USS Recruit Now Open to the Public
A two-thirds-sized replica landlocked Dealey-class destroyer escort built by the Navy and given commissioned status, USS Recruit (TDE-1/TFFG-1) was constructed aboard Naval Training Center San Diego for more realistic recruit training in 1949.
She looked so good that the opening and closing scenes of the Don Rickles comedy CPO Sharkey were shot there.
NTC Orlando had a similar concept– USS Bluejacket— as did NTC Bainbridge, Maryland (USS Commodore) while NTC Great Lakes currently has the concrete-bound USS Trayer (BST-21).
Used in one form or another until 1997– after she was refurbished to look more like an Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigate, hence the later TFFG-1 designation.

July 1982 Original Caption: Staff members of the Recruit Training Command line the rails of the newly retrofitted USS Recruit. Constructed in 1949 and affectionately known as the “USS Neversail”, Recruit is a mock frigate used for training purposes. (National Archives 29011234)
When San Diego was closed, USS Recruit became the property of the local redevelopment effort and was threatened with destruction more than once.
Now, after a decade of effort, she has been refurbished once more and, as part of the Liberty Station development, just opened to the public.


Great to see! My granpa as a recruit did boot camp at San Diego.
Reblogged this on DAVEBOOK and commented:
In my day (October – Dec 1981), we never went aboard her, mainly because I was in a Drill Company and consequently we had a different training path. But we marched by her every day, and when I went back in 2015 I made sure to stop by and see here again
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