- USS Oak Hill (LSD-7)
USS "Oak Hill" (LSD-7) was an "Ashland"-class
dock landing ship of theUnited States Navy , named in honor of Oak Hill, theVirginia estate of PresidentJames Monroe (1758–1831)."Oak Hill", originally designated as a Mechanized Artillery Transport, APM-7, was laid down by the
Moore Dry Dock Co. ,Oakland, California ,9 March 1943 ; launched on25 June 1943 , sponsored by Mrs. Robert E. Garrels; and commissioned on5 January 1944 ,Commander Carl A. Peterson in command.World War II
Following shakedown and amphibious training off southern
California , "Oak Hill", designed to serve as a cargo and transport type amphibious ship and as a floatingdry dock , ferried cargo between the west coast andHawaii . In early May she engaged in rehearsals for Operation Forager, the thrust into the Marianas, and, at the end of the month, sailed west in Task Group 52.16 (TG 52.16). Withtank -bearing LCMs and troops of the 2nd Marine Division on board, she arrived in transport area offSaipan early on15 June . Her boats soon away and headed for the beachhead, the LSD took up repair duties, working on LCMs,LCVP s and LCTs until the 22nd. She then headed back toPearl Harbor to resume shuttling cargo and landing craft between Hawaii and the west coast.On
12 August , "Oak Hill", with tanks and soldiers of the 710th Tank Battalion embarked, headed west again. Following rehearsals for the Palau operation atGuadalcanal , she was offBabelthaup by15 September . There she feinted towardNamai Bay , then proceeded toAnguar , sent her tank laden LCTs in, and again repaired landing craft. Departing thePalau s on the 21st, she moved toUlithi , thence proceeded toNew Guinea arriving at Humboldt Bay on the 29th to prepare for the invasion of the Philippines.On
20 October "Oak Hill" stood off Leyte and launchedLTM s andLVT s carrying 1st Cavalry Division units toward White beach. For the next two months she carried reinforcements from New Guinea to Leyte and then, on Christmas Day, arrived atMorotai to prepare for the Lingayen Gulf offensive. Departing the 28th, she proceeded toSansapor , thence, on1 January 1945 , to thePhilippines . On the 9th she dispatched LCTs and LCVPs to theLuzon beachhead, then withdrew to Leyte to begin ferrying reinforcements from there, and from Morotai, to the assault area.Sailing to the Solomons on
2 February , "Oak Hill" rehearsed with units of the 1st Marine Division for her next operation, the Okinawa campaign. On1 April , she arrived in transport area Baker, lowered her LCMs for the assault on Blue Beach and then began repairing landing craft. Through the end of May, she remained in theHagushi area for repair duties. Then she transported Marines and tanks toIheya Shima and toAguni Shima before steaming back to Leyte,10 June .For the remainder of the war, "Oak Hill" transported men and equipment from the central Pacific to the Philippines and Okinawa. Post-war duties at
Jinsen ,Korea , andTsingtao ,China , occupied the remainder of her tour in the Far East. In February 1946 she got underway for the United States and on17 March 1947 she decommissioned and was berthed at San Diego as a unit of thePacific Reserve Fleet .1951 – 1965
After the outbreak of hostilities in Korea, "Oak Hill" recommissioned at San Diego
26 January 1951 . Assigned to the Pacific Fleet, she participated in operation "Blue Jay", inArctic waters, in the late summer months of 1951, and, between May and December 1952, took part inOperation Ivy — the atomic andhydrogen bomb tests in the Marshalls. Following that duty she was transferred to the Atlantic Fleet andhomeport ed at Norfolk.In January 1955 "Oak Hill" returned to San Diego and Pacific Fleet duty, departing for her first regular WestPac deployment
31 March . During her 1958 WestPac tour she suppliedNationalist Chinese offshore islands as they withstood shelling byChinese Communist guns. After 1965, her annual western Pacific deployments took her toSouth East Asia where she supported Naval operations in strife-tornSouth Viet Nam . Operating primarily in theDa Nang –Cam Ranh Bay areas, she performed assignments as far south as theMekong Delta and visited ports inThailand ,Taiwan , andJapan as well as in the Philippines."Oak Hill" was decommissioned on
26 October 1969 , and stricken from theNaval Vessel Register on31 October 1969 .She was sold for scrapping,15 April 1970 , to Marine Power and Equipment Co.,Seattle Washington ."Oak Hill" (LSD-7) earned five
battle star s forWorld War II service and six campaign stars forVietnam War service.References
External links
*cite web
url= http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/o1/oak_hill.htm
title= "Oak Hill"
first= | last=
date= | work= DANFS | publisher= U.S.Naval Historical Center
accessdate= 2008-03-26
*cite web
url= http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/12/1207.htm
title= APM-7 / LSD-7 "Oak Hill"
first= Gary P. | last= Priolo
date=10 August 2007 | work= Amphibious Photo Archive | publisher= NavSource Online
accessdate= 2008-03-26
*cite web
url= http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/amphib/lsd7.htm
title= "Oak Hill"
work= DANFS | publisher= Hazegray.org
accessdate= 2008-03-26
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