense bombardment which preceded the initial landings of 15 September, the marines who went ashore that day still met fierce resistance from the Japanese defenders. The enemy, firmly entrenched in caves and tunnels that honeycombed the hills overlooking the beach and the strategic airfield, proved difficult to dislodge.Again, "Warren"'s beach party worked to keep the supplies flowing from the ship to shore where they were needed, providing the necessary supplies and ammunition for the hard-pressed marines. Meanwhile, as the casualties began coming back to the ship, the attack transport's medical department worked diligently to save the wounded. Among the first ships to discharge her cargo, "Warren" remained offshore in the ensuing days, becoming a floating hospital, as doctors and corpsmen worked to sustain lives of men evacuated from "the flaming hell of Peleliu."
The routine remained almost the same during the days and nights that "Warren" lay off the beachhead. Each night there would be more burials at sea while the crew waited at battle stations for what became almost a regular visit by snooping Japanese planes. It was not until 22 September that "Warren" departed Pelelieu, bound for
New Guinea .Invasion of Leyte
She arrived at
Hollandia on 25 September and stayed there until 15 October, when she embarked the men and equipment of the Army's 52nd Field Artillery, 24th Division Artillery, 24th Infantry Division. As part of TG 78.6, she subsequently sailed for thePhilippine Islands , as GeneralDouglas MacArthur made good his pledge to return - this time well-backed by ships, men, and planes - to the islands from which he had been so unceremoniously ejected in 1942.On 22 October - two days after the initial landings on
Leyte commenced - "Warren" discharged her cargo and disembarked her troops before pulling out of the area that evening. "Warren" returned to Leyte on 14 November, this time with sixRed Cross nurses as passengers in addition to the Army 1st Battalion, 127th Regiment, 32nd Infantry Division. The attack transport's commanding officer later recounted: "We all recalled that old superstition of the sea--'women on board ship bring bad luck'--when a Japtorpedo plane came close to hitting us with its deadly charge the afternoon before we sailed intoLeyte Gulf ." "Warren" relied on more than luck to enable her to escape damage--it was the straight-shooting of the after convert|5|in|mm|sing=on gun that did the trick.The enemy aircraft, a torpedo-carrying "Jill", bore in at the attack transport while flak blossomed about it. Only at the last instant a 5-inch shell blew the right wing off the "Jill", sending the plane sliding past "Warren"'s fantail and into the sea. Later that day, the attack transport witnessed other air attacks in her vicinity and watched while an Army Air ForceLockheed P-38 Lightning darted daringly through the flak to explode a Japanesefighter in mid-air with a burst from her machine guns.Leyte was still a hot target, so "Warren"'s unloading was efficient and rapid, discharging her cargo within a few hours and getting underway that evening and then slipping away in the darkness, bound for New Guinea. After stopping at Manus, in the Admiralties, and
Oro Bay , "Warren" reachedMilne Bay , New Guinea, on 27 November. The attack transport remained at Milne Bay through Christmas Day.Invasion of Luzon
Underway on
26 December 1944 , "Warren" picked up her convoy at Manus and then set out for Leyte again on2 January 1945 . Nine days later, she reachedLingayen Gulf offLuzon where the ship lost the first members of her crew to enemy action.The first boat to leave the ship during the landings carried half of "Warren"'s beach party, along with several members of the Army shore party embarked. Due to the heavy smoke screen and a faulty boat compass, the landing craft landed on a Japanese held beach near the town of
Damortis . It was a fatal mistake. Before it could get underway, the boat came under artillery, mortar, and machine gun fire, wrecking the vessel, killing several men, and wounding others. The remaining men abandoned the craft and began to swim away from the beach, but the Japanese automatic weapons opened up on them as they struggled to get out of range. Only 17 men out of 28 survived the deadly hail of fire. It was two hours before the survivors - many of them badly wounded - were picked up.By their firing on "Warren"'s boat, the Japanese gave away positions that pre-attack bombardments and bombings had not reached. Accordingly,
destroyer USS|Russell|DD-414 and two fast transports moved in close and joined Army heavy artillery in bombarding the area until all opposition was silenced completely."Friendly fire" casualties
On the 13th, a Japanese plane came out of the clouds off the ship's port bow, apparently intent on crashing into "Warren".
Antiaircraft fire reached up and blossomed in the sky around the intruder. While still several hundred yards away from the attack transport, the plane leveled off, swooped directly over "Warren" and headed for attack transport USS|Zeilin|APA-3.As "Warren"'s men watched, horror-stricken, the drama unfolded before their eyes, as the
kamikaze plunged headlong into "Zeilin". "Warren" herself was raked by machine gun fire from a "friendly" ship. Shells coming from the port quarter pounded the attack transport's port side. One man of her boat group, manning a gun in the cockpit in one of the ship'slanding craft , was killed outright. On theflying bridge alone, there were 22 casualties."Warren" completed her unloading on 15 January and returned. Ultimately, the attack transport completed one last voyage carrying troops, landing the men of the 1st Battalion, 163rd Regiment, 41st Infantry Division, at
Mindoro in the Philippines, after lifting them fromBiak Island , New Guinea. Later discharging all surplus supplies and all but two of her landing craft, "Warren" steamed eastward via Eniwetok and stopped at Pearl Harbor on 18 March before heading on toward the west coast of theUnited States on 20 March.Transport mission to Okinawa
Reaching
Portland, Oregon , on the 27th, "Warren" underwent an overhaul there, lasting into June 1945. Subsequently shifting to San Diego and then toSan Francisco , the attack transport departed the west coast on 24 June, bound for the Marshalls, and arrived at Eniwetok on 6 July. From there, she sailed viaUlithi toOkinawa and arrived off that island on 23 July. Over the next few days, "Warren" unloaded the men and material of the 66th Construction Battalion ("Seabees"), undergoing nearly constant air raid alerts as the enemy maintained its pressure on the invading Americans.From 1 to 3 August, "Warren" steamed in circles off Okinawa, riding on the outer edge of a typhoon, and sailed for Ulithi on the 6th. Arriving at her destination soon thereafter, "Warren" lay at anchor in Ulithi lagoon when the word of Japan's capitulation was received.
After hostilities
"Warren" put into Cebu harbor to load units of the Army's Americal Division; but, before she embarked those troops, her orders were changed. Instead, she was to proceed to Manila. There, she embarked the troops of the Army's 43rd Division and headed for
Tokyo Bay , reaching that body of water on 13 September, less than two weeks after the formal surrender ceremony on board thebattleship USS|Missouri|BB-63.The attack transport subsequently sailed for Okinawa, where she embarked men of the 1st Battalion, 5th Regiment, 1st Marine Division, and their equipment. She sailed from Okinawan waters on 29 September and reached the mouth of the
Taku River - the approaches to the city ofTientsin ,China - on 2 October. She thus completed the second of her occupation tasks, disembarking the marines over the ensuing days."Warren" departed
Taku Bar on 11 October and reached Manila a few days later. She then left Philippine waters for a three-day voyage across theSouth China Sea to theGulf of Tonkin . ReachingHaiphong on 26 October, "Warren" embarked 1,800 troops of the Chinese 52nd Army before she departed that port, bound forManchuria .However, because of unsettled conditions between
Chinese Communist andNationalist forces in Manchuria - a part of the brewing civil war that would reach its climax in the expulsion of the Nationalists from mainland China toFormosa in 1949 - "Warren" sailed instead toChinwangtao , China, the seaport at the base of the Great Wall. There, she debarked her passengers on 7 November. Two days later, "Warren" dropped down the coast for her second visit to Taku and Tientsin.Operation Magic Carpet
On 16 November, "Warren" sailed for Manila and participation in the mass movement of men back to the continental United States,
Operation Magic Carpet . After lifting a contingent ofseabees to Guam at the end of November, "Warren" streamed a "homeward bound" pennant on 1 December and set her course for the California coast.Decommission
Reaching San Francisco on 17 December, "Warren" remained at that west coast port until
14 January 1946 , when she got underway for New Orleans. Transiting the Panama Canal soon thereafter, "Warren" pushed on to the coast of theGulf of Mexico . Decommissioned on14 March 1946 , "Warren" was struck from the Navy list on17 April 1946 and turned over to theWar Shipping Administration on 1 August of the same year atMobile, Alabama .Decorations
"Warren" received four
battle star s for World War II service.Commercial service
Subsequently acquired by the
Waterman Steamship Corporation , the ship apparently kept her original name "Jean Lafitte", for only a short time. Renamed "Arizpa" in 1947, the former attack transport was converted for merchant service and operated under the Waterman house flag until 1966, when she appeared on contemporary merchant vessels registers as operating with Litton Industries Leasing Corp. ofWilmington, Delaware ."Arizpa" operated with Litton until 1976, when she was transferred to the Reynolds Leading Corp., also of Wilmington. At some stage she was converted into a container vessel for Sea-Land Service. She was reportedly scrapped at
Brownsville, Texas in September 1977.References
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/amphib/apa53.txt USS "Warren" (APA-53)] , DANFS Online.
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/03/03053.htm APA-53 "Warren"] , Navsource Online.
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