, 2012 Several LCIs survive and are available to be seen by the public. The , (a round conn, bow ramp) is located in
Portland, Oregon near the I-5 Bridge over the Columbia River. It is currently owned and being restored by a non-profit
501c3 group, the "Amphibious Forces Memorial Museum". Built in 1944 in
Neponset, Massachusetts, the ship was transferred to the Pacific Theater where it saw action in making two assault landings:
Zamboanga, Philippines in March 1945 and
Brunei Bay,
Borneo in June 1945 (as part of the
Battle of North Borneo). Purchased as war surplus initially for use as a log hauling tugboat, the engines were removed and it was relegated to a floating storage hulk in Stevenson WA until the late 1950s when it was abandoned and sank into the river mud on the shore of the Columbia river. In the late 1970s the ship was refloated and restoration began on the ship.
LCI(L)713 has changed ownership until finally sold to the AFMM in 2003. The
LCI(L) 713 has been continually restored with the goal of becoming a historically correct operating museum vessel. (also a round conn, bow ramp) is moored in
Eureka, California, and is owned and operated by the Humboldt Bay Air & Sea Museum. The ship was used in the
Korean War in 1951–1953 as an "Infectious Disease Control Ship". Her interior was modified to accommodate a larger crew that included ten medical doctors and lab technicians. In the late 1950s the ship was sold as surplus for use as an Alaskan fishing vessel. 30 years later, the
1091 was purchased and brought to Eureka, California, in the 1990s by Ralph Davis for use as a private fishing vessel. Davis sold the ship to the museum, headed by Leroy Marsh, and they are working together to restore the
LCI-1091 to an operating museum vessel. docked in
Vallejo, California, 2007 Several former LCI hulls were obtained and modified for use as sightseeing vessels after World War II by the New York City "Circle Line". The
Circle Line 7 (ex-
LCI-191),
Circle Line 8 (ex-
LCI 179) are all now retired.
Circle Line X is currently on active duty with
Circle Line 42nd Street on New York City's Pier 83. Several other LCI hulls have been located around the world. The Argentine Navy has at least three, which were still being used in 1998.
LCI(L)-653, renamed Husky II, was used as a pilot boat and then a fisheries tender in Alaska before being broken up at
Homer, Alaska in 2010. Three derelict LCI hulls remain at Staten Island, New York, in the
Witte Marine salvage yard. Only one LCS(L) Mk.3, the former
LCS-102, still survives in original configuration. She is moored at
Mare Island, California, where she is being restored to her World War II appearance by volunteers. ==See also==