>From the “Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships,” (1969) Vol. 4, p.486; (1970) Vol. 5, pp.53-54. NEVILLE Wendell Cushing Neville, born at Portsmouth, Va., 12 May 1870, entered the U.S. Naval Academy 12 September 1886 and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the Marine Corps 1 July 1893. In February 1914, Neville, a veteran of the Spanish-American War and the Boxer Rebellion, was promoted to Lt. Colonel and ordered to sail for Vera Cruz, Mexico. There, he led his regiment in the landing operations which resulted in the capture of that city, 21-22 April. For his conspicuous courage, coolness and skill during those operations, he received a commendatory letter from the Secretary of the Navy and was later awarded the Medal of Honor. Promoted to Colonel, August 1916, he was transferred overseas, December 1917, to command the 5th Regiment. In Europe, he put that organization through its final training and then led it into battle, commanding at Verdun and at Belleau Wood. Promoted to Brigadier General, he commanded the brigade which led in the Battle of Soissons (Marbache sector), the Battle of BlancMont Ridge (Champagne sector), the Meuse-Argonne offensive, the march to the Rhine, and, finally, the occupation of a sub-sector in the Coblenz Bridgehead. Continuing his service after occupation duty, he was appointed Major General, 10 December 1923, and became the 13th Commandant of the Marine Corps, 5 March 1929. Maj. General Neville died 8 July 1930 and was interred in Arlington National Cemetery. APA-9 Displacement: 7,475 t. Length: 507’ Beam: 56’ Draft: 24’ (mean) Speed: 16 k. Complement: 547 Troop Capacity: 1,150 Armament: 4 3”; 4 40mm Class statistics HEYWOOD Class (APA 6-9) Overall Length: 507’ Extreme Beam: 56’ Trial Displacement: 14,450 t. Limiting Draft: 25’6” Trial Speed: 16.8 k. (APA 6) 16 k. (APA 7,9) 16.5 k. (APA 8) Accommodations: (APA 6) Ship’s Company: Officer: 46 Enlisted: 504 Troop Capacity: Officer: 75 Enlisted: 1,203 Accommodations: (APA 7) Ship’s Company: Officer: 43 Enlisted: 337 Troop Capacity: Officer: 60 Enlisted: 898 Accommodations: (APA 8) Ship’s Company: Officer: 45 Enlisted: 515 Troop Capacity: Officer: 66 Enlisted: 990 Accommodations: (APA 9) Ship’s Company: Officer: 50 Enlisted: 524 Troop Capacity: Officer: 64 Enlisted: 1,249 Cargo Capacity: 150,000 cu.ft.; 2,900 t. (APA 6,8) 130,000 cu.ft.; 2,400 t. (APA 7) 145,000 cu.ft.; 1,800 t. (APA 9) Armament: (Aug 1945) 4 3”/50, all ships 2 40mm twin mounts, all ships 8 20mm twin mounts, (APA 7,8) 16 20mm single mounts, (APA 6,9) Engines: Geared turbine drive De Laval Steam Turbine Co., Trenton, N.J. Boilers: 4 each Babcock & Wilcox; header-type Propulsion: Propellers: 1 Designed Shaft Horsepower: 9,500 NEVILLE, built originally as the 3 massed, 440' screw steamer INDEPENDENCE (q.v.) in 1918 by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, Alameda, Calif., for the U.S. Shipping Board, was commissioned 18 November 1918, Lt. Comdr. O. P. Rankin in command. After WW I service in the Naval Overseas Transportation Service, she decommissioned 20 March 1919 and was returned to the United States Shipping Board for merchant marine service. Rebuilt and renamed CITY OF NORFOLK in 1930, she was run by the Baltimore Mail Steamship Company until reacquired by the Navy 14 December 1940. Converted by the Willamette Steel and Iron Co., Portland Ore., she recommissioned as transport NEVILLE (AP-16), 14 May l941, Captain C. A. Bailey in command. On 18 June 1941, NEVILLE reported for duty with the Atlantic Fleet and for the remaining days of quasi-peace in 1941 transported military and naval personnel to various points along the East Coast and in the Caribbean. On 7 December 1941, she was at San Juan, enroute from Trinidad to New York. Within the month, however, she was conducting landing exercises with Army units along the Virginia coast. Detached from that duty in mid-February, she embarked Army and Navy personnel and equipment and departed the East Coast 19 February 1942, on the first trans-oceanic run of her second world war. She completed the round-trip voyage to Belfast, 25 March at New York, disembarked R.A.F., R.C.A.F., and British Merchant Marine personnel, and then continued on to Norfolk for voyage repairs. At the same time, she received 20mm guns and more modern landing craft for use in her new operational territory, the Pacific. NEVILLE departed Hampton Roads, 10 April, and steaming south with TF 38, transited the Panama Canal on the 18th, becoming a unit of TransDiv 8, ServRon 4, Pacific Fleet. Anchoring in Fanui Bay, Bora Bora, 4 May, she discharged her Army and "Seabee" passengers and proceeded on to Wellington, N.Z., where she remained until 22 July. Then, with units of the 1st Marine Division embarked, she headed toward the Fiji Islands to rendezvous with other allied vessels assigned to operation "Watchtower," the assaults on Tulagi and Guadalcanal. At 0630, 7 August, NEVILLE arrived in her assigned transport area off beach "Blue" on Tulagi. Seven minutes later, she lowered her boats and Raider groups were dispatched. At 0730, Marine Combat Team 2 was debarked into landing boats which put them ashore soon after "H" hour, 0800. Despite increasingly stiff opposition, all assigned waves had been landed by 1012. By 1320, aerial resistance, in the form of bombers and fighters, had been added to the well developed Japanese defenses in the Tulagi-Gavutu-Tanambogo area. The long battle for the Solomons had begun. NEVILLE remained in the area through the 9th, witnessing from a distance, the devastation wrought off Savo Island on that date. On the 13th, she arrived at Noumea, New Caledonia, whence she continued on to Wellington to take on reinforcements. Returning to the combat area 26 October, she participated in the landings at Aola Bay, 4 November, and then departed to take up transport duties in the New Caledonia-New Hebrides area. At the end of the month, she again returned to Guadalcanal, discharged supplies and reinforcements, took on personnel to be evacuated, and headed south east. After stopping at Espiritu Santo to disembark her evacuees, she proceeded to San Diego, arriving 4 January 1943 for availability. On 14 February, NEVILLE, now redesignated attack transport APA-9 (effective 1 February), stood out from San Diego enroute back to the Atlantic. She arrived at Norfolk 10 March, and after amphibious training in the Chesapeake Bay area, sailed 8 June, for North Africa to prepare for the Sicilian invasion. By 10 July she was off Scoglitti with "Cent" Force as it landed Army units on either side of that fishing town. Assigned to the Northern Group, NEVILLE's boats delivered units of the 45th "Thunderbird" Division to "Red" beach, near the mouth of the Acate River at 0434. Despite being the last group to get away from their transport, heavy surf, and indefinite landmarks, they were the first to touch down on the beach. With the last wave in by 0640, the task of discharging cargo was begun. On the afternoon of the 12th, the APA departed the assault area and returned to Oran, whence she sailed, on the 22nd, for the United States. NEVILLE arrived at Newport News, Va., 3 August, only to depart again on the 23rd, once more assigned to the Pacific. By the end of September, she was engaged in intensive landing exercises in the Hawaiian Islands. On 10 November, she stood out of Honolulu and sailed for the Gilberts with 27th Division U.S.A. troops and a platoon of Marine Raiders, 5th Amphibious Corps, embarked. On the morning of 20 November, Marine and Army units were landed on Tarawa and Makin. At 0642, NEVILLE dispatched her Marines to secure Katubam but kept her Army units on board for later landings on the lagoon side of Butaritari. By 1015, the first of eight waves had been dispatched, landing on beach "Yellow" at 1040 under an opposing storm of small arms fire. Cargo discharge operations, begun later in the day, continued through the 22nd. On the 23rd, NEVILLE departed the transport area only to return the next day to take on survivors from escort carrier LISCOMBE BAY (CVE-56) before returning to Pearl Harbor. From Pearl Harbor, the transport steamed to Bremerton, Wash., underwent repairs, and then headed south to San Diego, arriving 31 December. With the new year 1944, NEVILLE received new landing craft, fresh boat crews, and orders to join TransDiv 30 at Pearl Harbor. She arrived in Hawaii on 9 January, again took on units of the 27th Division U.S.A., and on the 23rd, got underway with TG 51.1, the Kwajalein Attack Force Reserve Group. NEVILLE sighted Kwajalein on the 31st, but maneuvered east of the Atoll until entering the lagoon, 2 February. There, she engaged in debarkation drills in preparation for the assault on Eniwetok. On 11 February, the uncommitted Kwajalein Reserve Group was dissolved and reformed as the Eniwetok Expeditionary Group. Four days later, the group, TG 51.11, sortied from Kwajalein. On the 17th, NEVILLE entered Eniwetok lagoon and prepared to land her troops on the main objective, Engebi, the following morning. The first waves hit the beaches at 0844. NEVILLE's boats, used on the 17th and on the morning of the 18th, were not called on to transport her own passengers to the beaches until after the vessel had shifted to transport area 3. Then, at 1609, troops were debarked for landings on Eniwetok Island. For the next three days, she remained off Eniwetok, sending supplies to the beaches and taking on casualties. On the 23rd, she shifted to the Parry Island transport area where she remained for four days. APA-9 then got underway for Kwajalein, Pearl Harbor, and, ultimately, San Francisco. On 8 April, she returned to Hawaii to conduct amphibious training exercises with Marine personnel in preparation for operation "Forager," the push into the Marianas. Assigned in May to TransDiv 10, NEVILLE departed Honolulu 30 May, and steamed west with TF 52. Soon after 0630, 15 June, she was in her assigned transport area, 7 miles off Saipan. By 0700, her boats had departed for a demonstration feint off Mutcho Point, Garapan. Her boats reloaded in mid morning, she shifted to the Charan Kanoa transport area. At 1103, she received orders to send her troops in to beach "Green Two." The first boats shoved off for the departure line at 1135 and by 1340, the job was completed. From the 15th until the 18th, the transport retired each night to positions just off the islands of Saipan and Tinian. From the 19th to the 21st, as the Battle of the Philippine Sea raged, she cruised 75-100 miles east-northeast of Saipan, then returned to complete off-loading cargo at Saipan. On the 23rd, she turned her bow toward Eniwetok, where Japanese POWs were taken on board. Next sailing to Kwajalein, she embarked ambulatory casualties, and on 5 July joined a convoy headed for Pearl Harbor. There, on 13 July, she delivered her prisoners, and the next day continued her voyage arriving at San Diego on the 21st. On her arrival at San Diego, NEVILLE was assigned to TU 13.1.1, TransDiv 1, then conducting amphibious training exercises for assault troops. From 3 January 1945 until 15 August, she operated as a training ship for APA crews, and then, after the cessation of hostilities, resumed duties as a transport to ferry fresh troops to former Japanese islands in the South Pacific and bring home veterans. On 15 January 1946, the World War I transport departed California for the last time. Steaming to the East Coast, she arrived at Boston 5 February to begin inactivation, decommissioning 30 April. Transferred to the War Shipping Administration 16 July, she was struck from the Navy List 15 August 1946. NEVILLE received 5 battle stars for her World War II service. Transcribed by Michael Hansen mhansen2@home.com