Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book

 - Class of 1970

Page 9 of 150

 

Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 9 of 150
Page 9 of 150



Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 8
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Page 9 text:

2 Y gCOLUMBUS ,. COMM ISSIONING lam er November 30 , 1962 TA 1C0 P bl' T W' ' SHIP-S DA thlehem 1 S536 u If o llness Ceremony Usliermg Be Quln ' . . . . ' 1944 N If M N 30 November 5 ew Gu: eel lssile Cruiser Into ovy . ' . 194 - . . . Bullt by 3 June W -Towering majestically above water, massiyely hand- . rch 1959 SQUUU 11-'?F4COInbat grey, powerful and versatile, the guided ' Launched - l I Ma 962 missile cruiser Columbus ICG-122 will be commissioned h A ed - I I . - ' ber 1 tomorrow. The commissioning ceremony will begin at 2,-30 Commlsslon - 959 to Novem 962 plml at Dry Dock 6- - x g-gg .ssioned ' March 1 M ember 1 Rear Admiral Floyd s Decomml . - I 1 Dec et Schultz, Shipyard Commander, d h , - n . ' .190fe announced today that general dernize I . . - ' -' . . - ' t visiting for the purpose of 3 . Mo I .oned ' ' ai. . 674 fee tending Columbus commission- Omn-11Ss1 St antenn - ' t ' ing ceremony will be permitted. Rec to highe 70 fee All other areas of the shipyard . ht fwater , - V ' I ' ' will remain closed to visitors. l Helg , . ' ' 26 feet Those persons desiring to at h U ' ' , - ' tend the ceremony will be ad- Lengt 000 men mitted through any gate and I I 11 directed to the ceremony site Width ' 0 tons at Dry Dock 6. Gates will be ' ft I A . 18,07 open from l:30 p.m. until the DI-3 ' ' completion of the ceremony. ent Only authorized news media Complem representatives and a fficial f ment ' ' photographers will be permit- Displace ted to take pictures. .Personal I RADM DAVID . glhzzqiajhy ' 'he sh'P7a d 'S To Give Principal Address 1 0 I E 1 9 lf' If li' ' PR I N Cl PA L commissioning fnanding Officer is Captain Gid- ,speaker at Saturdays ceremonies eon M. Boyd, Executive Officer Stems Qwill be Rear Admiral David Lam- Commander IM R. Monroe, Jr. Ta1oS Sy inert, Commander Cruiser-De-!Ship's complement present dur- t--- - '2 stel-11S troyer Flotilla Nine, Pacific ing ceremonies will number 65 Armamen Tartar Sy eldest. X officers and 1,030 enlisted per- 2 tem RANKING military guest atlfsonnel including 60 Marines. SROC Sys S fthe commissioning will be Rearf One of the highlights of th 1 A edo Tube ns . dmiral Fernando Quintanilha !'C'GI'6'f11011y Will be Ph iple Torp libel- Gu endonca Dias, Minister of Ma- f tion of ship 2 Tr h 38 Ca , ine, Portugal. XH . 9 illc 1 ALSO T0 BE present 2 FIV gommissioning l istin 6 e presenta- silver service by the , onorable W. Ralston Westlake, at the f'1Vlayor Columbus, Ohio. , along with otherl Today, following the near com- guished military and eivi- fpletion of a 8100,000,000 Ship- ian dignitaries, is a delegation yard conversion including that rom Columbus, Ohio, including of government-procure f rs. Edward G. Meyers, sponsor als and local f Columbus when it was chris- l-S42 ened in June, 1945 and IVI . Ralston Wes k to be U1 C1 materi- work estimated at million, a front-line position ayor l in the Fleet is assured Columbu tla e, the latterlwith the installation a ember of the official l tra-moder if-ommissioning party. ls ' r tiv lf COLUQ-4335.3 ospec s of such ul- n surface - to - air and urface-to-water missile systems e Com- las Talos, .Tartar H-,.,,?,,,.,.,.,. t.-f. .ag v.-. l.-.-..fv if.wi,..,e-evw.if-'1.- 1---e -1--2-A M- - 5

Page 8 text:

The USS COLUMBUS KCG-125 was originally commis- sioned as a heavy cruiser KCA-741 and was-built at the Bethlehem Steel Company's Quincy, Mass. shipyard. The seventh of the 18,000 ton Baltimore Class cruisers, .she was turned over to the Navy on 8 June 1945. Hel' f1I'St Commanding Officer was Captain Allen Hobbs. Mrs. Edward G. Meyers of Columbus, Ohio was the ship's sponsor. Mrs. Meyers, who lost two sons in combat during the war, christened the ship inhonor of Ohio's cap- ital city. Throughout Naval history, two other ships have seen commissioned service under the same name COLUMBUS. The first was a 28-gun Brig fa two-masted shipj pur- chased in 1775 for the regular Continental Navy. She aided in the capture of Nassau, New Providence in 1776 and later that year took four prizes at sea. Her career came to an end on 1 August 1778 when she was chased ashore by Brit- ish squadrons and burned by her own crew to prevent her from falling into the hands of the enemy. The second ship named COLUMBUS - in honor of Christopher Columbus - mounted 74 guns, was 191 feet long and displaced 2,480 tons fapproximately the same tonnage as today's destroyerl. She sailed some 69,000 miles in both the Atlantic and Pacific between 1819 and 1860. Her end came in the same fashion as the first COLUMBUS. On 20 April 1860 she was burned by Union forces to prevent her from falling into the hands of the Confederates. The heavy cruiser COLUMBUS sailed for the Panama Canal on 7 December 1945 with orders to report to Com- mander Pacific Fleet for duty and ultimate assignment to the SEVENTH Fleet at Shanghai, China. While operating west she visited Pearl Harbor, Okinawa, Yokosuka and Sasebo, In September 1948 COLUMBUS returned to the East and joined the SIXTH Fleet in the Mediterranean. During the Mediterranean assignment she was homeported in Plymouth, England and visited ports in Norway, Denmark, Germany, Holland, Belgium, France, and Portugal. She hosted many visits of distinguished guests, among whom were King Paul and Queen Fredericka of Greece, Prince Bernhardt of Holland and King George of Great Britain. During her 15 months in the Mediterranean in 1950 and 1951, COLUMBUS visited 55 ports and 18 countries and possessions. In 1952, COLUMBUS crossed the Arctic Circle while participating in the NATO exercise MAINBRACE and visited Scotland and Norway and other ports in Europe and Africa. His Royal Highness Prince Olaf of Norway was a guest aboard the ship during her visit to his country. In November 1955 COLUMBUS departed the East Coast to participate in joint American-Peruvian Naval maneuvers. Following a short good-will visit to the Peru- vian capital city of Lima, she proceeded to her new home- port of Long Beach, Calif. During her deployment in the Far East COLUMBUS steamed approximately 63,000 miles and visited ports in Iwo Jima, Okinawa, Hong Kong, Subic Bay, Zambarga, Manila, Nagasaki, Sasebo, Port Swetten- ham, Penang and Guam before returning to the United States on 8 July 1956. On 16 July 1958 COLUMBUS deployed for duty in the Western Pacific and during that tour, operated in the Taiwan Straits in support of Chinese Nationalist ships de- lxilvering supplies to the off-shore islands of Quemoy and atsu. In May of 1959 COLUMBUS was decommissioned and began her conversion to a guided missile cruiser at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Washington. The first Commanding Officer of COLUMBUS, as des- ignated CG-12 , was Captain Gideon M. Boyd. COLUMBUS departed for her first Western Pacific cruise as a guided missile cruiser on 5 August 1964 and operated extensively in the South China Sea off the coast of Vietnam. In January 1966 COLUMBUS departed San Diego, Calif. for her new homeport of Norfolk, Va. During her coastal transit, COLUMBUS visited Acapulco, Mexico, Panama Cityg Kingston, Jamaica and the Virgin Islands. On 15 October COLUMBUS relieved USS ALBANY in the SIXTH Fleet. On the 8th and 9th of December she had an unusual assignment in that she participated in search and rescue operations in the Aegean Sea after the sinking of the Greek Liner SS HERAKLION. During the Mediterranean cruise, COLUMBUSMEN visited many interesting ports: among them Naples, Italy, Izmir, Turkey, Athens, Greeceg Marseille, France and Palma, Mallorca. ' In September 1967 COLUMBUS was visited by Japa- nese Foreign Minister Takeo Miki as part of a tour of Norfolk military installations prior to a conference in Washington, D.C. COLUMBUS received notification of her winning E's following the end of her first competitive period as an operative unit of the Atlantic Fleet. The ship received an E for Weapons, and E for Operations and the Battle Ef- ficiency E designating COLUMBUS as one of the outstanding combat-ready units in the Atlantic Fleet. COLUMBUS deployed to the SIXTH Fleet in January of 1968, and participated in the NATO exercise Operation DAWN PATROL in April. Some of the ports visited by COLUMBUS included Athens, Greece, Valletta, Maltag Barcelona, Spain and Naples, Italy. COLUMBUS partici- pated in the SIXTH Fleet Twentieth Anniversary Parade before returning to Norfolk in July 1968. After spending the summer in Norfolk Naval Shipyard for regular maintenance and upkeep, COLUMBUS deployed to the Mediterranean in December 1968 and returned March 17, 1969. On the morning of her return COLUMBUS fired her missiles in an Armed Forces Day show of sea power for President Richard M. Nixon, Commander-in- Chief of the Armed Forces. During her five and a half month Mediterranean de- ployment th e Tall Lady carrieid Co m m and e r Cruiser Destroyer Flotilla TEN and visited such ports as Barce- lona, Spain, Athens, Greeceg Genoa, Gaeta, and Naples, Italy. The Christmas-New Year season was spent in one of the crew'sfavorite ports, Villefranche, France. Valletta, Malta was host to COLUMBUS for Easter. COLUMBUS again spent the summer in the shipyard U11de1'S0ing standard upkeep and repairs before deploying to the Mediterranean in October 1969 for the fourth time since coming to the East Coast in 1966. She returned on March 16, 1970.



Page 10 text:

9 CLF-PAN-SXN if-Y' o sition NHC A ' Ship VCP?-R Y ated Siirpv or t Coivnhvs to Niissi e ' Compieteiq ntacefiitted' irom bow to stern, trorn iceei to top ofr the mast, the new Coiumbus wouid nev er be rec' ,osnized as 'Cue same ship by crew rnen90etS V900 served 4 ard her beiore she underwent conversion to become a ' 'ie cruiser. ' 'ng parts ot the oid' XN oridNN ar Tl cruiser are the huh itseit. The huii designation, -'I A to CG-YZ. y PENS shipworiaers ' was iaunched ' ut ot abo . guided missr The oniy rernaini ering systems and changed trom CP, re was removed b Ciean-Sw eep which 9 tn controiied ripo ization, over '21,- 'nciudfing the engine ' however, has been The entire superstructu ' in a caretuiiy prepianned Operation ' aboard Coiumbus tate in the summer or 195 . ships superstructure in advance o'r her modern t steei were removed in record-breaking time i dechhousing, gun directors, turrets and bar- ney savings scored as resuit ot Operation 00 see bristies with gurded g, With the new give the ,the ' 000 tons o fmasts, smohepipes, bettes. Direct iabor and mo Ciean-Sweep approaiimated '5'L00,0 . 'Yhe Coiumbus superstructure we now iauncners and radar antennae, which aion ew word combining Hmast' and Ustaciih, ge radicai appearance. The ship now seems imost exciusive use ot aiuminum tor ide weight considerabiy. oiumbus presentig ' rs ot the missiie Niacin ia n bus a stran , ' ot the case. A ' cuts the tops mast, the C ircratt carrie ' rnah- ,new Coiurn topheavy. This is n , superstructure tabrication From the keei to the top of the measures 'ZXY GP, or shghtig hrgher than a a ciass. Her overaii iength is 613 teet. hich is atop the torw ard Umacid' , is coiiapsibie, 'p to steam into aimost any seaport in the me bridges at the entrances to har. te Bridgej' it wouid have 'thout the coiiap- 4 Corai Se The mast, w ing it possibie tor the shi worid. Due to the iow spans ot so hors, such as New 'iorh City's i'ieiYs Ga been impossibie tor the Coiumbus to enter port wi sibte mast. NNW it heavv cruiser, Coiumbud armament consisted ot Wim battery and t2 5 l'58s tor annaircrart. fr-ne Wm Wee Wissiie srstensfrwo tor ann n page at P15 a nine 'EJ' 155s as the . new Coiumbus is armed KContinued o 6

Suggestions in the Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book collection:

Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 131

1970, pg 131

Columbus (CG 12) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 105

1970, pg 105

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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