By Phil Devlin.
(June 6, 2019) — Neil Blodgett has vivid memories of his three year stint in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Neil served as a gunner’s mate on an LST during the war. He received his training in Rhode Island and then shipped out to Bayonne, NJ, where he boarded a naval LST. An LST was basically a large cargo ship over 300 feet in length manned by a crew of about 125 that could carry men and material to battles. Often, Neil’s LST would carry large quantities of ammunition and gasoline to battles, thus putting its crew in extreme danger if attacked. Despite often being pursued by German U-Boats and attacked several times by German airplanes, his LST safely made trips to Africa, Sicily, India, and Burma to deliver its cargo before returning through the Suez Canal and the Mediterranean Sea to England to prepare for the D-Day invasion on June 6, 1944.
Neil’s LST was loaded with small locomotive engines that would fit on French railways as well as numerous troops in preparation for Operation Overlord. He remembers that the journey from England to the Normandy coast was postponed three times due to adverse weather. Finally, his ship became part of an enormous armada of over 6,000 ships of all sizes that set out for the invasion early on the morning of June 6, 1944. Neil said that he had never before seen so many ships in one place in his life; additionally, he saw and heard hundreds of airplanes overhead on their way to the Norman coast. It was an unforgettable experience. LST 209 finally reached Gold Beach on the morning of June 6th and unloaded its cargo successfully. Neil said that his ship was then transformed into a hospital ship that would transport wounded soldiers back to England for further medical attention.
Now in his 98th year, Navy veteran Neil Blodgett understandably takes great pride in his military service during World War II. Neil also takes great pride that his grandson, the commanding officer on the destroyer USS Barry, continues the Blodgett family’s service in the United States Navy.
Editor’s Note: Landing Ship, Tank (LST) is the naval designation for ships first developed during World War II to support amphibious operations by carrying tanks, vehicles, cargo, and landing troops directly onto shore with no need for docks or piers.
Thank you for your service Mr. Blodgett and thank you Phil Devlin for writing this wonderful tribute to his bravery.
If I Romberg, the guys on the ship would call a L S T, a large, slow ,,target. Is that right?