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Page 20 text:
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Durnng my 19541955 cruise I took part In the evacuation of the Tachen Islands steaming through mined and submarine infested waters my planes flymg support mlsslons as other shrps ot the Seventh Fleet evacuated Natnonalust Chlnese men, women, and chlldren from under Chmese Communist guns and carried them to Formosa I kept a watchful eye on the unstable condltlon In the Far Fast where my presence showed any potential ag gressor that the Umted States had a force In bemg ready for Instant retalua tnon should the need arise In keepung wzth the program of progressive modermzatnon, I was sent to Bremerton agam m I956 for fur ther alterations There I went unto dry dock and workmen trooped aboard Wooden shacks sprouted on my flight deck, scaffolding sprang up about my sldes, and my steel plates rever berated wlth the sound of alr hammers an dralls In due tlme, I received my angled deck, my hurrlcane bow I wanted patlently as the yard workmen tolled at thelr 'obs And at last they were done and I wanted for my lifeblood the drlvnng force that would once agam make my personalnty complete the officers that dlrect me the crew that makes me function sms
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Page 19 text:
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myself gain strength as mY Compart- ments were made watertight and electronic eClUlPmenl was installed' Giant cranes swung entire gun G5- Semblies high in the air and lowered them to their new resting places on my deck and sponsons. And while QunnerY eXPeVi5 Ullgned my battery and more equipment was stored below, Q' KR U 12 the cranes bent to the exacting task of lowering immense boilers and turbines to my deepest depths. Finally l was taken to sea on my builder's trials. Navy experts and inspectors observed and recorded my perform- GUCG, C0flClUding that l was fit for sea fit to serve. I On a chill, overcast day in March of T946, Captain Francis J. McKenna read his orders at the commissioning ceremonies. The watch was set Gnd the commission pennant was hoisted to the yardarm-I had ioined the Fleef. Born of the necessities of war, l served my early years during a period of de-emphasis of the Navy. Hundreds of battle-tested, veteran ships were retired to the Reserve Fleet as naval appropriations were drastically Cuf- The people at home, tired after four and a half years of wo, and hopefully looked forw years of peace and p,-Ospemy I relaxed i Clfd to . continued to steam the Anulmc . remaining vigilant, training for unit eventuality that might shower Owl dream of peace. The uneasy ,05w period drifted into the Cold Wunbufq, economic pressures continued and it T950 l was sent to Bremen Washington to be retired from seryi ' But my rest was not destined to , ' a lengthy one, for hardly hadlb i ' decommissioned than North ... 1 soldiers surged into South Korea, The Cold War had erupted into a long' drawn out battle in which the United States was morally obligated to take part. l was needed again and under. went an extensive, two-year program of modernization to keep me in step with the requirements of an attack carrier in the atomic age. In early T952 my face-lifting was completed. The five inch battery fore and aft of my island structure removed, my forty millimeter battery replaced by harder-hitting three inch guns, I was placed back in service. That fall found me off the coast of Korea as a part of Task Force 77. Operating out of supporting bases in the Western Pacific, lremained inthe combat zone for seven months. With the rest of the task force, l steamed up and down iust off the coast as my aircraft flew mission after mission in daylight and darkness, in fair weather and foul, supporting the United Nations forces ashore. In all, mY planes flew nearly 7,000 sorties-GH average of about 30 per ClUY l pin-pointing 4,500 tons of bombs, 2,800 rockets, countless rounds of 20 millimeter ammunition, and tons of napalm on Communist targets. Even after the truce was signed cl Panmuniom in the fall of l953, mY iob was not done. The Chinese Gnd North Korean Communists maintained the pressure on South Korea, Indo- China, and Taiwan, and l served mY time cruising in the troubled w0i9 5 of the Western Pacific.
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Page 21 text:
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