USS LSM-17
| History | |
|---|---|
| .svg.png) United States | |
| Name | USS LSM-17 | 
| Builder | Brown Shipbuilding Co., Houston, Texas | 
| Laid down | 10 April 1944 | 
| Launched | 7 May 1944 | 
| Commissioned | 14 June 1944 | 
| Decommissioned | 22 July 1946 | 
| Stricken | 15 November 1974 | 
| Honors & awards | 1 battle star (Okinawa, 1945) | 
| Fate | 
 | 
|  France | |
| Acquired | On loan, 1 April 1954 | 
| Fate | 
 | 
| .svg.png) South Korea | |
| Acquired | 
 | 
| General characteristics [1] | |
| Class & type | LSM-1-class landing ship medium | 
| Displacement | 
 | 
| Length | 203 ft 6 in (62.03 m) o/a | 
| Beam | 34 ft (10 m) | 
| Draft | 
 | 
| Propulsion | Fairbanks-Morse diesel engines, 2,800 shp (2,088 kW), direct drive, 2 screws | 
| Speed | 13.3 knots (24.6 km/h; 15.3 mph) | 
| Range | 5,000 nmi (9,300 km) at 7 kn (13 km/h; 8.1 mph) | 
| Capacity | 
 | 
| Troops | 54 troops | 
| Complement | 4 officers, 54 enlisted | 
| Armament | 
 | 
The USS LSM-17 was a LSM-1-class landing ship medium of the United States Navy, commissioned at Brown Shipyards in Houston, Texas, on 14 June 1944.[2] During the remainder of World War II, it served in the Pacific.
References
- ^ "Landing Ship Medium LSM-17". NavSource. 2010. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
- ^ William John Stevenson (AFC 2001/001/24632), Unit History (MS01), Veterans History Project Collection, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress.
Further reading
- Stevenson, William J., and Wendy Stevenson Clem. 2001. Lucky 17: Narratives from an LSM Crew as Part of the Amphibious Navy Fleet During WWII. Roseville, MI: CNC Systems, Inc.
 

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