Sun Sep 19, 2010 4:01 pm
Sun Sep 19, 2010 7:06 pm
Sun Sep 19, 2010 7:06 pm
Sun Sep 19, 2010 8:56 pm
Sun Sep 19, 2010 8:59 pm
Sun Sep 19, 2010 10:38 pm
Mon Sep 20, 2010 1:01 am
Mon Sep 20, 2010 7:29 am
Mon Sep 20, 2010 7:46 am
TimAPNY wrote:Is it me or the thought of such a museum in the cold and very long winters of Northern New England seem like a bad idea? I would love to see it saved but I think it might have a very hard time making it, but Maine is a HUGE tourist area in the short summer months. Maybe my blood is just getting thin living in the south.
Tim
Mon Sep 20, 2010 12:24 pm
jamesintucson wrote:I know I'll probably be accused of heresy around here but just how many more carriers need to be saved? Enterprise certainly and probably Nimitz are important enough to be saved but what is the big deal with the JFK? Important to the people who served on her sure but she didn't introduce any new technologies in fact she was a throwback to older technology between Enterprise and Nimitz.
At least two of the carriers that are already preserved are having money trouble. Is it really necessary to add another carrier to the preserved list? Perhaps they should look to perserving something that is truly historic and in immediate danger of destruction like the Olympia instead of yet another carrier.
James
Mon Sep 20, 2010 12:29 pm
Tue Sep 21, 2010 11:42 am
jamesintucson wrote:Just how many more carriers need to be saved?
jamesintucson wrote:At least two of the carriers that are already preserved are having money trouble. Is it really necessary to add another carrier to the preserved list?
jamesintucson wrote:Perhaps they should look to perserving something that is truly historic and in immediate danger of destruction like the Olympia instead of yet another carrier.
Not to mention her role in operations post 911.Kennedy launched 114 airstrikes and nearly 2,900 sorties against Iraq, which delivered over 3.5 million pounds of ordnance.
Tue Sep 21, 2010 4:40 pm
Tue Sep 21, 2010 7:04 pm
jamesintucson wrote:I imagine Enterprise will be a "lock" to be turned into a museum.
Tue Sep 21, 2010 8:37 pm
Garth wrote:jamesintucson wrote:I imagine Enterprise will be a "lock" to be turned into a museum.
Not a chance.
The only nuclear ship that the Navy's allowed to be turned into a museum (not counting the sails of various SSN/SSBNs that still exist in various places) is the Nautilus, and she's kept under extremely tight control ... and is physically parked on the US Submarine Base, Groton under USN care and stewardship.
There were legitimate and well-funded attempts to put the USS Long Beach next to the Queen Mary in Long Beach CA, bring the USS Cincinnati and a couple other SSN's to their namesake cities. Senator John Warner - who had more heft in Naval matters than any other US Senator and basically functioned as a quasi SecNav while representing Virginia, tried very, very hard to get the USS Virginia parked next to Nauticus in Norfolk. Navy flat out refused and he had to "settle" for the USS Wisconsin instead (fair tradeoff, imho).
The ONLY way that the USN would allow Enterprise to be turned into a museum rather than get processed through the Nuke Ship Recycling program is a situation similar to Nautilus ... she's parked at a Navy base and is owned, operated and cared for by the USN. There's a slight difference when it comes to things like that between a smallish first-gen nuke sub and a 1100' long nuclear carrier with eight ancient reactors buried in her well-armored belly.