< San Bernardino County LST-1110

San Bernardino County LST-1110

 

San Bernardino County

(LST-1110: dp. 1,625; 1. 328', b. 50'; dr. 14'1"; s. 11.6 k.; cpl. 133; trp. 147; a. 8 40mm., 12 20mm.; cl. LST-511)

LST- 1110 was laid down on 28 December 1944 by the Missouri Valley Bridge and Iron Co., Evansville ,Ind.; launched on 9 February 1945; sponsored by Mrs. Sidney Kolb; placed in reduced commission for transit to New Orleans on 1 March 1945, and commissioned in full on 7 March 1945, Lt. Alton S. Lee, USNR, in command.

Following shakedown off Florida, LST- 1110 loaded creosote, piles, asphalt, and an LCT and departed New Orleans for Pearl Harbor on 15 April. From Oahu, she carried her cargo on to the Marianas; offloaded the piles and asphalt at Guam, took on gasoline drums at Saipan, and, on 20 June, sailed for Okinawa. She offloaded her cargo onto the Hagushi beaches and embarked elements of the 6th Marines between 26 June and 10 July; then sailed back to Guam, where she discharged her passengers. Availability at Saipan followed, and, at the end of the month, she moved on to the Solomons to load cargo for the Philippines.

The war ended on 15 August, and, four days later LST-1110 departed Guadalcanal On the 30th, she anchored off Calicoan Island, P.I., and completed offloading by 11 September. The LST then shifted to San Pedro Bay, whence she proceeded to Lingayen Gulf to join Amphibious Group 8 to participate in the occupation of eastern Honshu.

Departing Luzon on 26 September, LST- 1110 disembarked elements of the 8th Field Artillery, 25th Division, I Army Corps, at Nagoya on 25 and 26 October; then got underway to return to Lingayen Gulf. In November, she transported Quartermaster Corps personnel to Sasebo thence sailed east. On the 27th, she arrived at Iwo Jima; embarked 20th Air Force personnel; and continued on to Saipan where she discharged her passengers on 5 December.

LST-1110 remained at Saipan through December and, on 8 January 1946, she sailed for Pearl Harbor and the California coast. Arriving at San Pedro on 11 February, she underwent overhaul at Long Beach

and, in June, proceeded to San Diego where she reported to ComPhibPac for duty. For the next two years, she provided amphibious training and logistic support services along the west coast. Then, in the summer of 1948, she commenced the first of many arctic logistic support missions. She departed Port Hueneme on 25 June; proceeded to San Francisco, whence she continued north, with LST-1146, to Seattle and Alaskan points. Later joined by the fee breaker Burton Island, she reached Nome on the 29th, and, on the 31st, moved on to other northern stations: Point Lay, Barter Island, Point Barrow. In mid-August, she began to move south again and arrived at Long Beach on the 28th. On 16 September, she returned to San Diego and resumed amphibious training and logistics operations along the California coast. For the next five years, she maintained a similar schedule, operating in the aretie during the summer and off California for the remainder of each year.

In the fall of 1953, LST-1110 was dispatched to Hawaii for winter training exercises. In February 1954, she returned to San Diego; and, in September, she sailed west again for her first peacetime deployment to the Far East. Departing San Diego on the 20th, she arrived at Yokosuka, Japan, on 22 October and began six months of cargo operations and training exercises in Japanese and Korean waters. On 12 April 1955, she departed Inchon for home and arrived at San Diego on the 28th.

At the end of June, LST-1110 resumed arctic resupply operations; and, on 1 July, while deployed, she was named San Bernardino County. She returned to southern California in October and remained there until February 1956, when she was transferred to Pearl Harbor. She arrived at her new home port on 2 March, conducted operations from there through May, but, in June, she again sailed north. Her reassignment to Pearl Harbor did not change her summer deployments; and, in that year and in 1957, she carried supplies to arctic bases.

On 13 September 1957, she completed her last Alaskan mission. On 31 December of that year, she was placed in commission, in reserve; and, on 15 August 1958, she was decommissioned for transfer to the Republic of China. The following day, the transfer was completed, and the LST was commissioned as Churg Chaing ( LST-225). San Bernardino County (LST1110) was struck from the Navy list on 6 February 1959.

LST-1110 received one battle star for World War II service.