DCMM to host USS Westchester County dedication event

Next Friday, November 1 at 11am, the Door County Maritime Museum will be dedicating a memorial plaque on the Sturgeon Bay West Waterfront behind the museum to the 23 US sailors and soldiers killed on the USS Westchester County. The Westchester County was built here in Sturgeon Bay at Christie Corp.

On the night of November 1, 1968, Viet Cong swimmers placed mines on the hull of the ship while at anchor. The mines exploded killing 23 US servicemen, two South Vietnamese personnel, wounding dozens more and ripping large holes in the side of the ship.

On November 1, 2024 THREE memorial plaques to Westchester County will be dedicated: one in the ship’s home port of San Diego, one in Sturgeon Bay where the ship was built, and the last in Westchester County, New York – the ship’s namesake community.

Our dedication ceremony will be similar to our annual Pearl Harbor event. We will have sailors from Westchester County here, and at least one will speak at the event. The event will take place no matter the weather on November 1.

The ship’s memory is now protected by the USS Westchester County LST 1167 Association, an organization of servicemen and family members who have banded together to remember the vessel’s service and those who died upon its decks. The names of those lost in the explosion are immortalized in bronze on a plaque on the West Waterfront of Sturgeon Bay, behind the Door County Maritime Museum.