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U.S.S. NAVARRO
(APA-215)THE HAPPY NAV
Click to view crew list
USS NAVARRO (APA-215 ) - a Haskell-class attack transport
In Commission 1944 to 1949APA-215 Deployments - Major Events
Add a APA-215 Shellback Initiation | Add a APA-215 Deployment - Major Event | ||||
Month | Year | to | Month | Year | Deployment / Event |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
JUN | 1944 | - | Keel Date: 27 JUN 1944 at Permanente Metals | ||
OCT | 1944 | - | Launch Date: 3 OCT 1944 | ||
NOV | 1944 | - | Commissioned: 15 NOV 1944 | ||
FEB | 1945 | - | Shellback Initiation - 5 FEB 1945 - Pacific Ocean | ||
NOV | 1956 | - | Shellback Initiation - 11 NOV 1956 - Pacific Ocean | ||
APR | 1958 | - | JAN | 1962 | West Pac |
JAN | 1962 | - | SEP | 1962 | West Pac Deployment Landed 1/4 Marines at Bankok Thailand |
MAR | 1963 | - | MAY | 1963 | Project SHAD Autumn Gold & Eager Belle 2 Classified Ops. |
SEP | 1963 | - | MAY | 1964 | West Pac |
JAN | 1964 | - | JAN | 1966 | West Pac |
APR | 1965 | - | Shellback Initiation - 20 APR 1965 - Pacific Ocean | ||
APR | 1965 | - | MAR | 1966 | West Pac-Viet Nam |
APR | 1965 | - | Shellback Initiation - 20 APR 1965 - Pacific Ocean | ||
MAY | 1965 | - | JUN | 1965 | West Pac |
NOV | 1965 | - | MAR | 1966 | West Pac-Viet Nam |
JAN | 1966 | - | JAN | 1967 | West Pac-Viet Nam |
JUN | 1966 | - | OCT | 1967 | West Pac-Viet Nam |
OCT | 1967 | - | MAY | 1968 | West Pac-Viet Nam |
JAN | 1969 | - | Decommissioned: 1 JAN 1969 | ||
JAN | 1969 | - | MAR | 1969 | West Pac-Viet Nam |
NOV | 1969 | - | NOV | 1969 | Decommisioning |
APA-215 General Specifications
Class: Haskell-class attack transport
Named for: Navarro County
Displacement: 7047 tons
Length: 455 feet
Beam: 62 feet
Draft: 24 feet
Final Disposition: Unknown
USS NAVARRO (APA-215)
Navarro
(APA-215) was laid down 27 June 1944 as MCV hull 563 and
launched by Permanente Metals Corp., Richmond, California, 3 October 1944;
sponsored by Mrs. Anne Jones; and commissioned 15 November, Comdr. F. E.
Angrick in command.
After commissioning Navarro moved to the Naval Supply Depot, San Francisco to take on
stores. Then, in a series of moves about San Francisco Bay, the ship took on
ammunition and degaussed. She commenced shakedown 1 December with a twelve day
cruise to San Pedro, and 16 December she commenced a week of amphibious
training at San Diego.
Navarro
got underway New Year's Day, 1945 for Seattle, Washington to
embark troops and equipment for transport to the South Pacific. She departed
Seattle 12 January, called at the Hawaiian Islands 20 January, reached
Guadalcanal 10 February, where she offloaded cargo and troops, and then moved
to Sunlight Channel, Russell Islands. At the Russells Navarro participated in an intensive rehearsal for the invasion of
Okinawa.
Navarro
arrived off Okinawa Easter Sunday, 1945, the morning that
U.S. Forces invaded the island. The next two days were spent offloading troops
and cargo, accomplished in record time. So effective was screening and air
cover that, despite several air alerts, Navarro's
gunners fired on hostile air contacts but three times.
After six days in the area, Navarro steamed for Guam. The morning of
12 April she departed for the United States, via Pearl Harbor, arriving San
Francisco 30 May; then transported troops and equipment to Seattle. She
departed Seattle 21 June for Ulithi via Eniwetok, but continued on to Okinawa
where she commenced offloading 24 July, amidst frequent calls to General
Quarters.
Navarro
then steamed to Ulithi, and was anchored in that lagoon when
the Japanese surrendered. She had been scheduled to return to the United
States, but was hurredly rerouted to the Philippines and arrived Leyte 23
August. A few days later she steamed for Yokohama, carrying occupation troops
for the Yokohama district.
Navarro
next participated in Magic Carpet, returning American
troops home. She decommissioned 15 March 1946 and went into reserve at
Stockton, California, where she remained until the Korean crisis generated the
requirement for a rapid expansion of forces.
Recommissioned 2 December 1950, Captain
R. E. Westbrook in command, Navarro transited
the Panama Canal to join the Amphibious Force, Atlantic Fleet. During the next
four years she operated out of Norfolk, Virginia, participating in both
Mediterranean and Caribbean deployments.
Since her return to the Pacific Fleet in
1955, Navarro has made periodic deployments
to the Western Pacific. Her 1956 WESTPAC cruise was marked by amphibious
demonstrations held for the Korean Marines and Midshipmen at Chinhae, Korea.
During the summer of 1958 Navarro provided
services for a series of atomic tests at Eniwetok. In 1960 she landed 1200 U.S.
Marines on Formosan beaches while participating in a mock amphibious invasion.
The Laotian situation entailed changes of
embarkation plans for the 1st Battalion, 4th Marines while Navarro was in Hawaii. Originally intended
for a practice assault on California beaches, the marines were instead carried
under sealed orders to Okinawa.
After participating in large scale
amphibious demonstrations for the President in January 1962, Navarro deployed to the Western Pacific
22 January for a seven month tour with the 7th Fleet. When a further
deterioration of the Laotian situation seemed imminent, the President ordered a
task force to move toward Indochina 12 May. Navarro
carried a portion of the 1,800 embarked marines of this force. When Valley Forge, Navarro, and Point Defiance arrived in the Gulf of
Siam, they were directed to off-load their 1,800 man Battalion Landing Team by
helicopter from the Gulf to Bangkok, Thailand. This force bolstered the Thai
defense against possible attack by Laotian Communists. Navarro departed Okinawa 11 August and arrived Long Beach 25 August
for upkeep and operational readiness training.
Upon return from her 1964 Western Pacific
deployment, Navarro underwent a Fleet
Rehabilitation and Modernization overhaul at Pacific Ship Repair Shipyard, San
Francisco. Upon completion she participated in exercise Silver Lance 25
February-9 March 1965 off the southern California coast, and 27 April she
departed on another WESTPAC deployment.
From 27 January through 16 February 1966 Navarro formed part of a special task
unit which provided boating and support for the combat landing of 1,200 marines
in Southern Quang Ngai Province, Republic of Vietnam, in Operation Double
Eagle. Over a dozen ships and 5,000 marines combined to mark Double Eagle as
the largest amphibious operation up to that time since the Korean War.
Navarro
returned to Long Beach 16 March after 10 months and 27 days
as part of the Amphibious Assault Forces of the 7th Fleet operating off
Vietnam. For service in support of military operations in Vietnam during the
period 1 January through 23 March 1968 Navarro
received the Secretary of the Navy, Meritorious Unit Commendation.
She rescued forty-three seamen from the
stranded British merchant ship Habib Marikar,
when it grounded on a reef in the South China Sea during a typhoon. In
November 1967, Navarro's salvage
efforts contributed directly to the salvage of Clarke County (LST-601), damaged and stranded on the coast of
Vietnam. Navarro's officers and men
carried out this salvage operation within range of enemy small arms and
artillery.
Navarro
continued to maintain a high state of readiness and has
provided amphibious expertise through both her west coast training operations
and her deployments to the Western Pacific. Reclassified LPA-215 on 1 January
1969, she was decommissioned at San Diego. On 20 August 1970, she was
transferred to the Maritime Administration and placed in the National Defense
Reserve Fleet at Suisun Bay, Calif.
Navarro
received one battle star for World War II service.
[Note: The above USS NAVARRO (APA-215) history may, or may not, contain text provided by crew members of the USS NAVARRO (APA-215), or by other non-crew members, and text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]