February 20, 2009 at 2:56 am
What ship is this? Any takers?
By: Arabella-Cox - 22nd February 2009 at 00:02
Pics
Sorry, I forget to include a couple pics of the guns………..
By: Arabella-Cox - 21st February 2009 at 23:59
Very interesting……………As a matter of fact I was so interested I went to nearby Fort Desoto today to check out such Naval Fortifications. While, it didn’t have big 14in battleship turrets. It was nonetheless very interesting. With 8 (4 left) – 12in Mortars and several 6in Naval Guns. I was also lucky that a local US Civil War Reenactment was taking place!:D:D:D
By: Arabella-Cox - 21st February 2009 at 23:01
IIRC, the after turrets from USS Arizona were removed and used to create a coast artillery battery on Oahu. I checked on wikipedia, and it says that this was the case:
“The aft turrets, #3 and #4, were moved to become United States Army Coast Artillery Corps Battery Arizona on the west coast of Oahu and Battery Pennsylvania on Mokapu Point.[7] The #2 turret guns were later installed aboard the battleship USS Nevada (BB-36) in the fall of 1944;[8] Nevada then used those guns against the Japanese islands of Okinawa and Iwo Jima.[9]”
Given the enormous cost of building battleship guns and turrets, I wonder if, way back in the early part of the 20th century, the War Department had a policy of utilizing the guns/turrets from scrapped or demobilized battleships as shore batteries. It certainly appears that way.
I am sure they meant the guns from number two (B) turret. As the Arizona’s turret had three guns while the Nevada only had two…………..
By: Bager1968 - 21st February 2009 at 03:46
Wasn’t hard for me… there have been recent (in the last year) threads on a couple of military boards I frequent discussing the fort.
I first learned about it in a National Geographic Magazine article in the 1970s.
Here is a website dedicated to Fort Drum:
http://www.concretebattleship.org/
http://corregidor.org/chs_battery1/drum.htm
http://www.travelsmart.net/ph/inquirer/issues/dec98/dec06/features/fea_main.htm
A nice long discussion here: http://warships1discussionboards.yuku.com/topic/6798?page=1
By: hawkdriver05 - 21st February 2009 at 00:40
FT Drum today.
By: Ship 741 - 20th February 2009 at 21:34
IIRC, the after turrets from USS Arizona were removed and used to create a coast artillery battery on Oahu. I checked on wikipedia, and it says that this was the case:
“The aft turrets, #3 and #4, were moved to become United States Army Coast Artillery Corps Battery Arizona on the west coast of Oahu and Battery Pennsylvania on Mokapu Point.[7] The #2 turret guns were later installed aboard the battleship USS Nevada (BB-36) in the fall of 1944;[8] Nevada then used those guns against the Japanese islands of Okinawa and Iwo Jima.[9]”
Given the enormous cost of building battleship guns and turrets, I wonder if, way back in the early part of the 20th century, the War Department had a policy of utilizing the guns/turrets from scrapped or demobilized battleships as shore batteries. It certainly appears that way.
By: Arabella-Cox - 20th February 2009 at 20:26
Ummm… Fort Drum?
GOOD CALL! 😀
By: Arabella-Cox - 20th February 2009 at 20:25
Correct!
Never saw a Concrete Battleship before……….;)
By: hawkdriver05 - 20th February 2009 at 09:58
Ummm… Fort Drum?
Correct!
By: Arabella-Cox - 20th February 2009 at 04:57
How it works…..
Here’s how a typical (16in) gun turret works……….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=AU&hl=en-GB&v=0OmOQs0ziSU
and in action!
By: Bager1968 - 20th February 2009 at 03:18
Ummm… Fort Drum?
By: Arabella-Cox - 20th February 2009 at 03:07
What ship is this? Any takers?
Well, first its a coastal battery and not a ship! The turrets don’t look like they are from any ship that I can place? The guns appear to be around 14in……….My “wild guess” is their a US Coastal Battery.