Spiegel Grove
(LSD-32)
The Spiegel Grove is one of our favorite dive sites, as well
as one of our most requested. Here is a little bit about the ship in it's first
life.
Quick Fact: She was
named for Spiegel Grove, the home and estate in Fremont, Ohio, of Rutherford B.
Hayes, the 19th President of the United States.
Name: | USS Spiegel Grove |
Namesake: | Spiegel Grove |
Awarded: | 18 March 1954 |
Builder: | Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula, Mississippi |
Laid down: | 7 September 1954 |
Launched: | 10 November 1955 |
Commissioned: | 8 June 1956 |
Decommissioned: | 2 October 1989 |
Struck: | 13 December 1989 |
Fate: | Sunk intentionally in 2002 off Key Largo to form artificial reef |
Class & type: | Thomaston-class dock landing ship |
Displacement: | 8,899 long tons (9,042 t) light 11,525 long tons (11,710 t) full load |
Length: | 510 ft (160 m) |
Beam: | 84 ft (26 m) |
Draft: | 19 ft (5.8 m) |
Propulsion: | 2 steam turbines, 2 shafts, 23,000 shp (17 MW) |
Speed: | 21 knots (39 km/h) |
Boats & landing craft carried: | 21 × LCM-6s Unknown number of LCACs |
Troops: | 330 enlisted troops |
Complement: | 18 officers, 300 crew |
Armament: | • 8 × 3 in (76mm) DP guns (4×2) • 12 × 20 mm AA guns (6×2) |
Aircraft carried: | up to 8 helicopters |
Career
Career
Spiegel Grove was laid down on 7 September 1954 by the
Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp., Pascagoula, Miss., launched on 10 November 1955;
sponsored by Mrs. Webb C. Hayes, and commissioned on 8 June 1956, Captain S.
Filippone in command.
Spiegel Grove sailed for Hampton Roads and arrived at
Norfolk, Virginia, on 7 July. She headed for the Guantanamo Bayarea on her
shakedown cruise on 26 July and returned on 15 September. The ship was in the
yard during October; and, in November, she participated in amphibious exercises
off Onslow Beach, North Carolina.
On 9 January 1957, Spiegel Grove, with other ships of
Transport Amphibious Squadron 4 (TransPhibRon 4), sailed fromMorehead City,
North Carolina, with elements of the 6th Marines embarked, for a tour with the
6th Fleet in theMediterranean. She returned to Norfolk on 3 June and operated
along the east coast for the remainder of the year. In November, she
transported 364 Army troops to Labrador. In January 1958, the LSD was deployed
with her squadron to the 6th Fleet on an extended tour which did not end until
6 October.
On 22 October, Spiegel Grove was assigned toPhibRon 10, the new Fast
Squadron. The years 1959 and 1960 saw the LSD participating in numerous
operations along the east coast and in the Caribbean.
Spiegel Grove stood out of Norfolk in April 1961 with Task
Force 88 (TF 88) for "Solant Amity II", a good-will tour to the African
coast. The force carried tons of medical supplies, food and disaster supplies,
toys, books, and seed. During the four-month cruise, the ships visited Gambia,
Durban, the Malagasy Republic, the Seychelles Islands, Zanzibar, Kenya, the
Union of South Africa, Togo, and Gabon before returning home on 8 September.
She then entered Horne Brothers Shipyard, Newport News, Virginia, for an
overhaul that was not completed until early January 1962.
Spiegel Grove conducted refresher training and then spent
March and April in amphibious exercises in the Caribbean. In May, she took part
in operations supporting Malcolm Scott Carpenter's manned space flight in
Mercury-Atlas 7. In July and August, she returned to the Caribbean for "Phibulex
2-62". On 1 December 1962 a tender availability period was begun to
prepare the ship for "Solant Amity IV". The LSD loaded supplies
during January 1963 and sailed, on 15 February for her second good-will tour
which lasted until late May. The ship steamed over 21,000 miles (39,000 km) and
visited nine countries before returning home. Spiegel Grove next deployed to
the Caribbean from July to September with PhibRon 8.
The landing ship has spent the greater part of her active
service participating in amphibious exercises along the eastern seaboard and in
the Caribbean. Spiegel Grove was deployed to the 6th Fleet from January to June
1964, 3 November 1966 to 11 May 1967; and from 17 April to 9 October 1971. She
participated in "Operation Steel Pike I" off Spain in October 1964
and made a midshipman cruise to England and Denmark in 1970.
In 1983, she won the Marjorie Sterrett Battleship Fund Award
for the Atlantic Fleet.
Sinking for reef
The ship was finally moved from Virginia to Florida in May
2002. The ship sank prematurely, on 17 May 2002.[1] During the sinking the
ex-Spiegel Grove suddenly started rolling on her starboard side, ending up
upside down on the sea bottom and leaving her bow protruding slightly out of
the ocean. On 10–11 June, the ship was rolled onto her starboard side by
Resolve Marine Group, and on 26 June the site was opened to recreational
divers. In the next week, over a thousand divers visited the site. The depth of
wreck requires that divers have an advanced diving certification.[2]
The ex-Spiegel Grove is located on Dixie Shoal, 6 miles (10
km) off the Florida Keys in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Her
exact location is25°04′00.2″N 80°18′00.7″W
In July 2005, Hurricane Dennis shifted the former USS
Spiegel Grove onto her keel, right-side-up, which was the position originally
intended when she was sunk. (Thanks for info Wikipedia)
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