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Leyte III (CV-32)

1945–1969

Named for the Battle for Leyte Gulf (23–26 October 1944). The first Leyte retained the name she carried when captured by the Navy, the second was named for the island in the Philippines. 

III 

(CV-32: displacement 27,100; length 888'; beam 136'; extreme width 147'6"; draft 28'7"; speed 33 knots; complement 3,448; armament 12 5-inch, 72 40 millimeter, aircraft 80+; class Essex

Crown Point (CV-32) was laid down on 21 February 1944, at Newport News, Va., by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co.; renamed Leyte on 8 May 1945; launched on 23 August 1945; sponsored by Mrs. Alice M. [Dillon] Mead, wife of U.S. Senator James M. Mead, New York (D); and commissioned at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Portsmouth, Va., on 11 April 1946, Capt. Henry F. MacComsey in command. 

Personnel shortages having impacting the Navy’s being able to fully man its ships delayed Leyte from carrying out her shakedown, but she ultimately departed Hampton Roads, Va., on 30 August 1946 for Quonset Point, R.I., where she embarked Carrier Air Group (CVG) 18. After embarkation, she carried out her carrier qualification landings, then shaped a course for Cuba. 

She arrived at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on 16 September 1946, for shakedown training and then transited the Panama Canal on 20 October, to join the battleship Wisconsin (BB-64) on a good will cruise down the western seaboard of South America. After embarking the Surgeon General of the Chilean Army at Balboa, Chile, she proceeded to Valparaiso, Chile. Her officers and bluejackets attended the Presidential inauguration of President Gabriel Gonzales Videla in Santiago, Chile, before she paid a goodwill call to Callao, Peru. She again transited the Panama Canal on 18 November 1946, to resume shakedown operations that took her to the waters of Cuba and the U.S. Virgin Islands. She stood into Yorktown, Va., on 12 December. 

On 30 January 1947, the Greek government proclaimed martial law in response to the rising threat posed by communist insurgents during the Greek Civil War. On 21 February, the British announced the reduction of their forces deployed to the eastern Mediterranean Sea and the withdrawal of military assistance to the Greeks and Turks effective on 1 April. U.S. intervention against communist expansionism in the ensuing power vacuum saw Leyte, as flagship of Carrier Division (CarDiv) 4, deployed to the Mediterranean from 3 April to 9 June 1947. This deployment saw a visit by Leyte to Greece, on 16 April, as a show of support for that country’s government. 

Shortly afterward, again as a result of ongoing Soviet pressure, this time against Turkey, and the British withdrawal from the eastern Mediterranean, U.S. ships including Leyte made a show of support for the Turkish government during a week-long visit to Istanbul beginning on 2 May. She also made port visits to Alexandria, Egypt, Naples, Italy, and Gibraltar. After a brief return to the United States, Leyte again deployed to the Mediterranean (30 July–19 November 1947). During this second cruise, she made port visits to Gibraltar; Algiers, Algeria; Golfe Juan, France; Izmir, Turkey; Naples; Taranto, Italy; and Athens, Greece. Upon her return to the U.S. she underwent a period of maintenance, then conducted fleet exercises and training of Naval Reservists in the United States and Caribbean. She went back to sea in February 1948 for fleet maneuvers in the Caribbean, during which she made port visits to Trinidad and Tobago and Panama. Leyte returned to the U.S. and entered New York Naval Shipyard and underwent four months of regular inspection and overhaul. Leaving the yard on 28 August, the ship spent two weeks in the waters around Guantanamo Bay, and then steamed to the frigid climes of the Davis Strait between Greenland and Canada to conduct cold weather flying tests in Operation Frigid.


A Sikorsky HO3S-1 flies beside Leyte during the Second Task Fleet's Operation Frigid, November 1948. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-K-9496, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)
Caption: A Sikorsky HO3S-1 flies beside Leyte during the Second Task Fleet's Operation Frigid, November 1948. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-K-9496, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)

Leyte, in January 1949, returned to the Caribbean and operated in the vicinity of Guantanamo Bay with 700 Naval Reservists embarked for a brief indoctrination cruise.


Leyte underway in January 1949, as photographed by AF1 P.C. Ferraro. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-405966, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)
Caption: Leyte underway in January 1949, as photographed by AF1 P.C. Ferraro. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-405966, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)

During the next two months, she conducted fleet maneuvers and made port visits to Trinidad and Tobago. After a short visit to New York, she returned to Quonset Point. She visited the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. for a week in May and then spent the next six weeks conducting visits to Bayonne, N.J. and Norfolk, Va. before returning to Quonset Point. From 7-25 July, she conducted two short cruises for Naval Academy and Naval Reserve Officer Training Candidate (NROTC) midshipmen out of Newport, R.I. and then spent the month of August at Quonset Point, painting ship and taking on supplies for her third Mediterranean deployment (6 September 1949–26 January 1950). During February–March 1950, Leyte participated in Operation Portrex off Puerto Rico and then returned to Norfolk for an accelerated three-week overhaul. 

Leyte made a fourth deployment in her short career to the Mediterranean from 2 May–24 August 1950. She made port visits to Lisbon, Portugal; Augusta Bay, Italy; Naples, Leghorn, Italy, the French Riviera, Athens; Greece; Izmir; and Beirut, Lebanon.


Swim call! Leyte sailors use her deck edge elevator as a diving platform, at Augusta Bay, Sicily, 27 May 1950. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-415936, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)
Caption: Swim call! Leyte sailors use her deck edge elevator as a diving platform, at Augusta Bay, Sicily, 27 May 1950. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-415936, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)

While visiting Beirut, Leyte and Midway (CVB-41), at the request of the Lebanese government, launched a demonstration of U.S. air power over the Lebanese capital on 14 August, as further evidence of the U.S. support against communism in the Middle East. While off Beirut, the ship received word that she was needed to support United Nations forces in Korea. She hurried to Norfolk where she stood in to port on 24 August. After 15 days of preparations, she cleared Hampton Roads on 6 September bound for the western Pacific. Leyte maintained an average speed of 23 knots on the fast voyage via the Panama Canal to join the Fast Carrier Task Force (TF) 77 in the Far East. 

Leyte arrived at Sasebo, Japan, on 8 October 1950 and after reporting to Commander, Seventh Fleet, was engaged in combat operations the next day. From 9 October 1950 through 19 January 1951, the ship and her aircraft spent 92 days at sea and flew 3,933 sorties against North Korean targets. Her first strikes against targets in Korea were in support of landing operations around Wonsan. In the course of her deployment, Leyte’s pilots accumulated 11,000 hours in the air while inflicting massive damage upon enemy positions, supplies, transportation, and communications. Having supported the Wonsan operations in October, her squadrons conducted bombing raids against the bridges over the Yalu River between North Korea and China.


Valley Forge (CV-45) and Leyte moored at Sasebo, Japan, in October 1950. Repair ship Hector (AR-7) lies moored beyond the two carriers, with other U.S. and British warships in the distance. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-426270, National Archives and...
Caption: Valley Forge (CV-45) and Leyte moored at Sasebo, Japan, in October 1950. Repair ship Hector (AR-7) lies moored beyond the two carriers, with other U.S. and British warships in the distance. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-426270, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)


Leyte moored off Naval Operating Base, Yokosuka, during a break from Korean War operations, 1 December 1950. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-424599, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)
Caption: Leyte moored off Naval Operating Base, Yokosuka, during a break from Korean War operations, 1 December 1950. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-424599, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)

Ens. Frederick C. Weber of Leyte’s VF-31 piloted a Grumman F9F-2 Panther credited with one of the first kills of a MiG-15 fighter on 18 November 1950.


Bridges at Sinuiju, North Korea, under attack by planes from Leyte. The built-up area in the background is the Manchurian city of Antung. Bomb explosions in the lower part of the photo are on the Korean side of the Yalu River. Photograph is dated...
Caption: Bridges at Sinuiju, North Korea, under attack by planes from Leyte. The built-up area in the background is the Manchurian city of Antung. Bomb explosions in the lower part of the photo are on the Korean side of the Yalu River. Photograph is dated 22 November 1950, but may have been taken on 14 November. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-423492, National Archives and Records Administration Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)


Soviet-made MiG-15 photographed during an air battle in which a MiG-15 was shot down over North Korea by a Grumman F9F-2 Panther from Leyte, 18 November 1950. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-424091, National Archives and Records Administration Still P...
Caption: Soviet-made MiG-15 photographed during an air battle in which a MiG-15 was shot down over North Korea by a Grumman F9F-2 Panther from Leyte, 18 November 1950. (U.S. Navy Photograph 80-G-424091, National Archives and Records Administration Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)

Of particular note, on 4 December 1950, Ens. Jesse L. Brown of VF-32 -- the first African American to complete the Navy’s basic flight training program for pilot qualification and to be designated a naval aviator -- embarked on board Leyte. Brown flew a Vought F4U-4 Corsair over Hagaru-ri, North Korea, in close support of the hard-pressed Marine Corps and Army forces around the Chosin Reservoir [Changjin Lake]. Antiaircraft fire struck the Corsair, forcing Brown to make an emergency landing beyond Chosin. In gathering darkness and falling temperatures, Lt. (j.g.) Thomas J. Hudner, his wingman, circled Brown to “protect him from enemy troops infesting the area.” Next, “fully aware of the extreme danger in landing on the rough mountainous terrain and the scant hope of escape or survival in subzero temperature,” Hudner made a wheels-up landing nearby. Working against time, Hudner attempted to pull Brown from the burning wreck. With the buckled fuselage trapping the pilot’s legs, Hudner packed snow around Brown to protect him from the flames and returned to his plane to radio for a rescue helicopter equipped with an axe and a fire extinguisher. A Sikorsky HO3S-1 from Marine Observation Squadron (VMO) 6, flown by 1st Lt. Charles C. Ward, USMC, responded but after repeated unsuccessful attempts by both men to free Brown, had to leave him with the onset of nightfall. Brown, unfortunately, died, but Ward rescued Hudner, who subsequently received the Medal of Honor for his attempt to rescue his wingman. Ward received the Silver Star for his volunteering for the rescue flight although he knew full well the hazards of the mission that would need to be carried out in gathering darkness.


Ens. Jesse L. Brown -- the first African American naval aviator to fly in combat and the first to be killed therein. (U.S. Navy Photograph USN 1146845, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)
Caption: Ens. Jesse L. Brown -- the first African American naval aviator to fly in combat and the first to be killed therein. (U.S. Navy Photograph USN 1146845, National Archives and Records Administration, Still Pictures Division, College Park, Md.)


Lt. (j.g.) Thomas J. Hudner receives congratulations from President Harry S Truman, after he was presented with the Medal of Honor in ceremonies at the White House, Washington, D.C. 13 April 1951. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph NH...
Caption: Lt. (j.g.) Thomas J. Hudner receives congratulations from President Harry S Truman, after he was presented with the Medal of Honor in ceremonies at the White House, Washington, D.C. 13 April 1951. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph NH 97093)

Leyte, having provided close air support for operations around the Chosin Reservoir, also assisted with retrograde and evacuation operations around Hungnam, North Korea. She was at Sasebo (26 December 1950–7 January 1951) and then returned to Korean waters to help U.S. Army units hold the strategic town of Wonju in central Korea. She was detached from the Seventh Fleet on 19 January 1951 and ordered to return to the U.S. Steaming back home, Leyte returned to the Norfolk Naval Shipyard for overhaul, steaming via San Diego, Calif. (3 February) and the Panama Canal, on 25 February.


Leyte loading aircraft at Yokosuka for transportation to the U.S., at the end of her Korean War combat tour, 24 January 1951. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph NH 97295)
Caption: Leyte loading aircraft at Yokosuka for transportation to the U.S., at the end of her Korean War combat tour, 24 January 1951. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph NH 97295)


Leyte -- partially framed by the tail of a Martin PBM-5 Mariner (BuNo 84771) -- rounds NAS North Island, as she arrives at San Diego, 3 February 1951. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph NH 97296)
Caption: Leyte -- partially framed by the tail of a Martin PBM-5 Mariner (BuNo 84771) -- rounds NAS North Island, as she arrives at San Diego, 3 February 1951. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph NH 97296)

With her repairs complete, Leyte conducted six weeks of fleet training exercises in the Caribbean which terminated at Norfolk on 21 August 1951. She departed for a return to the Mediterranean, her fifth deployment, on 3 September. Leyte completed her duty with the Sixth Fleet and returned to Norfolk on 21 December to conduct operations out of Hampton Roads. Prior to steaming again for the Mediterranean on 29 August 1952, she was redesignated CVA-32. This sixth deployment lasted through the New Year during which she was again redesignated, this time as CVA-32. With her sixth Mediterranean deployment completed, she returned to the U.S. at the Boston Naval Shipyard on 16 February 1953 in preparation for her expected deactivation. 

On 8 July 1953, however, the designation Anti-Submarine Support Aircraft Carrier (CVS) was established for attack carriers assigned to hunt submarines. The decision became effective on 8 August, and from this date, the five assigned carriers, not all operational, were redesignated Leyte (CVS-32), Enterprise (CVS-6), Franklin (CVS-13), Bunker Hill (CVS-17), and Antietam (CVS-36). Ordered to be retained in the active fleet; and, redesignated CVS-32 on the same day, work was begun converting her to an ASW support carrier. 

On 15 October 1953, at 1515, while still under conversion, Leyte suffered an explosion in her port catapult machinery room. Within minutes, naval base and city fire trucks were on the scene. After a hard and gallant fight, where acts of heroism were legion, the fire was extinguished at 1957. As a result of the fire, 37 men died and 28 were injured, the number including civilian workmen who were on board when the fire began. 

Leyte’s conversion was completed on 4 January 1954, and she thus became the initial operational antisubmarine warfare carrier. After refresher training based on Guantanamo Bay, Leyte took part in the Atlantic Fleet’s spring training exercises in the Caribbean and conducted the convoy exercise New Broom III to Lisbon, Portugal. She also introduced the then new Grumman S2F Tracker antisubmarine type aircraft to the fleet while playing the role as the nucleus of a hunter-killer force comprising herself, as flagship, her embarked air groups, and an escorting squadron of destroyers.


Grumman S2F-1 Tracker antisubmarine aircraft gets a 'go' signal from the Leyte flight deck officer as she is launched for antisubmarine patrol during LANTPHIBEX. The specially-designed aircraft were kept flying around the clock during the oversea...
Caption: Grumman S2F-1 Tracker antisubmarine aircraft gets a 'go' signal from the Leyte flight deck officer as she is launched for antisubmarine patrol during LANTPHIBEX. The specially-designed aircraft were kept flying around the clock during the overseas transit of the amphibious force, and combined with sonar-equipped helicopters and blimps, provided effective protection against four 'enemy' subs. Quoted from the original caption, which was released by Leyte under a date of 1 November 1955. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph NH 97297)

Leyte departed Quonset Point on 5 January 1956 and steamed to New York. Entering the yard on 8 January she underwent a maintenance availability until 21 June. After returning to Quonset Point on 22 June, she departed on 5 July for the Caribbean to conduct training. She returned to Quonset Point on 30 August. Later in the year she served as the flagship for Task Group 81.4 conducting antisubmarine patrols in the North Atlantic through the end of November. Having returned to Quonset Point, she remained there through the end of the year. 

Leyte’s proficiency in antisubmarine warfare (ASW) was recognized in August 1958 when she received the Battle “E” Award as the outstanding ship of her class. Throughout most of her service as an antisubmarine warfare support aircraft carrier, she served as the CarDiv 18 flagship. Operating out of Quonset Point, with her hunter-killer force, she carried out a constant schedule of ASW tactics training with U.S. submarines based from New London, Conn., in areas along the U.S. eastern seaboard and into the Caribbean. On Saturday, 27 December 1958, Lt. (j.g.) Charles G. Lukitsch, of VS-30, carried out the last operational landing on board Leyte, the ship’s 69,700th. 

Leyte departed Quonset Point in January 1959 for the New York Naval Shipyard, where she commenced pre-inactivation overhaul. She was decommissioned at New York on 15 May 1959 and placed in reserve. That same day, she was redesignated as an auxiliary aircraft transport, AVT-10, a description that “properly describe[d] her mobilization capability in her present configuration.” She was assigned to the Philadelphia group of the Atlantic Reserve Fleet with a berth in New York. Naval Supply Center (NSC), Bayonne, N. J., assumed temporary custody of Leyte and Franklin (AVT-8), the latter having been redesignated as an auxiliary aircraft transport as well, on 25 August 1962. 

Having been moved to the graving dock at the Military Ocean Terminal (MOT) (formerly the Naval Supply Center), Bayonne, Leyte underwent an inspection by a sub-board of inspection and survey (3-6 March 1969) that found her “unfit for further service.” The sub-board recommended, on 12 March 1969, that the ship be stricken from the Naval Vessel Register (NVR). 

Consequently, Leyte was stricken from the NVR on 1 June 1969. Although the ship was offered to the city of Pensacola, Fla., to serve as a memorial, various circumstances compelled the city to refuse the Navy’s offer. The removal of her machinery and equipment was completed on 20 February 1970. She was sold at public sale to the Portsmouth Salvage Co., Chesapeake, Va., for scrapping on 4 August 1970. Turned over to the purchaser, the ship was removed from the MOT and naval custody at 2210 on 24 September 1970 and began her last voyage to the breakers’ yard. 

Leyte received a Navy Unit Commendation (for the period 9 October 1950 to 9 January 1951) and two battle stars for her Korean War service. 

Commanding Officers Date Assumed Command
Capt. Henry F. MacComsey 11 April 1946
Capt. Edward R. Peck 29 March 1947
Capt. Charles F. Coe 29 March 1948
Capt. William L. Erdmann 1 April 1949
Capt. Thomas U. Sisson 14 April 1950
Capt. Paul L. Dudley 12 February 1951
Capt. Ford N. Taylor 26 January 1952
Cmdr. Richard L. Fowler 27 March 1953
Capt. Thomas A. Ahroon 17 September 1953
Capt. Elliott W. Parish Jr. 17 September 1954
Capt. Harlan T. Johnson 22 August 1955
Capt. Marshall T. Martin 22 October 1956
Capt. Charles T. Fritter 7 October 1957


Christopher B. Havern Sr. and Robert J. Cressman

27 September 2017

 

Published: Thu Sep 28 07:29:13 EDT 2017