1941 International Harvester A14 “Shop Mule”, still sitting where it was last parked, on the flight deck of USS Hornet.........17,500 feet down at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. Hornet was sunk in the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands in October 1942. She was finally located in 2019 by a survey team led by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen.
The USS designation along with the missing guns in "A" turret really threw me for quite a while.
Finally w/only 2 guns in the "B" turret it started to move me in a different direction.
Pretty warship.
Crazy story of how she came to be on the active USN list for a year LOL, with a large number of her German crew still onboard to operate the various systems.
This is in port Boston, in January 1946. She appears to have the guns still mounted in the forward turret.
At sea off the Massachusetts coast in 1946. Appears to have all her guns. The first photo I posted is in the Panama Canal, I suspect some of her equipment was removed before she went to Bikini Atoll to get blown up in the atomic bomb test. Maybe that's what happened to the guns in the forward turret.
"...The guns from turret Anton were removed while in Philadelphia in February (1946)". - Wiki
This was after the USA "won" her as a "war prize."
Off hand I couldn't find any particular reason why this was done.
Torpedo damage to the bow of the USS St Louis (CL-49) sustained from a torpedo hit during the Battle of Kolombangara.
Photo was taken on 19 August 1943 at Mare Island.
Photos of USS Pensacola CA-24 having her #3 turret removed at Pearl Harbor in January, 1943. She was badly damaged in the Battle of Tassafaronga in November 1942, inlcuding the detonation of several of her own 8-inch shells inside the #3 turret.
USS LST-1 arriving at Anzio in April 1944 carrying a deck-load of trucks full of artillery projectiles for the 5th Army. Beyond the LST are two Landing Craft Tanks - LCT-24 & LCT-220.
-
Photo from the Allison collection, MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military History.