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USS Ling (Excursion Pics)
Yesterday, I took the First Mate and crew to visit the USS Ling memorial in Hackensack, NJ. I had a great time and was very surprised to learn that my First Mate thought the whole tour was fascinating. My daughters enjoyed the trip too, though my youngest was more concerned about what toys might be awaiting her in the gift shop.:haha: She got an F-16 Fighting Falcon and an E2C Hawkeye out of the deal. She actually likes the airplanes.:o
Anyway, I'm posting a few pics to share my memories. The image quality had to be reduced considerably for quick loading on the web. This is only a smidgen of the overall number of pics I took: http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling1.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling2.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling3.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling4.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling5.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling6.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling7.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling8.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...l501/ling9.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...501/ling10.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...501/ling11.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...501/ling12.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...501/ling13.jpg http://i1045.photobucket.com/albums/...501/ling14.jpg To say that all the compartments were cramped would be making an understatement. How 90 guys all shared this same space for 45 to 60 days at a time is beyond me. Kind of makes you appreciate more, the sacrifices they made on our behalf.:up: http://www.njnm.com/subtour/index.html |
Great pics..!! Thanks for posting.:up:
Like you say...How guys actually lived in there for extended periods of time is beyond me. And the number of valves and other controls would drive me crazy... One interesting thing I noticed...There seems to be several "portholes" which could be opened while surfaced to air the place out.... |
Good pics, thanks Wernher. :up:
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Excellent images
:up:
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The port holes are actually "gun access ports" so that the crew had near immediate access to the deck gun and AA guns and did not have to jockey through the normal routes top side they where added into the designs some time in late 42 or 1943 I think the smaller ones are for passing up ammo others where strictly magazines hard to say for sure data on them is sort of lacking.
It is interesting to see pics of the old war subs especially the ones that received little modification post war yet they are all slightly different which makes sense since each sub wound up being slightly different form the next after receiving an over haul or two. I have been to the USS Drum a few times and just from these pics I can see some differences.Though the Drum is a Gato and the Ling is a Balao the Drum does have a Balao bridge though. WernherVonTrapp no pictures of the control room or conning tower? Also interesting to see that the Ling does not have a 40mm mounted might have at one time though. I agree with the confined spaces I toured a "boomer" some years back in high school I was glad that I was joining the Air Force.I think if I had been in the Navy in WWII I'd have given subs a shot beats floating around on the surface all day as a huge target if that is the other option. |
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The tour guide was a nice guy but not too well versed on the USS Ling and it's systems. He conceded that he was new and this was only his 5th tour. When I pointed to, and commented on the AA guns being the 20mm Oerlikons, he interjected, pointed to the 4" deck gun and said, "No, that's the 20mm right there".:har: |
Yeah the last time I was at the Drum back in 2009 they just gave you a pamphlet a "self guided tour" same goes for the USS Alabama. I was showing something to my daughter and some man and his family basically just tagged along once they figured that I knew a little about what all some of the gear was inside.(little did they know that I had read The Fleet Submarine in the US Navy, US Submarines Through 1945,Take Her Deep,Thunder Below and Wahoo to name a few.:arrgh!:)
The Drum has a few mk.27s in the aft torpedo room and they where pretty surprised to learn that such technology was around back then. Another interesting thing about the Drum that I noticed is that she has duplicate PPIs one in the conning tower and another in the control room I don't know if this was a WWII feature or if it was added later but it was an interesting rig none the less.It is also possible that one PPI was for the SV and one was for the SJ set. |
Wow, cool!! Thanks for sharing! :yeah: :yeah:
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Thanks for the replies fellas, I'm glad you enjoy the pics as much as I do. Wish I could've posted the full size pics here but, I doubt the page would've even loaded if I had.
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Both Submarines Through 1945 and The Fleet Submarine in the US Navy are very technical in nature.
Though I'd honestly recommend the later if you where to read one of the two mainly because it just seems to be better organized and covers all fleet boats all the way to the Fleet Snorkel and Guppy programs which is beyond the cut off point of Submarines through 1945 also the author of Fleet served on subs during the war and that seems to help his prospective. But for true detail the books authored by skippers other officers and some enlisted men are the best source for over all knowledge and they make great reads as well. You can take their tactics and use them in SH4."Thunder Below" by Adm. Gene Fluckey is really good you can hardly put it down I have read that book through at least 4 times over the years.You can tell that not only was Fluckey an effective, sound thinking and aggressive fighter he was also concerned about his sailors well being and his crew showed their appreciation once by making a flag which they tied to the periscope sheer while they where leaving port(without Fluckey knowing about it) it said,"Fluckey's 8th Fleet" obviously they felt that the Barb alone was worthy of being her own fleet. |
Have anyone visited all of the Fleet Boats? Closest I got to one was at Pearl while I was there for a week, also the one the SF.
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I visited the Ling 10 yrs ago and had the pleasure of meeting an actual sub veteran of WW2. I think is name was Art "Bullwinkle" something or other. I just saw the card he gave me the other day, and damn, you think I could find it now? Had his home address on it. I'm sure he's passed on now. I wish I would have put him on my Christmas card list. But loved the tour, and I too had to buy a few things from the gift shop! :smile: I might have to plan another trip up there.
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Great shots!
The only Fleet Boat I've been on is the Pampanito. I visit her a couple times a year, as she's only a few blocks down the hill. And, while I've spent vast amounts of time below deck on a wide variety of sailboats, I'm always struck by the lack of space in the Balao. |
Visiting all of the surviving fleet boats would be an international challenge I know for sure that there is one that was used by Brazil in 60's and 70's and it is on public display now in Brazil of course and there might be one on display in Turkey as well.
Another interesting thing the Ling was a Cramp yard boat and they where so backed up it had to be towed to Boston to be finished so it never went on a combat patrol during WWII(not to say that makes the Ling unimportant) and I found a picture of the Ling in late July 1945 off Boston with a 40mm on the fore AA mount and a 5"51 on the aft mount so she originally left Boston with a 40mm and a 5"51. Some of the post war fleet boats that got modified as radar pickets had the largest crews 105 officers and men they did have the rear torpedo tubes where and some other things where removed on them but still. |
It's my understanding that the USS Ling is in peril of being lost as a War Memorial museum. Seems that the landowners want the Ling, and the museum, to move so that the land can be sold for developement.:nope: With that in mind, I'm glad I got the chance to visit her when I did and hope to return soon.
http://mysite.verizon.net/resx5uqm/savetheling/ |
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