USS Alamo
1956 Thomaston-class dock landing ship
Vessel Wikidata
* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
The USS Alamo (LSD-33) was a Thomaston-class dock landing ship commissioned into the United States Navy in 1956. Constructed by Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississippi, she was laid down on October 11, 1954, launched on January 20, 1956, and officially commissioned on August 24, 1956. Designed for amphibious operations, the Alamo measured approximately 512 feet in length with a beam of around 84 feet, and a draft of about 16 feet. Her displacement was roughly 16,500 tons full load, and she was powered by steam turbines capable of generating around 20,000 shaft horsepower, allowing her to reach speeds of approximately 20 knots. Throughout her service, USS Alamo was involved in a wide array of operations across the Pacific and beyond. Her early activities included amphibious exercises off San Diego, shuttle runs between Eniwetok, Bikini Atolls, and Pearl Harbor, as well as participation in Operation Tradewind near Maui. She frequently transported landing craft, Marines, and their equipment to various locations, including the Marshall Islands, Japan, Taiwan, and Vietnam. Her operational history included involvement in several significant Cold War and Vietnam War operations, such as troop lifts, amphibious exercises, and patrols off Vietnam’s coast. Notably, USS Alamo participated in operations supporting U.S. military efforts during the Vietnam War, including transporting Marines and equipment, and engaging in amphibious assaults. She also took part in humanitarian missions, such as aid deliveries during typhoons and flood relief efforts in the Philippines. Her service extended into the 1980s, with deployments to the Indian Ocean, participation in multinational exercises, and port visits across Asia and Africa. Decommissioned on November 2, 1990, USS Alamo was transferred to the Brazilian Navy, where she was renamed Rio de Janeiro (G31). In Brazilian service, she supported UN missions, transported personnel and materiel, and served as a command vessel. She was eventually decommissioned in 2012 and scrapped in 2014. USS Alamo’s operational history underscores her significance as a versatile amphibious warfare platform during the Cold War era.
This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.