For RATING SHIRTS - Click on your Rating Abbreviation below:
AB AC AD AE AG AK AM AO AQ AS AT AW AX AZ BM BT BU
CE CM CS CT DC DK DM DP DS DT EA EM EN EO ET EW
FC FT GM GS (53-61) GS (78-Now) HM HT IC IM IS IT JO LI LN LS
MA (48-67) MA (72-Now) ME ML MM MN MR MS MT MU NAVY NC ND OM OS OT
PC PH PM PN PR QM RD (WW2) RD (48-72) RM SD SF SH SK SM
SO ST SV SW TM UT WT YN NAVY DIVER
Click on your Rating abbreviation above:


U.S.S. ALAMO

(LSD-33)

WE DELIVER

Click to view crew list
 

The USS ALAMO (LSD-33), a Thomaston-class dock landing ship, was commissioned on 24 AUG 1956. Built by Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississippa, USS ALAMO, after final fit out a Portsmouth NSY in Hampton Roads, VA, sailed for her homeport of San Diego. She took up her duty as a West Coast "Gator Freighter", deploying numerous times to the Western Pacific. At first she deployed in peace, but aster the U.S. became more and more involved in Vietnam, she carried her Marines to combat duty. After the war in Vietnam wound down, USS ALAMO continued deploying westward, including a voyage across the Indian Ocean to Kenya in 1980. USS ALAMO served her country for 34 years, 1 month and 4 days, until decommissioned on 28 SEP 1990. USS ALAMO was transferred to the Brazilian Navy after decommissioning and she remains in service as Rio de Janeiro (G31).

The USS ALAMO (LSD-33) deployment history and significant events of her service career follow:

LSD-33 Deployments - Major Events

Add a LSD-33 Shellback Initiation Add a LSD-33 Deployment - Major Event
Month Year to Month Year Deployment / Event
OCT1954-Keel Date: 11 OCT 1954
at Ingalls Shipbuilding Pascagoula MS
JAN1956-Launch Date: 20 JAN 1956
AUG1956-Commissioned: 24 AUG 1956
FEB1961-AUG1961West Pac
APR1961-APR1961Loaded a missile or rocket at Port Huenme Ca (Near Oxnard Ca)
JUN1961-DEC1961West Pac
OCT1962-MAY1963West Pac
JUN1964-DEC1964West Pac-Viet Nam
AUG1964-NOV1964West Pac-Viet Nam
JUN1965-AUG1965West Pac-Viet Nam
JUN1966-SEP1966West Pac-Viet Nam
OCT1967-JUN1968West Pac-Viet Nam
JAN1969-SEP1969West Pac-Viet Nam
MAR1969-Shellback Initiation - 21 MAR 1969 - Pacific Ocean
MAR1969-Shellback Initiation - 25 MAR 1969 - Pacific Ocean
JUL1969-MAR1970West Pac-Viet Nam
MAR1970-AUG1971West Pac-Viet Nam
AUG1970-MAR1971West Pac
JAN1972-JAN1972West Pac-Viet Nam
APR1972-DEC1972West Pac
APR1972-DEC1972West Pac-Viet Nam
JAN1974-JUN1974West Pac
JUN1974-Shellback Initiation - 5 JUN 1974 - Pacific Ocean
MAR1975-JAN1976West Pac
MAY1975- Shellback Initiation - 1 MAY 1975 - Pacific Ocean
FEB1976- Shellback Initiation - 12 FEB 1976 - Pacific Ocean
FEB1976- Shellback Initiation - 12 FEB 1976 - Pacific Ocean
JUN1976-Shellback Initiation - 6 JUN 1976 - Pacific Ocean
MAR1977-NOV1977West Pac
MAY1980-Shellback Initiation - 3 MAY 1980 - Pacific Ocean
MAY1980- Shellback Initiation - 3 MAY 1980 - Pacific Ocean
MAY1980- Shellback Initiation - 3 MAY 1980 - Pacific Ocean
MAY1980-Shellback Initiation - 3 MAY 1980 - Indian Ocean
JUN1981-DEC1981West Pac
AUG1981- Shellback Initiation - 30 AUG 1981 - Indian Ocean
AUG1981- Shellback Initiation - 30 AUG 1981 - Pacific Ocean
FEB1984-FEB1984Mini Gator Excorcices
APR1984-Shellback Initiation - 24 APR 1984 - Pacific Ocean
APR1986-Shellback Initiation - 1 APR 1986 - Pacific Ocean
NOV1987-MAY1988West Pac
DEC1989-JUN1990West Pac
MAY1990-Shellback Initiation - 8 MAY 1990 - Pacific Ocean
SEP1990-Decommissioned: 28 SEP 1990
NOV1990-JUN2012Decommisioning

LSD-33 General Specifications

Class: Thomaston-class dock landing ship

Named for: the Alamo

Complement: 304 Officers and Enlisted

Displacement: 8899 tons

Length: 510 feet

Beam: 84 feet

Flank Speed: 21 knots

Final Disposition: Loaned to Brazil 12 November 1990



USS ALAMO (LSD-33)



Alamo (LSD-33) was laid down on 11 October 1954 at Pascagoula Miss. by the Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp.; launched on 20 January 1956; sponsored by Mrs. Daniel V. Gallery the wife of Rear Admiral Daniel V. Gallery: and commissioned on 24 August 1956 Capt. James L. Semmes in command.

After commissioning the ship briefly visited Galveston Tex. then headed for Norfolk Va. to complete her outfitting and initial loading. On 13 October the dock landing ship sailed for the west coast. After transiting the Panama Canal she reached San Diego her home port and joined the Amphibious Forces Pacific Fleet. The ship held amphibious exercises and acceptance trials off San Diego in February 1957. Further training exercises occupied her until 29 May when she got underway for the Marshall Islands. Alamo paused at Peart Harbor from 6 to 8 June to load amphibious craft then continued on to the Marshall Islands. She discharged the craft at Eniwetok on the 14th and for the next 10 days provided shuttle service between Eniwetok and Bikini Atolls. Alamo put to sea from Bikini on 22 June and steamed by way of Pearl Harbor to San Diego where she loaded landing craft tugs and spare parts before sailing for Pearl Harbor on 23 July. There on 6 August she embarked marines and their equipment and put to sea for participation in Operation "Tradewinds " conducted in the area of Lahaina Roads Maui. Alamo returned from this exercise on the 15th; then left Pearl Harbor four days later to return to San Diego.

On 24 September Alamo began a voyage to the western Pacific (WestPac). She repeated her pattern of loading equipment at Pearl Harbor for transport to Eniwetok. Alamo then shuttled equipment between Emwetok Utirik Kwajalein and Ujelang Atolls. A voyage to Yokohama Japan where she arrived on 17 November interrupted that duty. Alamo cleared that port on 21 November to resume her shuttling service in the Marshalls before returning to San Diego on 15 December.

The beginning of 1958 brought more training and upkeep. On 8 March Alamo headed for Pearl Harbor where she joined a fast transport group for a series of amphibious force landing and salvage exercises at Kauai. The ship departed Pearl Harbor on 7 April and reached San Diego on the 14th. Ten days later she entered the Mare Island Naval Shipyard for an overhaul and returned to her home port on 31 July to begin two and one-half months of refresher training. On 10 October Alamo sailed for Japan. After loading landing craft at Yokosuka Alamo headed to Kaohsiung Taiwan. At that port the ship conducted amphibious training with units of the Nationalist Chinese Navy until 2 December 1958. She then steamed for independent ship exercises off Okinawa and stopped at Naha to load the men and equipment of Marine Transport Squadron 163 for transportation to Yokosuka. For the next two months Alamo shuttled various Marine Corps units between Yokosuka and Okinawa terminating her last voyage of this duty at Naha on 11 February 1959. Three days later she pushed on to Sasebo Japan but again got underway for home on 23 February and paid visits to Adak and Kodiak Alaska and San Francisco Calif before reaching San Diego on 12 March.

Following a round-trip run to Astoria Oreg. -- from 17 to 25 April -- to deliver a load of small craft she took part in exercises with other units of Amphibious Squadron 3 off Coronado followed by Operation "Twin Peaks " held off the California coast from 18 May to 5 June. Late in September Alamo sailed for the Far East. The ship visited Kaohsiung Taiwan; Yokosuka Iwakuni Kagoshima and Shimazu Japan Naha Okinawa Hong Kong Subic Bay Philippines and Buckner Bay Okinawa. After touching at Pearl Harbor she arrived at San Diego on 3 May 1960. From 25 July to 1 November the ship was overhauled at the Todd Shipyard Seattle Wash.; and from 14 November to 9 December she went through refresher training.

The vessel began 1961 with amphibious refresher training at San Diego and devoted most of the first half of the year to training and gunnery exercises naval reserve training cruises and Operation "Greenlight Phase III." On 17 June she got underway for another WestPac deployment. Upon her arrival at Subic Bay Alamo joined the 7th Fleet's Amphibious Ready Group (ARG) and shuttled Marine Corps units to Buckner Bay. She took part in Operation "Warm-Up" off the northwest coast of Okinawa from 13 to 20 October. A visit to Hong Kong followed before the ship returned to Subic Bay and began preparations for her voyage back to the United States. She got underway early in December and arrived at San Diego on the 16th.

Alamo remained there until 6 March 1962 when she got underway for San Francisco and the Todd Shipyard for her first interim overhaul. Six weeks later she returned to San Diego. Local operations occupied her until 16 October when she got underway for the Far East with Amphibious Squadron 3. En route several ships of the squadron were diverted to the Caribbean in response to the Cuban crisis and Alamo was held in Hawaii on a standby basis. On 17 November she sailed for typhoon-stricken Guam with emergency supplies. After a two-day stop in Guam to unload supplies the vessel proceeded to Subic Bay. Local operations off San Miguel were held before the ship sailed to Hong Kong for the Christmas holidays.

The ship visited Manila during the New Year's holiday in 1963 then returned to Subic Bay. In January she took part in Operation "Jungle Drum II" in Thailand and then spent two days in Bangkok. Her next assignment took her to the flood- stricken island of Mindanao in the Philippines. The month of March was taken up by Operation "Silver Blade" off Taiwan. After three weeks of restricted availability at Subic Bay Alamo sailed on 20 April for Yokosuka. The ship finally reached San Diego on 11 May. Following a period of upkeep and training she got underway for four weeks of operations in the Pacific Northwest with units of Amphibious Squadron 7 and Army Reserve units. Visits to Seattle Wash. and Portland Oreg. preceded her return to San Diego on 6 September. In mid-September the ship entered the Bethlehem Steel Co. shipyard Long Beach Calif. to begin an overhaul which was completed barely in time for her to get back home for the Christmas holidays.

A period of upkeep and refresher training kept the crew busy through March 1964. In April Alamo proceeded north to assist the earthquake-stricken region around Kodiak Alaska. She returned to San Diego in May and took part in Operation "Pine Tree." Then after several weeks of preparations Alamo departed San Diego on 18 June bound for the Far East. Upon reaching Pearl Harbor she was involved in Operation "Tool Box" and had a period of leave and upkeep before sailing for Okinawa on 9 July. Alamo returned to Subic Bay on the last day of July. On 5 August she sailed with Marine Corps Battalion Landing Team (BLT) 3/1 embarked for patrol duties off the coast of Vietnam and through most of the autumn alternated periods of leave and upkeep at Hong Kong and Subic Bay with Vietnamese patrol duty through 2 December. The ship arrived back in San Diego on 18 December 1964.

Participation in Operation "Silver Lance" off the coast of southern California lasted from 23 February through 10 March 1965. On 11 March Alamo was called upon to make an unscheduled run to Yokosuka carrying men and equipment for the American military buildup in the Far East as the United States was beginning direct participation in operations in Vietnam. She returned to San Diego on 12 April. The ship made a second unscheduled deployment to WestPac on 25 May. She sailed to Okinawa onloaded marines then landed them at Qui Nhon and Danang Vietnam. Alamo touched briefly at Yokosuka then headed back to San Diego. She took part in Operations "Cleansweep" and "Ragweed" during September devoted most of the autumn to training exercises and ended the year in port at San Diego.

In February 1966 the ship began her seventh major deployment to Westpac. Alamo spent six months operating as a part of an amphibious ready group (ARG) and shuttled troops and equipment from Subic Bay and Okinawa to various points in Vietnam. She returned to the United States in August. In September her home port was switched to Long Beach Calif and she was assigned to the newly formed Amphibious Squadron 7.

In early 1967 she entered drydock at the Todd Shipyard in San Pedro Calif. for her third major overhaul which with the ensuing series of refresher training exercises accounted for most of the year. In November the ship sailed for the Far East. There Alamo was engaged in a series of lifts from Guam and the Philippines to Danang. She also again became a member of an ARG and operated along the Vietnamese coast for much of her tour. The ship also participated in four amphibious operations before returning to Long Beach in June 1968.

The ship engaged in local operations along the west coast for the rest of 1968. On 30 January 1969 she began another WestPac deployment in which she lifted troops and equipment to Danang and then proceeded to Subic Bay where she joined ARG "Bravo." The vessel also took part in three amphibious operations off the coast of South Vietnam. After eight months away from home Alamo returned to Long Beach on 26 September 1969. The ship then engaged in a series of training exercises and operations for the remainder of the year.

Alamo opened 1970 at San Pedro Calif. undergoing a restricted availability during which repairs were made to damaged deck plating cranes and a boiler. Work was completed on 19 January and the ship made final preparations for more service in Oriental waters. On 31 January she sailed with Denver (LPD-3) to participate in Operation "Keystone Bluejay " which involved the withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam. Alamo sailed into Danang harbor on 19 February and began loading marines and equipment for transportation back to the United States. Alamo debarked the marines at Camp Pendleton Calif on 14 March and then steamed north to Long Beach. She spent the next four and one-half months in training exercises refresher training and availability. On 1 August Alamo headed out to sea on her 10th WestPac deployment. She stopped at Pearl Harbor and Guam before reaching Subic Bay on 20 August. There she unloaded her cargo and sailed on 21 August for Danang to bring more marines back to the United States. Alamo reached Camp Pendleton on 11 September. After 10 days of leave and upkeep she got underway for Danang. Alamo also visited Yokosuka Tokyo and Subic Bay. She transported landing craft along the Vietnamese coast between such points as Danang Vung Tau Song Bo De and An Thoi. In early December the ship took on board BLT 2/4 for participation in Exercise "GRR-1' in Subic Bay. Upon finishing that exercise she sailed to Hong Kong for Christmas. On 28 December 1970 she returned to the Danang operating area.

The vessel steamed to Mindoro Philippines on 5 January 1971 for amphibious operations andoved on to Subic Bay on the 10th to onload equipment to ship to Vietnam. After briefly touching back at Subic Bay Alamo left Danang to onload marines and vehicles as part of the general American troop withdrawal. On 1 February she got underway to return to Long Beach and reached home port on 22 February. A leave and upkeep period ensued.

Operations resumed on 5 April as Alamo sailed for southern California waters to hold a midshipman training cruise and amphibious exercises. In early May Alamo unloaded her ammunition at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station in preparation for an overhaul at the Long Beach Naval Shipyard. The ship entered drydock on 13 May. Yard work was completed on 15 September and then began a period of refresher training which lasted through 10 December.

The year 1972 began with the vessel in upkeep. Then a series of training exercises in preparation for deployment followed. In April Alamo left Long Beach for the Far East. During her seven and one-half-month WestPac tour she made numerous troop and equipment lifts to and from Vietnam. Following completion of these duties she got underway and returned to Long Beach on 8 November.

The vessel remained in upkeep through 27 March 1973. On the 28th she moved to the weapons depot at Seal Beach to unload ammunition. She entered the Bethlehem Steel Shipyard at San Pedro on 5 April for a restricted availability. This period ended on 15 May when Alamo held sea trials along the California coast. She commenced an availability at San Diego on 28 May to convert the fuel system from Navy standard fuel oil to distillate fuel. This work was completed on 14 September and the ship sailed to Hunters Point Naval Shipyard on 16 September to begin a week of training. She returned to Long Beach on 24 September. Alamo held amphibious refresher training off Coronado Calif. through 12 November and remained at Long Beach through the end of the year.

The first three weeks of 1974 were spent making final preparations for another WestPac deployment which began on 19 January. Eight days later Alamo took part in a Marine Corps landing exercise off Kaneohe Bay Hawaii. She reached Okinawa on Valentine's Day. After refueling and onloading Battalion Landing Team (BLT) 2/9 she sailed to Numazu Japan unloaded the marines and pushed on to Yokosuka for a fortnight's restricted availability. Next came port calls at Beppu Japan and at Keelung Taiwan. Alamo's ensuing assignment was an amphibious training exercise off Okinawa which in turn was followed by stops at Subic Bay; Chinhae South Korea; Hong Kong; and Numazu and Yokosuka Japan. On 30 May the ship got underway to participate in Exercise "Kangaroo I." The assault force gathered in the Coral Sea off the east coast of Australia. On 19 June she headed for Sydney for a leave period. On 4 July the ship weighed anchor and sailed home via Pago Pago American Samoa and arrived back at San Diego on 19 July. Local operations which began for the ship on 23 September were soon followed by preparations for an overhaul which began at San Diego on 4 December 1974.

Alamo got underway for Long Beach on 27 May 1975 and spent the month of June at her home port in restricted availability. On 2 July Alamo sailed to Seal Beach to take on ammunition and on 14 July began amphibious refresher training off San Diego. She sailed on 4 October for another WestPac cruise. Following her arrival at Pearl Harbor she took part in an amphibious exercise held in Kaneohe Bay from the 12th to the 14th. The next day the ship continued her journey bound via Kwajalein for Subic Bay. After a brief stop there on 1 November Alamo sailed to Sasebo for upkeep. She next transported BLT 2/9 from Numazu to Okinawa then made a trip to Pusan Korea. Her other subsequent norts of call included Sasebo and Kagoshima Japan; Keelung Taiwan; Buckner Bay Okinawa Singapore Sattahip Thailand; and Inchon Korea. On 7 May Alamo finally set course for the United States. She reached her new home port of San Diego on 25 May and following upkeep devoted herself to local operations along the California coast for the rest of 1976.

The year 1977 began with three months of refresher training for the ship. On 29 March she once again set off for the Far East. During this trip Alamo visited the now-familiar ports of Iwakuni and Numazu Japan Subic Bay Buckner Bay Inchon and Pusan Korea Hong Kong and Keeiung Taiwan. She also participated in joint exercises with Korean and Thai naval forces and made numerous troop and supply shuttles before getting underway for home on 23 October. On 17 November Alamo arrived at San Diego and entered a post-deployment standdown period.

On 19 January 1978 Alamo began a fortnight's operations off the southern California coast and then turned to preparations for an overhaul. On 13 March Alamo entered the Todd Shipyard in San Pedro. She held sea trials in December and was in port at Long Beach for the Christmas holidays.

She returned to San Diego on 11 January 1979. The vessel sailed to Seal Beach on the 22d to load ammunition and then commenced a series of training exercises. In June the ship was assigned to resupply duty and provided small boat repair service at the naval outpost on Eniwetok. The group was involved in a cleanup operation to make the island habitable once again. After finishing her work on 28 June she got underway for Pearl Harbor. At the end of a short stay there she resumed her voyage and sailed into San Diego harbor on 15 July. She spent the month of August in restricted availability. In September Alamo took part in a fleet exercise involving over 30 American and Canadian warships that included an amphibious landing on the island of Vancouver just off the Canadian coast. On 9 October Alamo sailed to Seattle where she underwent repair work for three weeks. She returned to San Diego on 2 November. The ship spent the remainder of the year preparing for a scheduled WestPac deployment in early 1980.

Alamo embarked upon the voyage to the Far East on 4 January 1980. En route she made stops at Pearl Harbor and Guam before arriving at Subic Bay in the Philippines on 10 February. The dock landing ship stayed in the Philippines through the end of the month getting underway once between the 22d and the 26th to carry out an amphibious landing exercise at Zambales. On 1 March she departed Subic Bay bound ultimately for duty in the Indian Ocean. Along the way Alamo stopped at Pattaya Thailand and at Singapore. She departed Singapore on 15 March and made her way across the Indian Ocean to the Arabian Sea where she joined the contingency force established in response to the takeover of the American embassy in Tehran Iran. Alamo operated in that area until the beginning of May. At that time the dock landing ship headed for the Navy facility at Diego Garcia Island. After stopping at Diego Garcia from 5 May to 13 May she returned to sea and shaped a course for Western Australia. Following a five-day visit to Perth the ship departed Australia on her way back to the Philippines. Alamo paid a five-day visit to Subic Bay as well and then began the voyage back to the United States.

The dock landing ship stopped off at Pearl Harbor between 24 and 26 June to disembark marines and arrived in San Diego on 3 July. Post-deployment standdown occupied her time from then until 11 August when she began normal operations along the west coast. She remained so engaged through the end of 1980 and for the bulk of the first six months of 1981. On 24 June Alamo stood out of San Diego for another tour of duty with the 7th Fleet. Once again however her western Pacific assignment included an Indian Ocean interlude. After a stop at Pearl Harbor and an exercise out of Buckner Bay Okinawa she visited Subic Bay for a fortnight in August. On 21 August Alamo left the Philippines for the east coast of Africa and arrived in Mombasa Kenya on 6 September. There she participated in a bilateral exercise with Kenyan forces before heading back across the Indian Ocean via Diego Garcia to Australia. After visits to Perth and Sydney and the multilateral exercise Operation "Kangaroo 81 " the dock landing ship set course for the Philippines on 1 November. She pulled into Subic Bay on the 9th and remained there for the rest of the month. On the 30th the ship got underway for the United States.

Alamo reentered San Diego again on 23 December and ended the year with the usual leave and upkeep routine. The relative inactivity following a deployment continued through the end of January 1982. In February the dock landing ship carried out some operations at sea but late in the month began preparations for regular overhaul. The extended repair period began on 12 April lasted through the end of 1982 and carried over well into 1983. Overhaul ended on 6 May 1983 and Alamo commenced refresher training in the southern California operating area. Late in June however damage to her propulsion plant interrupted her training evolutions and caused her to spend the summer tied up to a pier for repairs. Late in September Alamo resumed operations at sea.

Service along the west coast interrupted sporadically by repair problems continued through the end of the year and into 1984. In February she began concentrating her efforts on readiness exercises trials and examinations specifically geared to preparing the amphibious warship for her scheduled deployment to the Far East. On 30 May 1984 Alamo embarked upon the voyage to the western Pacific. On the first leg of the crossing she participated in multinational defense exercises with units of the navies of Australia Canada and New Zealand as well as with elements of the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force. For the most part those exercises were conducted in the Hawaiian Islands.

On 3 July Alamo concluded her visit to Hawaii and resumed the voyage to the Orient. En route further troubles surfaced in the boilers of her main propulsion plant so that upon her arrival in Subic Bay on 20 July she commenced another round of repairs. The dock landing ship carried out post-repair trials during the last week in August and finally departed Subic Bay on the 24th. Alamo reached Buckner Bay Okinawa on 27 August and began embarking marines for transportation to Japan. Between 28 August and 16 September the amphibious warship made two round-trip voyages between Okinawa and Japan carrying marines to and from training exercises. On 18 September she stood out of Buckner Bay on her way to Inchon Korea. During the period 18 September to 13 October she made three round-trip voyages between Okinawa and South Korean ports. Upon her return to Okinawa from the third of those assignments a problem with her stern gate tied her up with repairs until 2 November. At that time she headed back to Korea to participate in the bilateral exercise Operation "Valiant Blitz 85-1" in cooperation with elements of the South Korean Navy and Marine Corps. Following stops at Buckner Bay and Sasebo Japan Alamo began the voyage back to the United States at the end of the third week in November. The dock landing ship made the usual call at Pearl Harbor and then reentered San Diego on 6 December.

Post-deployment standdown and holiday routine occupied her time for the rest of 1984 and during the first two weeks of January 1985. Alamo resumed local operations out of her home port late in January. The amphibious warship spent the whole of 1985 conducting exercises trials examinations and inspections either in port in San Diego or in waters adjacent to the west coast. The only break in that schedule came in October when she made a round-trip voyage from the west coast to Hawaii and back for refresher training.

At the beginning of 1986 preparations for her upcoming tour of duty with the 7th Fleet occupied the energies of Alamo's crew. She embarked upon the voyage west on 16 January 1986 and made no stops along the way. The danger of violence during elections in the Philippines even prompted the cancellation of planned exercises at Iwo Jima in order that Alamo and other Navy ships be on station near Manila to render assistance to United States citizens in that eventuality. The threat never really materialized and she entered Subic Bay on 9 February. Ten days later the dock landing ship set sail for Hong Kong where she spent the five days from 21 to 26 February. Returning to Subic Bay briefly at the end of the month Alamo then headed for Okinawa on 2 March. At Okinawa she embarked troops for a major bilateral amphibious exercise conducted on the South Korean coast. Alamo returned to Okinawa on 1 April but stayed only until the 4th when she got underway for Japan. Following a nine-day call at Sasebo the dock landing ship returned to Subic Bay on 20 April. From there she voyaged to Singapore by way of the Indonesian island of Bali. Back in the Philippines by mid-May Alamo carried out exercises there for the remainder of the month. On 10 June she headed back to Okinawa. Alamo arrived at her destination on the 13th and spent the next 10 days conducting amphibious exercises at Okinawa.

On 23 June the dock landing ship put to sea for the passage home. After brief pauses at Iwo Jima and Pearl Harbor the amphibious warship dropped anchor at Del Mar Calif. on 15 July. She moved to San Diego on the 16th and commenced postdeployment standdown. The leave and upkeep period ended during the second week in August and Alamo started another schedule of amphibious warfare training in waters along the west coast. Those evolutions lasted until 14 October at which time she began a restricted availability at pierside in San Diego. She remained there through the end of 1986.


Alamo was decommissioned 2 Nov 1990 and loaned the same day to the Brazilian Navy as Rio de Janeiro

[Note: The above USS ALAMO (LSD-33) history may or may not contain text provided by crew members of the USS ALAMO (LSD-33) or by other non-crew members and text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]