- USS Belle Grove (LSD-2)
USS "Belle Grove" (LSD-2) was a sclass|Ashland|dock landing ship of the
United States Navy , named in honor of Belle Grove Plantation, the birthplace of PresidentJames Madison (1751–1836) inPort Conway, Virginia ."Belle Grove" was laid down on
27 October 1942 by theMoore Dry Dock Company ,Oakland, California ; launched on17 February 1943 , sponsored by Mrs. George M. Lowry; and commissioned at Oakland on9 August 1943 , Lieutenant Commander Morris Seavey, USNR, in command.World War II
Following her
shakedown cruise in the waters off southernCalifornia , "Belle Grove" sailed forPearl Harbor on21 October 1943 . Upon arrival, the dock landing ship conducted several rehearsals for the upcoming invasion of the Gilbert Islands. In early November, she loaded troops and equipment and set sail forMakin Island . Arriving in the lagoon off Makin on20 November , she unloaded her embarked troops and LCMs without incident later that morning. In company with Transport Division 20 (TransDiv 20), the ship cleared the island group that evening, returning to Pearl Harbor on2 December .1944
"Belle Grove" underwent repairs and alterations at that base before taking part in amphibious rehearsals at
Maalaea Bay ,Maui . On22 January 1944 , after embarking troops of the Army's 7th Infantry Division, she sailed for theMarshall Islands . The ship supported the seizure of Kwajalein Atoll, delivering troops and equipment ashore on31 January , and then served as a floatingdry dock and boat pool for the numerouslanding craft required in an amphibious operation. These duties lasted until8 February when she got underway for Pearl Harbor.With her transport capabilities needed in the Solomons, "Belle Grove" headed for the Southwestern Pacific on
2 March . After a brief refueling stop atFunafuti in theEllice Islands , she unloaded troops, vehicles, and other equipment atGuadalcanal . The dock landing ship then took on a cargo of pontoon barges and pilings intended for a motor-torpedo-boat base under construction atEmirau in theBismarck Archipelago just north of New Ireland. On25 March , despite heavy seas that wrenched her stern gate from its hinges, the LSD delivered the cargo to that island. After returning toTulagi for fuel, she proceeded toEspiritu Santo in theNew Hebrides for repairs. On22 April , she steamed toFlorida Island to deliver a cargo of landing craft. The ship also carried troops and equipment betweenManus Island and theRussell Islands before turning north forOahu .Reaching Pearl Harbor on
17 May , "Belle Grove" began preparations for the upcoming invasion of the Marianas. She embarked troops of the 4th Marine Division and vehicles (LVTs andLVTA s) of the Army's534th Amphibious Tractor Battalion . She also replaced her own boats with these more efficient landing craft. The ship sailed with TransDiv 26 in early June and arrived offSaipan on the morning of the 15th. "Belle Grove" disembarked the marines and the LVTs, and sent them shoreward without mishap. As intense fighting continued ashore for several weeks, the dock landing ship served as a floating "garage" to service and fuel the numerous landing craft needed to shuttle vital reinforcements and supplies to the beachhead. Shortages of repair force ratings and machine shop equipment, however, did hamper her repair efforts.Temporarily assigned to TransDiv 32 on
15 July for the planned occupation of nearby Tinian Island, "Belle Grove" went alongside SS "Dominican Victory" on15 July to load 9,500 rounds of 75-millimeter tank ammunition. Two days later, she received 2,215 five-gallon (20 l) cans of water from USS|Cambria|APA-36|2. And on the 22nd, LCMs brought 18Sherman tank s out to "Belle Grove". Two days later, at dawn on the 24th, the dock landing ship arrived off White Beach 2. The ship ballasted down, flooding her well-deck, and lowered her stern gate to launch the tank-carrying landing craft. The operation passed without incident until one LCM's ramp dropped as it went over the sill and it quickly filled with water. Fast work by "Belle Grove"'s deck crew saved both the LCM and its valuable cargo, and the rest of the landing went smoothly.The dock landing ship returned to Saipan for a second load of LCMs that afternoon and made the trip back to
Tinian the following morning. Although mortar fire from shore forced her to retire seaward, "Belle Grove" resumed unloading cargo late on the 25th. She went to Saipan again in the evening, loaded a third cargo of LCMs, and returned to Tinian the next morning. During the ensuing unloading operation, rough seas caused a water surge in the well deck that slammed several landing craft against the cargo deck. The aftermost LCMs dropped their ramps and filled with water, sinking in the well deck. Salvage work quickly restored the craft to service, however, and the unloading continued without incident. Later that afternoon,DUKW s from the beach came alongside to receive tank ammunition and water, then the ship returned to Saipan. On28 July , after "Belle Grove" delivered another cargo of water and ammunition to Tinian, she formed up with TransDiv 7 and began the voyage toHawaii .After arriving at Pearl Harbor in mid-August, the dock landing ship received a badly needed hull cleaning and other voyage repairs. Following amphibious exercises off Maui in the first week of September, "Belle Grove" embarked 20 LCMs, heavy equipment, and Army troops, before sailing on
15 September with TransDiv 28. She paused atEniwetok from 25 to 28 September to replenish stores and fuel before getting underway for the Admiralties. Arriving atSeeadler Harbor on3 October , the ship again replenished stores and fuel while both crew and troops went ashore for exercise and recreation. Underway again on the 14th, she set a course for thePhilippines ."Belle Grove" joined the massive amphibious force off Leyte on
20 October , ballasted down early that morning, and discharged her tank-loaded LCMs as part of the eighth assault wave. She then dispatched her boats to assist other ships in unloading cargo. The ship remained inLeyte Gulf until22 October when, partly owing to the threat from Japanese surface forces, she departed the area. The dock landing ship reachedHollandia on the 27th and loaded supplies for a return trip to Leyte. Over the next month, she made four more supply runs shuttling fromNew Guinea to Leyte, before loading three tank landing craft atSansapor for the invasion of Luzon. Underway30 December , she joined Task Group 38.5 (TG 78.5) for the journey toLingayen Gulf .1945
En route, "Belle Grove" observed
Japan ese air attacks on nearby ships, witnessingsuicide plane s crashing "LST-912" andattack transport USS|Callaway|APA-35|2 on8 January 1945 . Thetank landing ship fired at the latter's attackers and claimed hits "though not sufficient to divert the plane and prevent its crash-dive on "Callaway". "Belle Grove" herself escaped the attention of the kamikazes and arrived in Lingayen Gulf early on the 9th. She then anchored and began discharging her LCTs and DUKWs in the rendezvous area. Despite considerable air activity, the dock landing ship remained unscathed and, after a week of operations atAbuyo and San Pedro Bay, proceeded toUlithi where she arrived on the 23rd.Assigned to
Operation Detachment , the planned invasion of Iwo Jima, the ship steamed toGuam on7 February , loaded equipment, and shifted to Saipan the following day. She loaded LCMs laden with Marine Corps tanks before sailing for Iwo Jima on the 16th. After unloading her cargo on 19 and 20 February, "Belle Grove" served as a small craft control and "drydock" vessel in the transport area. She repaired landing craft damaged by both Japanese gunfire and the heavy surf of Iwo Jima's beaches. The ship remained off the island for a month, repairing 199 small craft of all types, before steaming for the Marianas on20 March . Touching at Guam and Eniwetok, she reached Pearl Harbor on8 April .She remained there until
3 June , undergoing repairs and alterations, while a large proportion of her crew were discharged or reassigned. After taking on their replacements, "Belle Grove" received orders to transport landing craft from the Marshalls and the Marianas to the Philippines. She made two runs to Samar in June and July before turning toward the New Hebrides on9 August . She reached Espiritu Santo on the 14th and began loading more landing craft. The next day, however, the end of hostilities with Japan interrupted this task. Instead, after departing Espirito Santo on27 August , the dock landing ship carried passengers and cargo to Hollandia, then toBiak , and on to the Philippines. On27 September , she departed Leyte forOkinawa , reaching her destination on the 30th.Although "Belle Grove" avoided injury in
Typhoon Louise , which struck Okinawa in early October, many other ships and small craft suffered severe damage from that storm. The dock landing ship remained inBuckner Bay for almost two months, using hermachine shop and well-deck to dock and repair 163 landing craft of all types. Finally released for other duty, the ship embarked replacements for veteran troops inChina and steamed forShanghai on23 November . Lingering in that port for only three days, "Belle Grove" sailed down the coast toHong Kong for rest and recreation before streaming the "Homeward Bound" pennant on6 December . After refueling stops at Samar and Eniwetok, the LSD reached San Diego on New Year's Day 1946. The ship then underwent a preservation overhaul before being decommissioned on30 August 1946 . She was berthed with thePacific Reserve Fleet at San Diego.1950 – 1952
The outbreak of hostilities in Korea in June 1950 prompted the dock landing ship's return to service. Ordered activated on
7 August 1950 , "Belle Grove" was recommissioned at San Diego on27 December 1950 , Comdr. W. R. Smith, III, in command. Upon completion of her shakedown training, she departed San Diego on16 April 1951 , transited thePanama Canal two weeks later, and reached Norfolk on4 May . The LSD participated in several amphibious exercises that summer before proceeding toBaltimore, Maryland , where she remained in overhaul from28 June and29 September . Following those repairs, "Belle Grove" returned to Norfolk on1 October . She sailed for theWest Indies on the 11th, visitingBermuda andPuerto Rico and then conducting training operations offVieques Island until5 November . After additional training offOnslow Beach, N.C. , the ship returned to Norfolk on18 November and remained in port through the end of the year.On
7 January 1952 , "Belle Grove" departed Norfolk for her first tour of duty with the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean. During the course of her deployment, as part of TransDiv 33, the ship visitedItaly ,Crete , andSardinia and participated inNATO Exercise "Grand Slam." She wound up her deployment with visits toBeirut ,Lebanon , late in April and toCannes ,France , early in May. Departing southern France on the 8th, the ship returned across theAtlantic , arriving at Morehead City, N.C., to drop off marines on22 May . She then resumed operations with 2d Fleet, carrying out amphibious training offVirginia and theCarolinas into September. Ranging farther afield, "Belle Grove" also shuttled troops and equipment between Norfolk, Morehead City, and Vieques. She stopped at Trujillo,Dominican Republic , between 2 and 5 November, and atNewport, Rhode Island , on 1 and 2 December, before returning to herhome port for the holidays on the 4th.1953 – 1955
Departing Norfolk on
6 January 1953 , "Belle Grove" proceeded toCharleston, South Carolina , for repairs and alterations. During that overhaul, which lasted until26 March , she received word of her impending reassignment to the Pacific Fleet. After post-overhaul refresher training at Guantanamo Bay,Cuba , the ship headed for Panama in mid-April. She transited the canal on20 April and reached San Diego on1 May . Three days later, she put to sea for Operation "Barchange", anArctic supply mission to support the embryonic continental defense systems being constructed inAlaska . She stopped at Seattle to load equipment and supplies before sailing for theAleutians on12 May . "Belle Grove" shuttled between Seattle and Alaskan locales such as Cold Bay, Naknek, Kodiak, Unimak, and Barrow, through mid-September 1953. Departing Seattle on22 September , she reached San Diego on the 26th, and remained there into the following year undergoing repairs and receiving the modifications necessary for operations in aradiation -contaminated environment.On
2 January 1954 , the dock landing ship sailed for Pearl Harbor in preparation forOperation Castle , a six-detonation atmospheric nuclear test slated to occur at Bikini and Eniwetok atolls in the Marshall Islands. Arriving at Bikini Atoll on19 January , "Belle Grove" resumed the familiar role of transport and "mother" ship to a boat pool of 26 small craft. In addition, before each test, the ship evacuated people and boats from the test sites. Following each test, she quickly returned to the lagoon to enable LCM decontamination and recovery operations to proceed as soon as possible. The first fivethermonuclear detonation s occurred at Bikini between1 March and5 May , and the last one took place on14 May at Eniwetok.On
17 May , "Belle Grove" sailed for home and, after stopping briefly at Pearl Harbor on the 26th, moored at San Diego on3 June . Following three months of upkeep and training, the ship got underway for the central Pacific on26 September . Arriving atKwajalein on6 October , she spent the next two weeks shuttling supplies and equipment among the Marshalls before sailing for Guam. From there, the ship proceeded toSangley Point in the Philippines, delivered cargo, and then set sail for home on the 30th. Steaming via Eniwetok, Midway, andAstoria, Oreg. , she arrived at San Diego on 23 November.On
11 January 1955 , "Belle Grove" enteredLong Beach Naval Shipyard for an overhaul and remained there until27 April . Following a short period of refresher training, the ship departed Long Beach for Seattle on9 May . Intelligence suggesting an increase in theSoviet long-range bomber threat had accelerated air defense and early warning system construction in Alaska, and the dock landing ship received another resupply mission to those Arctic outposts. Over the next five months, she shuttled between Seattle and the Alaskan ports of Anchorage, Kodiak, Naknek, Cape Newenhem, Northeast Cape, Nome, Tin City,Cape Beaufort , Cape Lisburne, andPoint Barrow . At one point, just before a change of command ceremony, the ship encountered such severe ice conditions that the new captain had to utilize anInuit "skin-boat" to cross the harbor to board ship. Returning to Long Beach on2 October , she spent a short time in the shipyard to repair damage sustained in theBering Sea ice pack but soon resumed the underway training off southern California that occupied her time for the remainder of the year.1956 – 1961
"Belle Grove" commenced her first postwar deployment to the Far East when she stood out of Long Beach on
12 January 1956 . The dock landing ship reached Yokosuka on3 February , and over the next seven months, operated with 7th Fleet forces in Japanese,Korea n, and Philippine waters. She also visitedKeelung , Formosa; Hong Kong; and Okinawa. High tensions with China marked this cruise, especially since the communists threatened Formosa with invasion at this time, but no incidents occurred and the ship departed for home on8 September . She arrived at Long Beach, via Eniwetok,Johnston Island , and Pearl Harbor, on4 October and spent the rest of the year in port.Local operations along the coast of southern California occupied her time throughout 1957 and the first few months of 1958. On
1 April , "Belle Grove" departed Long Beach for the central Pacific. She spent the next five months participating inOperation Hardtack , a 35-detonation series of nuclear tests held at Eniwetok, Bikini, and Johnston Island. After she arrived at Eniwetok on20 April , her activities involved shuttling LCUs and other cargo among the atolls and Johnston Island in support of boat pool activities. On10 June , following the first 14 nuclear tests, the ship steamed to Pearl Harbor for upkeep before returning for a second tour of duty in mid-July. She assisted in six more surface tests and in two high-altitudeRedstone rocket detonations off Johnston Island, before assisting in roll-up activities at Eniwetok into early September. The ship returned to Long Beach on the 23rd and then limited her activities to local operations for the balance of the year.Over the next 18 months, "Belle Grove" made two more deployments to the western Pacific. There, she operated with 7th Fleet units in the familiar waters off Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan. In mid-1960, after returning to the West Coast following her third postwar assignment in the Orient, she began an overhaul at the Todd Shipyard at San Pedro, California Departing that yard on
11 January 1961 , the dock landing ship conducted post-overhaul refresher training and local operations out of Long Beach into the summer.In late June, "Belle Grove" sailed for Portland, Oreg., and a
Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization (FRAM) overhaul. Her crew lived on board the barracks ship APL-4 while the dock landing ship underwent a thorough reconditioning. She received new mess facilities, modern communications equipment, and much needed maintenance to her engineering spaces, hull, and well-deck. With the overhaul completed in late December, the ship returned to Long Beach on the 29th.1962
Following refresher training in January 1962, "Belle Grove" sailed for another Pacific deployment on
15 February . During the first three months of the deployment, she shuttled marines and their equipment betweenSubic Bay and Okinawa. She also participated inOperation Tulungan , a multi-lateralSoutheast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) exercise held in the Philippines and designed to deter communist aggression in the region. In May, continued political friction between the communistPathet Lao and rightist factions inLaos , prompted PresidentJohn F. Kennedy to order American military forces into neighboringThailand . That move, symbolizing the American commitment to support the Thai andSouth Vietnam ese governments, began when an attack carrier group steamed into position offDa Nang , South Vietnam. Anamphibious ready group (ARG) then proceeded into the Gulf of Siam, and all available amphibious ships assembled in Buckner Bay, Okinawa."Belle Grove" and USS|Talladega|APA-208|2 supported this contingency operation by lifting the 1st Battalion, 9th Marines, and six
helicopter s to Subic Bay. When theInternational Agreement on the Neutrality of Laos was signed on23 July 1962 , theLaotian crisis abated, and the ship received orders to help remove the Marines of the3rd Marine Amphibious Unit (MAU) and their equipment from Thailand. "Belle Grove", and her sister ship USS|Carter Hall|LSD-3|2, made two trips toBangkok , Thailand, before completing this task in early August. [cite web
url= http://www.ussbellegrove.com/history/history.html#1962
title= History of USS "Belle Grove" (LSD-2)
date= |year= |month= | publisher= U.S.S. "Belle Grove" LSD-2 Association
accessdate= 2008-03-19 ] After dropping off marines at Subic Bay and Buckner Bay, the ship stopped at Yokosuka, Japan for minor repairs before departing for home on23 August . She arrived at Long Beach on11 September .At the end of a month of leave and upkeep, the ship received emergency orders to load elements of the
5th Marine Expeditionary Brigade at Camp Del Mar. The gradual rise in tension between the United States and Cuba, exacerbated by theSoviet Union 's delivery of military assistance to that island, had broken out into a severe crisis on14 October . A U-2 reconnaissance flight, initially described as "a milk run", detected the presence of offensive nuclear weapon sites on Cuba and prompted President John F. Kennedy to order a naval "quarantine " of the island. "Belle Grove", in company with three other dock landing ships, transited the Panama Canal on5 November and took up station south ofJamaica . Although the immediate crisis passed by28 October , the ship steamed with elements of Task Group 128 (TG 128) for another three weeks as the withdrawal of Soviet missiles from Cuba was confirmed. She departed the West Indies on2 December and arrived at Long Beach on the 15th in time to enjoy the holiday season in port.1963 – 1965
For the next ten months, "Belle Grove" conducted local operations off the West Coast. On
17 September 1963 , the dock landing ship sailed from Long Beach for her fifth Far East deployment. She visited Hawaii, Yokosuka, Sasebo, and Hong Kong before anchoring in Subic Bay as standby LSD for TG 76.5 in December. A faulty boiler, however, kept her in port for repairs until1 February 1964 , when she resumed operations with 7th Fleet. "Belle Grove" participated in amphibious Exercise "Back Pack" atTaiwan and then visited Okinawa and Japan before returning to Long Beach on6 April .In mid-July, after a period of local operations, the ship moved to Seattle, Washington, where she entered the
Todd Shipyard for another modernization overhaul to repair her aging hull, piping systems, and cabling. Returning to Long Beach in mid-October, she conducted refresher training and local operations into the following spring. On19 April 1965 , "Belle Grove" pointed her bow westward for service inVietnam . She transported a portion of the eliteSouth Korea n "Tiger" Corps to Vietnam. The ship then supported the recent marine deployment to Da Nang by serving as a boat haven in that city's harbor. In addition, she provided repair facilities to inshore coastal vessels engaged inOperation Market Time , a series of coastal patrols designed to interdict communist waterborne logistics routes into South Vietnam. Returning home29 November , she spent only six weeks in leave and upkeep before heading back to Vietnam.1966 – 1968
Assigned the task of establishing river patrol units in the
Mekong Delta , "Belle Grove" steamed forChu Lai , South Vietnam, on10 January 1966 . Arriving in that port on5 February , the ship spent the next two months maintaining LCM landing craft, PBR river patrol boats, andUH-1B "Huey" helicopters in theRung Sat Special Zone. She also served as a command center that coordinated Navy riverine patrols and Army helicopter sweeps againstViet Cong forces as part ofOperation Jackstay . Those attacks, carried out in conjunction with B-52 strikes, lasted from26 March to4 April . In mid-April, she coordinated the first PBR and helicopter patrols on theLong Tau River . On19 April , USS|Tortuga|LSD-26|2, relieved her as armed-helo support ship atVung Tau , and "Belle Grove" steamed for the Philippines that same day. After delivering cargo to Subic Bay the ship returned home, via Yokosuka and Pearl Harbor, on28 May .Following a short period of local operations, during which she was transferred to Amphibious Squadron 11 (Phibron 11) on
1 July , "Belle Grove" sailed for another Far East tour on1 September . On24 September , she successfully weatheredTyphoon Ida before putting into Okinawa. There, she joined TF 76, 7th Fleet's amphibious force, and began carrying troops and equipment throughout the Far East. "Belle Grove" transported cargo between Da Nang and Vung Tau, both in South Vietnam; Sasebo, Yokosuka, andNumazu , Japan; Okinawa; and Subic Bay, Philippines. She also delivered the bulk-fuel system for the base at Sattahip on the Gulf of Siam. Heading home in December, the ship suffered a delay in Pearl Harbor owing to boiler problems but finally arrived at Long Beach on10 January 1967 .For the next eight months, "Belle Grove" conducted refresher and amphibious training in the waters off California. She broke this routine only twice, once in March and again in April, to participate in exercises near
Kaneohe andMolokai , Hawaii. On11 August , the ship once again headed to Vietnam. After unloading equipment at Subic Bay on the 27th, the dock landing ship received orders to Da Nang on5 September . There, she relieved USS|Hermitage|LSD-34|2 and, the next day, joined TG 76.4 at sea. Over the next ten weeks, the LSD took part in three amphibious assaults in support of I Corps operations. The ship launched combat loaded LVTs, refueled and maintained helicopters, and provided base support for troops of the Army's Special Forces.In late November, she made several equipment deliveries between Subic Bay, Da Nang andCam Rahn Bay , at the conclusion of which she returned to the Philippines before heading for Sasebo on3 December . The next day she was diverted to assist a grounded Japanese fishing boat, the "Kiyu Maru", and rescued the entire crew. After a week of upkeep in Sasebo, "Belle Grove" steamed intoNaha , Okinawa, on the 17th. There she loaded CH-46 helicopters and related equipment for transportation to Da Nang. These she transported in two trips, making the first delivery on22 December and the second on2 January 1968 . In both cases, a lack of pier space inspired the crew to demonstrate "Belle Grove"'s versatility by assembling the crated helicopters in her well-deck and flying them off while she lay anchored in the harbor.For the next month, the ship conducted further equipment deliveries — between Subic Bay, Manila, and Cam Ranh Bay — before steaming to Yokosuka on
8 February . Following upkeep and inspection, "Belle Grove" got underway for home on the 28th, stopped at Pearl Harbor on 9 and 10 March, and arrived at Long Beach on19 March . Leave and upkeep lasted until 10 April when the ship began an overhaul at the Long Beach Naval Shipyard. After repairs ended on14 July , the dock landing ship spent the next four months conducting refresher training and underway exercises out of San Diego. On9 October she sailed for a port visit toAcapulco and, on the 25th, loaded severalyacht s of the victorious U.S. Olympic yachting team for transport back to San Diego. After unloading the sailing vessels on1 November , "Belle Grove" moved to Long Beach where she spent the remainder of the year conducting local operations.1969
In January 1969, "Belle Grove" moved to the Bethlehem Steel Shipyard, San Pedro, for an availability that lasted until the 27th. After a brief return to Long Beach, the ship steamed for Pearl Harbor on
30 January . Arriving at Oahu on7 February , the dock landing ship moored at the naval ammunition depot where she loaded dynamite and other explosives for the Atomic Energy Commission. Underway for Johnston Island on the morning of the 9th, the ship reached her destination on the 11th and worked cargo until sailing for the Marshalls the following morning. Entering the lagoon at Bikini Atoll on the morning of the 18th, "Belle Grove" commenced unloading explosives and other test equipment. Departing the atoll for Guam late that afternoon, the ship put intoApra on the 23rd but departed again that same day and arrived at Subic Bay on the 28th.For the next five months, "Belle Grove" shuttled men and material between Da Nang, Vung Tau, Subic Bay, and Okinawa, punctuating those lifts with short visits to
Singapore , Hong Kong, and Sasebo. When in Vietnamese waters, the ship often put into effect the "exposed anchorage and antiswimmer watch" to foil any Viet Cong attempts to attachlimpet mine s to her hull. This sometimes included the use of an armed picket boat patrolling around the ship and tossinggrenade s in the water. Her only amphibious operation took place in early August, when "Belle Grove" helped shift marines and their equipment from Chu Lai to Da Nang.Departing Vung Tau for the last time on
14 August , she reached Buckner Bay on the 17th, pushed on for Yokosuka the following afternoon, and moored there on the 21st. Five days later, the ship departed Japanese waters and arrived at Seal Beach, California, on11 September . Slated for inactivation, the dock landing ship unloaded all her ammunition before shifting to Long Beach the following day. "Belle Grove" was decommissioned on12 November 1969 , and her name was struck from theNaval Vessel Register that same day. She was placed in the Inactive Ship Facility, San Diego, where she remained into 1970. That summer she was sold to N. W. Kennedy ofVancouver, British Columbia ,Canada , and broken up for scrap."Belle Grove" earned six
battle star s forWorld War II service and eight battle stars forVietnam War service.References
*DANFS
External links
*cite web
url= http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/b4/belle-grove-i.htm
title= "Belle Grove"
first= Timothy L. | last= Francis
date=23 February 2006 | work= DANFS | publisher= U.S.Naval Historical Center
accessdate= 2008-03-18
*cite web
url= http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/12/1202.htm
title= APM-2 / LSD-2 "Belle Grove"
first= Gary P. |last= Priolo
date=14 December 2007 | work= Amphibious Photo Archive | publisher= NavSource Online
accessdate= 2008-03-18
*cite web
url= http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/amphib/lsd2.htm
title= "Belle Grove"
work= DANFS | publisher= Hazegray.org
accessdate= 2008-03-18
*cite web
url= http://www.ussbellegrove.com/
title= U.S.S. "Belle Grove" LSD-2 Association
accessdate= 2008-03-18
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