| (add image here) |
| Career |
| Awarded: |
8 August 1960 |
| Laid Down: |
2 April 1962 |
| Launched: |
3 August 1963 |
| Commissioned: |
22 February 1964 |
| Homeport: |
Gaeta, Italy |
| Fate: |
on active service |
| General Characteristics |
| Displacement: |
9559 tons light, 13634 tons full, 4075 tons dead |
| Length: |
522 feet overall, 500 feet waterline |
| Beam: |
107 feet extreme, 84 feet waterline |
| Draft: |
22 feet maximum, 23 feet limit |
| Speed: |
23 knots |
| Complement: |
72 officers, 593 men |
| Armament: |
eight three-inch/50 caliber guns |
| Aircraft: |
six helicopters |
USS La Salle (LPD-3/AGF-3), built as a Raleigh-class amphibious transport dock, was the second ship of the
United States Navy to be named for the town and county in Illinois that was in turn named after Rene Robert Chevalier de La Salle, one of the most celebrated explorers and builders of
New France in the 17th
century.
Her keel was laid down by New York Naval Shipyard,
Brooklyn, New York, on 2 April 1962. She was launched on 3 August 1963 sponsored by Mrs. Victor M. Longstreet, and commissioned on 22 February 1964 with Captain Edward H. Winslow in command.
After shakedown and training in the Caribbean Sea and off Norfolk, Virginia, the amphibious transport dock departed Norfolk
9 October to participate in Operation Steel Pike
I, a complex training exercise involving over 80 ships and United States and Spanish troops. She closed the coast of Spain off Huelva on 26 October, and embarked Under-Secretary of
the Navy Paul B. Faye, Vice
Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Horacio Rivero, Commandant of the Marine Corps General Wallace N. Greene, and Chairman
of the House Armed Services Committee Congressman Mendel Rivers to watch the landing
operations.
The exercise completed 4 November, La Salle joined the Sixth Fleet
at Naples, Italy, for amphibious operations and joint NATO training. She returned to Norfolk 13 March
1963.
With Vice Admiral J. S. McCain, Jr., Commander Amphibious
Forces, Atlantic Fleet embarked, La Salle sailed 1 May for exercises in the
Caribbean, returning to Norfolk 1 June. Three weeks later she joined the Caribbean
Amphibious Ready Squadron, returning to home port 21 September to begin
training operations along the east coast and in the Caribbean.
Through the first half of 1966, La Salle continued operating off the east
coast. July and September were spent in Norfolk for upkeep and modifications, with further exercises following. On 3 November, she recovered a Gemini 2 test
space capsule near Ascension Island. This was returned to Cape Kennedy, Florida, and the rest of the year spent on local
operations in the Atlantic. La Salle entered the Norfolk Naval Shipyard on 9 January 1967 for repairs and remained there until 20 March.
The remainder of 1967 and the first three quarters of 1968 were spent conducting various exercises and port visits which ranged along the entire Atlantic and Gulf coasts
and into the Caribbean as well. On 2 November she put into Norfolk to prepare
for an extended deployment with the Sixth Fleet. Departing 13 November, she
steamed first to Morehead City, North
Carolina, and then began her voyage to the Mediterranean
Sea.
- Need information from 1969 to present.
La Salle was converted to a "miscellaneous command ship" and given the hull classification symbol AGF-3.
The ship was dubbed "The Great White Ghost of the Arabian Coast" after being painted white for a Middle East deployment in
1972.
In 1980 La Salle was relieved as command ship for Commander, U.S. Middle East
Force, by USS Coronado (AGF-11).
As of 2003, La Salle was the command ship of the US Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean.
See USS La Salle for other Navy ships of the same name.
External links
This article includes information collected from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.
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