WW2 History of the USS St. Louis CL49
ST. LOUIS
CL-49
Displacement: 10,000 t.
Length: 608?4?
Beam: 61?8?
Draft: 19?10?
Speed: 33 k.
Complement: 888
Armament: 15 6?; 8 5?; 16 1.1?; 12 20mm;
1 depth charge track
Class: ST. LOUIS
The fifth ST. LOUIS (CL-49) was laid down on 10
December 1936 by the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock
Co., Newport News, Va.; launched on 15 April 1938; sponsored
by Miss Nancy Lee Morrill, and commissioned on 19 May 1939,
Capt. Charles H. Morrison in command.
Fitted out and based at Norfolk, ST. LOUIS completed
shakedown on 6 October, then commenced Neutrality Patrol
operations which, during the next 11 months, took her from
the West Indies into the North Atlantic. On 3 September
1940, she put to sea with an inspection board embarked to
evaluate possible sites, from Newfoundland to British
Guiana, for naval and air bases to be gained in exchange for
destroyers transferred to the British government. She
returned to Norfolk on 27 October and, on 9 November, sailed
for the Pacific.
Transiting the Panama Canal five days later, ST. LOUIS
reached Pearl Harbor on 12 December. She participated in
fleet maneuvers and conducted patrols during the winter of
1940 and 41; then steamed to California for an overhaul at
Mare Island. She returned to Pearl Harbor on 20 June and
resumed operations in Hawaiian waters.
Two months later, she sailed west with other cruisers
of the Battle Force, patrolled between Wake, Midway, and
Guam, then, proceeded to Manila, whence she returned to
Hawaii at the end of September. On the 28th of that month,
she entered the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard for upkeep; and, on 7
December, she was moored to the pier in Southeast Lock.
That Sunday morning at 0756, Japanese planes were
sighted by observers on board ST. LOUIS. Within minutes,
the ship was at general quarters, and her operable
antiaircraft guns were manned and firing on the attackers.
By 0806, preparations for getting underway had begun. At
about 0820, one of the cruiser's gun crews shot down its
first enemy torpedo plane. By 0900, two more enemy aircraft
had joined the first. At 0931, ST. LOUIS moved away from
the pier and headed for South Channel and the open sea.
Fifteen minutes later, her 6-inch guns, whose power leads
had been disconnected, were in full operating order.
As the cruiser moved into the channel entrance, she
became the target of a midget submarine. The enemy's
torpedoes, however, exploded on striking a shoal less than
200 yards from the ship. Destroyers then pounded the bottom
with depth charges and ST. LOUIS continued out to sea where
she joined in the search for the Japanese fleet. After
failing to locate the enemy strike force, the hunters
returned to Pearl Harbor on 10 December, and ST. LOUIS
turned to escorting transports carrying casualties to San
Francisco and troops to Hawaii.
On 6 January 1942, she departed San Francisco with Task
Force (TF) 17, centered on carrier YORKTOWN (CV-5) and
escorted the ships transporting the Marine Expeditionary
Force to Samoa to reinforce defenses there. Between 20 and
24 January, the YORKTOWN group covered the offloading at
Pago Pago, then moved to conduct air strikes in the
Marshalls and the Gilberts before returning to Pearl Harbor
on 7 February.
Upon her return to Pearl Harbor, ST. LOUIS resumed
escort duty with Hawaii-California convoys. In the spring,
after a trip to the New Hebrides, she escorted SS PRESIDENT
COOLIDGE, which was carrying President Quezon of the
Philippines to the west coast, arriving at San Francisco on
8 May. The following day, she was again bound for Pearl
Harbor. There, she switched to a reinforcement group
carrying Marine aircraft and personnel to Midway in
anticipation of Japanese efforts to take that key outpost.
On the 25th, she delivered her charges to their mid-ocean
destination, then moved north as a unit of TF 8 to reinforce
Aleutian defenses.
On 31 May, ST. LOUIS arrived at Kodiak, refueled, and
got underway to patrol south of the Alaskan Peninsula.
Through July, she continued the patrols ranging westward to
intercept enemy shipping. On 3 August, she headed for Kiska
for her first shore bombardment mission. Four days later,
she shelled that enemy-held island, then retired, returning
to Kodiak on the 11th.
After that mission, the cruiser continued patrols in
the Aleutian area and covered the Allied occupation of Adak.
On 25 October, she proceeded via Dutch Harbor to California
for an overhaul at Mare Island.
On 4 December, she departed San Francisco with
transports bound for New Caledonia. She shepherded the
convoy into its Noumean anchorage on the 21st, then shifted
to Espiritu Santo, New Hebrides, whence she proceeded into
the Solomons. She commenced operations there in January
1943 with bombardments of Japanese air facilities at Munda
and Kolombangara and, during the next five months, repeated
those raids and patrolled the "Slot" in the Central Solomons
in an effort to halt the "Tokyo Express"--reinforcement and
supply shipping that sought, almost nightly, to bolster
Japanese garrisons.
Shortly after midnight on 4-5 July, she participated in
the bombardment of Vila and Bairoko Harbor, New Georgia.
Her division, Cruiser Division 9 (CruDiv 9) and its screen,
Destroyer Squadron 21 (DesRon 21), then retired back toward
Tulagi to replenish as troops were landed at Rice Anchorage.
Early on the morning of the 6th, however, the
cruiser-destroyer force located and engaged ten enemy
destroyers headed for Vila with reinforcements embarked. In
the ensuing Battle of Kula Gulf, HELENA (CL-50) and two
enemy ships were sunk.
Six nights later, the force, TF 18, reinforced by
DesRon 12, moved back up the "Slot" from Tulagi and soon
after 0100 on the 13th, engaged an enemy force of one light
cruiser, JINTSU, and five destroyers in the Battle of
Kolombangara. During the battle, which raged for over an
hour, JINTSU and GWIN (DD-433) were sunk and HONOLULU
(CL-48), ST. LOUIS and New Zealand light cruiser LEANDER
were damaged. ST. LOUIS took a torpedo which hit well
forward and twisted her bow, but caused no serious
casualties.
She returned to Tulagi on the afternoon of the 13th.
From there, she moved on to Espiritu Santo for temporary
repairs; then steamed east, to Mare Island, to complete the
work. In mid-November, she returned to the Solomons and,
from the 20th to the 25th, covered marines fighting for
Bougainville. In December, she returned to that island to
shell troop concentrations and, in January 1944, shifted
southward to bombard enemy installations in the Shortland
Islands. Thence, she moved back to Bougainville to cover
the landing of reinforcements at Cape Torokina. On 10
January, she headed back to Florida Island. In February,
she again moved northwest, this time into the extreme
northern Solomons and the Bismarcks. On the 13th, she
arrived in the area between Buka and St. George Channel to
support landing operations in the Green Islands off New
Ireland.
At 1855 on the 14th, six Vals were sighted approaching
ST. LOUIS's group. Crossing astern of the ships, the enemy
planes went out to the southeast, turned, and reapproached.
Only five remained in the formation which split into two
groups. Two of the planes closed ST. LOUIS.
The first plane dropped three bombs, all near misses.
The second released three more. One scored on the light
cruiser, the other two were near misses just off the port
quarter. The bomb which hit ST. LOUIS penetrated the 40
millimeter clipping room near the number 6 mount and
exploded in the midship living compartment. Twenty-three
died and 20 were wounded, 10 seriously. A fire which had
started in the clipping room was extinguished. Both of her
planes were rendered inoperable and her ventilation system
was damaged. Communication with the after engine room
ceased, and the cruiser slowed to 18 knots. On the 15th,
she survived another air attack and was then ordered back to
Purvis Bay.
Repairs were completed by the end of the month and in
March, ST. LOUIS resumed operations with her division.
Through May, she remained in the Solomons. Then, on 4 June,
she moved north to the Marshalls whence, on the 10th, she
sailed for the Marianas in TF 52, the Saipan assault force.
Four days later, she cruised off southern Saipan. On the
15th, she shelled the Charan Kanoa area; retired as the
landings took place, then moved back to provide call fire
support and to shell targets of opportunity. On the 16th,
she proceeded south and bombarded the Asan beach area of
Guam. She then returned to Saipan and, on the 17th, shifted
to an area north of that island where she remained through
the Battle of the Philippine Sea. On the 22d, she returned
to Saipan and, after screening the refueling group for two
days, proceeded to the Marshalls.
On 14 July, ST. LOUIS again headed for the Marianas.
The next day, she damaged her number 3 propeller and lost 39
feet of the tail shaft. Nevertheless, two days later, she
arrived off Guam as scheduled; and, during the afternoon,
covered underwater demolition teams working the proposed
landing beaches. Pre-invasion shore bombardment followed;
and, after the landings on the 21st, she provided support
fire and call fire. On the 29th, ST. LOUIS departed the
Marianas for Pearl Harbor, whence she was routed on to
California for overhaul. In mid-October, she steamed back
to Hawaii, trained until the end of the month, then moved on
across the Pacific, via Ulithi and Kossol Roads, to the
Philippines, arriving in Leyte Gulf on 16 November.
During the next 10 days, she patrolled in the gulf and
in Surigao Strait, adding her batteries to the antiaircraft
guns protecting shipping in the area. Shortly before noon
on the 27th, a formation of 12 to 14 enemy planes attacked
the cruiser's formation. ST. LOUIS was unscathed in the
brief battle. A request was made for CAP cover, but
Japanese planes continued to command the air. At 1130,
another 10 enemy planes filled the space vacated by the
first flight and broke into three attack groups of four,
four, and two. At 1138, a Val, hit and aflame, made a
suicide dive on ST. LOUIS from the port quarter and exploded
with its bomb on impact. Fires broke out in the cruiser's
hangar area and spaces. All crew members of 20 millimeter
guns 7 through 10 were killed or wounded.
At 1139, a second burning enemy plane headed at her on
the port beam. Flank speed was rung up and the rudder was
put hard right. The plane passed over number 4 turret and
crashed 100 yards out.
At 1146, there was still no CAP cover over the
cruiser's formation, and, at 1151, two more enemy planes,
both burning, attacked ST. LOUIS. The first was splashed
off the port quarter; the second drove in from starboard and
crashed almost on board on the port side. A 20-foot section
of armor belt was lost and numerous holes were torn in her
hull. By 1152, the ship had taken on a list to port. At
1210, another suicide-minded Japanese pilot closed ST.
LOUIS. He was stopped 400 yards astern. Ten minutes later,
enemy torpedo planes moved in to attack. ST. LOUIS, warned
by a PT boat, barely avoided contact with a lethal package
dropped by one of the planes.
By 1236, the cruiser was back on an even keel. Thirty
minutes later, all major fires were out; and salvage work
had been started. Medical work was well under way: 15 were
dead, 1 was missing, 21 were seriously wounded, 22 had
sustained minor injuries. On the 28th, ST. LOUIS's
seriously injured were transferred; and, on the 30th, she
put into San Pedro Bay for temporary repairs which allowed
her to reach California toward the end of December.
On 1 March 1945, ST. LOUIS departed California and, at
mid-month, she joined the fast carrier force at Ulithi. By
the end of the month, she had participated in strikes
against the southern Japanese home islands, then moved south
to the Ryukyus to join TF 54, bombarded Okinawa, and guarded
minesweepers and underwater demolition teams clearing
channels to the assault beaches. On the 31st, she put into
Kerama Retto to replenish, then returned to the larger
island to support the forces landed on the Hagushi beaches
on 1 April.
Five days later, the cruiser covered minesweepers off
Ie Jima, then resumed fire support and antiaircraft duties
off Okinawa. On 18 May, she departed Hagushi for a brief
respite at Leyte; and, in mid-June, she resumed support
operations off Okinawa. On 25 July, she shifted to TF 95,
and on the 28th, she supported air strikes against Japanese
installations on the Asiatic mainland. Sweeps of the East
China Sea followed; and, in early August, she anchored in
Buckner Bay, where she remained through the end of
hostilities on 15 August.
Postwar duties kept the cruiser in the Far East for
another two and one-half months. In late August, while in
the Philippines, she was assigned to TF 73, the Yangtze
River Patrol Force. During September, as other ships joined
the force, she was at Buckner Bay, and, in October, she
moved on to Shanghai. In mid-October, she helped to lift
Chinese Army units to Formosa, then she joined the "Magic
Carpet" fleet to carry veterans back to the United States.
ST. LOUIS completed her first "Magic Carpet" run at San
Francisco on 9 November, and by mid-January 1946, made two
more runs, both to islands in the Central and Southwest
Pacific. In early February, she sailed for the east coast
and arrived at Philadelphia for inactivation on the 25th.
She was decommissioned on 20 June and berthed at League
Island with the 16th (Inactive) Fleet through the decade.
Early in the 1950's, she was designated for transfer to the
government of Brazil. Her name was struck from the Navy
list on 22 January 1951, and, on the 29th, she was
commissioned in the Brazilian Navy as TAMANDARE.
ST. LOUIS (CL-49) earned eleven battle stars during
World War II.
[TAMANDARE (C-12) was stricken from the Brazilian Navy
in 1976. Sold to breakers four years later, she foundered
24 August 1980 off South Africa while under tow to Taiwan.
?Jane?s Fighting Ships, 1976-77,? p.55 says the ship was
deleted in 1975 and offered for auction in September of that
year.]
May 30 2005 03:09:46:000AM
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