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Interviews with Crew Members - Past and Present

Susie Bloom, a valuable supporter of the LST 325 and of those who are associated with the ship, has embarked on this project of interviewing members and volunteers, past and present. She has always been interested in knowing the stories behind the involvement of the volunteers and members.

"We come from many varied backgrounds, from all over the United States. The reasons for becoming involved with the Ship Memorial are numerous. Each one of you are valued. In an effort to interest and inspire new members, we hope to share some of the experiences and stories with you."

Susie can be reached at Seabat with comments or, to request an interview form.


Click here for a special interview with WWII veteran, James Edwards


Crew Member Interviews



Name: Perry Ballinger

City/State: Massillon, Ohio

Hometown: Same

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

Navy Military Affiliate Radio Service (MARS) members were made aware of the ship’s return voyage and that it had been assigned a Navy callsign. I began listening on the radio channels for the ship. Followed it’s journey into Mobile with the TV coverage of the event. After that it was “back to normal” until the 2003 “Heartland” river trip when one of the radio operators, Rene Stiegler, had to leave the ship in Vicksburg, MS and go back to work. Being a Navy communicator I was asked, through the Navy MARS coordinator, if I could join the ship to replace him. I was able to arrange for about 5 weeks time away from home and did go aboard during the Mississippi and Ohio River time period.

It was then I noticed that not much of the replacement WW2 radio equipment functioned and I started a program of repair and restoration. This continued in 2004 with a number of visits to Mobile (18 hour drive) and also in Bender’s shipyard and the Shake-down cruise.

2005 saw more trips to Mobile, crewing the ship during the Atlantic Cruise, and also the upriver trip to Evansville in October. By this time all of the non-operational equipment had been restored to operation and used during these trips. Had the pleasure of doing additional work on signal lights, all antenna replacements (after the new mast was installed), plus alarm and sound powered telephone circuits.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

Served in the Navy from 1958-1961 aboard two Destroyers (2nd Fleet and 6th Fleet) as Electronics Technician 2nd Class. Saw service in Meditteranean, Arctic Circle, Atlantic, St. Lawrence River, Caribbean. Two homeports: Newport, RI and Mayport, FL. My uncle (Army National Guard) was transported aboard LSTs in Korea during 1951-1953. Joined Navy Reserves after college time (1965) and later on had ten more years of Navy duty as Electronics-Communications Chief (ETCS) at a Naval detachment at Camp Perry, Ohio (Lake Erie) through the auspices of the Ohio National Guard.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Yes, continuously. Electronics and Radio maintenance and new installations; Telephone and PA system repairs; Salvage visit to USS Des Moines (Philadelphia) for acquisition of WW2 period items for the LST. And even some painting!

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

Yes. 2003 River trip, 2004 Shakedown, 2005 Atlantic Trip, Evansville transit, 2006 Louisville trip and Cincinnati Tall Stacks visit. Duty stations: Radio operator (ship communications, USCG daily reports, crew health/welfare [High seas telephone calls and emails]); Quarterdeck watches; Low Bridge antenna/mast takedown/pull-up crew (river trips); Locking crew (river) and line handler. Also tour-guide duty in tour stop cities. Also ancillary duty as chaplain for memorial and religious services.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

One-on-one, mainly. Have interested many but most have time availability issues.

To groups: Have presented LST program to local groups in my area, mainly for their ‘entertainment’ time.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

The tremendous satisfaction of working/crewing an active Navy Memorial Ship, a opposed to a ‘static’ display. This includes seeing the happy faces of visitors during tours. Additionally, working with all the wonderful crew members, located nationally and Evansville, has been a real joy. Although I am active with my former Destroyer ship reunions, being able to work and visit with the LST crew and workers is far more satisfying. I am definitely a converted “gator sailor!”

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Atlantic Cruise: High Seas, Terrific Star Shows (that I had not seen in years!), pitching and rolling (Cape Hatteras area), being able to serve the crew with “health & welfare” calls and emails; enabling thousands of radio operators (Amateur radio & Navy radio) to talk to the ship over the radio circuits.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

To continue to restore and enhance the WW2 atmosphere of the radio room, and to train future operators/maintainers to perpetuate this art and science. Also to bring a USN jeep for display, use, and eventually donate.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

Watching the comedy among crew during the Cape Hatteras transit: walking with arms and elbows out, spilling coffee, pencils and paper falling, thankfully all without personal injury. Also enjoyed racing with the porpoise schools in the Atlantic.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Rebuilding and use of the big TDE transmitter in radio room and retrieval of the high-power TCK transmitter from USS DesMoines for installation on the LST

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

As I jokingly tell friends, it’s experiencing my “second childhood.” In reality, other than pastoral work, being able to help present to the public an active symbol of the concept of “bringing AND KEEPING the Peace” to a great nation is extremely satisfying. I view both as bringing GOOD to all mankind.


Name: Jeff Kurtz

City/State: Royal, IL

Hometown:

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

About 6 months after the LST 325 returned from Greece, there was an article in our local paper about it and the story mentioned the need for volunteers. The story was written because Bruce ”Boats” Voges lives in the circulation area of the paper. I read the article and called Bruce to see if I could help somehow. He welcomed me with open arms and within a few weeks I was in Mobile chipping paint on the main deck.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I am a businessman and professor with no connection to the Navy. My father is a Army veteran from WWII and my grandfather was a Army veteran from WWI. As a kid I knew that they had been veterans but I didn’t talk to them about it because I really wasn’t interested. Thanks to a wonderful history teacher in high school, I gained an interest in history, with a strong attraction to modern European history. Naturally, my interest in WWII was piqued. However, like most veterans, my dad wouldn’t talk about the war. Unfortunately, my grandfather passed away before I was wise enough to ask him about his WWI experiences. The regret I had for not talking to my grandfather about WWI awakened me to the fact that we have people walking among us each and every day who experienced history first-hand. Unfortunately, those people, our national historical resource, are passing away too quickly. I believe that it is the duty of the generations that follow in their footsteps to preserve historical items for future generations. Most veterans won’t talk about their war experiences unless prodded, and many won’t then. We need to keep history alive by caring for the old girl.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

I’ve chipped a lot of paint and painted a lot of steel on the LST 325. Mostly I do whatever Boats tells me to do.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I’m proud to have been on the crew for the 2003 River Trip, the 2006 Atlantic Trip, and the 2007 Tall Stacks Trip. On those trips I was a deckhand, stood watch on the bridge, served on the helm and I had special duties as the fire and medical officer.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I’ve spoken to my classes at the U of I about the ship and I speak frequently to individuals about her.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

see answer #2

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

There are so many. The one memory that is deepest and most recurring is that of the Atlantic Trip. The feeling of camaraderie with the crew; the feeling of solitude, loneliness, and smallness while at sea; when at sea, the water is the most beautiful color of blue I’ve ever seen. Hardly a day goes by now that I don’t wish I was doing that again.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I hope she’s around so long that I have enough free time to give her the attention she deserves. My favorite objective, although it’s too big to be personal, is to restore the port side quarters and head. I’d then like to see youth groups spend the night on her and hear stories of the brave people that she carried into battle.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

My favorite story to tell actually happened at sea during our Atlantic trip. We had cleared the north side of the Bermuda Islands and the seas starting getting rough (nothing much according to the Old Salts). I had been on the mid watch and retired to my rack. Sometime, either during watch or after, the shaft brake went on either the port or starboard side shaft because the screw had over-revved. The engineers were having a go of getting the brake to release. During this time we were rolling up to 17 degrees and the waves were hammering the bow of the ship, the vibration rolling back to my rack in the aft crew quarters and throwing us out of our bunks. I remember lying (sometimes) in my rack thinking about the possibility of the ship’s other, finicky, engine giving out and then being adrift in those rough seas. That was the only time I was scared on the ship.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

I’ve never cared for any of them until they were done!

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

Historically speaking, she means freedom to me. It reminds me of a time when the WHOLE nation was united to achieve one solitary objective – freedom. From an individual perspective it means that some grandkid will get the chance to hear about grandpa’s war experience. I missed my chance.


Name: Don Hardesty

City/State: Evansville, Indiana

Hometown: Evansville

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

When the ship first came to Evansville. I thought I might enjoy volunteering and mentioned it to my wife and she encouraged me to follow through.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I am a Navy vet. Served from 1955 to 1959. I was in Aviation in Fighter Squadron 14, the oldest squadron in the Navy. Went aboard the USS Forrestal in 1957 and made the first Med cruise that she made. Went to the North Atlantic in the winter of 57 on Operation Strikeback. Finished my tour on shore duty at NAS North Island, San Diego, CA.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Started out with the ship as a tour guide. Really enjoyed that. Now am curator of artifacts and I enjoy that even more. As of right now I have something like 500 hours with the ship.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

Have not served as a crew member.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

Have not spoken to groups but many people on a one to one basis.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

What a good time the volunteers have. And the unbelievable amount of work our maintenance guys can get done.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Watching some of the WWII vets who served on LSTs come aboard and the transformation that takes place. It's like they are going back in time. Some get very emotional.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

To get all the artifacts where they belong. Labeled and cataloged. This is an ongoing process. I can't wait until we get the museum where we can get them on display where they belong.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

When I was a tour guide tell the children about Jonathon, our ghost and watching their eyes get big. And then assuring them that Jonathon is a good ghost.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Working with the artifacts and photographing the guys going about their daily duties and posting them on the website Progress Report. These Maintenance guys can't be praised enough. They do a fantastic job. And our Tour Guides are well informed and outstanding.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

It represents a small portion of our past and history. It gives the generations who came after WWII an eye opening look at what our vets did for them.


"THE LIVING ROOM PICTURE"
By Kenny Adams (Reprinted from Progress Report of 24 October 2004)

The WebSkipper asked that I tell some sort of story about The Adams Family, Dad, and the LST.  I'll call it "The Living Room Picture."

A painted picture hangs on our living room wall in our 1800-vintage four-room farmhouse.  The four walls of the living room have five doors and a big window, leaving room for a TV and the wall picture.  From the early 50's to the mid-60's, the couch and chairs changed location and the walls were painted a time or two, but the 18" X 18" painted picture of a gray ship with 491 painted on her forward hull remained on the wall.

Doing farm work on a dairy, tobacco, and small-grain farm, there's not much time for six farm kids to watch TV, and the two-channel, black-and-white TV was normally off limits.  Watching the Little Rascals and Captain Kangaroo on Saturday mornings following the morning milking chores was a privilege, and this was normally in the winter months.  If there was horseplay or squabbling going on, Mom would put an end to the TV.

Then there was Sunday evening -- That's The Way it Was with Walter Cronkite.  This was the only time Dad watched the TV with us kids, and you did not talk, move around or make any sort of commotion.  Dad never spoke of the ship, only of the crew, and they all seemed to be men to be honored.

So life went on and time passed by, older brother Paul and younger brother Marvin joined the Navy, and sister Ann married a sailor.  The morning after my high school graduation in 1968, with a $25 1956 Chevy, a small blue suitcase, and a list of names and addresses provided by my mother of those men who served on the gray 491 ship that hung on our living room wall, off I went.

First I visited Momm 2/c Marvin Brock in Mississippi; then on to S 1/c Paul Hadley in Texas; RM 3/c Ted Manners in Oklahoma; Richard Warner in California, and later Lt. James Knox (the Skipper) in Pennsylvania.  I learned of D-Day in Normandy, the 36 LST's in Southern France in August, the bombing of LST 282, and then on to the Pacific.  Along with many, many stories.  They all talked of one another on the 491, and how great their shipmates were.  So I began to realize that these were the men who won the war and brought peace to the world.  Returning home, I then took a long look at "The Living Room Picture."  Asking Dad about the ship, he said they were all gone now, given away or destroyed for scrap.  So it was to be.

In 1969 (24 years after the war's end), I hitched a ride to Europe with some forty Canadian and British farmers who had fought in the war.  I wanted to see for myself and talk to the people there.  In the twenty days visiting Holland, Denmark and Germany, I spent evenings at pubs talking with kids of my age.  Talk of the war was a NO-NO.  Questions asked about the war were ignored.  I learned that the Kennedy half-dollars were treasured and most kids could not afford one.  Most families did not own a car.  During this trip, I also found out that the Canadians and the British refused to set foot upon or pay their respects at German cemeteries, and they spoke very little of what the Americans did during the war.  They spoke of us as equipment, not as men.

Through the years, we started collecting the equipment carried on the gray ship in the picture.

In 1974, Dad had a heart attack and several of the ship's crew came to the hospital to see him.

Dad and his brother Max (LST 901) attended the first National LST Association meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio.

In 1984, Exercise Tiger at Slapton Sands was declassified, so Dad hauled Mom across the pond to Slapton Sands, so he could make sense of his radio traffic on that April 28th, 1944, evening.  They also toured the beaches of Normandy.




Marion Adams (LST 491) keeps a
sharp eye on Kenny and John Paul
Adams making sure they do it right!


Heather, Jeremy, Anna and Kenny Adams
are restoring LST-325's LCVP #4
 

Kenny and Jeremy Adams show the tarp
they constructed to protect the LCVP
 

Click on any of the images
for enlargements
 

In June 1994 (D-DAY + 50), Dad, along with us kids and some grandkids, left for England, and then on to France to see and hear of those brave men on the gray ships.

Then, at last, in July 1998, an LST in Michigan.  Dad and Mom left at early dawn, Anna and I left late in the afternoon, and several other family members came up the following day.  An entire day was spent just trying to find someone who could get us on board a black, nasty-looking ship, well-marked, I might add, with signs of visitors being absolutely forbidden within an area of several thousand feet of the ship, and including some very tall, unfriendly-looking fences.  Day Two came, and along with a friendly shipyard foreman and a few flashlights, aboard we went.  For the next two hours, Dad showed us where the machine shop, electrical shop, radio shack, troop berthing, crew's quarters, and the elevator used to be during the war.  He showed us where the 40's and 20's should have been, where the bow doors and ramp should have been, where the cloverleaf tie-downs used to be, where the air ventilators used to be, and tried to explain what the tank deck looked like before the ship was converted into a car transport hauler.  Needless to say, we were excited, after all it was a "T" and -- as the story went -- they were going to restore it.

In June of 2000, another trip was made by family and friends back to the LST in Michigan.  It was brighter, cleaner, and more open, but not combat-looking.  No doors, no guns, and none of the shops or quarters for troops or crew were intact.

October of 2000 came along, and Dad started telling of a group of U.S. sailors in Greece who had found an LST and were making repairs to bring her back home.  We watched the website, and as Mom and Dad stay in Florida in the winter, day-to-day calls were made.  Dad and Mom watched the web on the LST at the local library in Homasassa, Florida.  January came along with a date for the LST's arrival in Mobile.  Mom and Dad, along with some friends, left for Mobile and fifteen of their family left Ohio at 9 pm for an all-night drive to make a rendezvous with a gray ship.

We had the honor of boarding the Great Gray LST-325 that January afternoon with our Father, and to his and our amazement, it was an LST with all her GLORY-- INTACT.

After touring the ship for several hours and visiting her crew at the Adams Mark Hotel, Dad told us that it's not the 491 and that the Skipper was not Lt. James Knox, but Jornlin seemed to be a good Skipper because his men spoke well of him, and the ship was something that we --  as a family -- need to help look after so that maybe the grandkids and their grandkids can someday set foot upon her deck.

Today, when we look at "The Living Room Picture" of that gray ship, Her Glory looks back at you as if to say, "I LIVE ON IN THE SOULS OF MY CREW!"

To and for my Father (Marion R. Adams, RM 3/c),

[ LST 491 was affectionately referred to as "The Ol' Double Trouble"]



Name:  Don Lockas

City/State:  Marseilles, IL

Hometown: 

1.  How did you become involved with LST 325?  (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I read about it in the Scuttlebutt, the LST paper, and applied to be a crewmember.  On the letter it said you have to be on an LST during some war and you have to bring something to enhance the trip home.  When I received the application, it said that we had several tests to fill out.  Seamanship, things of that nature.  I filled those out and sent them to the address shown.  They reviewed them and wanted to know what I had done during the war.

When they asked about resumes, I didn't think I would cut it.  I had been a signalman, but during WWII on the way back from Okinawa, I asked if the helmsman would teach me to steer the ship and he said yes.  We were on duty for two weeks four hours on the helm and eight hours off.  I highlighted that on my resume and they told me to come to Greece.  Two weeks of education got me on the greatest voyage of my life.

2.  What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy?  Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships?  (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I was on LST 454 as a Signalman in WWII.  I went into the Navy in March of 1945 and served until August, 1946.  I was in the Pacific Theater.  

3.  Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

I was never assigned to Maintenance during the war.  I did whatever job was assigned to me when we were in Greece.  I was quoted many times as saying that when I went down to see Whitey below decks, “ I will never be a snipe,  I have no desire to be a snipe.  But I will do whatever it takes to get this ship home!” 

I also worked on the ship in Mobile and during the voyages - mostly chip and paint.

4.  Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

Gold Crew.  Helmsman, Special Sea Detail.

5.  Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

YES.  I have had lots of talks and speeches and made close to $23,000 for the ship doing it.  Still doing it!

6.  If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

On the ship itself - The Gold Crew was the best.  People had said it can't be done..  but WE DID IT!

7.  What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

I have two from the trip from Greece to Mobile. 

One is that we were in the Mediterranean, down to one engine, putting along pretty good and a 15 foot sailboat passed us up.  It was disheartening.  There were a few disheartening times, but not many. 

We were in a storm for a couple of days and one of the crewmembers sat down beside me.  The crewmember said, "Lockas, do you realize there's only 3/8 inch of steel between us and that raging sea out there?"  My response was "Don't tell me that!”

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I wanted my grandchildren to see, and they did, what their Grandpa did to keep this great country of ours free. 

9.  What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

Do you know the difference between a fairy tale and a sea story?  The fairy tale begins with “Once upon a time..”  The sea story with "This ain't no shit..."

10.  What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Up on the Conn..  I still am involved with that.  On the trip to Boston, I had people to teach as we were using the gyro compass.

11.  What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

It means History to me.  We want to preserve it for our kids.  We have hundreds of kids coming in every month.  It lets us show them what we had to do to preserve the U. S. A.



Name:  Ray Rappold

City/State:  Falls View, West Virginia

Hometown:  Same (mailing address is Alloy)

1.  How did you become involved with LST 325?  (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

Early January of 2001 - I first heard about the ship from TV news reports while she was making her way across the Atlantic from Greece. I did not begin volunteering on the ship until March of 2003 (during a 1 week break from work).  I returned for another week in May of 2003 (prior to the river trip), and then worked on the ship for two weeks during the river trip of 2003.  Off and on during 2003, 04, 05 - I traveled to Mobile (once for nearly a month) to put in time on board.  I was to have been a crew member for the full ride during the scuttled cruise of 2004, and managed to make this dream a reality for the 2005 Atlantic Cruise.  Since the ship moved to Evansville, I have traveled there on several occasions to work and have followed the ship to both Lousiville and Cincinnati to help out while the ship was in those two cities.

2.  What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy?  Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships?  (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

My father was Electricians Mate 1st on the LST 354 - built in Charleston, SC and one of the first 12 LST's to reach the Pacific theatre (Solomon Islands) in WWII.  He had originally been assigned to LST 353 (the LST which started the chain of explosions in the West Loch of Pearl Harbor in May, 1944), but was transferred to the 354 after transiting the Panama Canal.

3.  Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

I have considerable hours invested in the maintenance of the 325, I have done everything from sweeping and cleaning to chipping and painting.  Have also helped with pipe-fitting, wiring, engine work, metal work and fabrication.  Proud to say I am willing to do anything that needs to be done aboard the ship.

4.  Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

I have served as a crew member, primarily as a member of the deck force.  My last duty station was as a lead helmsman on one of the watches during the Atlantic Cruise of 2005.







5.  Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

I have spoken to others (mostly one on one).

6.  If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

The special relationship that exists between a ship and her crew, and among the members of her crew (or among the members of the organization).

7.  What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

A very general one - of being accepted and welcomed by the veterans I have met - allowed to share in their talks, their jokes, their remembrances.  Knowing that my hard work and efforts will honor their service.

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I would like to see this ship be successful for many years to come, even after many of the original folks involved in this project have moved on.  I want to see this ship continue to sail to various places and expose other people to her history.  I want to see this ship sail on an ocean again in the next few years.

9.  What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

 Also regards the Atlantic Cruise of 2005 and the rough weather off Cape Hatteras on the way up the east coast - we were periodically doing some pretty good rolls and the ship was really slamming around one night. I was asleep in my rack (in the after crews quarters) and remember being awakened by a particularly big 'bang' - but managed to go back to sleep pretty quickly, but discovered the next morning that the bottom of my metal locker had been bent and twisted by the back end of the ship jumping around (the door to this thing still doesn't close correctly). Although it was also rough off Hatteras on the return trip - the first passage was a doozy. It brought to mind one of the few things my father had talked about with regard to his time on LST 354 - that those ships rode worse than any others.

10.  What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

 Sailing this ship up the Atlantic coast in summer 2005.

11.  What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

 It means a small part of my father's life that I have had the opportunity to share (even if I wasn't able to share it with him directly).


Name: Sherry Witt

City/State: Des Moines, Iowa

Hometown: Same

1.  How did you become involved with LST 325?  (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I first discovered LST 325 when doing an online search about LST's in April of 2005. Fred's father Bill had served on LST 349 in WWII and was diagnosed as terminally ill in April. Bill recorded on tape what he wanted his obituary to say and he went on and on about serving on the LST. Bill had also served on the USS Wadleigh and USS Hampton in WWII and the Korean War, but it was the LST 349 he went on and on about. I kept thinking, "What the heck is an LST? What was so special about this ship that brought back so many memories and giggles for him?" and my search was on.

2.  What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy?  Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships?  (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

See above.

3.  Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

Fred and I spent all three weeks of our vacation working on the ship in 2006. One week in June, another in August and the last in September 2006 during LST Week. We have spent most of our time chipping paint and painting. Fred (known as "Bigfoot" by Ken Frank) is also handy with the lifting stuff. During LST Week we also helped with the passengers on the LCVP rides.

4.  Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

Neither of us has crewed. Fred however, served six year in the Navy aboard the USS Trenton. I would love to crew some time. Who needs fancy separate facilities? Give me a five gallon bucket and a curtain and it works for me. Geez, doesn't anybody remember camping in the rough anymore???

5.  Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

I hang pictures of the ship and from the ship on my walls at work. It's a good conversation starter. Folks are amazed this ship is actually a running, working WWII ship. And they are even MORE amazed to discover it can navigate the rivers and is right here in the heartland rather than on the coast.

6.  If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

It's a very worthy cause and besides that, you sure have a good time. During LST Week last year Fred and I were in the back of Kenny Adams' Jeep. Kenny was driving and Anna Adams in the passenger seat. I turned to Fred as we drove along and said, "We gotta quit having so much fun on our vacations!"

7.  What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

I first met Bruce (Boats) Voges when we volunteered in August. On our first day there that week I sat down for a bite to eat with Bruce and after a few minutes of conversation about the ship he looked at me with those soulful ice blue eyes of his and said, "Sherry, there's no reason why this ship can't still be running in another 30 or 40 years. I hope at that time I can look down, or look up depending on where God puts me and will still see her going." Needless to say, I had to fight back a few small tears when he said that, but I will NEVER forget that moment. It's funny how someone else's desire can start a fire inside of you.

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

How can you top what Boats said???

9.  What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

Hmmm, probably the one about Chris and the Terrorist Emperor Penguins.

10.  What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Although we worked during LST Week, we did not participate in the organizing. But those who came up with the idea and put it together did a great job! We put in long (10-12 hour days) volunteering but It was such fun seeing so many people with so much in common come together again.


Name: Dianne Hill

City/State: Surprise, Arizona

1.  How did you become involved with LST 325?  (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

When I gave my blessing to Rocky to go to Greece In 2000 and be a part of the crew to bring the 325 home.  I did not realize back then how that decision would change my life, but I have been enriched many times over because of it.

2.  What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy?  Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships?  (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I was never in the service. My husband Rocky was in WW II and served on LST 465 in the Pacific.  I was involved with him putting on reunions for his shipmates after our retirement. That is when I realized the “family Bond” these sailors had with one another.

3.  Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

I can handle a broom and mop or a computer keyboard, but don’t put a wrench in my hand! I’m a snipe’s wife, not a snipe and he won’t let me take the rank of deck ape. What does that make me?

4.  Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

Not officially. I like working in the background. I have been directly involved since the ship came into Mobile, AL and have reaped many rewards.

5.  Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

Yes lots of times. (is there anything else to talk about???) We belong to the AZ LST State chapter and I personally hand out Memorial membership forms and information on LST week and any other information of interest to the group. I keep them infomed on up and coming trips that the ship takes and encourage members to become a volunteer. I believe in this “Living memorial” and  mention it quite often to new acquaintances.

6.  If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

Let us never lose sight that we have something unique to treasure and to care for.  28 men risked their lives to bring her back home so that future generations can learn the history of these ships.

7.  What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

When the ship arrived in Mobile Bay on January 10, 2001. It was so patriotic and very emotional. As a friend said as he filmed her coming into the bay “Home at last, home at last”

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

No personal goal, but would like to see the membership reach 3000. If every member would sign up just one new person, we would double our membership in no time.

9.  What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

 Not really a ‘sea story’, but I like to tell how hard Rocky and I worked at getting everything in order for him to go over to Greece. We had so many red flags going up along the way. From getting his PassPort application expedited, to loosing his billfold and credit cards and his flight tickets getting lost. But he was so determined to make it work. I finally said. “Lord if you want him to be a part of this project, you’re going to have to make it work, because I’m running out of patience.”  You know the rest of the story.

10.  What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Being a Co-Editor of The Phoenix and keeping the members informed.

11.  What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

Pride in knowing my husband persevered and became a part of the “Historical Voyage”. When I look at the 325, I am reminded of the sacrifice that our military men and women have given in order for me to have the freedom to speak, pray and vote the way I want to.

Additional comments:

I’m proud to be associated with the LST Ship Memorial and all she stands for”.


Name: Andrew L. Clark

City/State: Fort Branch, IN 

Hometown: Fort Branch, IN

1.  How did you become involved with LST 325?  (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I was invited to join the Evansville LST Committee by Mike Whicker in 1999 or 2000

2.  What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy?  Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships?  (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I served in the USMC from 1974 – 1980. (Military Policeman) In 1991 I wrote the book “A Cornfield Shipyard” a history of the Evansville Shipyard and the 167 LST’s built there.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

NO

4.    Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

NO

5.    Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

I have spoken to at least 50 groups and countless individuals.

6.  If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

7.  What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

get the entire ship painted

9.  What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

10.   What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Scraping and painting

11.  What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?



Name: Dominick R Perruso

City/Sate: 2012 Kemmerer St. Beth. Pa.

Hometown: Born In West Easton Pa.
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I became involved when my son Michael had some free time during classes. He is a school teacher and was on the computer and ran LST-391 and found out that they were going to return the 391 back to the USA, that it was in Greece at the present time. Michael called me when he got home and questioned me about the 391. He knew I served on it in Normandy and that we had taken a hit on the starboard side and the Captain gave the order to abandon ship. We were in Cherbourg at the time and that was the last I saw of the 391. I was not aware of the LST Association. I contacted Linda Gunjack and gave her my information and I joined the Association. Then she filled me in on what had happened since we abandoned ship. The ship was blocking the harbor and had to be removed. They temporarily patched a hole in starboard side and towed her back to England for more repairs, then towed her back to USA where she underwent a complete over haul. The war in the Pacific was winding down so she never left the USA except trips to Greenland. Eventuallly she was turned over to the Greek Government along with LST-325 and other LST'S that had been taken out of service and were in what they called the bone yard (ready for scrap). Our LST Memorial Association spent many years and a lot of their own time and money attempting to acquire an LST. This is a long story and I would have writer's cramp till I got done . Ed Stroble did locate LST in Greece and he went aboard the 391 to check it out. Some of our board also went to check it out. The 391 was in very good condition as Strobel has the photos to prove it. When everything was approved with Congress, President Clinton signed the bill to turn ownership over to the LST Memorial Association. To our surprise when we arrived in Greece, the 391 had been literally destroyed. We were given a choice of other LSTs and the 325 was selected. That is another story.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

In reference to what I did in Greece - I along with every one else - did what ever we could do to restore the 325 and prepare her to sail home. I have to admit that after two weeks aboard we were making no headway at all and I phoned my wife told her I was thinking about returning home. I did. While back home my thoughts were of the crew I left. In order to keep myself busy, I built a deck which I had intentions of doing anyway. About two days after I completed my deck, I had a call from Robert Jornlin. He introduced himself, and I did know him personally. Some of our crew knew him well and spoke highly of him. He said the reason he was calling was that he wanted me to return and the crew was also asking for me to return. I did mention to him if he was aware of why left. He said he was, and that he was leaving for Athens the following day. He assured me that things would change after he was aboard. I said "Mr Jornlin, do I have your word on that?" He said "You certainly do!" With that I booked a flight back Souda Bay, Greece. I know the Captain is a man of his word.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

(Dom didn't answer this question, but as you can see in his other replies, he has been a terrific asset to the 325!)

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

(Dom is a Gold Crew member.)

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

My wife will tell you that when I start talking about LST-325, and you are eager to listen, I talk non-stop.  I, along with other Gold crew members, have given talks to schools, churches, service clubs or any organization that needed a guest speaker.  Of course we were always looking for a donation at completion of our speech. We must be old news as I do not get any more requests.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

She's a grand old girl - she served her country and crew and the men that served on her were the best!

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

I have so many memories and they are all good. The month of March, 2001, myself and Corbin Fowkes and Jim McAndrew spent the whole month and installed the sewage disposal system and replaced most of the soil lines.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

We the crew, are mostly in our eighties/plus. I would like to see her keep moving forward and as long as we have the caliber of people that come aboard to work on her, I can see this happening.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

There again, there are many I do remember. During the night we had a close call with one of those container ships. I don't recall if our power when down or if we had lost our steering. This happened quite a few times then we made 360 to get back on course. It was a lot of fun.. ha-ha

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

We had a leak from the sea chest; it was down in the bilges and hard to get at. My helper Jim McAndrew said "Pop, (that's what he called me) you can't get down there and patch that. I said "Jibo, watch me!" Well, the patch was still there until the ship had a lot of repairs in Mobile. Prince Albert (White), our laundry man, had trouble with hoses for the washer. They would get clogged up, he would call and I would clean the hoses out. Some time after that he told me he had an electrical problem with the washer. Well that is 240 DC, so I called Gary Lyon to give me a hand. What happened was the discharge valve was an electric solenoid and it went bad. We did not have another. What I did was put a gate valve on the discharge line and all Albert would have to do was open it for the discharge cycle, which were quite a few. What we did was connected a pig tail to the solenoid valve circuit and when the red light lit, he would open the valve and close it when it went off. The starboard engine gave us a problem all the way home .While checking shaft alley, they found that the starboard engine was down again. I talked to Bartlett and he said there was a water leak on the heat exchanger. This is somewhat of long story. I will make it short - I got an angle iron, rubber gasket material and two pieces of wood. Well the patch worked and 0800 that morning they started it up. A patch was in place all the way home. There are some more but that's enough for now.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

She is part of me or the other way around. She, along with all the other LSTs, played a big part in bringing WW2 to an end. She is a MEMORIAL AND A TRIBUTE to everyone that sailed, but mostly the troops which were transported to the beach and never returned.

Any additional comments you'd like to include:

In concluding I want to mention some thing very important - GOD was with us all. He gave us our youth back for six months.



Name: William (Rocky) Hill

City/State: Surprise, AZ.

Hometown: Spokane, WA.  

1.How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

Since 1984 I have followed the National LST Associations efforts to locate a W.W. lI LST to make a memorial to show people what an LST is.

I first became involved in 1998 when I and the AZ. LST Association sent letters to the Secretary of State of the State Department, Congressman, and Representatives, to cut the red tape and release the Greek LST to the Memorial. In 1999 I made an attempt to join the crew by contacting Mr. M____ by E-Mail, letter, and phone calls. Having no answers from him I gave up. Returning from a trip to Spokane, WA in 2000, I fired up my trusty computer, went to the National web site and saw the message that Electricians and Motor Machinist Mates were needed badly in Greece to help bring back the LST 325. After much discussion with my wife Dianne, I called Captain Jornlin on the ship, at the Suda Bay Greek Navy Base. After giving him my qualifications and being accepted, and after a lot of red tape, I was on my way.



2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I was in the Navy from 1943 - 1946. I attended Boot camp at Farrugut, ID. Diesel school at the University of Missouri. Assigned to LST 465 in Brisbane, Australia. Making invasions from New Guinea through the Philippine's. Was 3" 50 gun pointer on General Quarters station. Then assigned to ARD 23 at Guam as boom crane operator. After my working years, I became involved with the National LST Association and later helped form the Arizona chapter and was Vice President of this chapter for one year and from 1995 to 1997 was President of this group.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

Yes. As a Mo.M.M. I stood watches in the main and auxiliary engine rooms. Was boat engineer on L.C.V.P. crew.  Did maintenance on ship and boat engines.

4. Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

Yes. 2000 – 2001. Standing watches and fighting breakdowns in Main Engine room, from Crete, Greece to Mobile, AL. In 2002 Dianne and I spent 6 weeks in Mobile working with the Blue crew making much needed repairs. Made the 2003 river trip. Basically as a tour guide and at times (shudder) as a deck ape. In 2005 I was main engine room watch leader and processed fuel and lubrication oil (as oil king) on East Coast trip, also in 2005 moved the 325 from its old home port in Mobile, AL to its new home port of Evansville, IN as main engine room watch leader (and oil king). Then in 2006 at Cincinnati, OH Tall Stacks trip as main engine room leader (and oil king).

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

Yes. At Ship reunions, Historical preservation groups, boating groups, Church groups, and retirement groups at several different locations throughout the United States. I have also shown the History Channel “Return of the LST 325”, by Linda Alvers, several times to various groups.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

The point I want to bring out is that if it hadn’t been for the close knit operation of the crew of 28 men that kept the old girl operating through all of the many breakdowns, and terrific storms, she would not be back here now for everyone’s enjoyment. The trip was more of an ordeal than people realize.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

We were told as we were coming in to Mobile that there would be approximately 500 people to greet us. It was beyond my imagination that there would be the kind of greeting that we got, from closer to 5,000 people. Dock and factory workers standing outside in the cold waving flags at us. Bands playing, all kinds of LSTer’s, school children, relatives, friends, young ladies called The Azalea Trail Maids in their beautiful Southern Bell dresses, and dignitaries of all kinds, and most and best of all my wife Dianne.

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

 My goal is a huge goal…to get younger people trained in the operation of the engine rooms and the purification and transfer of fuel and lubrication oil. This is going to have to be done, if we are going to keep the old girl operational.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

I would guess that my favorite sea story is when in Mobile at the National LST convention, Dianne and I had a rental car. We kept hearing a funny noise when we accelerated or braked the car. Upon investigation I found a brand new golf ball rolling around. I took this ball up to our room and with a laundry marker pen I autographed it and wrote LST 325 on it. I then made a sign that showed a price of $25.00. I took it down and laid it on the table where the lady’s from the 325 were selling T-shirts, caps, books and other items. The lady’s immediately said Rocky! That won’t sell. The next morning when I went by the 325 table, the golf ball was gone. The ladies told me Linda Alvers had bought it and paid the full $25.00 for it. Of course I said  “I told you it would sell!” I then looked up Linda and told her that it had been a joke and I would refund her money. Linda then told me that her boss had a golf ball collection and she was going to give it to him so he would have the only collection with an authentic 325 golf ball autographed by Rocky Hill from the Gold Crew. When I offered to return her $25.00 she said “No!” that it was going to benefit the 325 coffers.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

It is an ongoing project on all of the trips for me to hassle Deck Ape, Bosons Mate, Bruce Voges and his two sons Tim and Mike. From the time I arrived at the ship in Greece when I first met Bruce and his side kick Dewey Taylor, until now. We have been very good shipmates, even with their dislike of SNIPES.

11.    What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

It represents a period in my life that I went into the Navy as an 18 year old kid and after being involved in the horrors of war, I grew up quickly and came out with a man’s attitude towards life.

Any additional comments you'd like to include:

I am very lucky to have my wife Dianne become as involved and as dedicated as she has been with the several involvements that I have had with the LST Associations, Ship reunions, and now the LST Memorial. At first she could not understand the close camaraderie amongst shipmates. She did not understand that these shipmates were our family for years.



Name: Kenneth Frank   

City/State: Glen Rock, NJ

Hometown: Fair Lawn, NJ

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I started searching the internet for things about LSTs, since my Dad had been an LST sailor. I found the information about the group trying to acquire an LST as a working museum. I followed their progress in their search for a ship. After they found the ship I followed their progress getting it ready to sail home and then followed the Gold Crew (not their name at the time) as they sailed her home. I watched Tom Brokaw's reporting it on NBC news. It was then that I knew there was a real LST in Mobile.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy?  Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships?  (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

My Dad was a sailor in WW II. He served aboard the LST 32 as the lead Storekeeper. He was a plank owner and traveled to North Africa, Sicily, Anzio, and the invasion of Southern France. I have always been interested in his service and used to ask him about it and the 32. When I was younger we completed a model of an LST from a plastic kit. I remember he took a razor blade and managed to change the decal of the hull number to 32. I was really impressed and happy. I remember asking him about different parts of the ship and how things worked. I always wanted to see a real LST.

My brother and I both served in the Navy because our Dad had been a sailor, although neither of us served aboard a ship. My brother was a Yeoman in the Pentagon and I was a Communications Technician in the Philippines. I remember seeing LSTs in Subic Bay while I was stationed there but never got on one.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

I started volunteering on the LST 325 in 2002 in Mobile. I did two trips from my home in NJ to Mobile to volunteer for a week each time (19 hours driving each way).  I went to Boston and helped with tours for four days on the East Coast trip and my wife helped in the gift shop while we were there. I have been to Evansville two times for maintenance work (13 hours driving each way). 

Some of the maintenance work I have completed on the LST 325 includes:

Once 4 of us chipped, primed, and painted the entire railing around the ship!
Working in the engine room installing compressed air tanks and pipes in shaft alley.
Repairing the hatches to the ballast tanks.
Worked on installing plugs in the end of the 40 mm guns to keep the rain out.
Replaced bulbs and fixtures in the lights on the tank deckPlus other miscellaneous chipping and painting, which is endless!

4.  Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

I was a crew member on the Tall Stacks trip. I did tours in Cincinnati and manned a tour station at the bottom of a steep ladder when the crowds got too large for individual tours. Underway, I was on the Lock Crew, working fenders as we went through the Locks to keep the ship from hitting the sides of the Locks. I also stood wheel house/throttle watches and did galley and scullery duty working for Ol’ Joe the cook. Whew!.

5.  Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

I have spoken to friends and family and other veterans about the LST.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

I think it is amazing that this is the only WW II ship memorial that can still sail under its own power and has been out in the ocean visiting cities on the east coast.

7.  What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

I have more then one favorite memory!  The first is my first tour in Mobile with Calvin, when he showed me all the areas a Storekeeper would have worked in. Second would be touring the ship again with my daughters and one of my Dad’s shipmates in Mobile. Third would be crewing on the Tall Stacks trip.

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

Crewing again, and to be part of the next generation in keeping the LST going and preserving history.  I’d love to see her visit the east coast again, maybe New York City for Fleet Week.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

Any time I have given a tour, and an LST vet comes back on an LST for the first time in 30 years, they say the smell is the same. (They do say smell is our strongest memory.) The LST vets can’t wait to show their children and grandchildren what the ship looks like, what they did, and where they did it. Some of them get very emotional when they relate their stories. It is an honor to be there and witness that.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Every thing I have worked on has been so educational and satisfying.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

 It is a connection to WW II history and my Dad’s service in it.

Any additional comments you'd like to include:

Someday I would like to take my new grand daughter and show her the ship and tell her about my Dad (her great-grandfather) and my part in keeping the ship going


Name: Mike Whicker

City/State: Evansville, IN

Hometown: Denver, Colorado

1. How did you become involved with LST 325?  (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

Sometime in late 2001 or early 2002 I saw The Return of LST 325 on the History Channel. At the end of the show, Captain Jornlin says that the goal of the crew is to keep the ship sailing and take her to places that made LSTs during the war. He named a few places. Although he did not name Evansville , I thought to myself: What better place to take the ship than to Evansville – we made more LSTs than anyone.

I managed to get the Captain’s email address and I contacted him about bringing the ship to Evansville for a visit. It took a long time and a great deal of work by a lot of good people, but it happened.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy?  Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships?  (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I am an Air Force veteran, but my service was unspectacular. I first tried joining the Marines and was turned down because of an open heart surgery I had as small kid and a heart murmur. Then I went to the Army and was turned away for the same reason. Finally, I crept in under the radar with the Air Force and got accepted. I spent most of my hitch in schools (nuclear weapons) and never left the States. My father’s service as an Army Ranger in WW2, and my daughter who is currently on her second tour in Iraq, are the military heroes in my family.

I do have a strong connection to LSTs. My mother was a welder at the Evansville LST Shipyard during the war, and my father was taken back to England to heal after he was wounded on Omaha Beach on D-Day. Six weeks later, another LST returned my father to France to rejoin his unit.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

I did a great deal of painting, chipping, and needle-gunning on the ship during the 2005 East Coast Voyage, and a little painting since the ship arrived in Evansville. I do more sweeping now then painting.

4. Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

Yes, one of my proudest achievements is spending a month as a crewmember during the East Coast Voyage. And it is certainly my greatest adventure. I had never been on a ship in the ocean before, far from land. My duties included deck ape and lee helmsman under Don Lockas.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

I have no clue how many groups I have spoken to about the LST since 2001, but it has to be well over 200 – not sure. Numerous Kiwanis, Civitan, and Rotary groups along with veteran and church groups, libraries, schools at all levels, etc.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

I like to talk about the heroic odyssey of the Gold Crew’s voyage from Greece, and the current people who are now caring for the ship in Evansville.

7.  What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Grilling sausage burgers on the stern of LST 325 150 miles off the East Coast when an American attack sub surfaced behind us. I was the first one to see it. I ran to my bunk to get my camera and burned the burgers. Got a photo though!

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

Lots of goals over the long haul, but one will be building an entire WW2 themed complex at Marina Pointe with a WW2 restaurant and bar, a bed and breakfast, and a Home Front Museum Interpretive Center.

9.  What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

See number 7, or the day at sea when we came across a French air craft carrier. We established radio contact with them. Their operator was a female. She spoke English well, but with a strong accent. They could not figure out what we were so they actually scrambled two of their jets to fly over. Just about broke our eardrums. Some of the men ran out on the deck and were shaking their fists at the French jets. Don Lockas jumped in one of the gun tubs and pointed a 40mm at them.

One more story that sticks is my helming the ship in the Potomac River ten minutes after someone decided I was to be trained as a lee helmsman. You might think they would have at least waited until we turned the corner out of Chesepeake Bay and entered the Atlantic where there was nothing to bump into. But no, here I am, a helmsman for ten minutes and I’m in control of an irreplaceable WW2 LST in the Potomac River with a bank on each side and small boats all around!

10.   What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Bringing the ship to Evansville for the 10-day visit in 2003. Seeing 35,000 folks stand in long lines in the July heat to be able to walk the decks of an LST. If it wasn’t for that visit, the ship would not be in Evansville now.

11.  What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

To me, the LST represents America ’s finest hour – WW2 – when the nation was one and united in a noble purpose. It represents the men and women of the Armed Services like my father, daughter, and all others who are the best of America. It represents the veterans, heroes every one, who have served their country in war or peace. And it represents all those who respect the flag, and who stand respectfully and say the Pledge of Allegiance sincerely, regardless of their service. These are the people of bright character.


Name: Glenn Gregg

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I got a call from Linda Alvers at 8 a.m. one day and she said "Can you be in Gibraltar tonight?" That night I showed up at the LST unannounced.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I am an Air Force veteran.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I worked on the trip over from Gibraltar in the engine room with Rocky and Mac

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I shot the History Channel documentary 'Return of LST 325'

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

I have 29 older brothers I didn't have before....

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Captain Jornlin explaining how he made the decision to allow me to sail with the ship. (ask Lois)

8.   Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

Just seeing the guys again in September!

9.  What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

Almost getting tossed in the sea while filming during a storm.

10.  What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Getting it across the Atlantic

11.  What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

What can be achieved with a dedicated crew!



Name: Gary Hendrickson

City/State: Portage Wisconsin

Hometown: Portage Wisconsin

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I first heard about the ship when the Gold Crew brought it back from Greece in 2001 when it was on the news.

Don Lockas is a Gold Crew member and a neighbor of my daughter in Marseilles Illinois. In 2003 Don mentioned to her that the ship was looking for qualified help. I was in the Navy and have mechanical experience. Don got an application for me to apply for crew membership.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I am a US Navy veteran. I enlisted right out of High School July 1958-Aug 1961. I served 2 1/2 years on WW11 vintage Destroyers as a machinist mate in the Engineering Department, out of Long Beach California. We spent a lot of time at sea including a 6 month patrol from Long Beach to Pearl Habor, Midway Island, Japan, Philippines, Formosa, Hong Kong China.


3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

As a machinist mate on Destroyers, I did a lot of mechanical work. Repairing steam lines and equipment like steam turbines. I spent 35 years as a maintenance mechanic in plastic factories. I did a lot of welding, pipe fitting, electrical and mechanical trouble shooting, repairing air compressors and vacuum pumps, etc.. I was a Supervisor for 7 years.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I was selected as a crew member January 2004. I made 9 trips from Wisconsin and spent many hours in Mobile Alabama helping to get the ship ready for the 2004 Boston trip, which was canceled. Since then I have spent many hours in Evansville after helping with the move from Mobile. I have done a lot of welding, pipe fitting and other mechanical work on the ship. I stand my watches in the engine room when the ship is underway.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I talk about the ship all the time. I always wear the ship hat and have had older veterans ask me about the ship. I had an interview with the local newspaper reporter just before the 2004 Boston Trip. He ran a front page article on the Ship and my involvement.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

I have talked to a few of the other crew members and we pretty much have agreed that we liked working on the ship and being part of it. The best part was the camaraderie with the other crew members from all over the United States. Reminds me of when I was in the Navy years ago.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

I have made several trips on the ship under her own power. I guess the best cruise was when we finally made it to Boston and other ports on the way in 2005.

It was great being out in the Ocean again and on board a vintage ship once again. The trip from mobile to Evansville on the river and the reception we got was also great.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I haven't really set a personal goal yet, I would like to just continue doing the work as I have been doing and see the ship farther on into its restoration.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

I have had a few special experiences since I have been a crew member, including a couple of harmless pranks by "Jonathan", but the one that stands out was meeting Ed Brooks. Ed works for Warner Brothers as a stunt driver and supplies antique cars for scenes in movies. He was involved in the Flags of Our Father's movie.

As a crew member of the ship we were working together on the trip moving up to Evansville. The ship was stopped just before getting to Evansville, when Ed dropped his cell phone overboard, it landed on a barge next to the ship. I got the captain of the tug boat to help retrieve the cell phone. Ed also wrote a song dedicated to the LST 325, which he sang for us while paying his guitar, he was very good.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

I'm not sure what you mean by favorite project, I have done a lot of work projects, welding - pipe fitting- and mechanic work. One important project that Kenny Adams, myself and other crew members accomplished was repairing the Port side Davit, so we could hoist the Higgens boat back on board before the Louisville trip last year.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

This ship to me represents the old Navy, the way it was when I was in the service. The vintage WW11 equipment and the memories of being 18-19 years old again. It is nice to be part of something like this again. I have always worked on similar equipment during my working life and have been retired since 2001. I missed working with people and the satisfaction of completion on work projects. It is very special to be helping to restore and maintain the LST 325.City/State: Portage Wisconsin



Name: Bob Willard

City/State: Fairfax VA

(Original)Hometown: Bellerose NY
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

In 1999 the LST Association reported in The Scuttlebutt that Ed Strobel had found a restorable LST in Crete. Soon after that, progress reports began appearing in each issue and also on their website.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)


In November 1951 I was assigned to LST 528, shortly before she was recommissioned out of the Green Cove Springs, Florida mothball fleet.  I worked first in the scullery as a mess cook, then in Deck Force, before finding my niche in the Gunnery Gang.  LST 528 made two trips to northern Greenland carrying rations, vehicles and drivers for the USAF base being construction at Thule.  And we made many trips to Vieques PR with CBs and Marines to practice beaching operations.

In April 1954 I was transferred to USS Oak Hill (LSD-7), where I got to see more of the world and served the rest of my four year enlistment.  We spent six months in the Mediterranean Sea with the Sixth Fleet, and then steamed through the Panama Canal enroute to our new home port in San Diego.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

During the time LST 325 was in Chickasaw, I drove down from Virginia several times.  On my first visit (January, 2003) I wanted to do technical work, and Gary Lyon let me every job that was in progress.  I helped pull electrical cable, removed old plumbing from the heads, and removed fresh water valves from the port shaft alley, so they could be refurbished.  I also guided people on tours.  On my next visit, Paul Holler and I figured out a way to remove accumulated rust from the sounding tubes.  They were on the Coast Guard list of unsatisfactory items.  Some of the sounding tubes are 20 feet long, and most were packed with rust particles for most of their length. 

On my final trip, Bill Arras mentioned that we needed to rehab the threads on the studs and nuts that hold the access covers over the water, ballast and fuel tanks.  The first ones we worked on were in the storerooms below the berthing compartments.  Fortunately Bill Arras loaned us the special dies we needed for this project; and Ken Frank, and 'Little Bill' Rutledge continued the job after my three weeks were up.  In between these 'technical' jobs, I chipped old paint and rust from various places, and completed some paint jobs other people had started. Last year, in Evansville, I only had time to work three days. This time my project was to plug some of our AA gun barrels to keep rain water from rusting them away.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

On the 2005 Atlantic Cruise I joined the ship in Alexandria Va. and sailed to north to the three ports in Massachusetts and then south to Chickasaw. I served as helmsman, lookout, line handler, quarter deck watch and tour guide.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I've spoken to my former shipmates at reunions, my American Legion Post, a gun collector association, and a learning in retirement group, as well as to anyone else who recognizes my LST hat and asks about it.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

I am most impressed with the men of the Gold Crew who brought the ship back to the US for us, and continue to serve the ship to realize their dream of having a Memorial Ship to share with visitors and future supporters of the ship. And I am also impressed with all of our volunteers, and the wives of our volunteers, who continue to work in support of 'our' ship.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

The first time I came up the gangway of LST 325 was like turning back the pages of time. I could not see the US flag, but I saluted it anyway. And the rust brought back memories of LST 528.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I want to meet Ed Strobel and personally thank him for what he did for all of us. Without his initiative and involvement, I doubt there would be an LST Memorial ship.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

There is an electrical box in the wheelhouse with part of an old fashioned soldering iron attached to it. When I am giving tours I enjoy pointing to it and explaining that this is an example of how our Gold Crew electricians had to improvise on the trip from Greece. When the hydraulic portion of the rudder control system became unreliable; this box and some electrical cable, run down to after steering, replaced the ship's wheel. When you need right or left rudder, you push the soldering iron in the appropriate direction.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Serving as a crew member on the Atlantic Cruise and proving to myself that I can still steer a compass course, without chasing the compass.  My biggest test was in the narrow channel entering Mobile Bay.    

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

This ship is proof of the 'can do' spirit of the men who sailed LSTs from 1942 until the present.  It represents the dedication of those men, and all the men and women who continue to support our Memorial Ship.



Bob is on the far right with Jim Grayson
and Harold Morgan

Name: R. G. (Bob) Cerling

City/State: Evansville, IN

(Original)Hometown:

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I encountered a news article before the first visit of LST 325 in Evansville and toured the ship at that time. When the decision was made to make this her home port, I volunteered as a tour guide.


L to R: Charlie Lawrence, Indiana
governor Mitch Daniels, Bob Cerling,
and Keith Mosby

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I enlisted in the US Navy in January of 1942 while in college. I finished college in the Navy at the University of Michigan, attended midshipman school at Cornell University and Damage Control school at the Philadelphia navy yard before I was assigned to the USS Massachusetts in the Pacific theater in 1945.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

I have not served in maintenance on the LST, but have been in building construction my entire working life. My degree is in Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I was in charge of a damage control patrol on the USS Massachusetts, and have been a tour guide on LST 325 ever since it docked here permanently in October of 2005.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I have spoken to both individuals and groups about the ship, and led a special tour for a construction industry technical association last year.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

The LST is a unique slice of the history of WWII since it was part of both the liberation of Europe and the Cold War which followed.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

My favorite part of the LST experience is being able to take my children and grandchildren to see the ship.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I would like to see the ship become a better tool for the education system in Evansville, Indiana, and the US because "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it" (George Santayana).

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

My favorite "sea story" about the LST 325 is about reclaiming her from the Cretan junkyard. My favorite personal "sea story" is about our attack on Tokyo on the last day of the war.

10. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

I really enjoy conducting tours, especially with children.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

LST 325 is a link to my early life. My grandfather came to the US as a ship's carpenter on a tramp freighter, and my father was a carpenter's mate in the US navy during WWI. Also, I have built small boats and models, and I built and owned a marina on the Mississippi River in Camanche, Iowa. My brothers served in the Marines on many of the island assaults in the Pacific during WWII (including Iwo Jima).

R. G. Cerling (former Ensign, USNR)



Name: Bob Wilder

City/State:

(Original) Hometown:

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I talked to Jack [Carter] while the ship was still in Greece and while the ship was in the Atlantic. Got to looking up the ship's history on the web and found that I had ridden on her many years ago while she was the USNS LST 325 working in Greenland. I caught a ride back to St John's Newfoundland when I had been stuck at BW-1 when the aircraft I had been on developed engine trouble. This was back in '51 or '52. It was a heck of a ride as we caught the tail end of a hurricane while in the Davis Straits.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

The interesting thing is that I am not a Navy veteran, but retired from the USAF Air Force with over 23 years of duty. I started out in the New York Air National Guard and then was called to active duty during the Korean war. I started out as a Radio Operator and retrained into Radio Maintenance. Have always been a nut about history, so getting involved with the LST was a natural for me.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Kind of answered that above, but one of my USAF tours was on Midway Island and as there is not much to do out there. I spent a lot of my off duty time at either the air traffic control site working that radio doing flight follows and position reports or at the transmitter site helping the ET's work on the transmitters.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

Would have liked to serve as a radio operator but have not had the opportunity to do so.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

A lot of one on one on both the ham radio bands and MARS radio frequencies. Have spoken to a couple of groups about the ship and it's need for help getting ship ready for its role as a museum.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

After the ship had been in Chickasaw for a year it looked better than it did after it was when I was aboard on the USNS LST 325. But nothing can compare for the miserable shape the ship was when it first arrived in Mobile.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

It has to be chance I had to ride on the ship for the shake down in the Mobile River. Feeling the low rumble of her engines once again brought back my trip on her many years ago. There is nothing so nice to lull a person asleep as a diesel ship's engine.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I hope someday I get the opportunity to sail on LST-325 again on one of its trips. It has been over 50 years since I was on her sailing on the high seas.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

It has to be riding out a hurricane aboard her some 50 years ago.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Tracking down much of the WW2 radio equipment amd seeing it aboard in the radio room.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

It personally has reminded me of the courage of all the great men who sailed aboard her and all of their sister ships. Not only those sailed by our Navy and Coast Guard and the Royal Navy since the days of World War Two.

Bob Wilder
TSgt, USAF (Ret)


Name: Ellis DeLay

City/State: Surprise, Az.

(Original) Hometown: Richmond In.

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I first heard about the ship from Rocky Hill; Ken Knight & I went down to Mobile on Jan. 10, 2001 to see the LST come in. What a sight! About 5000 people were on the dock. I went aboard and shed some tears at some places and laughed at others about things that happened on my LST 456 during WW2. That is when I decided I would do what I could to help make it like it was in 1942. But living 1700 plus miles away has made it hard to do.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I am a veteran of WW2, in the Pacific from Australia in the south to the northern part of Japan. I was the coxswain on the lcvp on LST 456 later I became a gunnersmate 3/c. We gave LST 456 to Japan. I went on LST 697 and came home and was discharged in May, 1946.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Beverly and I both are Blue Crew. Beverly worked in the gift store as well as cleaning up in officer’s country. I worked in the crew’s head cutting out rusted steel and replaced it with new I worked with Kenny & Anna & John LeMaster and Beverly worked with Bobbie LeMaster. We became good friends. We were sorry to hear about their deaths. We went there on our 56th anniversary to work one week but stayed two weeks to be blue crew members.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I went down in 2004 to take it up the east coast, but we didn’t have the ship ready. I was there in Feb. 05 for the shake down. I came back in May and I had my 79th birthday on the ship. We made the trip up to Boston. When I was told we were coming right back I called home and Beverly said I could stay on to bring the ship back to Mobile. I got to ride on the Constitution while we were in Boston, also went to a ball game. I got to go up on the big green wall. The seats are $100.00 to see a game! I also went to Tall Stacks in 06.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

Most of the time one on one.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

I have met the best people in the world on the ship - both crew and the guests that I have taken on tours.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

In 05 I was working over the side in a boat when I lost my balance and fell in. I was in over my head, I lost my glasses. When I came up a lot of the crew was there to help me get out. I was lucky. The Capt. nicknamed me swimmer. That night there was a snake about 5 ft. long came by where I fell in. That same night an alligator came by on the port side. I didn’t see it, but the guys said he was looking for me!

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I got and installed the mats and the handrails in the crew’s shower. In 04 when I was taking a shower I almost fell so I did it for my safety. That was in the fall of 04. Beverly helped with sending out some mail while we where there.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

I don’t have a favorite.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Working with a lot of nice people that are working to get the ship in first class shape.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

It is like reliving my teenage years.

Any additional comments you'd like to include:

I want to thank the EVANSVILLE CREW for doing one h--l of a good job. The stern of the ship looks great in the pictures I have seen. That has always been looking bad to take visitors there. Doug, it looks like I need thank you for that job well done!


Name: Terry Tull

City/State: Center Point, Iowa

Hometown: Center Point, Iowa

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

My LST reunion was held in Mobile in 2004 and we toured the 325. We were not allowed in the engine rooms and this was my primary work space on the LST 980 USS MEEKER COUNTY. I went back to get my 40 hours of volunteer time in and be able
to get into the engine rooms. I went in Febuary, intending to stay 2 weeks and ended up staying a month. I met Kenny & Anna Adams and we formed a real friendship.

(Terry Tull, left and Dean Erickson, right)


2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I served aboard the USS MEEKER COUNTY LST 980 for 23 months during the Vietnam war. I was a 3rd class Engineman. I served part of 1967 all of 1968, and part of 1969 aboard the 980. During the time the 980 was in Vietnam she earned 10 battle stars and 2 commendations.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

During my 1st month of volunteering, I helped Kenny build the stairs to the main engine room and rebuild the vents on the main deck to satisfy the Coast Guard. Also some other misc projects.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I was able to be part of the crew on the East coast trip, going from Glouster, Massachusetts, back to Mobile. I also was part of the crew on the trip from Mobile to Evansville. I was part of the crew on the trip to and from Tall Stacks. I was watch leader in the Main Engine Room.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I have spoken to American Legion groups and the local Lions Club, also the 980 ship reunion. I have spoken to many people one on one about the 325

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

I think that preserving the 325 for future generations is a vital undertaking. The crew both in Mobile, underway and Evansville are the greatest group of people that could ever be assembled.

7.
What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Having the privilege of working with many of the Gold crew is such a great opportunity. It makes you realize what makes our country great. Just being counted as a member of this group of people is a humbling experience, they accepted me right away and I am grateful for their friendships. I especially feel fortunate to be count anomg my friends Bill Arras, from Mobile.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I want to see the 325 stay a operating memorial for the future. I was fortunate enough to be elected to the Board of Directors in 2006 and I hope to be a positive influence for many years to come. A project I would like to see done is the restoring of the foward Diesel firepump and its engineroom. I Know tours can never see it because of its location, but it was my general quarters station on the LST 980. I wouldn't say I have fond memories of the time I spent there, but it was an important part of the overall mission of the ship.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

One night (actually 4:00 A.M.) I was relieving Rocky Hill as engine room watch leader and he wrote me a note (because of the noise of the Main Engines you can't talk to each other). Rocky's note said " I lost 1000 gal of Diesel fuel". That gets your attention. He didn't really lose it - it just went to a tank he wasn't expecting it to go to.

It is also amazing to me that the main engines, although over 60 years old at the time of the East coast trip, were set at standard speed and were never slowed down until we went under the big bridge in Mobile. I think it was about 12 days, 24 hours a day nonstop and they never missed a beat.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

I don't know if I have a favorite project. All the projects are important. I can't praise the Evansville crew enough for the great job they are doing on so many different projects. Many of the projects are highly visible, but some of them aren't noticed by most people, like lights that now work in places we used to have to string aux lights.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally?

LST 325 has become very important to me, but the crew is probably the greatest part of being associated with the 325.
What does it represent?
The 325 represents a time in my life when I was actively serving my country. I think that it is of the utmost importance that my grandchildren and all future generations understand what those in all branches of the military went through and continue to go through to keep our country safe.

Any additional comments you'd like to include:

All the people associated with the 325 are the greatest! I feel very fortunate to be associated with each and every one of them.

Terry Tull LST 325
LST 980 USS MEEKER COUNTY
Director, LST 325 Memorial



Name: Howard Norlin

City/State: Evansville, Indiana

Hometown: Duluth, Minnesota

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

In 2003, about the time the LST first came here from Mobile, my wife and I were relocating here from Arkansas, where we had retired from Cincinnati in 1989, after 39 years with General Electric. Our daughter, a nurse, has lived here since college, over 30 years ago. At that time, we lived in Indianapolis, and were familiar with the LST manufacturing here during the early forties. I became involved as a tour guide in October, 2005, when the ship docked permanently.

 2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I enlisted in the Navy in August, 1942 at age 19 in my hometown of Duluth, Minnesota as my draft into the Army was soon to be. Having had some experience as an Eagle Scout and Assistant Scoutmaster, and teaching Red Cross First Aid and Lifesaving, I went in the medical corps with a rate. After basic training at a newly opened base at Farragut, Idaho and Air Base Hospitals in Seattle, I was sent to x-ray technician school in Bethesda, Maryland. My girlfriend from back home was working in D.C. during the war, so after my training, we married in the Chapel at the Naval Medical Center. This was 63 years ago in February, 1944. Then after a few months at the Navy Hospital at Chelsea, Mass., I shipped to San Francisco and Hawaii, where I was assigned to the USS Goshen, APA 108 (Attack Personnel Auxilliary). These ships carried marines and other troops to invasions, and LSTs carry the tanks, jeeps, trucks, etc. So I became familiar with LSTs in Pacific landings. After a year of invasions, including Iwo Jima and Okinawa and marine landings in Japan and China, the war was over. I then had my first experience on an LST. One was going back to the States, and having enough service "points", I passengered on the deck for thirty days from Teintsen, China to San Diego. So I had some bit of experience on an LST before I boarded LST 325 here in Evansville. My Navy discharge was December, 1945.

 3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Being 84 years of age, my body will not do maintenance.

 4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

As an LST crew member, I have been a Tour Guide averaging 8 to 10 hours a week since October, 2005.

 5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

Along with my wife, Connie, and my daughter and son-in- law, Barb and Barry Hart, I hosted a four day reunion here in September last year of my APA 108 Ship, USS Goshen, with 53 attendees, at the Executive Inn. A great Tour with Memorial Service by VFW Post 1114 and our Tour Guides was the highlight of the event. We have had 16 annual reunions of the Goshen all over the United States, and this August will be in the Washington D.C. area. We also hosted the Branson one in 2003 when we lived out there before moving here.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

We talk about the 325 daily to friends and whoever will listen and have a membership in the Association. It is a wonderful memorial to our younger and present lives. Having resided in seven states in my life, the four years here with the wonderful people has been great.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Once the office received a letter from a twelve year old boy --- praising and thanking a "Howard" who gave a tour he was with. The thanks we get are rewarding. Often, after giving a tour, the guests want a picture with me included. Almost all groups have cameras. This is one place in our retired lives where folks respect and listen to us old "experts". Outside of this environment, most of us are unimportant and feel rather useless. Here, when giving a tour, most of us get a temporary usefulness --- PERHAPS SIMILAR TO THAT WHICH WE HAD WHEN WE WERE USEFUL IN OUR WORKING LIVES.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

A personal goal for the ship? Less emphasis on the Greek 35 year ownership, flags, and symbols. More emphasis on the World War Two period, the Navy personnel of that time, who they are and were; and their personal life stories. Who was captain, executive officer, chief petty officers, cooks, corpsmen, yeomen, boatswain, etc. Also stories of people from the shipyards of 1942 to 1945. Let us not forget those who fought Hitler and Tojo and other terrorists of that era.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

Not having made the trips to Louisville, Cincinnati, or up the Atlantic coast, I do not have the sea stories, but I have told guests of my experiences riding another LST for 30 days across the Pacific from China to San Diego in October 1945.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?
Driving to Louisville and back two days to assist with tours was rewarding. Those people were appreciative.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

The USS Navy Ship LST 325 represents a small but important part in bringing Hitler and Tojo to their knees for what they did in terrorizing the world. Today’s generations need to understand how "THE GREATEST GENERATION" gave them the life they have today --- and, we need some younger tour guides to join the group, and also maintenance volunteers on deck. But after they learn what WW II was all about.



Name:  Larry Hahn

City/State: Evansville, Indiana

Hometown: Evansville, Indiana

1.  How did you become involved with LST 325?  (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

Before I became fat, I ran throughout downtown Evansville and while running, I saw the 325 on it's first trip to Evansville.  I just had an urge to be on an LST once again. I was not able to tour her on her first trip here.My dad worked at the ship yard in Evansville during the war and I can remember the LST's being tied up at Dress Plaza after launching.

2.  What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy?  Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships?  (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I was in the Marine Corps. and had experience training and being trained on beach landings with LST's and in Amtracks.. My tour of duty was from 1958-1966 with some of that time in the reserves.

3.  Have you served as a maintenance worker?  What duties have you participated in along this area?

I have done needle gunning, painting, general labor and a lot of mopping. I built clothing racks  and hung cabinets in the gift shop.  I installed security gates in the Gift Shop.

4.  Have you served as a crew member?  If so, what have been your duty stations?

Just off the beaches of Virginia while in the service and was a throttle man on the trip to Louisville and back.I work as a tour guide as well as other duties.

5.  Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups.  What types of events?)

People are getting tired of me always talking about the ship.  I always tell them one on one, if you want me to stop talking about her, come join in and then people can listen to you.

6.  If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

There are many many devoted people who work tireless hours on her.  Then, there are folks who work according to what time they have to give.  Many hours or not so many hours, they are all devoted crewmembers who love the ship.

7.  What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

I would say my most favorable memory was the trip to Louisville.  Except for the heavy rain, it was a blast especially eating with some of the guys at Joe's Crab Shack. (that's another story)The least favorable memory was at the Newburgh Dam on the return trip.  (that is another story too)

8.  Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship?   (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I am just now starting to get back into some restoration work and my hopes are to continue on  another project when I get through with the one I am currently on.What I am working on right now are some large vents right above the ships photographer's office. I get a double pleasure of getting a job done and blasting out his loud radio with the echo from the needle gun right above him. ( I know it really makes his day as well as mine )

9.  What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

With all the sea stories you hear in the Ward room it is hard to point to just one.  I try not to get into sea stories that much but to see and listen to some of the guys relive their past, it makes up for it.I just guess it's not what is told but how it is told.  I just listen better when it starts with "This ain't no %@*#".

10.  What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

All projects that show improvement inside or out are well worth being on my list of favorite projects. To see what has been done in the crews quarters head, the stern winch, to mention a few and the look of a "job well done" on the faces of those who have done the work and have taken it personally is also high on my list of favorite projects.

11.  What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

There is a strange feeling when I come aboard the ship.  I guess you can day dream of what has happened in the past, the guys who fought to keep her afloat, for the guys who spent  some of the best years of their lives on her and fought for the freedom we all have today.  What she represents is felt and lived by all who spend time on her, have spent time on her and will spend time on her in the future.It is easy for me just to walk through the ship and relive the memories, in my mind, of what all has happened here in years gone by.

Any additional comments you'd like to make:

What a great piece of history to show our kids, why I even showed a kid a typewriter the other day.

Larry


Name: Sidney Hisel

City/State: Georgetown, Kentucky

Hometown: Lexington, Kentucky

1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

March 2001, my wife and I were traveling from Florida to Louisiana. We had just recently read about the LST 325 being in Mobile. I suggested that I would like to see it because I had sailed on one during WW II. Because I was napping when we came to the Alabama border, she pulled into a rest area and they gave her directions to the ship. That afternoon, after parking the RV, we went to the ship. At that time they would only let LST sailors go through the ship - she had to wait in the wardroom for
two hours as my visit with memories took time. In April after being home for two weeks, I recalled that they would welcome volunteers to help restore the ship. We loaded the RV and went to Mobile and that started our love affair with the 325. We both are Blue Crew Members.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

In June 1944, as a 17 year old farm boy I was sworn into the Navy and was sent to Great Lakes for "boot" camp. From there to Camp Bradford, VA for radar school. After school I was put into a ship crew and we went to Seneca, IL to pick up the LST 1132. After a trip down the Mississippi we went to Mobile where it was decommissioned and converted to ARL 31. After the conversion and recommissioning we went to San Francisco and spent 9 months repairing different ships. While on board I switched to the signal group and finally made SM 3/c. I was discharged in June 1946.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

I have helped with electrical, chipping, painting, cleaning, tour guiding and anything else that needed to be done.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

Yes, I have served as a crew member on the '03 Mississippi trip, the Boston trip, along with my two sons bringing the 325 to Evansville and the Tall Stacks trip. I did not make the "Thunder over Louisville" trip but I did drive to the ship every day and served as tour guide at that stop. Under way I was a "deck APE". This meant serving as a part of the helm watch, in port I served as quarter deck OD plus ticket sales and tour guide.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

RV groups, newspapers, TV and individuals.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

The 325 very easily gets a place in one's heart and then all of the people that I met while associated with the ship have become friends. This includes those in Mobile, ships' crews and Evansville workers.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

In 2001 being a part, along with my wife, of the recommissioning of the 325 as a Historic Naval Vessel in Mobile. The LST Association held their meeting in Mobile and this enabled us to see a huge crowd tour the ship. We also got to meet about 25 men who served on the 325 during WW II. Needless to say many tears were shed while this was going on. A second thrill was getting to be a part of the crew on the Boston trip. At this stage of my life, going to sea again in a Naval Ship is something one can only dream about.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

Keep the "T" floating and being a traveling museum.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

The first tour I gave in Mobile had a former soldier, his wife and 2 friends. After touring a part of the ship, he said the only thing I want to see is that big motor up forward (elevator motor). He said that saved my life as we were going into Leyte. There was a big gun upon a hill shooting at us and I, along with several others, got behind it. Several people were hit around me but that motor shielded me and I am thankful to be here today and tell about that ordeal. At that point I noticed four people along with the tour guide had tears in their eyes.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Bringing the ship to many ports and leading hundreds of people through a great part of history.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

I seemed to have developed a strong love affair with the ship that has been transmitted to my wife, my two sons and their wives and one of my grandsons.

Any additional comments you'd like to include:

I first want to thank and applaud the Gold Crew for bringing the 325 to us. I would be
amiss if I did not thank the wives of the men who worked so hard to get the ship running.
I think about the heart break each of them must have felt in being separated for Christmas.
Then there is that dedicated group in Mobile that took care of her for several years and
started the restoration. Their work and care started what has become an on going process.
In recent times the Evansville group has demonstrated an equal love and care as they have
done a tremendous job of improving and showing the LST 325.


Name: Susan Bloom (SeaBat)
Hometown: Lancaster, Ohio
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I first saw the Ship in a news story that appeared on the national news as the Gold Crew was returning the ship from Greece. At the time, I was interested as I knew my Dad had served on this type of ship. It was a year later, after the death of my mother, that I came upon Dad’s dress blues, his sea bag and other momentos of his service time. One box contained pins and ribbons – I was ashamed that I didn’t know what they represented. I requested Dad’s service record, the deck logs of his ship and began to read. So much of the logs I didn’t understand. I searched the web, came across a LST bulletin board, posted questions and the rest is history… Those men who encouraged my questions and the sharing of LST 125’s deck logs opened a hatch for me and have accompanied me on my personal voyage. I owe them a debt that I can never repay.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

Dad was a MoMM 2/c aboard LST 125 in the South Pacific. He had two brothers who were also Sailors – one was lost aboard the Mt. Hood at Manus Island. Mom had six brothers – five of whom served during WWII, the sixth during Korea. Uncle Joe was lost in the Sea of Japan on his Superfortress in December, 1944. I had a great-grandfather who fought during the Civil War, a grandfather who was in the Spanish-American war and a Great Uncle that was killed in France during WWI. My older brother and several cousins served in and during Vietnam. Today the family tradition continues with several cousins who are active duty military. I was brought up to respect and honor their sacrifices and honor their memories. If it weren’t for them, and all of you, we would not enjoy the freedoms we have today.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

I’ve just returned from a visit doing some cleaning and painting. It’s always so fulfilling to get my hands dirty! I really felt as if I had contributed in a small but concrete way to the preservation of the ship. I’ve worked the Ship’s Store and done mailings. The ladies and gentlemen that quietly perform these tasks also help in maintenance – by raising money to fund repairs and restoration. The Ship has come a long way from the early days in Greece… due to the efforts of so many willing volunteers in all areas of work and from all over the Country!

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

No… I’m female and at this time there is not berthing aboard for men and women. (I think Captain Jornlin would shudder at an all female crew... smile)

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I’ve done some recruiting of men and women to serve as volunteers, worked on articles and stories, mailings, and tried to keep the discussion forum lively! I’ve spoken to a few groups and many, many individuals. I was so honored to represent LST 325 at the Military Vehicle Preservation Association Convention last year. Working with Kenny and Anna, Ron Bezouska and Hike Nedeff on that project was pure joy!

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

This ship is the only operational LST ‘alive’ in the United States. It serves as a memorial and tribute to the men who served on them, to those who were transported by them and especially to our Gold Crew who brought her back to us as a gift for future generations.

The people involved in this project have become dear friends and family. We are all different – backgrounds, perspectives, geographic areas – yet we all share a love of LST 325. All of the personalities come together in a common goal and make a beautiful mosaic.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

I have been blessed with so many wonderful experiences… and know that there will be many more in the future.

When the ship departed for it’s River Cruise in 2003, I drove to Evansville. I could have gone to Jeffersonville, it would have been closer to me, but Dad’s LST was built at Evansville and I wanted to visit her there. I thought this might be my only opportunity to see a LST; I couldn’t pass up the chance. Upon arrival in Evansville, I took a tour. Stepping aboard for the first time was very emotional. I could sense the souls of sailors of the ages, hear the boom and chatter of the guns, picture the running feet as “General Quarters” was called. Ernie Andrus was the tour guide for the group I was in. As he showed the us around the ship, you could see the pride of accomplishment in his face. During the tour he noted that he had served in the South Pacific. My ears perked up, as that was where Dad had been. After the tour, Ernie was gracious enough to talk to me for a few moments. Through our conversation, Ernie said that he had served on LST 124. I was amazed - his was one of the ships in the convoy that left the States with LST 125. I then discovered that Ernie went aboard the 124 the same place (and the same time) Dad went aboard the 125...at Noumea, New Caledonia in January of 1944. The two ships were sisters, in many of the same operations. Coincidence? I don't think so... it was a part of God’s plan. Having Ernie give me my first tour somehow made everything complete...almost as if Dad were there showing me through. I firmly believe that Dad was smiling down from above – at Ernie and me!

Another wonderful memory is being on Boston Bay in one of the LCVP’s. Ron Maranto, Kenny Adams, Ralph Bryant, Josh Powell and I. It was something that I had never anticipated being allowed to do. I still owe a very deep debt of gratitude to Captain Jornlin and BMC Bruce Voges for allowing me to participate. It was pure joy, sharing the experience with these fine men. The salt spray and the sea breeze and yet, at the same time, realizing that these small boats carried so many to the beach and wounded from the beaches. I still marvel at the lives they saved. LST's and the small boats were not just ships of war, but of comfort and solace to the weary and wounded. Walk the decks and passageways aboard the LST or ride in an LCVP and you will feel these same emotions.

Visiting the ship in October of 2005 with the Ohio LST Amphibs Association is another precious memory. These men and their wives are also my family – and sharing the ship with them was one of the great privileges in my life. They encourage, support and give of themselves to preserve the history of LST and Amphibious Sailors. Seeing their faces, wiping away their tears, knowing instinctively what it means to them to be able to go aboard and remember - please know that your efforts have made these 'reunions' possible for so many deserving veterans and their families.

Another highlight was seeing the engine rooms for the first time – having a dear friend show me through the engineering spaces and patiently explaining how everything worked together. Hearing and feeling those 567 diesels purr! It gave me a much clearer idea of what Dad was doing during the war... and where.

Seeing the faces of veterans, listening to their stories as they come aboard for a tour – many for the first time since their Navy days.

Then there are the hugs… the joy of being simply being together as a family…

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

My goal is the same as most of the others – I want the LST 325 to live and prosper as a lasting, operational Memorial. She represents so many fine men and the sacrifices they made for all of us. We owe our veterans a debt that can never be repaid, but to pay proper tribute we MUST learn, share and constantly recruit others so that the Amphibs tradition can sail into the future.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

I don’t really have ‘sea stories’, but I constantly share how good everyone is to me… the importance of preservation, the laughter, the gentle teasing, the quiet conversation… and sometimes tears of remembrance. The joy of being a small part of this wonderful ship, this wonderful family is overwhelming.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

The interviews I’m currently doing! Any effort I’ve made, I’ve made from the heart - a love of the ship and a deep respect and affection for the crew and other volunteers!

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

This ship has given me insight to a part of my father that I never knew. Like many, he did not share his experiences, yet his service time was a large part of making him the wonderful man he was. In this day and age it is rare for a person to be able to say they had an ideal childhood, but I did – thanks to two wonderful parents. It’s given me a good perspective of the sacrifices made by men and women who serve – yesterday, today and tomorrow – at home and abroad. It has given me a new family… one that I know my parents would heartily approve. It’s not work, it’s not a hobby or a past-time. This ship becomes part of you, or as Dom said, we a part of it. I am indeed blessed.

There is a saying that when we give from the heart, we receive those gifts back two-fold. I know that is true…


Name: John Currie
City/State: Pahrump, Nv/Phoenix, Az 
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

Upon hearing in early 2001 news reports of the 325 returning to Mobile, AL, I began to relive my long ignored July 1942 to January 1946 Navy life.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

Joined the Navy upon graduation from High School June of 1942. Boot Camp San Diego, Ca; Diesel School 8 weeks, Los Angeles, Ca; 6 weeks Cleveland, Oh GM Factory Plant on LST engines; Little Creek, Camp Bradford Chesapeake Bay, LST Training. As an 18 year old MoMM 1/c left New York on the LST 358 in early April for the Mediterranean. The 325 coming back in 2001 brought back to me that long thirty plus days fully loaded: 6 LVCP's on davits, LCT on deck, all troop bunks full, saltwater showers, no fresh water making on early LST's.



Along with the 325 and other LST's the 358 made all of the Mediterranean landings; Sicily, Salerno, Anzio and southern France.. I moved from the 358 to the 6 after Salerno, then as MoMM in charge of a group of 20 plus LCVP moored shallow water mine sweeping boats. The sweeps were done ahead of H Hour, then all the beaches and harbors from Italy to Spain. I missed the D Day landing during the mine sweeping. The mine sweep group returned to Norfolk, Va in late December, 1944. After leave and evaluation I was assigned to shore duty in the Little Creek Port Director Dept. I met and married Joy at Virginia Beach in 1945. After discharge from the Little Creek , Va base in January 1946 we made our home in Arizona for college, then research and farming. We have three daughters who are true farmers.  Then came the 325 and life has not been the same since.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area? 

In January of 2001 we made a hurried trip from Arizona to Norfolk to visit Joy's very ill brother-in-law, a retired Master Chief Navy Shipfitter. On the way we stopped to visit the 325 which had just arrived at Chickasaw from downtown Mobile. We visited the ship again on the return trip west. I met the Captain and several Gold Crew members at the USS LST Convention in St Louis in 2002 and in 2003 met the ship at St Louis on the up river trip and helped with the tours. Then on to Evansville for the stop there on July 11th to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the landing at Sicily on my19th birthday. To celebrate the anniversary I wore my original blue uniform with just a few moth holes and a bit tight. Until this time I had been unable to schedule work visits but had contributed in other ways. Then came work time aboard.

In October of 2004 I spent more than two weeks aboard with Bos'un Voges repairing, chipping and painting the tank deck. In 2005 I stayed aboard two weeks pre-sea trial. After the trial in February I spent 18 days mostly below deck working with Munford. As I travelled cross country by air Munford ferried me from ship to Brookley Quarters. While working on the fuel purifier repairs I got a hernia on the left side and had to return back west. The doctor agreed to delay the surgery and allow me in early May to return to the ship wearing a supporter for the east coast trip. 
 
4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I served as a crew member for the east coast trip from Mobile to Massachusetts Maritime Academy, then had to return to Las Vegas to the doctor. I visited the ship for a few days after her return to Chickasaw, then back west but returned Sept 17 to serve on crew to Evansville Oct 3. Then back west for the hernia surgery Oct 27, 2006. With all personal repairs done returned to the ship for 12 days work and crew to Louisville Thunder.

After a chain saw accident to my thumb in July was able to participate in LST week in September. I am now trying to work out travel and participation in the April work party engine rooms maintenance and cleanup. Have worked in engine rooms underway and in port, both below deck and roaming.  

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?) 

Not on a scheduled basis but with veteran and other groups whenever possible. 

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be? 

The completeness of the ship - the guns, machinery, quarters, cargo and vehicle tie downs - and it all works. The ship is a glimpse of the people who designed and built her and operated her during a very important period of history. 

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

The dedication of the Gold Crew to get this very important piece of history where it is. 

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

To help keep the 325 operating and open to the public as an example, especially to younger folks, of what this great country can produce and accomplish when need be. 

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325? 

Stories of personal experiences during extreme conditions as tours pass points on the ship. Have you ever tried a ladder to the engine rooms or shaft alley?

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325? 

Just keep the engine running. 

11.What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

After more than fifty years she has given the opportunity to share a lot of long buried memories with a lot of great people.


Name: Roald Zvonik
City/State: Moline, IL.
Hometown: Moline, IL.
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

 
I became involved in 1992 or 1993 when I joined a group of men under the leadership of Mr. Jack Melcher. Before becoming a member we had to pass a Department of Transportation (DOT) physical plus written nautical tests. We purchased our tan uniforms and acted as honor guards at many LST National Conventions. Once we purchased tickets to Taiwan to sail a LST to the USA, but the trip was cancelled 2 days before departure. Fast forward to our advance crew in Souda Bay, Crete, the LST 391 was considered but rejected in favor of the LST 325.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I joined the U S Navy at 17 years old on May 9, 1944. In September 1944, I reported on board USS LST 722 at the Jeffersonville, Indiana shipyard. On April 11, 1946, we departed Yokohama, Japan for the United states via the Phillippines, Guam (where we delivered 7 Japanese war criminals who were later found guilty and hanged), Saipan, Johnson Island, Pearl Harbor and arrived at San Francisco May 27, 1946. We departed San Francisco on June 4th for Hartford, CT via San Diego, Acapulco, Mexico, Panama Canal, Staten Island, NY and Old Saybrook, CT, arriving at Hartford, CT on July 14, 1946; the 722 was decommisioned, and I was discharged at Great Lakes July 20, 1946.
See additional comments about the duties.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Served as maintenance worker in Souda Bay from August to October 2000. duties were painting, cleaning, mopping decks, clean and flush fire hydrants, working by flashlights removing hatches, fire hydrants and assorted parts from other LST's and reinstall them on the 325. Extenuating shipboard circumstances indicated a deep concern for my personal safety so I departed for home on Halloween leaving "Jonathan" in charge.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

Served as crew member on shakedown cruise in Souda Bay, Crete. Duties of 3rd Class Boatswain Mate were handling lines and other duties as assigned.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I have appeared before church groups, union meetings, civic organizations, Junior High School classes and as a former Executive Vice President of the Illinois LST Association which donates $250.00 yearly to LST 325. Major General Wade McManus signed a Certificate for a "Commander's Award For Public Service" which was presented to Messrs. George White, Don Chapman and myself in ceremonies at the Rock Island Arsenal, IL which was attended by Arsenal employees, the news media and Captain and Mrs. Jornlin.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

I am very proud to see a WW II operational LST in this this country with so many years of hard work to achieve this goal. I am also very proud to see so many dedicated personnel working on the 325 since its return. Keep up the excellent work!

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

We had many good times in Souda Bay. For a couple of weeks I assisted George White in walking a mile to the supermarket in Souda Bay to purchase food supplies for the ship. Since neither one of us could understand Greek, picture labels informed us of the contents but other items were more of a challenge. The second floor of the supermarket consisted of dry goods and hardware items.

Luggage carriers sufficed for shopping carts. Many of the shopkeepers knew us as the "American Sailors". The 325 was featured on Greek National TV and Tony, the restaurant owner which was doing a thriving business from us, rented a large TV for the occasion.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I contributed by contacting Congressmen and Senators for a special act of Congress to be passed for the return of a LST to this country. The LST 325 was considered to be a significant piece of war materiel and illegal to enter this country. My personal goal was achieved with the Overseas Support Group and the Gold Crew returning the 325. The Overseas Support Crew got the Gold Crew going.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

Why would a sane man pay $ 1500.00 dollars plus $ 600.00 dollars for the "Slop Fund" plus air fare and daily personal expenses in Crete to work? My wife stated that I must be crazy to pay to work, but "go ahead and enjoy yourself if that's want you want to do". My civilian job working for the U S Army took me to all posts, camps and stations in the U. S. plus Germany and Vietnam. My travel rank was between a Major and a Colonel. My wife was accustomed to my periodic paid travels lasting up to 4 months.

We were requested to bring cockroach poison to Greece because the decks were slippery from walking on them. I assumed everyone would bring the poison so I brought rat traps and had the unofficial title of "Rat Trapper"

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

All projects are my favorite because they are for the improvement of the 325.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

An unforgettable WW II experience. It represents that a group of determined men working together can overcome seemingly impossible odds to accomplish a job well done.

Any additional comments you'd like to include:

Reference question 2.
My seaman duties consisted of hand chipping paint, painting, helmsman, gunner, mess cook, fire fighter, crows nest lookout, gangway messenger, line handler, bow hook man on the LCVP, laundryman, taking water depth soundings between 2 Japanese islands, sweeping, dogging the bow doors shut after beach retraction, positioning emergency cushioning fenders before sideswiping tanker filled with aviation fuel when we bent up boat davits, securing a road grader sliding back and forth in the tank deck, washing off anchor chain and stacking the anchor chain in the chain locker while the anchor was being raised, securing our Captain safe from sliding around in his quarters, loading ammunition, food and general supplies, train other ship crewmen on anti-aircraft guns, utilizing fire hoses to wash away sand from the ship's bow because we hit the beach at full speed ahead which caused us to miss the invasion of Borneo, plus other duties as assigned.  I had ample opportunity to advance but I wanted to stay a seaman first class to enjoy fresh air and colorful sunrises and sunsets. From my battle station I observed cruisers firing broadside blasts, dive bombers, rocket ships blasting the beaches, and our troops going over the side to our LCVP's and other ships dropping depth charges after the destroyer escort next to us was torpedoed. Proud to be a "Deck Ape"! Recreation at sea was reading, watching movies several times over, sewing canvas hand bags and guncases, fashioning silver rings from quarters by tapping the edge of a quarter with a spoon to flatten it and drill hole in it, making belts from numerous strands of string tied with square knots to form decorative patterns. Assigned a "newbie" seaman to watch for a "mail bouy" to receive our mail and last but not least - card playing.


Name: Norval Jones
City/State: Auburn Hills, MI
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

Although I had heard about a group of men who were looking for an LST left over from WWII, I didn't check on it until I met Melcher at the LST Convention in Las Vegas. He said they needed medics and didn't have even one. I thought "Why not?" I had an EMT license, so I signed on. I'm not sure when that was, but it must have been around 1982 or 1983. Can't remember for sure.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I served on LST 828 in WWII as a motormac, picked it up at Evansville, went down the River, shakedown in the Atlantic, through the Panama Canal and off to war - which was not as the movies portrayed wars (no background music in a real war).
Anyway, even though we trained hard on how to get tanks on the beach, we did not carry tanks, we hauled ammo instead. Seems at that time there was a shortage of Ammo ships. So the numbers of LSTs in that area, at that time, went into a hat and someone drew out the type we were to be. We were number two on the lotto for that. Incidently, LSTs were so ugly they didn't even have names. The 828 never got a name. The ones that did, later, were named after Counties. I had lunch with our Captain - Lt. Commander Richard Trombeth, forty-two years after the war ended. He told me this was done for two reasons. The Japs knew what Ammo ships looked like and there was a shortage of them.

Following is a brief rundown of my Navy Career -

I enlisted on my 17th birthday, I had to wait until my mother would sign the papers because I was underage. She finally did when I explained to her that the recruiter told me once I was sworn in I was bulletproof. When the war ended, I re-upped, thought that I might make a life out of it, but soon found out it was not to be. I served three years and nine months in the 'regular' Navy. Joined the reserves which was supposed to be for four years, but someone started another war - Korea - so they added more time to me. I ended up with eight years and nine months. Not a total loss though, I received a Good Conduct Medal and my WWII uniform is in a museum at Frankenmuth, MI ("Chicken City"). I spent some time in the hospital at Pearl (fractured leg). Served on two LCIs and my last ship was the LST 827.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

I have not worked on the 325 since we brought her home. My health does not permit it. As a matter of fact, if someone else had been the Medic on the "Return of the LST 325", I would not have been cleared to make the trip. I know some people couldn't understand why I was aboard as a Medic (40 years) and not a MoMM (4 years), but I hated diesel engines and haven't touched one since 1947.

I had a heart attack in September, 1984 with a quadruple bypass in November, 1984. Shortly after that I was diagnosed with diabetes and had surgery to repair a hernia. Another bypass - triple - and my gall bladder removed later. I was diagnosed with CHF and living on lasix! When I went to Greece, I was having trouble with artery blockage in my legs. I also have four stents in various parts of my body. There is a new annuloplasty mitral ring helping the other side of my heart. The aortic valve was replaced, just before I went to Crete. I have worn out one pacemaker, but my second one is doing a good job. It didn't help that I started having symptoms of muscle problems which turned out to be Parkinson's. The bad part is I finally had to retire from the Fire Department at seventy-eight, but only because my legs don't want to work right. My brain works good, so I have a new job, tutoring English.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I really don't think that I can serve again as a Crew member... I really don't have an able body. Able Body Seaman? I don't think so!

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I have done many talks about the return of the LST 325. My largest group was probably on the 391 at Muskegan, MI on the tank deck. About two hundred old Sailors and friends. I've also talked to veterans groups, church groups, civic groups - you name it. Even the Retired Pilot's Association and the parents of Annapolis Cadets.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

Coming into Mobile after being gone for four and a half months - this was my home-coming from WWII, since I never came home during the war and the war had been over for about seven months when I did. We were met by a lot of people and brass bands. It is hard to believe the reception we received.
One think I would like to mention about the LST 325. I used to hear people talk about ships as though they were alive - with a soul - now I know why the 325 has spirit! She should have sunk, had I really thought about it, and the Coast Guard probably was right in their assumption in that regard. The coward that I am should have kept me from sailing on her!
To the people of the Navy and sailing world: THIS is the ship to pay monage to. It's probably the last chance for most people to see how primitive we really were in the 'old days' compared to the ships today.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Coming into Mobile after being in Crete for four and a half months was the biggest day of my life. In that, I had never been away this long since I was discharged from the Navy. My wife was supposed to meet me in Mobile, which she did. It was a true home coming for me since I never got home during the war and the war was long over when I did (duration and six or more).
We were met by brass bands, small boats, tugs squirting colored water and crowds of people and school children. My Daughter in Law and my two Grandsons were there. They have been aboard the 325 three times, toured the ship with some of the world's best guides.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I know I won't live to see it, but I hope my Grandsons take part in the 325 in the years to come. They have both written about her in school and what Grandpa did during the war. They also know the difference between a ship and a boat!

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

I could tell many stories about the LST 325 and her crew, but by far, I like the one about the Spanish Navy and the Battleship Commander.

We had trouble with the starboard engine shortly after leaving Crete. We (the USA) have a base in Spain and we wanted to put in there for repairs, but because of politics and other stuff (a story in itself), we could not. So we went to Gibraltar (a British base) for repairs. I think we were there twelve or thirteen days and pulled out at night. While we were in the Straits of Gibraltar, a voice, speaking fluent English, contacted us. The voice said he was a Battleship Commander and apologized for the treatment we received from Spain. The voice said he would consider it an honor to escort us through the Straits. It was a dark night, I was on lookout with the Captain. The Capain said "See if you can see a Battleship". Now the Straits of Gibraltar was packed with ships, but look as I did, I couldn't see any lights looking like they belonged on a Battleship. Nothing that large. I asked the Captain "Does Spain, or anyone else for that matter, have a Battleship?" He siad "Up until now, I didn't think so." Okay.. so I thought to myself "What am I missing?" Then it dawned on me, all the ships out there in the Straits, or anywhere else for that matter, were passing us. I finally found the only ship going our speed was about the size of a PT Boat. No wonder the Battleship Commander sounded so young! These Spanish!

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

My legs are gone, so the only thing I can do is visit the 325 during LST Week in Evansville.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

Although I didn't fix any engines, or drive home, I do feel I had a part in getting her here. I signed on as a Medic, probably the only person on the ship to hold any kind of current license, with forty years of training and experience. Not only was I the only Medic aboard, I was the only crew member from Michigan. I spent eight hours of every day on the bridge as lookout and I'm not sure how much time I spent as the Medic and as part time in the Ship's Store. Sometimes I slept. When I did, it was on a stainless steel operating table in the Sick Bay.

On the 325, I was MC, EMT - Master Chief Emergency Medical Technician. Up until then I was a Fire Captain EMT with thirty-five years of fire-fighting plus BLS (basic life support) and CPR.

I might add that I have not touched a diesel engine since November, 1947 but I have saved a few lives and put out a few fires. I still have my badge because anyone who has been around as long as I have gets to fade away when ready - and I also have a key [to the firestation].

Now that I can't do anything physical, I tutor English as a second language. Keeps me busy. I'm also taking Spanish. I don't know why I'm learning Spanish...

Just to add a couple of kicks - I served on an APA for about a month as engineer for the Captain's Gig and about a month on a mine sweeper that wouldn't run. Also put LCIs in mothballs for about 3 months, right after the war in Astoria, Oregon.


Name: Linda Alvers
City/State: New York, NY
Hometown: New York
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I was the producer of LST 534 and then was able to document the journey across the Atlantic.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

My father was a coxswain on board LST 534.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Documenting and spreading the word 

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

No.

Linda and her Father

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I speak to everyone about the ship.
 
6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

That it is a means of living history. That all children should learn about the ship, its mission and the mission of the people who served on her.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Watching her sail in to the port of Mobile, Alabama.  

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

That all veterans be allowed to spend time on the ship. And that I can help in anyway I can. From a distance.9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325? I have not told any sea stories.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

The Return of LST 325 on The History Channel. 

11.What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

A connection to my Dad.
Any additional comments you'd like to make: I would like to acknowledge and thank the citizens and mayor of Evansville for being such a great host for the ship.


Name: Dewey Taylor
City/State: Greenacres, FL
Hometown: Cincinnati, OH
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I signed up to be a Crew Member at Cincinnati, Ohio, my hometown. The LST Association was having their reunion. I knew about it for many years as I called the LST Association when it was just formed with only four or five members.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I joined the Navy at the age of 17 in 1942 with 4 weeks in Boot Camp. I was sent to Solomons, Maryland for Amphibious Training for one month. Our Crew was formed there. We were sent to Portland, Oregon. We Commisioned LST 452 on January 16, 1943. In about six weeks we were the first LST to cross the Pacific. We stopped at Pearl for a couple of days, next to the Fiji Islands, New Caledonia.

On April 16, 1943 we arrived in Brisbane, Australia. We started training Australian Army troops to make landings. After two weeks, five other LSTs arrived, about a week later we moved up to Towersville, Australia. We took on 500 American troops, trucks, guns and jeeps on the top deck. Tanks and others on the tank deck. The first six LSTs made the first D-Day landing in the Southwest Pacific. The LST 452 was the Flag Ship of Flotilla 7. After two years and 13 D-Day Invasions, my last landing was Leyte Island in the Philippines. While making the landings at Leyte we were hit with 13 mortar shells and 3 - 5 inch shells. We made it back to New Guinea okay.

We tied up to a repair ship. The next day, I and 5 others were on our way home. I had 4 years in the Navy. I arrived in San Francisco on December 7, 1944. I got my 30 day leave. About 15 days into my leave, my hands started to shake. My duty on the LST 452 was at sea, steering the Ship. I was in the Deck Force. The last year aboard I was coxswain of one of the LCVPs.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

I am a Gold Crew Member.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

Bringing the Ship home from Greece, steering on my trips. I work for Bruce Voges.
 
5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

Giving tours on the Ship and to friends.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

After seeing the LST in the junkyard and the work we did in Greece on the ship, sailing her to Mobile and all of the times going back to work on her. I am very proud to be a Crew Member. The Crew was great. Bruce Voges and I were on the 325 when Hurricane Katrina found the 325. With 13 feet of water surge, we had to slack off on the lines. What a sight!

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

My favorite memory is of November 14, 2000 - the day we left Souda, Crete, Greece. The second is January 10, 2001, the day we arrived in Mobile, Alabama.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I am 82 now. My personal goal is to have five more years to come to the ship. I think the 325 keeps me young and in good shape.
 
9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

I was going through the Chart Room... about two more steps... at Midnight I was to relieve the Helmsman. A big wave hit the ship and it put me into the bulkhead. I broke my video camera. It was 2 more days to Gibraltar and I wouldn't have any video for the whole Atlantic trip.

While in Gibraltar, NBC came aboard. I was talking to one of the NBC people as to what happened to my video camera. She gave me one of their video cameras and plenty of film. They were in Mobile [when we arrived there]. They were very nice people.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Getting everything painted and then starting over and doing it again!

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

It brings back my youth . . . to a 17 year old on LST 452. It is great!

Any additional comments you'd like to make:

The LST 452 that I was on for two years made two more D-Day landings ater I left it. That made 15 D-Day landings and two or three resupply trips for each landing.


Name: Steve Watt
City/State: Greenwood, Indiana
Hometown: Indianapolis
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

 Ever since the group of Vets have been looking for an LST to rehab and bring back, approx. 20 years. I am and very much appreciate being a part of the extended family of Bruce and Katie Voges.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

No I am not a veteran, but as the extended family of the Voges'.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Yes, I was privileged to be on the LST 325 when she came up for permanent berth at Evansville, worked on the LST in Jeffersonville during the 2003 river tour selling souvenirs and tickets; also in Boston in 2005, and in Cincinati during Tall Stacks. I also work on board at Evansville, cleaning whatever and doing whatever I am asked while there.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

Yes for a short time from Paducah, KY to Evansville in 2005 as a deck ape.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I speak to everyone I can about the LST and tell them anything they want to know if asked and tell them about the web site.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

This floating museum is the greatest thing that has happened to the midwest; the dedication of all who are associated with her is awesome.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Any time I am on her is a great memory. I hope to have a lot of memories in August and September when I hope be on part of the Illinois river tour.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

Not anything specific yet, for now the upcoming river tour.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

None yet. Just listening to the veterans relate their memories.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

None yet.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

The LST represents to me a living museum that everyone young and old should come and see. It also represents what the veterans went through to give us, the United States of America, the freedoms we have.

Any additional comments you'd like to make:

I wish to gratefully thank all who have given of their time and talents to have this museum in Evansville not just the veterans but all of the volunteers that have made this ship their pet project.


Name: Jim Hamann (Skivvywaver)
Location: Dupo IL
Hometown: Dupo IL
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial)

I was doing some web searching, and ran across a story about some veterans going to Greece to pick up an LST and bring it back. I told myself, now that’s a trip I would love to make. So I started following the story, and when the ship made a stop in St. Louis, Mo. I went there and visited it.

2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.)

I’m a Cold War veteran, as a Navy Beach Master. I was involved in many amphib landings, none were under fire, but still it was a hard duty. I was a signalman, which the Navy has decided that they no longer need.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

Sorry to say that I’ve not been a worker on the ship YET.

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

Again I have to say no I have not, YET.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

Anytime that someone mentions going through Evansville, I tell them that they must stop and see the ship. Also if I run across any LST veterans I tell them about the ship.

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

It’s a great group which keeps the ship alive.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

Just stepping aboard the ship in St. Louis brought back many memories.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

My goal is to be able to work/or sail aboard the ship some day.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

Not enough space here!

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Sorry to say this but I’m a communications geek, so it would have to be the Signal Bridge and the Radio Room.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

A time to look back at my younger years.

Any additional comments you'd like to make:

Some day I hope to meet as many people as I can.


Name:  Doug Leib
City/State: Sarasota, Fla.
Hometown: Cleveland, Ohio
1. How did you become involved with LST 325? (When, where, how did you first hear about the ship that might become/was the LST Ship Memorial.)

My dad had been following the progress of the return of the 325 in the “Scuttlebutt” and we decided to travel to Mobile to welcome it home. We were able to go aboard after the ceremonies and to see my dad’s reactions to seeing an LST again was priceless. Everyone was so kind to my dad and I , one gentleman even took an hour to give us a personal tour. We both talked about getting involved but it was about a year before we returned to work.
2. What is your background - do you have a connection to LSTs or the Navy? Are you a veteran or the relative of a veteran who served aboard or was transported by these ships? (If you are a veteran, please also give information as to when and where you served, the duty you had.) 

My dad, Jim Leib, was on LST 838 and 522.He sailed down the Ohio River  from the Devoe Shipyards in 1944. When I told him that I was going last year to the “Tall Stacks” in Cincinnati he remembered that the people of Cincinnati had come aboard his ship and given each member of the crew some gifts. That trip down the Ohio River was very emotional for Ken Frank and me as we followed the path both of our dads took during the war.

3. Have you served as a maintenance worker? What duties have you participated in along this area?

I have done a lot of chipping , priming and painting. I have also cleaned a few toilets along the way!

4. Have you served as a crew member? If so, what have been your duty stations?

I sailed the ship back from Glouster, Mass. in June of 2005 and was a deck hand. I  met
the 325 in Cincinnati and sailed it back to Evansville last October. On that cruise I was  promoted to the rank of  Scullery Mate 2nd Class faithfully serving  under Joe in the kitchen.

5. Have you spoken to others about the Ship Memorial? (One on one or to groups. What types of events?)

I brought a group  of history buffs from my church to  visit the ship when it was in Mobile. Kenny Adams met us there on a Saturday and gave us the royal treatment. It was the highlight of everyone’s weekend which included the D-Day museum in New Orleans

6. If you could make a specific point about LST 325 (the ship or the people), what would it be?

The connection I feel with history and that whole WWII era-the people and events that changed the world.

7. What is your favorite memory/recollection of regarding LST 325?

I have several- My dad, my two brothers and me working on the ship together,  my first tour group in Glouster, and my dad and me alone on the deck talking together at dusk  with the lights of Evansville in the background.

8. Do you have a personal goal regarding your involvement with the ship? (A specific project, a personal achievement, an overall goal you want to see attained)

I really want to honor my father and all of our veterans by helping to keep the ship  going strong.

9. What is the favorite 'sea story' you have told regarding the LST 325?

My dad and I took a short cruise together. We were on the ship in dry dock in Mobile when it was moved to another location a few hundred yards away! We handled some lines together and it was a wonderful experience.

10. What has been your favorite project regarding LST 325?

Painting the railings all the way around the ship with Ken Frank, Bill and Raine Rutledge and my dad.

11. What does the ship mean to you personally? What does it represent?

It means a special connection with my father and the whole World War II generation. Sometimes when I walk down on the tank deck and smell the smells there it almost feels like I’m there in history. (Can anyone else relate to that?)

Any additional comments you'd like to include:

Working on the ship, sailing on the ship, and meeting so many fantastic people has been a highlight of my life! God Bless us-EVERYONE!!


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