The
USS Missouri (the "
Mighty Mo") proudly rides at anchor in
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, next to the
USS Arizona Memorial, the two marking the beginning and the end of
World War II. The USS Missouri
Memorial opened
January 29,
1999 and is one of the most popular attractions in
Hawaii. One cannot fail to be deeply moved by the historic significance of this great ship. She was the last battleship ever built and the biggest. She is almost 900 feet long and over
100 feet in beam and more than
200 feet in height. Each link in the 1,200-foot long chains of her two anchors weighs over 100 pounds. 17 inches of solid steel protect her citadel from which the ship's operations were directed during battle. But even greater than her physical size is the size of her place in
American history.
On the deck of the USS Missouri on
September 2, 1945,
General Douglas MacArthur accepted
Japan's surrender, thereby ending World War II. And after World War II, the USS Missouri fought again in
Korea and in
Operation Desert Storm. The USS Missouri was launched on January 29,
1944, commissioned on June 11 of the same year, and reported for duty to the
Third Fleet in
Pearl Harbor on
Christmas Eve 1944. She became the flagship for
Admiral William "Bull" Halsey and was an important part of the war in the
Pacific, assisting in the bombing raids over
Tokyo and providing firepower in the battles of
Iwo Jima and
Okinawa. She was first decommissioned in
1955 after action in Korea.
In
1986 she was modernized, recommissioned,
and sent on a tour around the world. Then in
1991, she was sent to the
Persian Gulf to protect American-flagged oil tankers near the
Straits of Hormuz, and she launched 28
Tomahawk missiles against Iraqi positions in
Baghdad and
Kuwait during Operation Desert Storm. Her final operational mission was to sail into Pearl Harbor on
December 7, 1991, the 50th anniversary of the
United States' entry into World War II, when she played an important role in the commemoration of that event. In
1992, the USS Missouri was decommissioned for the second time, and in
1995 she was removed from the
Navy's ship registry, enabling her to be donated by the Navy for preservation as a memorial museum. After intense competition, the USS Missouri Memorial
Association was selected by the Navy to care for the "Mighty Mo" at Pearl Harbor, and in
1998 title to the ship was transferred to the Association, and the "Mighty Mo" was brought to Pearl Harbor. A massive effort by volunteers was undertaken to refurbish the ship,clean and repaint her exterior, refinish deck planks, polish her brass, and clean a number of her interior spaces in time for her opening.
On the
Surrender Deck of the USS Missouri, the visitor experiences history come to life, hearing the unmistakable voice of
Gen. MacArthur and seeing the precise spot where the surrender occurred and the world's bloodiest war came to an end. The visitor can see the wardroom, officers quarters, the spot on the fantail where a
Japanese attack plane penetrated the USS Missouri's anti-aircraft defenses and crashed into the deck, setting the ship on fire. And the visitor can stand in awe of the USS Missouri's 16-inch guns. Each of those guns (three to a turret) is 65 feet long, weighs 116 tons, and can accurately fire a 2,700 pound shell 23 miles in 50 seconds.
- published: 12 Nov 2015
- views: 4298