It is clear the Navy is always looking for better
ways of accomplishing its amphibious mission. Perhaps this
little tour will help to establish a perspective that
states loud and clear, "We've come a long way baby".
"All turned upon LST's" wrote Sir Winston Churchill in
Closing the Ring. Although over 1000 of these ships
were built between 1941 and 1945, the demand was never
satisfied. The major restriction on all Allied planning
during World War II was the shortage of specialized landing
craft. "All the great strategic combinations of the Western
Powers were restricted and distorted by the shortage of
tank landing craft for the transport of, not so much of
tanks, but of vehicles of all kinds. The letters LST are
burnt in upon the minds of all those who dealt with
military affairs during this period".
Initially conceived to carry tanks on
ocean passages and then to land them directly onto open
beaches, many LST's were adapted for other tasks.
By 1945 over one hundred had been converted or completed to
serve as hospital ships, repair ships, depot and base
ships, ammunition ships, stores ships, headquarters ships,
small aircraft carriers, fighter direction ships and
accommodation ships. They were used as impromptu fire
support ships with light guns ranged upon their decks to
lay down a curtain of fire while approaching beaches in the
South Pacific.
They sailed on every sea and fought in every theater and
though their construction received the highest priority
during the war, demand always exceeded supply. One can see
an element of despair in a letter to General Marshall in
1943 relating to problems in pursuing the Italian campaign.
"The whole of this difficult question only arises out of
the absurb shortage of LST's" wrote Churchill. From the
time that they were introduced into service during World
War II LST's continued to serve with distinction in every
armed conflict that the United States was involved in up to
and including Operation Desert Storm.
LST design started moving rapidly when the
suggestions for such a ship landed on the desk of John C.
Niedermair, civilian technical director for the preliminary
designs branch of the U.S. Navy's Bureau of Ships. It was
November 4th, 1941, and the United States was not yet at
war though ominious clouds hung on the horizon. The request
for a new type of landing ship was given to Niedermair by
his superior, Captain (later Admiral) Edward Cochraine,
then assistant head of the Design Division of the Bureau of
Ships. After studying the requirements for such a ship,
Niedermair, in a stunning display of creativity, worked out
the entire concept of an LST in about a half an hour on the
same day. His basic design became the pattern for all of
the 1051 LST's built during World War II and his concept
must be considered to be the true ancestor of other ocean
going amphibious ships of this type of later design.
Niedermair has since become known as the "Father of the
LST."
A PRE-KOREAN WAR LST
This was a 547 class vessal and represented minor changes
to the WW2 vessels. She was commissioned February
14,1945, and was named the San Joaquin County at about the
same time LST 1159 was named Tom Green County.
She operated in the central and western pacific from July
1955 until June 1969 and may have been involved in some
operations with LST 1159.
She was decommisioned September 26, 1969 and scrapped some
time later.
LST's of the United States Navy, though
conceived in 1941, with a few being commissioned in 1942,
were not to see combat until the middle of 1943, first in
the northern Solomon's in the Pacific and soon thereafter
during the invasion of Sicily in the Mediteranian. General
Dwight D. Eisenhower noted that 233 LST's were in readiness
for the spectacular invasion of Normandy. At least 160
LST's were included in the invasion of Leyte in the
Philippines and 60 more were on hand at bloody Iwo Jima.
More than 200 LST's were either at Okinawa or were en-route
there when the massive attack on the island was launched on
Easter Sunday 1945, and at least another 150 contributed to
the final victory there.
Though scoffed at by some, LST's were
tough, versitle little ships that served many functions,
but stood alone in one function that no other ship in the
world, of comparable capacity, could duplicate. Throughout
recorded history, other than when approaching a dock or
pier, mariners have been schooled in avoiding contact
between their ships and land. LST's were conceived,
designed, constructed and sailed to do just the opposite.
They could cross the deepest ocean then rush headlong into
land to offload their cargo where it was needed the most,
without benefit of dock, pier or harbor.
During an amphibious landing the objective was to get the
maximum men, equipment, and supplies on the beach in as
little time as possible. An invasion beach could look
pretty chaotic during the peak initial landing period.
Without LST's it
has been estimated that World War II would have lasted at
least another year, with casualities mounting every passing
day.
Naval Historian Samuel Eliot Morison wrote
about LST's, "They were literally what their crews called
them, Large, Slow, Target's." Morison called LST's "the
most useful all around craft invented by the Navy."
Four great groups of ships were built by
the United States, the first being the 1051 ships built
during World War II. The second phase of U.S. LST
construction began with the LST 1156 which was commissioned
in November of 1952 and was later named the USS Terrebonne
Parish. (The USS LST 1153 and the USS LST 1154, though
great ships, were built as experimential steam powered
ships and were not considered as a great group of
ships) Fifteen of the Terrebonne Parish class of ships were
built. LST 1159 - Tom Green County was one of this class of
ships. One of the major improvements of this class over the
World War II class was the mounting of four diesel engines
rather than the two mounted in the previous design. This
allowed a speed of about 15 knots, or about 50% higher than
the World War II version.
The third major group of American built
LST's was the DeSoto County class, of which seven were
built. This class had a higher degree of habitability for
the crew and embarked troops. They were considered the
ultimate design available with traditional LST bow doors,
and with a top speed of 17.5 knots. This class of LST was
the fastest LST in service prior to the arrival of the
Fourth Great Group of Ships: American Newport class in
1969.
Primary landing ships, resembling small aircraft carriers, designed to put troops on hostile shores. Features: Modern U.S. Navy amphibious assault ships are called upon to perform as primary landing ships for assault operations of Marine expeditionary units. These ships use Landing Craft Air
Cushion (LCAC), conventional landing craft and helicopters
to move Marine assault forces ashore.
In a secondary role, using
Harrier aircraft and anti-submarine warfare
helicopters, these ships perform sea control and limited
power projection missions.
The Wasp-class are the largest amphibious ships in the world. The lead ship, USS Wasp (LHD-1), was commissioned in July 1989.
Builders: Ingalls Shipbuilding,
Pascagoula, Miss.
Description: Air cushion craft for transporting,
ship-to-shore and across the beach, personnel, weapons,
equipment, and cargo of the assault elements of the Marine
Air-Ground Task Force.
Features: The landing
craft air cushion (LCAC) is a high-speed, over-the-beach
fully amphibious landing craft capable of carrying a 60-75
ton payload. It is used to transport weapons systems,
equipment, cargo and personnel from ship to shore and
across the beach. The advantages of air-cushion landing
craft are numerous. They can carry heavy payloads, such as
an M-1 tank, at high speeds. Their payload and speed mean
more forces reach the shore in a shorter time, with shorter
intervals between trips. The air cushion allows this
vehicle to reach more than 70 percent of the world's
coastline, while conventional landing craft can land at
only 15 percent of the coasts. Background:
Thirty-three air-cushion landing craft were authorized and
appropriated through FY86. An additional 15 were funded in
FY89, 12 more in FY90 and FY91. The remaining 24 were
funded in FY92. As of December 1995, 82 LCACs had been
delivered to the Navy.
Description: Amphibious Command ships provide command
and control for fleet commanders. Background:
Commissioned in 1970, these are the only ships to be
designed initially for an amphibious command ship role.
Earlier amphibious command ships lacked sufficient speed to
keep up with a 20-knot amphibious force. Subsequently,
both ships became fleet flagships.
General Characteristics, Blue Ridge
ClassBuilders:
Crew: 52 officers, 790 enlisted
The "Gator"Navy equipment keeps evolving, improving,
getting bigger, and more complex. The Officers and crew get
more demands put on them, require more training and develop
skills that crewmen in my time never even thought of. The
men and women of todays Navy provide us with ample reasons
to be proud of todays Navy and to continue to be proud of
having served in a great branch of the military.
Amphibious warships are uniquely designed to support
assault from the sea against defended positions ashore.
They must be able to sail in harm's way and provide a rapid
built-up of combat power ashore in the face of opposition.
The United States maintains the largest and most capable
amphibious force in the world. This is a brief tour of the
types of LSTs that preceeded the LST 1159 type and the LST
types that
came later, and were probably never seen while we were on
duty.

She carried a crew of about 110 and 6
Officers. Her length was 328
feet, beam 50 feet, draft 11'2" aft. Her speed was 12
knots. Her armament consisted of 8 40MMs and 12 20MMs. 


This was a Class 1156 vessel. Her displacement was 2,590
tons. Her Length 384 feet - Draft Aft 17 feet, Fwd. 6feet
3 inches and her Speed 15 knots. Her Armament consisted of
3 3inch/50s and 6 20MMs Her Crew consisted of 116 enlisted
men + 6 Officers
The two ships of this class, now
assigned to the Naval Reserve Forces, are the only of this
20-ship class of LSTs remaining in the fleet. The hull form necessary to attain the
20-knot speeds of contemporary amphibious squadrons would
not permit bow doors. Accordingly, these ships offload
cargo and vehicles by means of a 112-foot ramp over their
bow. A stern gate allows off-loading of amphibious
vehicles
directly into the water. 

Power Plant: Two boilers, two
geared steam turbines, two shafts, 70,000 total shaft
horsepower
Length: 820 feet (249.9
meters)
Beam: 106 feet (31.8
meters)
Displacement: 39,400 tons (40,032 metric
tons) full load
Speed: 24 knots (27.6 miles per
hour)
Aircraft: (Actual mix depends upon
mission)
Crew:
Ships
Company: 104 officers, 1,004 enlisted
Marine
Detachment: 1,894
Armament: Two NATOSea Sparrowlaunchers; three 20mm Phalanx
CIWS mounts; eight .50 cal. machine guns

Philadelphia Naval Shipyard
- LCC 19
Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. - LCC
20.
Power Plant: Two boilers, one geared turbine,
one shaft; 22,000 horsepower
Length overall: 634
feet (190 meters)
Beam extreme: 108 feet (32
meters)
Displacement: 18,874 tons (19,176.89
metric tons) full load
Speed: 23 knots (26.5
miles, 42.4 km, per hour)
Aircraft: All
helicopters ![]()
