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Letters,
we get letters. . . |
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A quick update for
the history page.. Westpac '80 dates are Jan 11,
1980-June 12 1980 (including 4 days towing the
"Br-Okinawa").. There was
no '79 westpac, Gridley came out of the yards in early '79 and
did exercises and work up
'till the Jan 80 departure.. The ports for the '80 Westpac
were - Pearl - Yokosuka - Subic - Pattaya Beach, Thailand -
Singapore - Mogadiscio, Somalia -
Mombasa, Kenya - Perth, Australia - Subic
- Guam - Pearl.. The task for the '80 cruise was to protect and
escort the amphibious ready group
which was there to support the (failed)
hostage rescue attempt.. Don Morrison
Editor's
Note: Some of us would have a hard time imagining GRIDLEY
towing an aircraft carrier but the proof is here. |
Just
found the web page while looking at several other Navy pages.
Reported aboard the USS Gridley on 07Feb68 and left the ship
when she went into Bath, Maine for the conversion, left ship on
10Sep68. First went into the "Deck
Crew" were now Senator Kerry as a Ltjg oversaw the
operations. I do remember a "Chief" that
really ran the show, but unable to remember his name. Will
have to look it up in my "Cruise Book" later - book at
my parents. Made YN3 on 15Jul68 while on the
Gridley. My memory is
some what foggy, but remember crossing the Equator and becoming
a Shellback in route to New Zealand. Remember that Captain
Harper (sp) was also initiated and led the pog line along the
deck. Remember launching missles at boggies coming
out from N. Nam, but only three missles made it and the
paperwork that was required to answer why the fourth did not. Remember
Wellington, New Zealand and the great fun, drink and ladies. Anyway,
now that I have "bookmarked" this webpage, I will
return soon. Got out of
active duty in late 1969, stayed in Reserves for another six
years, then quit. Got back into the Navy Reserves in
the Seabees seven years ago, and just this year made Equipment
Operator Chief. Anyway,
email, or write.Richard BurdetteP.O. Box 245Grayland, Washington
98547cpoburdette@techline.com
Editors
Note: If I had known I could beat Captain Harper's butt I
would have extended for the rest of the cruise and not gone home
from Subic in May.
I visited
"Ensign" Kerry when I was in Washington once. We
had stood many a mid-watch together. The now
"Senator" Kerry didn't really have a clue who I was
but was very hospitable. Introduced me to Ted Kennedy and
we had a brief encounter with VP Al Gore. I didn't tell
anyone I was a Republican! |
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My name is Tim Draughon, I served on
the Gridley from Dec.77 until Aug.81 in deck division. I was a
second class when I got off active duty, and ended up in the
reserves a month later. Of all the years and all the ships and
units I have served with, my fondiest years are the ones I spent
on the "The Worlds Greatest Cruiser".
I remember Rieley and Springer
and a few other names I have seen on other web sites. The only
one I ever stayed in contact with is BM3 Steve Rose form
Missouri, just spoke with him last night.
I made the West-Pac in 80, and
boy do I remember the rough weather, unfortunately the bridge
had to be manned no matter how bad things got. I would love to
talk to some of my old shipmates that I served during the late
70's and early 80's. I need to make a correction to one of the
pictures on the web site, we did not to the Iwo but the Okinowa,
anyone who was there will remember Mr Watabayashi sitting on the
01 level aft standing the gonzo watch, I can't recall anyone
with that much time left to go with that poor an outlook.
I am trying to find a deckape
that served during my years named Tim Addams, not sure if it's
one or two D's. Last I heard he left for OS A school I missed
him in the PI he was on the Midway moored in front of us for one
night and never heard from him again. I wish everyone fair winds
and following seas. |
From Peter WIlliams
Thank you for the site on the USS
Gridley.
My Dad (Hersey
Williams) was a senior chief on the ship during the mid-1960s.
I've learned a lot of things that he never told me.

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Phil, my name is Dave Springer. I was an
FTM2 on Gridley from 77-80. I just
sent Keith my roster info. I work here at NSWC Port Hueneme CA with at
least three ex-Gridleyites. I can give you
some info on my period onboard.
I reported aboard from SPG-55 Mod 8
(Terrier Fire Control Radar)school at Mare
Island in Nov. 77. The first thing we did was go to Acapulco Mexico
for 5 days of fun in the sun. Then in Jan 78
we went to LBNSY for overhaul, during
which the 55's were upgraded to Mod 8. I spent 5 weeks at the Sperry
plant in Long Island doing what was called
factory acceptance testing on our systems.
Several of the FTMs were rotated there during that period. We left
the yards in Mar. 79 and did workups in SoCal. We deployed for WestPac
in Jan '80 and returned July 80. Stopped in
Pearl Harbor for several days, then
headed to Subic. I think it was during that transit that we weathered
a hell of a storm for several days. No hot
food, and no normal work routine.
Just stay in your rack or whatever to keep from getting too beat up.
We were in company with several FF 1052 frigates, and they were taking
water over the entire mast structure. They
lost ship's boats and radar antennas
big time.
We were part of the escort for a Marine
amphibious group. As such, we spent a
lot of time in the Indian Ocean (not sure about dates). This was during
the Iranian hostage situation, and we saw lots of Soviet ships (both
intelligence and war ships), and had a
number of Bear aircraft overflights, some
of them pretty low. Our contribution to the failed hostage rescue
attempt was to go the opposite way of the
Nimitz (I think that was the ship they
launched from) to pull the Soviet IG ships away.
After 50+ days underway in the IO our
first port visit was, of all places, Somalia.
Moslem country, no alcohol. Very popular stop (not). Seems the U.S.
was trying to kiss and make up with them in order to get access to the
port and airport facilities built by the
Russian, who had recently been kicked
out. We were the first American ship to visit there in a long time.
The American embassy held a 3 day pool party
(with beer!!) and that's where we
spent most of our time.
Next stop was Kenya, nothing special to
remember it by. Then we went to Perth
Australia which was a 5 day party as trips to Australia usually are.
Then I think we headed home by way of Pearl
Harbor. Please info me on all Gridley
related email. Also, I have some WestPac 80 pictures
I will forward. Don't want the pre-Zumwalt guys to get all the glory.
We youngsters knew how to party too. Thanks
V/R Dave
Springer
Thanks Dave,
this is the kind of info we need to flesh out the history of
GRIDLEY. Don't worry, we won't think all you post-Zumwalt guys are
wussies, but we need the photo proof first! |
Springer
then |
Now |

Springer and his kids. We decided to
put this in even though his son had the poor taste to become a
jarhead. (only kidding Dave)
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| Phil,
Are you the white haired dude that was at
the Gridley decom with Proud?
Larry (Flick) Flickinger FTMSN/
FTM3
Gridley (Oct 64- Apr 67)
Guilty dude! You
still surfing too Flick? |
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Keith,
Phil & Ted
Great job on the Gridley webpage. I wish
someone would do the same for my old home....USS Belknap DLG 26/CG 26.
Ted Hetherington and I were/are still great buddies from the '68 Nam
cruise. He was on the Gridley and forwarded the page to me. Again, great
job.
Jeff Sand GMG2
USN '66-'70 |
| Kevin
Reilly (FTM2) Kevin.Reilly@inrange.com
writes:
I served onboard the "World's
Greatest Cruiser" from April 1979 to July 1983. I made
two trips to San Diego to see the Gridley decommissioned (in December
1993 and January 21 1994), and I
would travel anywhere from my home near Denver to attend
a reunion of the USS Gridley CG-21. Wild horses could not stop me from
going to the Decommissioning and Wild Horses
will not be able to stop me from going
to a reunion of my shipmates! I still keep my copy of the
Decommissioning brochure in a safe
deposit box. Seeing MY ship with her masts cut off broke my heart.
As well as the seeing that She was to be scraped with MY 55B's still
onboard tore out by broken heart. I guess
that I hurt my pride that MY radars did
not warrant special attention. When I parked my rental car for the
Decommissioning, I ran into CW04 Bullock,
who was in my division on the Gridley and
who is the reason that I did not re-enlist As I left the Navy some
eleven and half years earlier, the
past was just water under the bridge. I kept up with Mr.
Bullock for a while after that (Christmas cards) but eventually let the
contact die. Like I said, Mr. Bullock and I
were not friends. Me and Mr. Bullock is
a story for another day.
I see that Dave Springer contributed
pictures to the Gridley's web page. I served
onboard during the same time as Dave, and I have tons photos of that
same era. And I recognized several of
the people in Dave's pictures. I don't think that
I will be able to sleep to night from all the memories. Though none of
my pictures have been converted into
jpeg's, if you want to use any of them I will scan
them and provide them. I have been itching for an excuse to get a
scanner and scan my photo album. You
could say that I was a shutter bug in those days. I contributed
to the 81-82 cruse book. Just look for the misspelled Helo.
The Aft 55 Radar room was my home for
over four years. I ended up being the Aft Battery
Supervisor. Dave Springer worked in the Forward 55 Radar room. I am
currently looking for Jim Lanham, a friend
of mine who worked with Dave. I am sad
to admit that I lost contact with my shipmates within the first year
after getting out of the Navy in July
of 1983. My chief was standing on the Quarter Deck
when I walked off it for the last time. (I forget his name.) He told me
that I would be back. Well my chief was
wrong and he was right. Wrong because I did
not go back, except to see the Gridley decommissioned. Right because I
should not have left the Gridley and the
Navy. My Navy training has bought me a high
paying career and with it a very good living. But something has
beenmissing and by the time that I would admit it to myself, it was too
late to go back. Enough crying over
spilt milk.
True stories from a small world: I have
run into three of my shipmates from the Gridley
over the past 17 years.
The first time that I ran into a shipmate
was in my first six months after leaving
the Gridley. I don't remember his name (his rank was DS1). I ran into
him at the Norfolk Naval Base where we were
both Field Engineers working for different
Navy contractors. I left that job soon after for a Field Engineering
position with Storage Technology in Denver
and I never saw him again.
The second time that I ran into a
shipmate was in Denver. It was my first or second
Christmas Day in Denver. I was employed as a Field Engineer for Storage
Technology and my customer had put in a service call. (I almost always
end up working on holidays.) It was
midnight, and I had just stepped into my customer supplied
office to grab a spare part, and he waked by the door. I know his name,
and if I were to think about it long enough,
it would come to me. He was one of the
Gunner's Mates in the Aft Missile House. On the Gridley we walked in
different circles and we were never friends.
He got himself fired soon after and I
never saw him again.
The third and last time that I ran into a
shipmate was in December of 1993. I had
come to San Diego to visit the Gridley the month before she was to be
Decommissioned. I was driving around Ocean
Beach trying to find my old haunts, and
out of the corner of my eye I saw a car go out of control on a side
street. I went back to see if I could
help. But I was not needed. While I waited around to
give my report to the police, I keep thinking that one of the other
witnesses looked familiar. And sure
enough, I not only knew him from the Gridley, and not only was he was
from my Fox Division, he was the guy who had the bunk next to me for
a couple of years! He was the 48 Radar technician. I could shoot myself
as I did not get his address.
Running into Mr. Bullock did not count as
a small would as one would expect to run
into shipmates at a time like that. Sorry
to take up so much of your time reminiscing. If
you are able to find enough Grildey'ites for a reunion, let me know. I
will be there.
Haze Gray and Under Way, |
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From David P. Broich, Miller Place,
long Island, NY 11764
Saw your site and I'm very impressed.
Bring back a lot of memories. I'd
like to reintroduce myself to you.
David P. Broich (MT3 converted to FTM3).
I am a "plank owner" of the USS
Gridley DLG-21. I served on
board until just after returning to Long Beach in November, 1964.
I was assigned to the after missile house.
After returning to Long Beach I was
transferred to the USS England DLG-22 for
a short while. I served for
4-years & 4-months (was involuntarily extended four months).
A few recollection points may be of
interest to you & your site.
1. Degaussing in San Diego (wrapping
cables around the ship).
2. If you recall the Ship's first WestPac
deployment, lumber for the pollywogs
initiation pool was stored in the after missile house for safe keeping.
* I was responsible for nailing the
lumber into one big log in the aft
missile house. The two-man rule with a sentry access log gave me away.
Well, I was made a "special case"
during the initiation. King Neptune (Capt. Lilly)
and his Shell-Back henchmen blistered my rear (one on each side of
me) while kneeling in front of him. I
vividly remember not sitting for several
days afterward.
* I also remember a young pretty-boy
Lt.Jg declaring "I won't let them cut
my hair". Well, just prior to the pool dunking they did cut his
hair. He fought like a lunatic until
Capt. Lilly looked down and ordered him "in hack".
I believe he missed all of Australia liberty.
* A scary situation occurred when the
ship was blown away from the swimmers
during the swim-call just prior to the initiation. Remember the swimmers
were almost out of sight by the time the ship was able to respond
to rescue them.
* The kangaroo mascot we kept after the
Australia visit. How it died of
gang-green after a botched rubber-band castration attempt.
* The baby duck I bought 25 centavos
while on liberty in Subic Bay. We actually
kept it alive and happy near the after gun shack for several weeks.
The crew, including the skipper, used to be
entertained by it in the evenings
while on Yankee Station. It hurts to say Yankee today because I'm a
Met fan and the Yankees won the series last
night. I actually went to the only
game the Mets won (4:2) on Tuesday night.
* Mention of our ship's activity was made
during the Gulf of Libya situation
several years ago. They said at the time that the "last time a US
war ship passed though contentious waters
was in 1964 through the Straits of Indonesia".
Wasn't that the USS GRIDLEY DLG-21 ? We were at Condition-3 all that
time.
* I used to sail the small sailboat the
crew had. I had no problem passing
the usage test because the young officer who was responsible for those
tests used to a sailing instructor in the Great South Bay of Long
Island and he knew my father's schooner.
Subic Bay was safe for sailing & I had
a ball. Remember we auctioned off the sailboat just prior to returning
to Long Beach and how it was destroyed in
the storm we hit a night or two before
reaching port. Funny how you remember these incidents. The boat WAS
close to me though because I used it so
much.
* I was the third baseman for the Ship's
softball team. We played all over the
WestPac ports. We even played the Australians.
* Several scary incidents come to mind.
* When a diver surfaced by the fantail
while in Hong Kong Harbor one night.
* When one of the crew shot himself the
first day in Australia.
* When a strut bearing on one of the
screws broke loose while on Yankee
Station causing the ship to have to return to Subic for repairs.
* When we had missiles on the launcher
and the launcher assigned while at GQ
on Yankee Station.
* When Gunners Mate 1st Class Danner hit
me over the head with a San Migel
beer bottle at the club in Subic.
At any rate, it was fun to reminisce.
Warmest Regards,
David P. Broich |
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Brent Curtis sends us an incredible tale
of GRIDLEY during the 69-71 period.
I seem to have been on the Gridley during
a time when there's not much history
for that period. Well we were a strange bunch. After Gridley
went to Bath, Maine for overhaul, we picked her up there and sailed
to Norfolk. 90% of the crew had never been to sea and most were leaning
over the rail before we even got out into the ocean.
I remember when we left Norfolk we ran
over a buoy and had to have the Coast
Guard tow us back to the dock and try again the next day. We
went from there to the Panama Canal, stopped at Panama City for half
a day and then up to Long Beach.
Went into the yards at Long Beach for
several months, went on sea trials
and then WesPac. We spent Christmas day in Subic and the next two
weeks getting shots in sick bay. We spent our time on NorSAR and Sasabo,
Japan. When we first got there tho, we did spend about a month
sitting off of North Korea doing electronic spying. Then off to NorSAR.
We hit Hong Kong a couple times and Subic on the way back.
Guam on the way over where we were asked
to leave and not come back. They
opened the EM club for us while we refueled and we went a little overboard.
Seems like I remember armed guards on the pier when we stopped
to refuel on the way home. I remembered I volunteered to go get
mail so I could get off the ship.
I also remember when we got to Pearl, we
had a change of command and we were
supposed to have a missile shoot just before we got back to Long
Beach. The forward 55B radar was not working and we needed a new bull
ring which would require going into the yard for major work. The new
Captain decided not to let us (Fox Division) off the ship at Pearl
until all radars were up. That didn't go over so well.
When we got back to Long Beach, I got off
the ship and a few months later got a medical.
We were a good crew, but it was a strange
time. It was a hard time to be in the
service. Civilians thought everyone was at My Lai. They didn't
really know how it all worked. I
know the Gridley went on another WesPac. Not sure if she did another
after that. Then I heard She was home ported in San Diego and then
put out to pasture. I don't believe she ever make it to the East Coast
again.
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You may not know it, but Gridley was the site
of the Navy's first non-tactical computer system situated onboard a
combatant vessel. DPC Roland Pharr was stationed onboard Gridley to tend
the system. I found out about the computer and started working with Chief
Pharr after hours (I was a poor-excuse-of-an-ET at the time). I did manage
to change my rating to DP after several months.
The computer was part of a project to evaluate
the use of mini- computers onboard combatant ships. The sponsoring command
was the Navy Personnel Research and Development Center (NPRDC) at Pt.
Loma. The original system was a Data General NOVA 1200, but was replaced
by a DEC PDP-11/60 system while the ship was in the yards in Long Beach.
(OH... that 11/60 had two 6MB disk drives, each costing about $30,000...
the entire system cost over $100,000. The average PC today could've run
rings around that DEC...)
The original use of the computer was to
provide Damage Control Training, but evolved into many other aspects. We
established a ship's personnel roster among other things. Certainly we had
a hard time getting people to initially use this new-fangled thing, but
after awhile, they couldn't live without it. The computer center was put
into an existing EW shack, the highest working space on the ship. Lots of
people probably remember climbing up to that room to take tests (had to go
outside to get to it!). It was right behind one of the forward -55 Fire
Control Radars.
I don't know what happened to the system
after I left the Navy. Actually, I was onboard Gridley as a
civilian when it deployed to
WESPAC in January 1980, training my
replacement. I finally left the ship for good when we got to Hawaii (after
towing the Okinawa for awhile). I sometimes wonder what happened after
that?
Ray Haas ET/DP
I can answer the questions about this computer
system. I reported aboard Gridley in June of '81. At the time
EWC Raper was running the system, and I was tasked to replace him.
During the yard period following the
81-82 WestPac, the system was removed from the ship and installed into a
motor home. If I remember correctly, it never went back aboard, it
was replaced by a SNAPII system. As near as I recall, Gridley was the
first non- FFG to get SNAPII. The SNAP system was installed in the old OE
cal lab back near the after CPO quarters.
Hope this helps.
Terry Roberts ET 81-84 |
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