Central Pacific campaigns After
shakedown off
San Francisco, the new landing ship dock departed San Diego 27 December 1943 loaded with
LCTs for docking and undocking trials in
Maalaea Bay,
Hawaii. Following 18 days of intensive training,
Lindenwald sortied from
Pearl Harbor with the Southern Transport Group for the
invasion of the Marshall Islands on 22 January 1944 with 18
tank-carrying
LCMs stowed in her well deck. Arriving off
Kwajalein late evening 31 January, she launched the LCMs at dawn the next mornIng. Six days later, the ship loaded 54
LVTs and sailed for the
Ellice Islands en route to
Guadalcanal. Anchoring off Guadalcanal on 23 February, she received calls from Admiral
William F. Halsey and Maj. Gen.
Roy S. Geiger, USMC. During March she made two runs from Guadalcanal carrying boats and marines for the daring invasion of
Emirau Island, just 150 miles north of the Japanese stronghold at
Rabaul. She spent April and May in Hawaiian waters, training with marines, then departed 30 May for
Eniwetok en route to the
invasion of Saipan.
Lindenwald arrived the morning of
D-Day, 15 June, and debarked LCMs preloaded with tanks and men of the
2d Marine Division. The ship then stood off
Saipan while on the beaches the marines overcame tough opposition with naval gunfire and air support.
Lindenwald departed for San Francisco 22 June and arrived 11 July, touching Pearl Harbor en route to unload boats and marine casualties.
Philippine and Okinawa campaigns Departing the West Coast only 10 days after arrival,
Lindenwald loaded boats at Pearl Harbor and steamed for the
Admiralties to make final preparations for the
invasion of Leyte. She left
Manus Island for
Leyte on 14 October and anchored in the LSD launching area 20 October. The next day, she quickly unloaded boats and got underway for
Hollandia,
New Guinea, to carry General
MacArthur's rear echelon to the new headquarters at Leyte. For the next two months,
Lindenwald carried troops and equipment from New Guinea to Manus and Leyte. With Leyte secured,
Lindenwald prepared for
the invasion at
Lingayen Gulf, about 150 miles north of
Manila. as the Navy leapfrogged toward Japan. The ship departed Manus for
Lingayen on 31 December. En route, January, four
suicide planes attacked the formation. One crashed the port side of
escort carrier . Formation antiaircraft fire splashed or diverted the others. The action continued with increased fury the next day. As the LSDs launched boats, was crashed just 1,000 yards from
Lindenwald. That afternoon an enemy bomber damaged . Nevertheless, the operation was successful. On 10 January the ship steamed for
Wake Island to get reinforcements and returned to Lingayen on the 27th. Departing immediately, she picked up more men and equipment from
Biak Island and returned again to Lingayen 11 February. Shoving off 13 February, she arrived Guam on the 24th, then proceeded to
Milne Bay, New Guinea, loaded 38 boats, and steamed for Leyte. Arriving 12 March, she reported to Task Force 51 (TF 51) under Vice Admiral
Richmond K. Turner and began preparations for the upcoming
Okinawa campaign.
Lindenwald sailed due north from
San Pedro Bay, Leyte, for
Okinawa on 26 March and arrived 1 April. She remained off Okinawa for 92 days, docking, repairing, and servicing
landing craft damaged by enemy gunfire or the heavy surf. During this period, the ship repaired 452 boats. Enemy harassment twice threatened to cut short her busy career. Early morning 27 May, after suicide planes crashed into two sister auxiliary ships,
Lindenwald splashed an enemy aircraft before it could crash nearby . Two weeks later, a murderous barrage from
Lindenwald diverted an incoming suicide plane just enough to escape disaster. It barely missed the
radar mast and splashed 500 yards off the bow. With the liberation of Okinawa completed,
Lindenwald sailed for San Francisco on 1 July and pulled in three weeks later. After a 2-month overhaul, she made a fast run to Pearl Harbor, then sailed via the
Panama Canal for
Galveston, Texas, and transport duty in the
Gulf of Mexico. == 1946–1954 ==