The Marvelous Maverick, The Saga of LST 325

 

THIS BOOK IS A GREAT STORY OF THE SHIP FROM HER BEGINNING THRU HER RESCUE FROM THE GREEK GOVERNMENT

Calling All Amphibious Sailors, Read about this Famous LST 325! She was Resurrected from a salvage yard in Greece by a Crew of "Old Timers" (Avg Age 73!), There are many pictures of LST Landings in this book. You can order this book directly from the publisher: Tablet 2, PO Box 874, Wichita, KS 67201. Call toll free: l-866-822-5384, or Email: corbettvgc@aol.com, Also available at Amazon.com/Advantage, Barnes & Noble and Watermark Books

LST 325 IN BOSTON FOR FATHERS' DAY 2005

This Photo was Provided by an old shipmate of mine who served aboard DD869 when I was aboard her. He recently visited the LST325 in Boston on Fathers' Day 2005 and snapped this photo. She really looks Great!! Brings back a lot of Memories!


USS LST-325 is a decommissioned tank landing ship of the United States Navy, now docked in Evansville, Indiana. Like many of her class, she was not named and is properly referred to by her hull designation (LSTs in service after 1955 were named after U.S. counties and parishes).
LST-325 was launched on October 27, 1942, from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The ship operated in the North Africa area and participated in the invasions at Gela, Sicily and Salerno, Italy. On June 6, 1944, LST-325 became part of the largest armada in history by participating in the D-Day invasion at Omaha Beach. It carried   men on that first trip. On its first trip back to England from France, 325 hauled 38 casualties back to a friendly port. Over the next nine months, Navy records show LST-325 made more than 40 trips back and forth across the English Channel, carrying thousands of men and pieces of equipment that troops needed to successfully complete the liberation of Europe. The ship continued to run supply trips between England and France before returning to the United States in March 1945.
LST-325 was decommissioned in 1946 and sent to Greece on September 1, 1964, as part of the grant-in-aid program. The USS LST Memorial, Inc.,
a group of retired military men, acquired the LST 325 in 2000. They paid their way to Greece, made the necessary repairs to the ship and sailed it back
to the United States, arriving in Mobile Harbor on January 10, 2001. In 2003, LST-325 made a sentimental journey up the Mississippi and Ohio rivers.
The 10-day stop in Evansville, Indiana, allowed more than 35,000 people to take a tour. In May and June of 2005, she sailed up the east coast under her
own power for a 60-day tour of several ports, visiting Alexandria, Virginia, and Buzzard's Bay, Boston, Gloucester, Massachusetts. LST-325 is the last navigable
LST in operation in the U.S. She is undergoing constant maintenance and restoration, and is in tip-top shape, according to her crew. On October 1, 2005 Evansville,
Indiana, became her home port (although this ship still visits other ports each year).
Career 
Laid down: August 10, 1942
Launched: October 27, 1942
In service: February 1, 1943
Decommissioned: July 2, 1946
Fate: Docked, Evansville, Indiana
Struck: September 1, 1961
General Characteristics
Displacement: 1,625 t.(lt), 4,080 t.(fl) (sea-going draft w/1675 ton load)
Length: 328 feet
Beam: 50 feet
Draft: (light) - 2' 4" fwd, 7' 6" aft
(sea-going) 8' 3" fwd, 14' 1" aft
(landing) 3' 11" fwd, 9' 10" aft (landing w/500 ton load)
 
Propulsion: Two General Motors 12-567, 900hp diesel engines, two shafts, twin rudders
Speed: 12 kts (maximum)
Range: 24,000 miles @ 9 kts.
Complement: 7 officers (104 enlisted)
Armament: 2 - Twin 40MM gun mounts
4 - Single 40MM gun mounts 12 single 20MM gun mounts
 
Boats: 2



NOW HEAR THIS!! She is still sailing the East Coast this summer, and I will attempt to keep you posted about her whereabouts on this page! What a Moving Monument she is to our "GATOR NAVY"



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