Author: otuafijorge

THE MEMORIAL

THE MEMORIALTHE MEMORIAL

This monumental public artwork provides long overdue commemoration of the distinguished service of the cruiser USS San Diego and her crew, serving as a perpetual reminder of their selfless contribution to victory in World War II. The memorial is an original artwork designed by noted sculptors Eugene Daub and Louis Quaintance for the USS San Diego (CL 53) Memorial Association, which is donating it to the Port District for the benefit of the people of San Diego. The memorial’s complimentary components serve to remember, inform, illustrate and inspire.

THE MEMORIALThe monument’s soaring 28-foot apex, which resembles a ship’s bow, forms a distinctive landmark on the San Diego waterfront. Four adjoining walls of polished carnelian granite and composite terra cotta are arranged on a V-shaped footprint, which encompasses a magnificent artistic map of the Pacific Theater. The colored terrazzo map depicts the ocean areas and contiguous land masses of East Asia, Australia and the Pacific islands. Embedded brass and zinc strips mark the wartime track of the USS San Diego as well as the equator, latitude and longitude lines. Brass lettering identifies key geographical features, and five-pointed brass stars mark the engagements for which the ship earned its 18 battle stars in World War II.

THE MEMORIALThe south side of the memorial’s terra cotta wall features a dramatic bas-relief artwork by Eugene Daub and Louis Quaintance that depicts the San Diego in action at sea. The artist’s life-size bronze sailor sculpture on the opposite side of this wall, overlooking the Pacific map, is the humanizing focal point of the memorial. The sailor represents all the crewmen who ‘ served on the San Diego and is emblematic as well of all sailors who served in World War II. He is shown in relaxed battle dress, perhaps after a major action or long hours on watch or at general quarters. Though appearing weary and exhausted, he remains undaunted and resolute.

Inscriptions on the inner panels contain historical details and a summary of the San Diego’s accomplishments, including a list of major actions she participated in between 1942 and 1945, from Guadalcanal to Tokyo Bay. Campaigns for which battle stars were earned are so indicated, correlating to the brass stars on the map. The names of all the officers and men who served on the ship are engraved on two polished granite panels. Above these appears a simple inscription, an excerpt from Admiral Halsev’s congratulatory message to his fleet after its pivotal victory in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal: “You have written your names in the golden pages of history and won the underlying gratitude of your countrymen.”

SPECIAL GEST

Admiral Leon Edney, U.S. Navy (Ret.)

THE MEMORIALAdmiral Edney was commissioned in the Navy as an Ensign in 1957, and he retired in 1992 after having served as NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander and Commander in Chief of the United States Atlantic Command. Other positions Admiral Edney held include Chief of Naval Operations, Chief of Naval Personnel, Commander of Carrier Group One, Director for the Office of Program Appraisal for the Secretary of the Navy, Director of Aviation Plans and Requirements, Commanding Officer of the USS Constellation (CU 64), and Commander of Carrier Air Wing Two. He also served as a White House Fellow in 1970. His many honors and decorations include the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, Distinguished Service Medal with Gold Star, and Air Medal with Gold numeral 6.

Congressman Randy Duke Cunningham

Now in his seventh term in the U.S. House of Representatives, Congressman Cunningham serves on the House Appropriations Committee, the Labor, Health and Human Services Committee, the Education Appropriations Subcommittee, the Defense Committee and the Select Committee on Intelligence. A former Naval Aviator, Congressman Cunningham was one of the most highly decorated pilots in the Vietnam War. He was nominated for the Medal of Honor, received the Navy Cross, two Silver Stars, fifteen Air Medals, the Purple Heart and several other decorations. He was a fighter pilot trainer at the Navy Fighter Weapons School and is a former Commanding Officer of the elite Navy Adversary Squadron.

Former crewmen rally to salute the San Diego

Former crewmen rally to salute the San DiegoFormer crewmen rally to salute the San Diego

Nobody thought to pass the hat back then, when the light cruiser San Diego came back from World War II and the citizens of its namesake city lined the waterfront to say thanks.

A Great Crew, a Grand Ship — Well Done, USS San Diego,” read one dockside banner. Fireboats shot water in the air in tribute. Bands played.

The hat is being passed now, 56 years later. Men who served on the San Diego — one of the war’s most decorated but least known ships — are raising money to build a memorial along Harbor Drive at the G Street Mole.”It will be a fitting way to remind people, especially young people, about what the war was like, about the horror of it, and about the relief we felt when we won it,” said Leonard Shea, a retired Navy captain who served on the San Diego and now lives in Coronado.

Chronological History

Chronological HistoryChronological History

USS San Diego (CL 53)
Chronological Outline of Significant Events

DATE ACTION WHERE
A/S – Air Strike
TF – Task Force, Task Group, Task Unit
Port – Where we stopped
1942

Jan 10

COMMISSIONED BOSTON NAVY YARD

May 6

Underway for PANAMA CANAL & S.D.

16

Port Arrived San Diego.

Jun 6

Port Arrived PEARL HARBOR

Aug 17

TF 17 Departed P.H.

25

GUADALCANAL Invasion/capture of Guadalcanal.

Sep 15

WASP & O’BRIEN torpedoed/sunk

26

Port NOUMEA, New Caledonia.

Oct 2

TF 17 Underway.

5

A/S BUIN-FAISI area.

16

A/S SOLOMON ISLANDS.

26

SANTA CRUZ TF 17 HORNET & PORTER sunk. SA DIEGO took 200 HORNET survivors to NOUMEA.

30

Port NOUMEA

Nov 11

A/S Off GUADALCANAL.

16

Port NOUMEA

Dec 11

Port ESPIRITU SANTOS, New Hebrides
1943

Jan 28

“THE SLOT” TF 16 Intercepting Jap Fleet in the “SLOT” off GUADALCANAL.

Feb 12

Port ESPIRITU SANTOS.

Mar 16

Port AUCKLAND, New Zealand.

19

Captain HUDSON relieved Capt. PERRY

Apr 7

Port ESPIRITU SANTOS.

May 3

Port NOUMEA.

Jun 27

TF 14 Invasion/capture MUNDA, New Georgia in the SOLOMONS.

Jul 25

Port NOUMEA

Aug 5

Port EFATE, New Hebrides.

Sep 5

Rear. Adm. Wiltse hoisted Flag on SAN DIEGO as ComCruDiv 11.

14

Port ESPIRITU SANTOS.

Oct 29

TF 38 Air strikes against BUKA-BONIS off BOUGAINVILLE in Northern SOLOMONS.

Nov 5

A/S RABAUL, New Guinea.

8

Port ESPIRITU SANTOS.

9

TF 38 Air strikes against REBAUL.

14

Port ESPIRITU SANTOS,

15

GILBERTS TF 50.4 Air strikes, invasion, & capture of GILBERT ISLANDS.

26

MARSHALLS TF 50.3 Air strikes on KWAJALEIN & WOTJE ATOLLS in the MARSHALL ISLANDS.

Dec 9

Port PEARL HARBOR.

11

STATESIDE! Departed P.H. for California

15

Port Arrived SAN FRANCISCO and entered drydock at MARE ISLAND SHIPYARD
1944

Jan       4

Underway San Francisco to PearlHarbor

16

TG Departed P.H.

29

MARSHALL ISLANDS 58.2 Air strikes on KWAJALEIN supporting

31

invasion/capture

Feb       4

Port MAJURO ATOLL, Marshall Islands

12

TG Departed MAJURO for ATTACK ON TRUK

17

TRUK ATOLL 58.2 ATOLL, major Jap port

20

Air strike on JALUIT Atoll,Marshalls

21

Port MAJURO ATOLL

28

STATESIDE Departed MAJURO for SAN FRANCISCO by way of PEARL HARBOR.

Mar 9

Port Arrived San Francisco & entered MARE ISL. NAVY YARD for overhaul

14

Departed MARE ISLAND for Pearl Harbor

19

Port Arrived P.H.

21

Training exercises Mar 21/25

May 2

TG12 Departed PEARL HARBOR

8

Port Arrived MAJURO

15

TG Underway as TG 58.6.

18

WAKE & MARCUS TU Scouting mission, TU 58.6.4 under Adm. WILTSE to WAKE & MARCUS ISLANDS

21

TG Rejoined TG 58.6 to attack WAKE.

26

Port MAJURO

Jun 6

TG Left MAJURO IN TG 58.4.

11

MARIANNASA/S First air strikes against MARIANNAS

15

BONINS A/S First air strikes against BONINS.

16

IWO JIMA A/S First air strikes against IWO JIMA

19

PHILIPPINE SEA First BATTLE OF THE PHILIPPINE SEA west of the MARIANNAS

23

SAIPAN Strikes on GUAM and invasion/capture of Saipan

Jul 2

(continued)

6

Port ENIWETOK ATOLL, Marshall Islands.

13

Capt. MULLEN relieved Capt. HUDSON.

14

TG Departed ENIWETOK in TG 58.4.

18

GUAMA/S Invasion/capture of GUAM

Aug 9

Departed GUAM

13

Port ENIWETOK ATOLL

18

Adm. WILTSE hauled down his flag.

25

Training exercises at sea.

29

TG Departed ENIWETOK as TG 38.2

Sep 1

Crossed EQUATOR at Long. 155-20E.

6

A/S PALAU & PELELIU Sep 6-8

9

A/S MINDANAO,SAMAR,LEYTE Sep 9-13

17

PALAU A/S Invasion/capture of PALAU GROUP

21

A/S MANILA and CENTRAL PHILIPPINES

28

Port SAIPAN

Oct 1

ULITHI ATOLL Port CAROLINE ISLANDS- our new home!

6

TG Departed ULITHI in TG 38.2

10

A/S First strikes on OKINAWA

Oct 12

A/S FORMOSA Oct 12-14

17

A/S MANILA & LEYTE. Now with TG 38.1

23

LEYTE TG TG 38.1 detached to ULITHI. Orders 24 suddenly changed to proceed at flank speed to strike at major Jap fleet attacking LEYTE landing.

29

Port ULITHI ATOLL

Nov 5

TG TG 38.4 departed ULITHI

11

A/S. LEYTE

13

A/S MANILA, Nov 13-19.

22

Port ULITHI ATOLL.

Dec 10

TG TG 38.1. A/S LUZON & MINDANAO.

17

TYPHOON! Dec 17-19 Major casualties.

24

Port ULITHI ATOLL.

30

TG TG 38.1 departed ULITHI ATOLL
1945

Jan 3

A/S FORMOSA

6

A/S LUZON

9

CHINA SEA    A/S CHINA COAST & FRENCH INDO CHINA

20

Departed CHINA SEA

21

A/S OKINAWA. Jan 21-22

26

Port ULITHI ATOLL

Feb 10

TG Underway in TG 58.4

16

JAPAN A/S
IWO JIMA
Major strikes on JAPAN supporting invasion of IWO JIMA Jan 16-26

Mar 1

A/S NANSEI SHOTO. Joined CruDiv 14 in bombardment of OKINA DAITO JIMA

2

Port.

4

ULITHI ATOLL.

14

TG Departed ULITHI with TG 58.4.

15

OKINAWA A/S JAPAN & OKINAWA Mar 15-Apr 27.

Apr 28

HAGGARD DD555 Escorted damaged HAGGARD to KERAMA RETTO Apr 28-30

May 1

Left KERAMA RETTO & rejoined TG58.4.

2

A/S Invasion/capture OKINAWA May 2-13

14

Port ULITHI ATOLL

24

TG Departed ULITHI with TG 58.4

25

A/S OKINAWA. Air support May 25-June12

Jun 13

DRYDOCK, LEYTE 15 months at sea! Cleaned our bottom.

Jul 1

TG Left LEYTE GULF with TG 38.4. 9

9

JAPAN A/S JAPAN from HOKKAIDO TO THE INLAND SEA Jul 9-Aug 5.

6

ATOM BOMB! TF 38 told on Aug 5 to go 300 miles East of Tokyo before BOMB dropped

9

2nd ATOM BOMB No response from JAPAN.

15

SURRENDER! A/S A/S over TOKYO when Japs surrendered

16

Cruising SoEast of JAPAN. USS SAN DIEGO designated Flagship TF 3 TOKYO BAY OCCUPATION FORCE.

23

AT SEA. Completes 300,000 miles! Adm. Badger broke his flag on the USS SAN DIEGO as CTF 31
Aug 27 Port SAGAMI WAN.

28

TOKYO BAY! Port      FIRST major belligerant ship to enter Jap waters during a war

29

YOKOSUKA Docked at YOKOSUKA NAVAL BASE. Adms. NIMITZ & HALSEY came aboard to accept the surrender of the Base

Sep 2

GOING HOME! Headed out of the Bay toward CALIF.

19

SAN FRANCISCO Port Thousands of cheering citizens jammed the Golden Gate Bridge welcoming
Oct 25 SAN DIEGO    Port The city of SAN DIEGO threw a tremendous welcome party for the ship for 3 days over Navy Day Oct 27

Our thanks to LT. Spence Ehrman for creating the ship’s history from which this outline has been burgled. The intention of this outline is to highlight main events in the history of the USS SAN DIEGO, to give a time reference for her location during those war years, and to do it all as briefly as possible.

USS SAN DIEGO: The Unbeatable Ship That Nobody Ever Heard Of

USS SAN DIEGO: The Unbeatable Ship That Nobody Ever Heard OfUSS SAN DIEGO: The Unbeatable Ship That Nobody Ever Heard Of

USS speed trials.jpg (34167 bytes)Few knew of her during World War 11, and few know of her even today: a ship named for the city of San Diego. The light antiaircraft cruiser USS SAN DIEGO (CL 53) received the honor of being the first victorious American warship to enter Tokyo Bay. A former crewman, Bill Butcher, gunners mate second class, wonders about the SAN DIEGO and her place in history books. He recently wrote, “…Nothing ever happened to us that was ‘headline news’ until we were the first major Allied warship to enter Tokyo Bay. We were straddled by bombs, dodged torpedoes and (were) attacked by suicide planes that missed. We never lost a man in combat, never surrendered to the enemy, and earned eighteen battle stars while steaming 300,000 miles without a major overhaul.” (Butcher now lives in Massachusetts and is petitioning Congress and the Postal Service to put the SAN DIEGO on a commemorative postage stamp.)

John Supino, seaman first class, was assigned to a specialized damage control party whose duties were to make repairs when the ship got hit. Supino maintains that since the ship never got hit, the damage control people virtually had a pleasure cruise. (Supino. who entered the Navy from Everett, Massachusetts, still lives at the same address.)

World War II went out with two stupendous, thundering booms in August, 1945. The atomic bombs brought the Japanese to the peace table. On August 15 Japan gave up, and everything changed. Only a few months earlier, everyone believed that to end the war, Japan would have to be invaded at a cost of a million lives or more.

Now the ship’s crew suddenly realized the end of the war was at hand, and got to wondering about going to Tokyo. It turned out that a little delay going home via Tokyo was quite acceptable, especially when they were being honored to act as flagship as well as the first ship to dock in Japan. That would fulfill a promise made back in Boston in January 1942, “that she wouldn’t stop until she dropped her hook in Tokyo Bay.”

On August 12, Admiral William “Bull” Halsey, colorful commander of the huge United States Third Fleet, sent a message to a light cruiser, the USS SAN DIEGO (CL 53), as follows: “SAN DIEGO designated as flagship for Commander Task Force 31, and thus in the center of all activity. Seeing an imminent end of combat, Halsey handpicked the SAN DIEGO to be the first major warship to enter Tokyo Bay once the enemy surrendered unconditionally. That event happened two days later, on August 14, signaling the end to the long and vicious fighting that started with the Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941.

The crew of the SAN DIEGO felt that they had rightfully earned the honor with a remarkable wartime record. She’d won 18 battle stars. She took part in 34 major battle actions; steamed an incredible 300,000 miles at sea with only short stops at such out-of-the-way places as Majuro, Eniwetok and Ulithi atolls; and never took a direct hit or lost a man in combat from the day she was commissioned in January’ 1942. Bob Alderson, yeoman third class, attributed the success of the SAN DIEGO to his shipmates. He said, “I think it was the accuracy of our aim. The more our ship was in battle, the greater our chances of survival because we knew what we were doing. We had complete confidence and good skippers.”

Then there was the design of SAN DIEGO, which made life a nightmare for the enemy aviators. As one officer observed, “When seven turrets with fourteen five-inch guns were all firing at the enemy, it looked like the ship itself was on fire.”

A rather crusty Rear Admiral Oscar Badger had been selected by Admiral Halsey to be Commander Task Force 31 on the SAN DIEGO. The accompanying minesweepers, destroyers, seaplane tenders, and high-speed transport making up Task Force 31 had also compiled exceptional combat records. The task force headed into the narrow but heavily fortified entrance to Tokyo Bay after taking some Japanese navigational pilots aboard. Heeding Admiral Halsey’s warning “to be vigilant in light of the enemy’s reputation for treachery,” all ships stayed at General Quarters, manning; their battle stations while en route to their anchorage in the Bay just outside the Yokosuka Naval Shipyard.

USS appraoching Tokyo Bay.jpg (17349 bytes)The previous day, Rear Admiral Badger had given Lieutenant Junior Grade Will Templeton, the SAN DIEGO Officer-of-the-Deck (OOD), a sample of his personality. A Japanese tug with thirteen military personnel waiting to board the ship was standing off some distance away. When Templeton asked the admiral what signal he should send the tug, the Admiral barked that when he was ready, he would say what he wanted to do. “Yes sir!” said Templeton, who now lives in Oceanside, CA. Rear Admiral Badger had a mean look and a nasty disposition when encountering those Japanese.

USS in Yoko.jpg (56530 bytes)Rear Admiral Robert B. Carney was scheduled to take command of Yokosuka Naval Shipyard the next morning after the SAN DIEGO had moved from her anchorage to a dock in the Shipyard at 1000 (10 a.m.). By then a coxswain and sideboys piped aboard and saluted Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz, Admiral Halsey and a bevy of V.I.P. admirals, generals and civilians, plus about 20 press and radio people. The radio group set up on the bridge for a direct broadcast to the USA.

Gun captain and coxswain Earl Burton said, “It was the damnedest day I ever spent on this ship, with more gold and silver aboard than any ship has ever had at one time. During all this, I had the Bos’n Side Boy watch and piped nearly all the big boys either aboard or over the side. I was glad when the sun set. Almost everybody aboard has all sorts of souvenirs.” Burton now lives in Endwell, N.Y.

Soon after Admiral Halsey came aboard, he decided he needed a haircut. With little ceremony, the Admiral was escorted down to the ship’s barber, Harry Mcllvaine, a young seaman first class, who easily clipped the Admiral. When Admiral Halsey was finished, he wanted to tip the barber, who said,” No thanks, but I sure would like one of your cigars.” The admiral gladly gave him one, the start of one more true sea story.

After the SAN DIEGO completed her historic mooring to mainland Japan, Admiral Badger decided he needed seven staff cars, so he summoned a Marine orderly. He bellowed to the Marine to go get seven staff cars. The bewildered orderly departed the ship with seven Marines following. They disappeared over a small hill nearby. Soon seven Japanese cars paraded up the dock. The Admiral smiled. The Marines had found a busy street right over the hill and simply went out and stopped traffic, commandeering seven decent cars.” (Yeoman third class Bob Alderson, who was the Captain’s yeoman, was witness to the show. He is retired in San Diego.) This and other incredible events capped the exceptional career of an exceptional ship and her crew.

The saga of the SAN DIEGO dates back to 1938 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a large appropriations bill to build new warships. The President believed what few did then, that Adolph Hitler was building a powerful armed force preparing to go to war against the Atlantic alliance, a conflict we could not avoid.

A strong contingent of energetic San Diegans went to Washington to support rebuilding the Navy, and to persuade the President to name a new cruiser after the city of San Diego. They were successful.

The keel was laid in March, 1940, for the new cruiser USS SAN DIEGO (CL 53) at the Bethlehem Steel Shipyard in Quincy, Massachusetts. She was the third of eight of a new design that came to be known as the Atlanta Class, essentially constructed to produce heavy anti-aircraft fire from eight twin five inch 38 caliber gun mounts, along with many secondary machine guns. She had a three and a half-inch armor belt, with two inches of deck armor. The three tiered mounts forward and aft gave her a beautiful silhouette.

In July, 1941, the San Diego sponsoring group went to Quincy to take part in the christening and launching festivities. Mrs. Grace Benbough, wife of Mayor Percy Benbough, splashed the champagne for the launching. San Diego Chamber of Commerce members and other dignitaries attended.

The ship fitted out at the Boston Navy Yard, and about a month after Pearl Harbor the SAN DIEGO was commissioned on January 10, 1942. It was snowing, and the weather was cold and miserable, perhaps a portent of the tough year ahead. A nucleus crew of officers and senior crewmen had been assigned months prior to the completion of the ship. The full complement of 650 men arrived on commissioning day, consisting largely of graduate recruits from boot camp and reserve officers, to supplement the experienced regular Navy petty officers and Naval Academy-trained officers.

The ship’s Commanding Officer, Captain Benjamin Franklin Perry, commendably was a man of few but measured words. In the subzero temperature and eight inches of snow, Captain Perry said, “This ship will be an honor to the city of San Diego. The time for talk is over; let’s get going.” The executive officer was Commander Timothy O’Brien, who later made admiral.

The new light cruiser was 541 feet in length with a beam of 53 ft. Her full load displacement was 7,500 tons. She was destined to build a formidable record and set a high example for her seven sister ships.

SAN DIEGO went through a condensed shakedown and training period in the Portland, Maine, area. She then headed for the Panama Canal, en route to her namesake city for special training before heading, out to the Pacific combat zone.

From day one of the War, a cloak of secrecy surrounded all ship and personnel movements. Nearly everyone in the city of San Diego was unaware that her namesake had arrived in port on May 17, 1942. While the training exercises continued until the end of May, the crew took every opportunity for liberty when in port. One anonymous young fireman from the engineering department went on a royal “toot”. At length, he encountered a local policeman who noticed his instability. As the hour was late the policeman asked, “Where are you from, sailor?” The sailor: “SAN DIEGO.” Policeman: “What part of San Diego?” Sailor: “The forward boiler room.” The policeman led the sailor off to the drying-out tank, having never heard of a ship with that name.

The ship’s disbursing officer (paymaster), Ensign Len Shea, had handled millions of dollars with great integrity throughout his regular Navy career. But finding himself a bit shy on funds while ashore on liberty, he sauntered into a bank to cash a check. His uniform said he was in the Navy but when the cautious teller asked what ship he was on Ensign Shea stalled a bit before finally revealing the name “SAN DIEGO.” The teller rather sourly said, “Get outa here! There’s no ship named SAN DIEGO.” (The former paymaster retired as captain, and lives in Coronado.)

Two weeks later, on June 1, 1942, the ship departed San Diego. (It would be 41 months before the city and the USS SAN DIEGO would get together again, and that for a huge postwar victory jamboree.)

The ship escorted the SARATOGA, a large carrier, to Pearl Harbor. Further training, exercises over four weeks brought the feeling of war closer, until in mid-August the SAN DIEGO got underway as part of Task Force 17 escorting carriers and tankers to the battle area in the southwest Pacific. She arrived a week after the tragic Battle of Savo Island.

For 41 days the ship was at sea supporting the Marines’ invasion of Guadalcanal. Fierce fighting called for periodic reinforcements for both the Marines and the Japanese. While on patrol off Guadalcanal, the ship’s crew saw the carrier WASP sunk by torpedoes from a Japanese submarine, which also damaged the destroyer O’BRIEN and the battleship NORTH CAROLINA.

Toward the end of September, Task Force 17, headed up by Rear Admiral George D. Murray, sailed into Noumea, New Caledonia. After provisioning in four days, they set out to sea for what proved to be the first action of the War for the SAN DIEGO. A raid on enemy islands Buin and Faisi earned the ship her first battle star.

At the end of October came the Battle of Santa Cruz Island, considered by the crew as the first major action of their careers. American naval forces were beginning to threaten Japan’s control of the sea and the air around Guadalcanal, in the Solomon Islands. The enemy mounted a large force of carriers and heavy ships to wipe out the threat. The SAN DIEGO was stationed to protect the port side of the valiant USS HORNET which had been bombed and torpedoed on the starboard side. The carrier could not be saved, but the SAN DIEGO took off 200 survivors. Her five-inch guns were credited with bringing down three planes. Gunner’s mate Tom Kane, manning a 20 millimeter machine gun on the aft end of the ship, shot down a torpedo plane directly astern. The gunnery officer, Lieutenant Commander Brooke Schunim, witnessed and confirmed the kill. (For 30 years after the war, Kane was a writer for actor John Wayne.)

The enemy, failing to unload a large contingent of infantry reinforcements, suffered three damaged cruisers, a wounded battleship and 123 planes knocked down, and then withdrew from the fray as did the enemy troop ships. The SAN DIEGO survived without casualties or real damage, and won its second battle star. Santa Cruz was decisive because the expansion of Japan’s power was stopped cold by a US force whose warships were outnumbered 46 enemy ships to 33 of ours.

Nearly everyone on board the SAN DIEGO remembers well the days their task force spent near Guadalcanal at night. An enemy twin-engined plane, nicknamed “Washing Machine Charley,” flew over nearly every night. His engines were out of synchronization, and made a loud, annoying noise, enough to keep everyone awake. He’d drop a few bombs but never hit anyone.

Many of the crew recalled tying up alongside anchored sister ship SAN JUAN, in one of several atolls. In the evening, while awaiting movies on the fantail, a potato fight would break out between ships, amid hearty insults flying back and forth. That would bring some officers roaring back to the fantail to halt “the disrespectful treatment of Navy food.” Entertainment was difficult to come by.

November 1942 found the enemy making a last desperate attempt to reinforce their beleaguered troops and regain control of the Island and Henderson Field. At the conclusion of the decisive Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, all 11 Japanese troop ships involved were destroyed – either sunk or beached – with an estimated 24,000 personnel losses. This time the SAN DIEGO was with the carrier ENTERPRISE, whose planes helped demolish the reinforcement effort. The action earned the light cruiser another battle star.

Early in February 1943, the Japanese frantically sent 20 destroyers at high speed “down the Slot” to Guadalcanal. It appeared to be still another reinforcement action, but was, in fact, a clever evacuation of 11,000 enemy troops, which Admiral Nimitz praised. That ended the Guadalcanal stalemate. From then on, the American forces took the offensive that led to Tokyo, as a relentless flow of new ships and planes established superiority over a weakening enemy. The SAN DIEGO survived the darkest days, fighting in nearly every battle to finally turn the tide.

Over the next six months or so, the SAN DIEGO operated in and around Espiritu Santo and Noumea, either on patrol or on exercises, with one large interlude. On March 14, the ship got underway bright and early. At 0600, Captain Perry announced over the public address system that “this ship is underway for Auckland, New Zealand, for about a 12-day stay. We will steam at 26 knots.” It was an electrifying message. New Zealand was a dream place for liberty, dining and friendliness.

Auckland was magnificent, as were such treats as fresh milk, fresh vegetables and excellent waitress service. (Americans tipped handsomely, contrary to Kiwi practices). The crew favored the nightlife at the Peter Pan Ballroom, especially the New Zealand girls from 15 to 50 who mobbed the place. During their stay, a special national holiday festival was held to honor the Maori natives. Prime Minister Peter Fraser and the King and Queen of the Maori tribe attended. Seventy-five sailors from the ship were invited. Some hostesses were present, but most of the sailors arranged their own dates. What a highlight!

On March 19, Captain Perry was relieved of command by Captain J. L. Hudson. Under the firm leadership of Captain Perry, SAN DIEGO had established a solid reputation for being dependable and always ready to go. He’d fashioned a fine ship while earning the first four of eighteen battle stars.

Except for 30 days from the end of June, when the SAN DIEGO joined Task Force 14 to provide support for the successful invasion of Munda, a British protectorate in the Solomon Islands, the ship sailed mostly in and around New Hebrides and New Caledonia. Bill Butcher, a gunner’s mate second class, recalled that before arriving in New Hebrides someone removed some water from a flask on a life raft and replaced it with some raisins. With the normal motions of the ship at sea, the flask got quite a shaking, so much so that when the ship entered port in New Hebrides, it blew up. Since there were many mines in those waters, some sailors celebrated, thinking the ship had taken a hit, and would be heading home.

Starting in November, SAN DIEGO and her “playmates” were assigned to the Central Pacific theater, joining the Third Fleet, which became the Fifth Fleet by a flick of the numbers. Many new ships were steadily arriving and the task forces were burgeoning into powerful groups.

In November, the SAN DIEGO participated in two raids on the Japanese strong -hold base of Rabaul (another battle star) followed by the invasion and capture of the Gilbert Islands (still another battle star).

With her sister ship SAN JUAN, SAN DIEGO was dispatched to Mare Island in December for more extensive yard work. The weather en route was pretty rough. Cliff Rayl, seaman first class, (now retired in California) was assigned a bunk directly below five inch twin gun mount number eight. While the ship tossed about in the rough seas, he and four shipmates were enjoying a friendly poker game. For a card table they were using the closed hatch to the ammunition magazine below; the hatch to the gun mount above was open for ventilation. On one bad roll, a five-inch shell broke loose, and fell down the hatch. It landed on their “card table” with a live nose fuse. An alert sailor picked up the shell, rushed it topside and threw it overboard. That wasn’t the end to their troubles.

Two new four-bladed propellers that had been welded and chained to the deck for transit to the States started to come loose in heavy seas. In the dark of night, deck hands were summoned topside to secure them. The decks were awash. Coxswain George Horton was hit by a wave coming over the port side that carried him through the lifelines. Just as it looked like he was a “goner” he was able to grab the middle guard line, when another wave washed him back on board.

In November came the gigantic typhoon that was the most violent anyone had encountered. The wind speed rose rapidly to over 100 mph. SAN DIEGO took rolls of 37 degrees then 45 degrees, then 50 degrees. A huge wave came over her amidships, tore the #1 motor whaleboat off the davits and sent it reeling into the superstructure, smashing it in two. Three men were injured when five-inch ammunition came loose and bashed them. Over 120 planes on board the carriers were wrecked by the fierce storm. Three destroyers capsized, they had been light on fuel and hadn’t sufficient ballast. A dozen other ships were damaged. It took four days for this worst of typhoons to fade, and was the most frightening, vicious storm in memory.

About mid-December Lieutenant Commander Joe Eliot, the gunnery officer, put out a special notice about a threat worse than typhoons – kamikaze attacks.”‘ More and more, the Japanese kamikaze tactic was seen as the last possible hope for Japan’s badly decimated air arm. These suicide missions caused tremendous damage to over one-hundred ships. The gunnery officer set about training gun crews to fire the guns manually, in case all electrical power was lost. It wasn’t much fun. But it paid off.

The Third Fleet became the Fifth Fleet in the first part of February, 1945 as the same ships in the same groups took off to support the invasion of Iwo Jima. As March came in, the SAN DIEGO joined Rear Admiral F. E. M. Whiting with VINCENNES (CA 44), MIAMI (CL 89) and Destroyer Squadron 61 for a shore bombardment of Okino Daito (or Borodino) Island, 195 miles east of Okinawa. The force made three firing runs on a reported enemy radar station there.

In mid-March, and for the next two months, life for the SAN DIEGO crew was an endless schedule of sorties to support invasion landings in the Okinawa area. The one important diversion involved towing and escorting the USS HAGGARD (DD 555), a destroyer that was terribly damaged by a kamikaze. The SAN DIEGO took off 31 of the badly wounded while en route to Kerama Retto, a protected island repair base off Okinawa. The crew turned from fighting to tending the sick, giving up their bunks to the seriously wounded. They provided food, candy, ice cream; new uniforms and comfort. A few days later, the survivors were transferred to a hospital ship, and the SAN DIEGO rejoined its formation.

At the end of May, another switch in fleet numbers put everyone back in the Third Fleet, in support of the Okinawa campaign. Admiral Halsey commanded the Third Fleet, Admiral Spruance the Fifth.

For two days at the end of June, the ship was dry docked in the Philippines for minor repairs, a routine inspection of her bottom, and rest for the crew. In mid-July, SAN DIEGO skipper Captain William Mullan passed word to the crew that the ship would be going back to the States for a yard availability, or maintenance period, in mid-August. The crew exploded with joy. At the end of three years in the combat zone without a full overhaul, the ship and crew deserved a little relief. However, it was not to be: such are the Navy’s ways. The U.S. forces began massive and incessant B-29 bombing attacks and shore bombardment of the Japanese seacoasts by powerful naval forces -aggressive preparations for the invasion of Japan. SAN DIEGO was ordered back to operate with the Third Fleet through July into early August, when Admiral Halsey sent all fleet units to rendezvous 200 miles east of Tokyo. But two atomic bomb blasts virtually ended the War, and the Japanese Finally surrendered unconditionally in mid-August.

The climax of SAN DIEGO‘s war career was her selection to be flagship of Task Force 31. With her dramatic entry into Tokyo Bay, the United States accepted the surrender of the giant Yokosuka Naval Shipyard. The ship had been winning battle stars right up until September 2, when, weary of the great long battle, she headed for home, having thereby earned the Japanese Occupation Medal as well.

On the last of the three days they were docked in the Yokosuka Naval Shipyard, all of the SAN DIEGO‘s crew were allowed to set foot in Japan. One clever sailor put it, “It was like thirty seconds over Yokosuka,” but everyone was proud to be number one.

On September 1, they pulled away from the dock to anchor a short distance offshore, where they took aboard 250 officers and men as passengers. They were fully qualified for discharge and were eligible to go home. The following, morning, SAN DIEGO pulled her hook out of the Tokyo Bay mud and steamed out at 27 knots on a direct course for home – San Francisco. That same day, the formal surrender by Japan took place aboard the USS MISSOURI, as 258 allied ships filled the bay to celebrate their victory.

From the SAN DIEGO‘s cruise book: “Anchoring in Tokyo Bay will be remembered for two things. We saw a real setting sun over Fujiyama, and we had movies on the fantail. If we needed any last assurance that the war was over that was it.”

USS returning to San Diego.jpg (27313 bytes)San Francisco gave a giant welcome to the decorated ship passing under the Golden Gate upon arrival in the USA. The city of San Diego then invited the USS SAN DIEGO to a much larger celebration on Navy Day, October 27th, the most extravagant bash the city ever hosted.

Chief electrician’s mate Mike Lawless, of the Navy Veterans Association, composed this tribute; “Of all the ships and all the crews I served with the U.S.S. San Diego, CL-53 and crew has a special place in my heart. It always has and always will be my favorite ship and crew. The day I left the San Diego CL-53, I walked from the gangway to the bow with my seabag slung over my shoulder, and I said to myself, I am just going to keep walking and not look back. When I was parallel to the bow, I stopped, took a look back at that beautiful ship and said, ‘You carried me all through that war safely and brought me back,’ then I proceeded to cry like a baby.”

USS SAN DIEGO was decommissioned and placed in the Bremerton, Washington reserve fleet on November 4, 1946. She was redesigned CLAA-53 (light antiaircraft cruiser) in March 1949, On March 1, 1959, the Navy struck her from the lists and she was scrapped.

THE SHIP USS San Diego (CL 53)

THE SHIP USS San Diego (CL 53)THE SHIP USS San Diego (CL 53)

The USS San Diego (CL 53) was christened at launching in July 1941 by Grace Benbough, wife of the mayor of the ship’s namesake city. Commissioned into service six months later-just a month after the Pearl Harbor attack-the San Diego soon joined the Pacific Fleet with which she served nearly continuously throughout World War II.

The San Diego was a light cruiser-one of four of the Atlanta class-and the only one of her sisters to survive the war unscathed. Ships of this class could steam at over 30 knots and carried a main battery of 16 five-inch guns, which enabled them to provide formidable anti-aircraft defense for the fast carrier task forces that spearheaded the naval offensive in the Pacific.

A fortunate and well-run ship, always ready for action, the San Diego steamed over 300,000 nautical miles, engaged the enemy on 34 different occasions, and never lost a man. She earned 18 battle stars for her World War 11 service, more than any other Navy ship except for the famous carrier Enterprise.

In recognition of her battle record and her long, reliable and steady service-from the darkest days of the war to the final victory-Admiral Halsey designated the San Diego to be the first allied warship to enter Tokyo Bay at the war’s end.

Returning after the war to the city for which she was named, the San Diego received a tumultuous welcome and was the center of jubilant Navy Day celebrations. Barely a year later, a brief but action-filled career came to a close when she was decommissioned in November 1946.

PCU San Diego (LPD 22)

PCU San Diego (LPD 22)PCU San Diego (LPD 22)

Is slated for commissioning in FY 2011 and whn commissioned becomes the fourth USS SAN DIEGO. The new USS SAN DIEGO is a San Antonio class amphibious assault ship.

San Antonio Class 21st Century Amphibious Assault Ships
– LPD 17 Transforming America’s Expeditionary Force

It’s more than just a word. It is a mindset…a way of operating that has its roots in the birth of the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps over 225 years ago. And it is the foundation for 21st-century peacetime forward deployments, responses to crises world wide, the War on Terrorism, and warfighting to protect America’s citizens, friends, and vital interests wherever and whenever they might be at risk. It is the essence of naval operations from the sea – anytime…anywhere.

“The operational commanders will be standing up and cheering when the day arrives that we can finally get these ships in the fleet.”

— Admiral William J. Fallon, VCNO, SASC Seapower Subcommittee, 24 July 2001

San Antonio Class Ships

LPD 17 LPD 18 LPD 19 LPD 20
LPD 21 LPD 22 LPD 23 LPD 24
LPD 25 LPD 26 LPD 27 LPD 28 PCU San Diego
Production photograph of LPD-22 (Apr 6, 2010)

The Navy and Marine Corps have put in place a well-crafted vision to ensure that the nation has the naval expeditionary forces – ships, aircraft, weapons, and systems – to carry out a full spectrum of roles, missions, and tasks in the new century. The projected 12 San Antonio (LPD 17)-Class amphibious assault ships are vital elements of this Sea Power 21 and Naval Vision 21 and are a top expeditionary warfare priority.

Operating forward, from the sea, America’s Amphibious Ready Groups (ARGs) and their Marine Expeditionary Units (Special Operations Capable) [MEU (SOC) s] are multimission crisis-response “tools.” They are a mix of highly mobile air and ground firepower with self-sustainable forces that can quickly project compelling power, withdraw rapidly, and then reconstitute to redeploy for follow-on missions. In the Sea Power 21 concept, Expeditionary Strike Groups, combining expeditionary warships, surface combatants, submarines, and Littoral Combat Ships will serve as Sea Strike and Sea Shield force multipliers, operating from Sea Bases worldwide. The LPD 17 Class will be a fulcrum for these future naval expeditionary operations.

Emerging visions – the Navy’s Forward…From the Sea, and the Marine Corps’ Operational Maneuver From the Sea (OMFTS) and its tactical implementation plan, Ship-to-Objective Maneuver (STOM) – have defined the requirements for the 21st- century warfighting environment and the capabilities needed to succeed in the littoral battlespace. Designed from the keel up for littoral crises and conflicts, the LPD 17 Class will support sustained and continuous operations in this challenging environment. Sea Power 21 built upon these requirements to focus forces and Sea Warriors to innovative employment and operational strategies to best serve our national security. Enhanced amphibious capabilities and advanced warfighting systems make these WARSHIPS the right tool for the expeditionary warriors in the 21st century.

Enhanced Warfighting

Designed to fight, the San Antonio Class war fighting capabilities include a state-of-the-art command and control suite, substantially increased vehicle lift capacity, a large flight deck, and advanced ship survivability features that enhance its ability to operate in the unforgiving littoral environment. The deployment of LPD 17s will provide each naval expeditionary force with greatly enhanced operational flexibility. The LPD 17 can operate as part of an Amphibious Task Force – the “workhorse” of a three-ship ARG – organized to accomplish a broad range of military objectives; or as an element of a “Split-ARG” that has the LPD 17 detached and operating as a single ship, supporting lower-risk operations. Furthermore, it has the warfighting potential to fully operate within an Expeditionary Strike Group or perhaps serve as a mother shipto planned Littoral Combat Ships. This mission flexibility fully expands the ARG’s or ESGs area of influence by providing an improved capability to cover multiple areas of responsibility, while responding to several crises simultaneously.

Improved LIFT – strategic and tactical – is critical to the sustainment of power projection operations. The San Antonio Class is the functional replacement for four Classes of less capable amphibious ships equipped with 1970’s and early 1980’s technology, including its predecessor, the USS Austin (LPD-4) Class. Each LPD 17 has 25,000 square feet of vehicle storage space, more than the larger Wasp (LHD-1)-Class multipurpose assault ship and double that of the LPD-4. When the required twelfth ship (LPD-28) reaches the fleet, the Navy’s amphibious force will have the enhanced lift it needs to support forward presence operations and successfully implement the OMFTS and STOM concepts.

The LPD 17 is the first amphibious ship designed to accommodate the Marine Corps’ “mobility triad” – Advanced Amphibious Assault Vehicles (AAAV), Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC), and the Marine Corps’ new tilt-rotor MV-22 Osprey – for high-speed, long-range tactical-lift operations. Just as “littoral” has come to mean operations that begin well “over-the-horizon” (OTH), some 600 miles from an adversary’s coastline, the “mobility triad” will ensure our ability to “reach out and touch someone” 200 miles inland, at revolutionary speeds.

Built Tough & For a Dangerous World

America’s warships are designed and built to operate in harm’s way. Even in peacetime, the threat of attack always lurks in the shadows. The multi-mission San Antonio Class is designed and engineered to operate either as a critical part of a group, or alone, operating forward, in hostile waters. The LPD 17 has a reduced vulnerability in the littoral environment by minimizing radar cross section signature using a streamlined topside design. Combining this significant improvement with state-of-the-art command and control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (C4ISR) capabilities and upgraded self-defense systems significantly improves the ship’s ability to defeat airborne threats. The LPD 17 design reflects a revolutionary emphasis on shipboard survivability through an organization that will support both traditional manning and core/flex approaches, a focus on vulnerability reduction, and 21st-century survivability features. Never before has a design meshed these attributes into such a comprehensive approach to optimizing ship survivability.

Although LPD 17 is not flagship-configured, it does contain enhanced command and control features and a robust communications suite that greatly improve its ability to support embarked landing forces, Marine Air Ground Task Forces, Joint or friendly forces. The ship’s Combat Information Center, Marine Tactical Logistics Center, mini-Intelligence Center, and Troop Operations command and control spaces are equipped with large screen displays and dedicated computer consoles. Removable “smart bulkheads” integrate these spaces to create synergy and the shared knowledge needed to improve operational agility. A separate mission planning space provides the assets for crisis action planning critical to Special Operations Capable missions.

The heart of the ship’s defensive capability is a quick reaction Ship Self-Defense System (SSDS) that correlates sensor information, provides threat identification and evaluation, assesses own-ship defense readiness, and recommends optimal tactical defense responses against anti-ship missile and aircraft attacks in a cluttered conflict environment. Information flow will be equally state-of-the-art, as the LPD 17 is the first U.S. Navy ship to be equipped with a fiber-optic Shipboard Wide Area Network (SWAN). The SWAN connects all ship systems, combat systems, sensors, and command and control nodes with the ship’s warfighting consoles to provide the essential real-time decision-making information required for fighting the ship effectively.

Employment of the “mobility triad” affords LPD 17, current ARGs, and future ESGs with an OTH maneuver capability that extends their operating range and improves threat reaction time. Highly capable air- and surface-search radar systems, the revolutionary Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC), the Rolling Airframe Missile system, and the Mk 53 Nulka Decoy Launching System present an impressive array of self-defense capabilities. An upgrade path has been defined to accommodate future advanced radar systems for long-term horizon-search and fire-control requirements on LPD 17 in the 21st century.

The ship will carry two high rate-of-fire Mk 46 Mod 1 automated 30mm Close-in Gun System mounts. The Mk 46 provides long-range lethality while engaging small, high-speed, surface targets. The LPD 17 design also reserves space and weight for adding improvements such as a Vertical Launcher for the Evolved Sea-Sparrow Missile System to boost future capability.

Innovative, Affordable Design

The San Antonio Program has been structured to ensure seamless integration of Navy and Marine Corps assets. With the decision to involve the war fighter from the keel up, the LPD 17 Team embraced a “Design for Ownership” philosophy to interact with the fleet’s operating forces – the Navy and Marine Corps operators, maintainers, and trainers who will ultimately use the ship. This unique engineering approach injected warfighter inputs into the development process early on, shaping every element of the ship’s program, while simultaneously addressing the warship’s fundamental functionality to fine-tune its design and meet the warfighters’ needs.

The LPD 17 Program also took advantage of numerous “Smart Technologies” and optimized-manning initiatives to achieve significant cost avoidance in the operating and support costs of this 12-ship Class. Addressing manning and human-systems integration issues early in the developmental process was absolutely essential, since some 60 percent of a ship’s total ownership costs – cradle-to-grave – are linked directly to its operating and support expenses. In response, the LPD 17 was designed for a significantly reduced crew size the projected manning of 361 men and women is 14 percent less than that of the smaller and far less-capable LPD-4 ships that the LPD 17 Class replaces.

The San Antonio design reflects a focus on reducing workload. Its all-electric auxiliaries eliminate existing maintenance-intensive steam systems to achieve significant support savings by reducing crew workload over the ship’s 40-year lifetime. To further reduce maintenance support requirements, corrosion-resistant materials are used throughout the ship, high solids paint is used on the well deck overhead and ballast tanks, and the ship’s interior decks are covered with wear-resistant tile. The ship’s design with its hull-length overboard discharges and elimination of cuppers will avoid the repeated painting of running rust down the ship’s side.

Enhanced Quality of Service

The Design for Ownership approach led to changes that will enable every Sailor and Marine to focus on warfighting and associated training and less on routine facilities management and own-unit support. The LPD 17 also provides the latest quality-of-life features to help reduce some of the rigors of life at sea. Newly designed gender-neutral living spaces will have “sit-up” berths and adjacent head and lounge facilities. All crewmembers and Marines will be able to access e-mail and Internet services within their berthing spaces via the SWAN.

The SWAN also advances the art of onboard training on the LPD 17 Class. The ship’s training department will employ a Total Ship Training System to develop lesson plans, conduct training, and document results. Dedicated training spaces include the Learning Resource Center and Electronic Classroom, and even the ship’s chapel has been designed to convert into a Classroom. The ship is designed to support Marine training needs by providing space for an indoor simulated weapons range, as well as other weapons trainers in the well deck and vehicle stowage spaces. Crews will be able to train in their Advanced Amphibious Assault Vehicles as they interact with the ship’s Battle Force Tactical Trainer.

Meeting the Nation’s Needs

America’s naval expeditionary forces – particularly its multi-mission ARG/MEUs and future ESGs – are at the leading edge of global operations that protect important U.S. interests, allies, and friendly nations. They help maintain peace and stability in troubled regions around the world, provide the foundation for quick, effective response when crises and conflicts erupt, and are expected to be at the leading edge in the War on Terrorism.

When the first Sailors and Marines step onboard USS San Antonio in 2004, they will bring forward a history of expeditionary operations from the sea that began more than two centuries ago. The 12 multimission LPD 17s are the foundation needed for extending that tradition of expeditionary warfare excellence well into the 21st century. 

The twelve ships of the LPD 17 Class program will be the replacement for three Classes of amphibious ships that have reached the end of their service life — the LPD 4, LSD 36, and LST 1179 Classes – and one Class that has already been retired, the LKA 113 — replacing a total of 41 ships.

Ground BreakingGround Breaking

If you are a member of the USS San Diego Association or attended the ground breaking ceremony and would like digital copies of any of the pictures, please contact us.

MODELS FOR USS SAN DIEGO MEMORIAL ON DISPLAY IN THE PARSONAGE MUSEUM

MODELS FOR USS SAN DIEGO MEMORIAL ON DISPLAY IN THE PARSONAGE MUSEUMMODELS FOR USS SAN DIEGO MEMORIAL ON DISPLAY IN THE PARSONAGE MUSEUM

The models for the landmark public art project, honoring the World War II cruiser, USS San Diego, will be displayed in The Parsonage Museum of Lemon Grove Mar. 29 through May 31 in conjunction with the current exhibition, “Lemon Grove in World War II,” it was jointly announced today by Helen Ofield, president of the Lemon Grove Historical Society and Capt. Leonard Shea, president of the USS San Diego Memorial Association.

 

Four years in the making, the USS San Diego Memorial will be installed this year on Harbor Drive at the G Street Mole as a tribute to the extended San Diego community, whose efforts were critical to victory in World War 11. San Diego presently lacks a major World War II memorial.

“The memorial will help to educate San Diegans about their city’s namesake warship and its remarkable history,” said Capt. Shea, who was the commissioning officer for the USS San Diego in 1941 and co-founder of the Memorial Association. “Because of their impressive efforts to present the story of the vanishing generation of World War II veterans, we asked the Lemon Grove Historical Society to be the first to show the models in East County.”

The USS San Diego was the second most decorated ship during the war, earning 18 battle stars, second only to the USS Enterprise with 20 battle stars. From Guadalcanal to the end of the war, the 7500-ton San Diego engaged the enemy 34 times, steamed 320,000 nautical miles more than any other U.S. ship in the war zone — dodged countless bombs, torpedoes and kamikazes, yet never lost a man to enemy action.

Admiral Halsey selected the San Diego to be the first warship to enter Tokyo Bay after hostilities ended. On Aug. 27, 1945 five days before the peace ceremony aboard the USS Missouri, the Yokohama-Yokosuka area was surrendered in a ceremony aboard the San Diego.

On Sept. 13, 1945 the San Diego led a formation of battle-proven vessels through the Golden Gate Bridge to become the first capital ship to return to the West Coast after the Japanese surrender.

The Memorial Association commissioned the noted California artists, Lou Quaintance, Berkeley, and Eugene Daub, San Pedro, to create the striking stone, terra cotta and bronze monument. A massive, abstract ship’s prow dominates the four sections, with the San Diego surging through waves carved in bas relief on the south section. A life size statue of a weary but resolute sailor stands by the inscribed dedication to the ship and its crew. Stretching from the base of the monument is a map showing the ship’s wartime track inlaid in brass. The freestanding monument allows visitors to walk around and through its sections.

Among Daub’s numerous public sculptures are the World War 11 commemorative bronze plaque in Asan Park, Guam; the dramatic Lewis and Clark monument in Kansas City, and the huge medallion on the Supreme Court of the State of Nevada in Carson City.

The beauty and historical significance of the USS San Diego Memorial prompted the Port of San Diego, through its Public Art Program, to donate the waterfront site for the monument on Harbor Drive. The monument has been supported entirely by private contributions to the non profit USS San Diego Memorial Association. Donations to assist the project can be sent to P.O. Box 182142, Coronado, CA 92178.