Construction and commissioning Ringness was laid down as the USS
Ringness (DE-590), on 23 December 1943 by
Bethlehem-Hingham Shipyard,
Hingham,
Massachusetts, and
launched on 5 February 1944, sponsored by Mrs. Henry R. Ringness. The ship was reclassified as a and redesignated APD-100 on 17 July 1944. The ship was
commissioned on 25 October 1944.
Pacific War Following
shakedown off
Bermuda and
amphibious warfare exercises in
Chesapeake Bay,
Ringness steamed in
convoy for the
Pacific on 21 December 1944. She transited the
Panama Canal, stopped at
San Diego,
California, and reached
Pearl Harbor,
Territory of Hawaii, on 15 January 1945. After training in the
Hawaiian area, she departed Pearl Harbor on 1 March 1945 for
Funafuti in the
Ellice Islands,
Port Purvis on
Florida Island in the
Solomons, and
Ulithi Atoll in the
Caroline Islands, where she arrived on 22 March 1945. After further training
Ringness proceeded on 24 March 1945 to
Saipan, getting underway for
Okinawa on 27 March 1945, escorting
Task Group 51.2 composed of escorts,
transports, and
cargo ships, take part in the
Okinawa campaign.
Okinawa campaign The
amphibious landings on Okinawa took place on 1 April 1945, and during the two days following,
Ringness engaged in anti-
suicide boat patrol along the southeast coast of Okinawa, where intelligence reports had located
Japanese suicide-boat nests. On the night of 2 April 1945,
Ringness attacked a Japanese
midget submarine with undetermined results. On 3 April 1945
Ringness steamed to Ulithi Atoll for supplies, returning to Okinawa with Task Group 53.8. Upon arrival she was assigned to
anti-submarine and
anti-aircraft patrol, undergoing numerous air attacks. This patrol lasted only four days before she steamed as a convoy escort to Saipan. On 23 April 1945
Ringness again steamed for Okinawa, escorting a convoy of
tank landing ships (LSTs) and
medium landing ships (LSMs). On 27 April 1945, a Japanese
submarine fired two
torpedoes at her.
Ringness replied with gunfire and a
depth charge attack, with undetermined results. On 30 April 1945,
Ringness arrived at Okinawa for the third time since the Okinawa campaign began, remaining there for the entire month of May 1945. During this time she maintained her various anti-submarine and anti-aircraft screen stations. On 4 May
Ringness witnessed the death dive of a
kamikaze onto the flight deck of the
escort aircraft carrier , turning
Sangamon into a roaring inferno.
Ringness stood by the crippled vessel and rescued some of the men forced over the side by flames and explosions. On 11 May 1945,
Ringness proceeded to
Radar Picket Station 15 for
rescue and
salvage work on
destroyers and , which had born the brunt of one of the heaviest Japanese air attacks of this period. On the night of 16 May 1945, just off Okinawa,
Ringness dodged an oncoming
kamikaze, getting credit for shooting it down. At the end of May,
Ringness escorted a convoy to Ulithi Atoll, arriving there on 6 June 1945.
Convoy escort duty Ringness then proceeded on to
Leyte in the
Philippine Islands. After further convoy escort duty between Leyte, Okinawa, and Ulithi Atoll,
Ringness was diverted from her escort duty on 3 August 1945 and rescued 39 survivors of the sinking of the
heavy cruiser including its captain
Charles B. McVay III.
Post-World War II service Ringness was in
Leyte Gulf at the end of World War II on 15 August 1945. She proceeded to Okinawa, then participated in the occupation landings at
Jinsen,
Korea. On 26 September,
Ringness was detached and departed Jinsen for Okinawa. On 29 September 1945,
Ringness commenced her second occupation operation as sole escort for
Task Unit 78.1.94 bound for
Tientsin,
China. On 9 October 1945 she shifted to
Qingdao, China, serving as 7th Amphibious Force Beachmaster (Director of Disembarkation)
Flagship. She remained at Qingdao until departing for the
United States on 29 January 1946. She arrived at
San Pedro, California, on 23 February 1946, transited the
Panama Canal, and put into
Norfolk,
Virginia, on 14 March 1946.
Decommissioning and fate Ringness reported for lay-up at
Green Cove Springs,
Florida, on 4 April 1946. She was subsequently towed from Green Cove Springs to
Naval Station Mayport at
Mayport, Florida, and
Naval Station Charleston at
Charleston,
South Carolina, at various times in 1947 and 1948.
Ringness was
decommissioned and placed in the
Atlantic Reserve Fleet on 5 June 1946, berthed at
Atlantic Reserve Fleet, Green Cove Springs. In 1959 she was towed to Norfolk, where she remained as part of the
Atlantic Reserve Fleet, Norfolk until berthed at
Atlantic Reserve Fleet, Orange in
Orange,
Texas, in 1966 as part of the Atlantic Reserve Fleet Texas Group. Reclassified as an "amphibious transport, small," and redesignated LPR-100 on 1 July 1969,
Ringness was sold for scrapping on 1 July 1975. ==Awards==