Tag Archives: USS Houston

Houston, departing

Here, 80 years ago today, we see the Northampton-class heavy cruiser USS Houston (CA-30), as viewed through the sight of an Australian 4-inch gun on the beach at Darwin, Australia, on 18 February 1942. Houston– which had been RADM Thomas C. Hart’s Asiatic Fleet’s flagship until he was scapegoated and relieved of operational responsibilities the week before– was then leaving Darwin for the Dutch East Indies and a rendevous with destiny.

As such, this is one of the last photos taken of the doomed ship, as she would be sent to the bottom at the Sunda Strait just 11 days later.

Photo courtesy of Otto Schwartz, 1983. Naval History and Heritage Command Catalog #: NH 94458.

Houston would earn the Presidential Unit Citation and two battle stars for her World War II service, in the hardest kind of way.

Houston is still there

140609-N-ZZ999-001 140609-N-ZZ999-001 This photo shows the cruiser USS Houston (CA30) in the San Diego Bay in Oct. 1935

140609-N-ZZ999-001 This photo shows the cruiser USS Houston (CA30) in the San Diego Bay in Oct. 1935

Last December, the Australian National Maritime Museum (ANMM) and the National Research Centre of Archaeology Indonesia/Pusat Penelitian Arkeologi Nasional (ARKENAS) conducted a remote-sensing survey of the wreck sites of Royal Australian navy light cruiser HMAS Perth (D29) and the U.S. heavy cruiser USS Houston (CA30), lost during World War II at Sunda Strait, 1 March 1942.

There had been persistent reports that both ships, along with a number of Dutch vessels, had been extensively raided by illegal scrap metal salvors.

After initial analysis, it looks like Houston may have been spared the vultures.

The new multi-beam sonar imagery shows the entire wreck site and confirms the wreck remains in its original sinking location and is largely intact.

More here

Sometimes, a trumpet is more than a trumpet

WaPo has a pretty interesting article on the efforts of the U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command as told through the horn of a Conn Trumpet.

MATT MCCLAIN / WASHINGTON POST Shanna Daniel is part of a conservation team at the Washington Navy Yard working on a trumpet found in the wreckage of the USS Houston in 2013.

MATT MCCLAIN / WASHINGTON POST Shanna Daniel is part of a conservation team at the Washington Navy Yard working on a trumpet found in the wreckage of the USS Houston in 2013.

The old, bent trumpet is dripping with water as Shanna Daniel lifts it from its basin in the conservation lab at the Washington Navy Yard.

It’s a B-flat horn, made around 1934, with a bell that was smashed in battle, a missing mouthpiece, and brass tubing that is split and pitted.

Daniel, in a white lab coat and lavender rubber gloves, rests it on a layer of hard foam and lowers a magnifying light over it. She picks up a surgical scalpel and begins to scrape deposits from the surface.

She is very careful. The object has traveled a great distance, and sealed inside may be the DNA of the sailor who played it.

The trumpet arrived at the lab 21/2 years ago, handed over by an Australian diver who found it in the wreck of the USS Houston, a World War II cruiser, off the coast of Java in Southeast Asia.

More here

This trumpet was illegally salvaged recently from the wreck of the USS Houston, a heavy cruiser lost at the outset of World War II off the Indonesian coast. The trumpet is now under the care of the Naval History and Heritage Command's underwater archeology branch that preserves, protects and fights to recover looted U.S. Naval history. Efforts are underway to preserve the trumpet while Navy divers prepare to survey the wreck of the Houston this month during annual Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training exercises.

This trumpet was illegally salvaged recently from the wreck of the USS Houston, a heavy cruiser lost at the outset of World War II off the Indonesian coast. The trumpet is now under the care of the Naval History and Heritage Command’s underwater archeology branch that preserves, protects and fights to recover looted U.S. Naval history. Efforts are underway to preserve the trumpet while Navy divers prepare to survey the wreck of the Houston this month during annual Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training exercises.