The Wingnut
One Too Many
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Those of you native to Northern California are familiar with the sight of the 'Mothball Fleet', 77 ships anchored in Suisun Bay. In their ranks are WWII era vessels including the U.S.S. Iowa, and the Hoga; a tugboat that survived the Pearl Harbor attack.
The ships have fallen out of 'favor' with the DoD and are now the targets of much pressure from environmentalists, activist groups, and numerous government agencies. The Iowa herself has been the topic of much debate in many cities around the Bay Area, as groups are attempting to preserve her and turn her into a floating museum much like the U.S.S. Hornet (CVS-12, not CV-8, which was sunk at the battle of the Coral Sea). These groups have met nothing but resistance in the military-unfriendly climate of most city counsels.
A few ships have been recovered from these fleets in the past and preserved, such as the Red Oak Victory and the Jerimiah O'Brien. The talk of scrapping these ships is disturbing. The cost is prohibitive...an estimated 1.5 million to make each seaworthy for the 5000+ mile tow to scrapyards on the Gulf Coast of Texas.
So, where do they go? Will the Navy deicide to assign them the same fate as the U.S.S. Oriskany, possibly one the the last unconverted straight-deck carriers which was built in 1944? The Oriskany was sunk in 200 feet of water in the Florida Keys this past month to create the world's larget manmade reef. The carrier was the last unconverted Essex-class carrier in existance. Pulled from her slumber in the Beaumont Ready Reserve Fleet, she now sits at the bottom of the ocean, never to be seen again other than by a select few divers.
...we're losing the past, through 'progress', and apathy.
The ships have fallen out of 'favor' with the DoD and are now the targets of much pressure from environmentalists, activist groups, and numerous government agencies. The Iowa herself has been the topic of much debate in many cities around the Bay Area, as groups are attempting to preserve her and turn her into a floating museum much like the U.S.S. Hornet (CVS-12, not CV-8, which was sunk at the battle of the Coral Sea). These groups have met nothing but resistance in the military-unfriendly climate of most city counsels.
A few ships have been recovered from these fleets in the past and preserved, such as the Red Oak Victory and the Jerimiah O'Brien. The talk of scrapping these ships is disturbing. The cost is prohibitive...an estimated 1.5 million to make each seaworthy for the 5000+ mile tow to scrapyards on the Gulf Coast of Texas.
So, where do they go? Will the Navy deicide to assign them the same fate as the U.S.S. Oriskany, possibly one the the last unconverted straight-deck carriers which was built in 1944? The Oriskany was sunk in 200 feet of water in the Florida Keys this past month to create the world's larget manmade reef. The carrier was the last unconverted Essex-class carrier in existance. Pulled from her slumber in the Beaumont Ready Reserve Fleet, she now sits at the bottom of the ocean, never to be seen again other than by a select few divers.
...we're losing the past, through 'progress', and apathy.