Monthly Archives: July 2015

Warship Wednesday July 8, 2015: Colombia’s Grande Dame, with a bit of British influence

Here at LSOZI, we will take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, July 8, 2015, Colombia’s Grande Dame, with a bit of British influence

ARC Cartagena river gunboat (Canonero fluvial), commisoned in 1929 and participant in the war against Peru in 1932 decommissioned in 1986

Here we see the Colombian river gunboat (cañonero fluvial) ARC Cartagena (C-31, later C-134), the lead ship of her class of shallow draft warships somewhere in the chocolate milk waters of the Amazon.

Colombia in 1928 had no navy to speak of and was in trouble.

While it had a naval tradition and had built officer training schools twice before, by 1909 the schools had been shuttered and the only vessels flying the Colombian flag were merchant ships. However, the country had a vast interior, controlled by rivers (the massive Magdalena, Amazon and Putumayo systems), and was threatened along its borders by a much stronger regional power, Peru.

With that in mind, the Colombian government negotiated for a trio of newly built gunboats in the UK for use both along the coastline for defense, and on the river system against interlopers pushing the limits of their borders. Ordered in 1929 for a combined cost of £ 200,000 at Yarrow in Glasgow were the threesome named Cartagena, Barranquilla, and Santa Marta.

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These 138-foot gunboats, displacing just 150 tons, were beamy at nearly 24 feet, giving them a length-to-beam ratio of nearly 1:5. This translated to a draft of just four feet (48 inches) when fully loaded. If only carrying a light load of diesel oil in her bunkers, they could navigate in just two feet of calm water.

Armed with an Armstrong 12-pdr [3″/40 (7.62 cm)] 12cwt quick-firing gun forward and a quartet of Vickers water-cooled machine guns, their 34-member crew could man all of the mounts and still be able to send a small (squad-sized) landing party ashore or to board suspect ships.

To help train the first generation of modern Colombian naval personnel, the Latin American government picked up several hardy British and French mariners (it was the Great Depression after all, and experienced sailors were available by the boatload) led by one Captain Ralph Douglas Binney CBE, RN.

Binney

Binney

Binney was a remarkably English chap. Born in 1888 in Cookham, Berkshire, by 1907 he had earned his commission as a lieutenant in the King’s Navy and served during the Great War on the pre-dreadnought HMS Britannia then spent the 20s on more modern battlewagons including HMS Collingwood and HMS Royal Sovereign before ending his time at sea with the RN as skipper of the monitor HMS Marshal Soult in 1931. Moving to the reserve list, the Colombians picked up Binney as an adviser soon after.

With his help and the cadre of European instructors, the Colombians opened the Escuela de Grumetes (Navy Sailors School) and the Escuela de Cadetes (Navy Officers School), which still exist today.

By the end of 1931, all three gunboats were complete, and British contract crews crossed the Atlantic in an epic 24-day voyage (their Gardner diesel could only make 15 knots wide open and, as they ran at half that to sip fuel, it took little time).

In 1933, primed with their new boats, the infant Colombian Navy (with the ships fleshed out by British and French sailors and dubbed La Flotilla Fluvial, The River Flotilla) made a sortie into the river systems to wave the flag and let the Peruvians know what’s up.

ARC Cartagena river gunboat (Canonero fluvial)

Note the basic rangefinder atop the superstructure for her 12-pounder.

Finding out that the Peruvian Army had sent about 1,000 men to the disputed river ports of Leticia and Tarapacá in the Amazon, the Colombians picked the latter to make their point. There, Barranquilla, leading four transports, landed a 700-man Colombian battalion and bombarded the Peruvian positions on Valentine’s Day, scattering the invaders without casualty– despite being strafed by Peruvian Air Force Vought O2U Corsairs operating from sandbar landing strips.

Win one for the gunboats!

Then, in the March 26-28 action (remembered as the Battle of Güepí) Cartagena, serving as flag, and Santa Marta took on a battalion-sized group of Peruvians on the Putumayo River at Guepi and Port Arthur. Landing Colombian infantry within a stone’s throw of the enemy positions and covering their advance Boom Beach-style, the twin cañoneros lit up the night and fired until they had largely exhausted their ammunition, again shrugging off a raid from the Peruvian air force– this time from Curtiss F-11 Goshawk floatplanes.

Peruvian F-11s. These planes were armed with a pair of .30 light machine guns and could carry two small bombs

Peruvian F-11s. These planes were armed with a pair of .30 light machine guns and could carry two small bombs.  In a twist of fate, the Colombians utilized the talents of private German pilots to airlift troops and supplies to the isolated region, landing Fokker trimotors in remote jungle strips.

At the end of the day, the crews of the gunboats nailed the Colombian tricolor on top of Peruvian fortifications.

Win two for the gunboats.

On April 16 the Peruvians struck back, mounting a Krupp 1894 75mm field piece on a river steamer San Miguel and, packing it full of soldiers, ran down the Putumayo and took a Colombian position under fierce attack.

Cartagena raced to the scene and, in an exchange of naval gunfire along the riverbanks at night, forced the San Miguel to beat feet– although Cartagena took a 75mm shell through part of her stack without casualties.

A larger sortie supported by aircraft was repulsed two weeks later with the help of Santa Marta.

Win three (and four) for los canoneros!

sternFollowing these actions, the Peruvians went to the bargaining table, and the so-called Colombia–Peru War was ended by May through the kind services of the League of Nations. All told both sides suffered less than 200 casualties in the entire conflict, but the three gunboats were without a doubt the MVPs.

Peace led to the Colombians adding destroyers to their naval list and further increasing their fleet. In addition, after tasting the near misses from airplane-dropped bombs (some of the 117-pounders dropped from the Goshawks were lobbed from 5,000 feet), the gunboats each picked up a single high-angle 20 mm Oerlikon Mk 4 AAA piece.

With the drums of a Second World War beating in the distance, an American naval mission arrived in Colombia in January 1939 to incorporate the Colombian forces in the defense of the nearby Panama Canal. Although the country did not declare war on Germany until November 26, 1943, the gunboats nonetheless stood watch along the coast for U-boats long before that date.

As for Binney, when the balloon went up in Europe in 1939, he resigned from his desk in the Colombian Naval Ministry and picked up where he left off in British service, holding down staff positions in Alexandria and London. Sadly, on Friday, 8 December 1944, on a crowded Birchin Lane in the City of London, Binney saw a couple of rough chaps pull off a smash-and-grab raid on a jewelry shop. He alone stepped forward in an attempt to stop the pair as they escaped in a car and were callously run down by the fleeing criminals. His friends and colleagues established a fund to ensure that his selfless heroism would not be forgotten – and that other such acts would be appropriately recognized. Today this fund still exists as the Police Public Bravery Award– commonly referred to as The Binney.

Now back to Latin America.

The river gunboats remained in service for another generation, with Santa Marta retiring in 1962, her parts used to keep her two sisters running.

A series of images of her late in her career remain to give a look at her circa 1950s appearance:

Speaking of running, in the mid-1960s both Cartagena and Barranquilla were re-engined and their 12-pdr, Oerlikon and Vickers swapped out for a (slightly) more modern Bofors 40mm/60 cal Mk I and a half-dozen air-cooled M1919’s.

Cartagena and Barranquilla put in time for their country in a third war, the epic low-intensity guerrilla war between the government, paramilitary groups, narco-traffickers, and insurgents such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), M-19 and the National Liberation Army (ELN).

Throughout the ’60s and ’70s, The two gunboats often towed barges set up as floating barracks behind them packed with Marines and, just as they did in 1933, provided gunfire support for her landing force going ashore.

Barranquilla, pushing 40, was laid up in the 1970s and cannibalized to keep the more famous, and class leader Cartagena, in operation.

Her day came on 26 July 1986, with 51 years of service behind her; she was decommissioned and landed ashore, her feet dry. She was disarmed except for her Bofors (minus breech), her machinery removed, and all fluids drained.

ARC Cartagena river gunboat (Canonero fluvial), commisoned in 1929 and participant in the war against Peru in 1932 decommissioned in 1986c

Note her Bofors forward and yes, that is as deep as her hull goes, hence the large above-deck superstructure.

ARC Cartagena river gunboat (Canonero fluvial), commisoned in 1929 and participant in the war against Peru in 1932 decommissioned in 1986bShe is retained as a museum, open to the public, at Naval Base ARC Leguizamo, although plans are afoot to dismantle her and transfer the vessel to another base where she would be restored.

ARC Cartagena river gunboat (Canonero fluvial), commisoned in 1929 and participant in the war against Peru in 1932 decommissioned in 1986a

Specs:

Displacement: 142 tons full
Length: 137.5 feet
Beam: 23.49 feet
Draft: 2-4 feet
Machinery: 2 300hp Gardner semi-diesels (replaced by Detroit Diesels in the 1960s)
Diesel oil bunkering: 24 tons full load
Range: 2100 nm at 15 knots, nearly twice that at 8.
Speed: 15.5 knots on trials, 10 knots cruising
Crew: 2 officers, 32 enlisted (as built) later 39 after 1960s modernization. Up to 100~ infantry
Armament:
12-pdr [3″/40 (7.62 cm)] 12cwt QF (1931-60)
40mm Bofors (After 1960, Cartagena and Barranquilla only)
20mm AAA (Fitted 1939)
4 Vickers, later swapped out for M1919 Brownings, later swapped for M60 GPMGs and M2s in Cartagena by 1980s.

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The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

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And here is why you use a can…

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Tech. Sgt. Jason Cangemi, an armorer for the 103rd Rescue Squadron, 106th Rescue Wing test fires an M4 carbine during a multi-day training course at the firing range on April 9, 2015. (New York Air National Guard / Staff Sergeant Christopher S Muncy / released)

While the muzzle flash here seems impressive, under real-world tactical conditions it would likely be extremely muted through the use of a suppressor. The live-fire training consisted of multiple events, including tactical movement, responding to incoming fire, retrieving and caring for wounded individuals and night-time shooting.

The Orange Beach Bomber

pby florabama (7)

One of the last airworthy PBY Catalinas in the world was beached in shallow water behind an iconic roadside bar on the Florida-Alabama line last week.

The giant Consolidated PBY Catalina, with its 104-foot wingspan and crew of 10 was used to bomb enemy ships and submarines and, most importantly, rescue downed aircrews and shipwreck survivors lost on the waves. They destroyed more than 40 German U-boats, sighted the Japanese fleet first at the Battle of Midway– giving the advantage to team USA in that pivotal battle, and rescued and evacuated thousands.

3 weather beaten PBY Catalinas somewhere tropical

3 weather beaten PBY Catalinas somewhere tropical

One of the most high-profile sea rescues for these big flying boats was after the sinking of the heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis in 1945 when a PBY, against orders, landed and took aboard an amazing 56 sailors from shark infested waters.

The PBY, a 5A model named “Dumbo” by its crew, bounced along 12-foot seas to rescue as many survivors as possible.

That act was being recreated in an upcoming Nicolas Cage movie “USS Indianapolis: Men of Courage” which is filming in the area using the retired battleship USS Alabama as a prop and the shallow waters of Mobile Bay as a set.

That’s how the restored PBY appeared at the bar.

According to Gulf News Today, the plane beached behind the Flora-Bama Lounge on Monday and started taking on water for reasons unknown. Settling nose-down in about three feet of surf, crews battled for days to recover the plane through a combination of dewatering, boats, and tractors.

pby florabama (5)

pby florabama8

In the end she had to be removed with a crane (see last image).

pby

From the tail numbers the plane is confirmed to be a Cyclone powered PBY-6A Catalina currently registered as N85U.

n85

The big Cat served in the Navy (as N6453C) and later through a series of civilian owners until she was retired from smothering wildfires in 2006 and restored to her WWII-livery.

More here in my column at Guns.com

Say goodbye to the eastern cougar

Not seen since 1938, and identified as its own species in 1946, an exhaustive review of sightings and information available has left the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service with a plan to delist the eastern cougar as endangered and stamp it extinct.

Sadly, it will be the 10th time an animal has dropped off the list for that reason.

Bruce Wright, New Brunswick wildlife biologist and author, with what is believed to be the last eastern puma. Rosarie Morin of St. Zacharie, Quebec in Somerset County, Maine trapped the puma in 1938. Mounted specimen resides in the New Brunswick Museum in St. John, New Brunswick. Credit: Courtesy of Northeastern Wildlife Station via USFWS

Bruce Wright, New Brunswick wildlife biologist and author, with what is believed to be the last eastern cougar ever confirmed in the wild. Rosarie Morin of St. Zacharie, Quebec in Somerset County, Maine trapped the puma in 1938. The mounted specimen resides in the New Brunswick Museum in St. John, New Brunswick. Credit: Courtesy of Northeastern Wildlife Station via USFWS

The full story in my column at Big Game Hunter Journal

Former Sea Shepherd Ship still causing problems

 

PHOTO CURTESY OF SEASHEPHERD.ORG -- Japanese Whaling Vessel Kaiko Maru Confronted by Sea Shepherd 12 February 2007

PHOTO CURTESY OF SEASHEPHERD.ORG — Japanese Whaling Vessel Kaiko Maru Confronted by Sea Shepherd 12 February 2007

Farley McGill Mowat* was a Canadian novelist and a pretty good one. Odds are you may have read People of the Deer or Never Cry Wolf (which was made into a film in the 1980s that wasn’t all that bad a retelling).  His non-fiction account of the HMS Frisky/ salvage tug Franklin, The Grey Seas Under, is one of the best ship tales ever written.

The Grey Seas Under

If you come across a used copy at a great price, pick it up.

Mowat also chipped in a fair amount of bread late in life to the Sea Shepherd anti-whaling fleet of piratical environmentalists and the group repaid the honor by naming a couple of their “Neptune’s Navy” patrol ships after him. The most current is the former USCGC Pea Island (WPB-1347), bought by the group earlier this year. (Somewhere a Coastie CPO is twitching.)

The first Mowat, however, was a 172-foot (650-ton) Norwegian fisheries research and enforcement trawler who started her career as the R/V Johan Hjort in 1956. The Norwegians laid the old girl up after 40 years of hard times in the Arctic and Barents Seas and the S/S group picked her up for a song.

In service to the pirates she carried the moniker Sea Sherpherd III, the Ocean Warrior, then finally Farley Mowat as well as a number of various groovy paint jobs as she shuttled her port of registry at least four times in her 12 year career as a hooligan afloat, conducting 100 cruises for the group all over the world. (Images via Shipspotter et.al.)

Farley Mowat (Seashepherd)

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860132

FARLEY_MOWAT

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Well in 2008 the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans seized the S/S flagship over Fisheries Act violations during the seal hunt off the west coast of Newfoundland and she sat tied up at dock for a year when Ottawa ordered her sold at auction, where she brought just C$5000. A breaker picked her up and she apparently changed hands again to a group looking to put her back in the oceanography game in 2011, which never materialized and she sank at her moorings in Nova Scotia last week while being scrapped.

The scrapper owes some C$14,000 in dock fees on her and she is leaking oil.

According to the National Post :

The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, for the most part, has expressed delight its former flagship has become an administrative headache for marine and municipal authorities.

“Farley would be smiling to know that the ship that bears his name continues to be an annoying irritation for Canadian authorities,” wrote Sea Shepherd’s founder, Paul Watson, in a 2014 social media post.

However, Watson has since claimed his plan all along was to have the ship seized by Canadian authorities, arguing that it was cheaper than paying to have the Farley Mowat decommissioned.

“The retirement didn’t cost Sea Shepherd a dime and for that we thank the Canadian government,” wrote Sea Shepherd member Alex Cornelissen in a 2008 post to the group’s website.

*(As a sidebar, Mowat was a subaltern in the Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment during WWII and helped bring back tons of captured German kit for museum use all over Canada after 1945, so when in the Great North and you see something heavy and Teutonic on display, thank Farley)

Last ride of the Prowler

Two EA-6B Prowlers assigned to the Star Warriors of Tactical Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 209 take-off for their final flight at Naval Air Facility Washington, D.C. VAQ-209 is transitioning from the EA-6B Prowler aircraft to the EFA-18 Growler aircraft. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class David A. Frech/Released)

Two EA-6B Prowlers assigned to the Star Warriors of Tactical Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 209 take-off for their final flight at Naval Air Facility Washington, D.C. VAQ-209 is transitioning from the EA-6B Prowler aircraft to the EFA-18 Growler aircraft. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class David A. Frech/Released)

Electronic Attack Wing, U.S. Pacific Fleet (CVWP), hosted a three-day Sunset Celebration commemorating the retirement of the Navy Grumman EA-6B Prowler last week after some 45-years of service.

As noted in the release by the Navy, retired Capt. Fred Wilmot, who served as a test pilot for the Navy Prowler and delivered the first Prowler to Naval Air Station Whidbey Island while serving in Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 129 in January 1971, was on hand for the sad event.

Some 170 Prowlers were built as an improvement to the EA-6A “Electric Intruder” from lessons learned fighting what was potentially the hottest and most advanced anti-air environment in the world at the time over North Vietnam.  The type replaced the old EKA-3B Skywarrior “Whales” on carrier decks besides picking up the vital SEAD mission.

The radar spoofing/SAM-killing Prowler remained in front line service, even outlasting the USAF’s EF-111 and F-4G Wild Weasel force, to hold the line as the single EW attack plane type in the national inventory.

The event concluded with the last Navy Prowler flying off from NASWI’s  Ault Field, completing the transition to the EA-18G Growler. Ironically, the Growler’s older brother, the F/A-18C, replaced the Prowler’s older brother, the Intruder in 1997.

Vale, Prowler.

150626-N-DC740-049 OAK HARBOR, Wash. (June 26, 2015) An EA-6B Prowler breaks away from three EA-18G Growlers in a missing man formation during a farewell ceremony as part of the Prowler Sunset Celebration commemorating the retirement of the Navy EA-6B Prowler. The celebration, marking the end of an era for the Electronic Attack community, included a history hall in Electronic Attack Wing, U.S. Pacific Fleet’s Havilland Hangar with a Prowler on display, a farewell ceremony and concluded with the last Navy Prowler flying off from Naval Air Station Whidbey Island’s (NASWI) Ault Field. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class John Hetherington/Released)

150626-N-DC740-049 OAK HARBOR, Wash. (June 26, 2015) An EA-6B Prowler breaks away from three EA-18G Growlers in a missing man formation during a farewell ceremony as part of the Prowler Sunset Celebration commemorating the retirement of the Navy EA-6B Prowler. The celebration, marking the end of an era for the Electronic Attack community, included a history hall in Electronic Attack Wing, U.S. Pacific Fleet’s Havilland Hangar with a Prowler on display, a farewell ceremony and concluded with the last Navy Prowler flying off from Naval Air Station Whidbey Island’s (NASWI) Ault Field. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class John Hetherington/Released)

Happy Independence Day (weekend), 1776 flashback

George Washington Reading the Declaration of Independence to the Troops by Mort Kunstler.

George Washington Reading the Declaration of Independence to the Troops by Mort Kunstler.

Stay safe out there this weekend!

Happy Independence Day, 1918 flashback

You have to love the Springfield 1903.

Be careful this weekend. Lots of under-supervised barbeques and illegal fireworks. Not that I’m complaining or anything, just saying.

Boom!

 

Shirley Jane and the Buzz Bombs

P-47D-27-RE Thunderbolt #42-26919 362nd fighter group 377 fighter squadron FTR October 26 1944 2

Here we see Captain Edwin O Fisher of the 377th FS/362nd FG, 9th AF, somewhere in liberated France (possibly Rennes-St. Jacques Airfield) in the fall of 1944. He plane is a Republic P-47D-27-RE Thunderbolt #42-26919.

Volunteering for the Oregon National Guard in 1936 at age 17, Fisher was accepted to the U.S Army Reserve’s Aviation Cadet Program when war came and by 1943 he was a rated fighter pilot flying the huge Thunderbolt over Northern Europe as a 1LT.

The P-47s often handled air to ground operations (hence the extensive truck and locomotive “kills” noted on Fish’s bird, the Shirley Jane III).

P-47D-27-RE Thunderbolt #42-26919 362nd fighter group 377 fighter squadron FTR October 26 1944
Notice the outlines of the Flakzielgerät 76 (FZG-76) V-1 “Buzz Bomb” cruise missiles?

He got all of them on the same day, June 29, 1944, chasing them down and knocking them from the sky as they were on their way to deliver a huge load of explosives (nearly one ton of amatol each) somewhere in the British Isles.

As the V-1 ran between 350-400 mph at low altitude (under 3,000 feet) and the heavy 8-ton P-47 (its pilots often called it the “Jug”) could only beat that by about 50 mph or so at that level, it took some skill to pull off any Buzz Bomb intercept much less a three pack.

Gun camera footage of Fisher splashing the trio of buzz bombs over France

Besides the trucks, tanks, random German foot soldiers and buzz bombs, Fisher also had a chance to scrap with some of the Fatherland’s few remaining pilots.

In a 35 day period (July 5-August 9, 1944), Fisher swatted down a total of 7 confirmed kills on Luftwaffe Me109s and Focke-Wulf Fw 190s to become the 377th’s only ace of the war.

Fisher was killed just shy of his 30th birthday in a flying accident in an AT-6F Texan near Norristown, Pennsylvania, on March 28, 1947, while serving with the 64th Army Air Force Base Unit at Andrews Field, Maryland.

As for the 377th, it was a war baby squadron stood up in Feb. 1943 and disbanded on 1 Aug. 1946, its colors cased ever since.

A reader’s experience with setting the mail buoy watch

LSOZI reader Liam weighs in on the traditional blue jacket rite of passage with the great story below:

During a winter transit of the North Pacific en route to the Realm of the Golden Dragon (including the Viet Nam combat zone), somewhere west of Midway, as I was JOOD with the conn of the USS NICHOLAS (DD-449), the Boatswain Mate of the Watch requested permission to set the “Mail Buoy” watch. I accompanied him to the starboard wing of the bridge and briefed the new man, DCSN Wong, on his Mail Buoy Watch duties.

DCSN Wong was properly outfitted with foul weather jacket, safety harness, Mae West, helmet liner and binoculars. Some 20, or so, minutes later Wong (whose first language was not English) was heard shouting from his position near the top pf the haze gray portion of the mast, and pointing off the starboard bow. I asked the OOD to take the conn, in order that I might discover the cause of Wong’s excitement. When I reached the level of the mast where he was, and looked in the direction toward which he was pointing, there was a buoy, adrift in rough water in the middle of the North Pacific!

“Good man yourself,” I said as I raised my binoculars for a closer look (knowing that the captain would probably not appreciate holding a bumper drill, in such seas, to recover the buoy). After a moment’s contemplation as I focused my binoculars on the drifting buoy, I said. “That’s a mail buoy, alright, but, as you can see, the little mechanical flag has not been set. It’s just like a postman ashore raising the little metal flag on an ordinary mailbox to announce the presence of mail. Keep up the good work.”

About ten minutes later DCSN Wong reported to me on the bridge, saying “I now understand Mail Buoy Watch.”

[Being that I had worked, at age 16, as a temporary letter carrier, in deep snow, for the Christmas rush, I could somewhat identify with adjusting to new postal responsibilities.]

Wong and I got along famously after that experience. He would even help me translate letters written in Chinese, and some time later, before he left the ship (as a DC3), he presented me with a ship’s plaque, which he had fabricated in the DC workshop.

 

USS Nicholas, a hardy Fletcher-class tin can Circa 1968 underway to Vietnam as seen from the USS Intrepid (CVA-11). From the collection of Dennis H. Hough. Can you make out DCSN Wong through the spray? Image via Navsource

USS Nicholas, a hardy Fletcher-class tin can Circa 1968 underway to Vietnam as seen from the USS Intrepid (CVA-11). From the collection of Dennis H. Hough. Can you make out DCSN Wong through the spray? Image via Navsource

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