USS DOROTHEA L DIX AP67 World War II

USS DOROTHEA L DIX AP67 World War II This page is in honor of my dad Richard Daecher and all his WWII shipmates of the USS DOROTHEA L DIX USS Dorothea L. Dorothea L. J. B. Schulten in command.

Dix (P-67) was a transport ship of the United States Navy named for Dorothea Dix (1802–1887). Dix was launched on 22 June 1940 as Exemplar by Bethlehem Steel Company, Quincy, Massachusetts, under a Maritime Commission contract; sponsored by Miss P. Kalloch; transferred to the Navy on 13 September 1942; and commissioned on 17 September 1942, Captain L. SERVICE HISTORY

MEDITERRANEAN 1942–1943: Put

ting to sea from Cove Point, Maryland, on 23 October 1942, Dorothea L. Dix sailed with Task Force 34 (TF 34) to land Army troops and supply scout boats in the assault at Safi, French Morocco, from 8 to 12 November, during "Operation Torch". She returned to Norfolk on 24 November. Between 12 December 1942 and 5 April 1943 she made two more transatlantic voyages to Oran, Algeria, carrying Army troops and nurses. After amphibious training at Norfolk, she sailed on 8 June 1943 for Oran, arriving on 22 June. On 5 July she got underway for the invasion of Sicily, arriving off Scoglitti late on 9 July and debarking her troops and cargo early the next day under heavy air attack. She embarked wounded and one Italian prisoner and returned to Oran on 15 July. A week later she was en route to New York, arriving on 3 August to debark her passengers, German prisoners of war. A similar voyage was made to Oran between 21 August and 21 September after which she sailed on 8 October for the United Kingdom. Dix arrived at Gourock Bay, Scotland, on 17 October 1943, and sailed ten days later for Algiers where she exchanged troops for 243 survivors of Beatty (DD-640) and for Oran to embark Army troops. She unloaded cargo at Gourock Bay between 24 and 30 November then sailed to New York, arriving on 11 December. Between 29 December 1943 and 10 March 1944 she carried troops on two voyages from New York to Gourock Bay and Liverpool. NORMANDY LANDINGS 1944: On 23 March 1944 Dorothea L. Dix sailed from New York for Belfast, Northern Ireland, arriving on 3 April. After amphibious training in the Clyde area, she sortied with Temporary Transport Division 97 from the Isle of Portland, England, on 5 June for the invasion landings at Normandy the following day. She returned to Weymouth Bay on the 7th to debark casualties, then embarked troops in the Clyde area and tanks at Avonmouth which she carried to Naples, arriving on 16 July. MEDITERRANEAN 1944: She put out from Naples on 13 August 1944 for the invasion of southern France two days later, unloading tanks and Army troops for the assault landings. She continued to support this operation by carrying French, British, and Italian as well as American troops to Baie de la Cavalaire and Marseilles from Naples and Oran until 22 October. Three days later she left Oran for New York, arriving on 8 November. PACIFIC 1945–1946: Dorothea L. Dix put to sea from New York on 18 December 1944, and arrived at San Francisco on 4 January 1945. Two weeks later she sailed to carry Army troops to Pearl Harbor, returning to San Francisco on 2 February. After a voyage to Attu, to transport Army troops to Aleutian Islands she proceeded to Okinawa arriving on 1 May. Here she landed support troops and embarked casualties and naval passengers for San Francisco, arriving on 27 May. Between 10 June 1945 and 9 February 1946 Dorothea L. Dix operated on transport duty from San Francisco and other west coast ports to the Philippines, carrying replacements to the Pacific and returning veterans. She sailed to New York on 29 March 1946, was decommissioned there on 24 April 1946, and returned to the Maritime Commission for disposal the same day. AWARDS

Dorothea L. Dix received five battle stars for World War II service.

Spotted at Harvard University Book Store...
01/19/2026

Spotted at Harvard University Book Store...

Audio recording of DIX shipmate referencing the Normandy invasion... link in "comments"Albert Lewis Rinehimer, Jr. Colle...
12/14/2025

Audio recording of DIX shipmate referencing the Normandy invasion... link in "comments"
Albert Lewis Rinehimer, Jr. Collection | Library of Congress
6th Naval Beach Battalion; USS Dorothea L. Dix (AP 67); Battles & Campaigns: Operation Overlord (D-Day Normandy Invasion)

Motor Machinist's Mate Second Class, Navy, World War, 1939-1945 - Normandy, France; European Theater.

With much love and respect, we remember our brave boys and men of the USS DOROTHEA L DIX AP-67... the "Greatest Generati...
11/11/2025

With much love and respect, we remember our brave boys and men of the USS DOROTHEA L DIX AP-67... the "Greatest Generation" of veterans to ever sail the seas. Here is the article written by Ernest Hemingway of the D-Day invasion as he sailed the DIX that fateful day:

The stories and reports of American war correspondent Bill Downs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_Y3vw8haM8
07/29/2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_Y3vw8haM8

The Ghosts of D-Day Terrifying Normandy Ghostly EncountersDiscover the chilling truth about Normandy's D-Day beaches, where the spirits of fallen WWII soldie...

DOROTHEA L DIX AP-67 D-Day +
06/06/2024

DOROTHEA L DIX AP-67 D-Day +

THE GREATEST GENERATION
06/06/2024

THE GREATEST GENERATION

June 6, 1944, began with Allied aircraft bombing German defenses in Normany, followed by some 1,200 aircraft who carry airborne troops.

USS Dorothea L. Dix AP-67 photographed during a convoy to Casablanca in early 1943, picture taken from USS Nicholson DD-...
04/17/2024

USS Dorothea L. Dix AP-67 photographed during a convoy to Casablanca in early 1943, picture taken from USS Nicholson DD-442

Dorothea L. Dix was a transport ship named for American activist The DIX was commissioned in September 1942. She participated in Operation Torch and other Allied landings in the Mediterranean, as well as the DDay landings at Normandy, transporting troops and equipment and returning with the wounded. She later returned to the Mediterranean for the Invasion of Southern France.

Transferred to the Pacific in December 1944, she transported troops to the Aleutians then Okinawa, returning to San Francisco with wounded.

USS Dorothea L. Dix earned five battle stars for her WW2 service, she was decommissioned in April 1946

LIFE Magazine Archives - Dmitri Kessel Photographer

03/12/2024

The freaks posting on this page offering customized DIX sweatshirts, tee shirts, etc. are avidly posting their crap here on our page. Please ignore these posts... Meta has made it very difficult to control issues like this, but I will continue to look into how to keep these losers off our page!

Compliments of Tom Robertson... "I recently picked up a gala navy day dinner menu 1945 for the USS Dorothea L Dix AP-67 ...
01/16/2024

Compliments of Tom Robertson... "I recently picked up a gala navy day dinner menu 1945 for the USS Dorothea L Dix AP-67 along with 2 photos of it in Dock in Los Angeles"

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