Whilst on a business trip to San Francisco earlier this month, I visited the USS Hornet (
CV-18), now a museum at the former NAS Alameda near Oakland.
Interestingly enough, Alameda was where the Doolittle B-25s were winched aboard the earlier USS Hornet for the Tokyo raid in 1942.
This USS Hornet (the eighth to bear the name) entered service in 1943, and was in action in the Pacific for 16 continuous months.
After the war, she was stored for a number of years, then converted to an Attack Carrier (
CVA-18) with an angled deck and twin catapults, and later was used as an anti-submarine carrier (
CVS-18), and was used as the recovery ship for the Apollo 11 and 12 missions in 1969, before final retirement the following year.
The ship was opened as a museum in 1998, and is well worth a visit for anyone in the area.
The view from Flying Control
An early Apollo capsule, used for a sub-orbital flight and later for drop tests to determine the effect of an emergency capsule landing on dry land.
One of the quarantine units for the returning astronauts. Converted from an airstream caravan - how times have changed since the 1960s!
Last edited by
Mike on Fri Jul 29, 2005 11:40 pm, edited 2 times in total.