PS, hope this works first time posting pic's

Moderators: Joel Billings, wdolson, Don Bowen, mogami
ORIGINAL: TOMLABEL
She looks like she's in good shape. Do you know her latest disposition? Bound for the scap heap?
ORIGINAL: rtrapasso
ORIGINAL: TOMLABEL
She looks like she's in good shape. Do you know her latest disposition? Bound for the scap heap?
"In 1999, the former USS Crescent City was moved to Oakland, California, for use as a cultural center, under the name Artship."
My mother was stationed at Mare Island during WW2 and has fond memories of the place. I went to Nuclear Power School there in 1970 (class 70-1) and my fond memories are of the strip club about two blocks off base. I went to that den of sin for cultural and art purposes.Hello, several months ago I went back to Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, Ca to check out where I used to work. It was very depressing to see how run down and abandoned she is now compared to the spit and polish I remember. As I was driving up there was this fine looking ship tied up to the pier. I asked the guard there, and he said she is the USS Crescent City AP-40. I was shocked because I thought these ships were scraped decades ago. I thought you all might like to see some pictures of her.
ORIGINAL: khyberbill
My mother was stationed at Mare Island during WW2 and has fond memories of the place. I went to Nuclear Power School there in 1970 (class 70-1) and my fond memories are of the strip club about two blocks off base. I went to that den of sin for cultural and art purposes.Hello, several months ago I went back to Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, Ca to check out where I used to work. It was very depressing to see how run down and abandoned she is now compared to the spit and polish I remember. As I was driving up there was this fine looking ship tied up to the pier. I asked the guard there, and he said she is the USS Crescent City AP-40. I was shocked because I thought these ships were scraped decades ago. I thought you all might like to see some pictures of her.
Provide emotional support to your local stripper? I think the name of the place was Peanuts. We used to go to Tony's Depot Club first and have a shot and a beer. Tony's was next to the bus station. A shot and a beer during happy hour was a quarter. The shot came from a bottle with a name I cant recall but we called it Old Smothie. There was a line of these bottles behind the bar and each was a different shade. The beer was Olympia. A couple of those and a few pickled eggs and we were set for the weekend.Of course such clubs are for cultural purposes, what else could they be used for ?
ORIGINAL: khyberbill
My mother was stationed at Mare Island during WW2 and has fond memories of the place. I went to Nuclear Power School there in 1970 (class 70-1) and my fond memories are of the strip club about two blocks off base. I went to that den of sin for cultural and art purposes.Hello, several months ago I went back to Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, Ca to check out where I used to work. It was very depressing to see how run down and abandoned she is now compared to the spit and polish I remember. As I was driving up there was this fine looking ship tied up to the pier. I asked the guard there, and he said she is the USS Crescent City AP-40. I was shocked because I thought these ships were scraped decades ago. I thought you all might like to see some pictures of her.
We just missed each other. I arrived Jan 1, 1970 and left at the end of June for Idaho Falls, Idaho. I spent too many long hours studying nuclear physics and chemistry to miss the place! After my enlistment, when I returned to college I received two years of math and science credits for the six months spent there.After a WestPAC deployment my ship returned to Mare Island in the fall of 1970. It spent a yeat and ahalf there for refueling. Vallejo was a big navy town. Even the Pizza joints were topless and bottomless. We had it planned out so that we could hit happy hours from club to club 4pm to 9pm each night.
I live about 45 minutes from Vallejo and it was painful to watch the base reduced from a thriving surface and submarine facility to what it is today.