MA -- Charlestown -- Charlestown Navy Yard -- Visitor Center:
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Copyrights: All pictures were taken by amateur photographer Bruce Guthrie (me!) who retains copyright on them. Free for non-commercial use with attribution. See the [Creative Commons] definition of what this means. "Photos (c) Bruce Guthrie" is fine for attribution. (Commercial use folks can of course contact me.) Feel free to use in publications and pages with attribution but you don't have permission to sell the photos themselves. A free copy of any printed publication using any photographs is requested. Descriptive text, if any, is from a mixture of sources, quite frequently from signs at the location or from official web sites; copyrights, if any, are retained by their original owners.
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
CHARVC_190810_002.JPG: Proudly They Served
USS Mason in a Segregated Navy
CHARVC_190810_005.JPG: Training
CHARVC_190810_008.JPG: Convoy Escort Duty
CHARVC_190810_013.JPG: Recognition
CHARVC_190810_022.JPG: Designed and built by LEGOLAND Discovery Center Boston's Master Model Builder, Megan Amaral.
CHARVC_190810_031.JPG: Serving the Naval Fleet
CHARVC_190810_037.JPG: Protecting American Interests
CHARVC_190810_040.JPG: A Site Rich in History
CHARVC_190810_042.JPG: SWONS
The Shipbuilding Women of the Navy, Boston Naval Shipyard, 1941-1945
The United States at War: A Call to Action
CHARVC_190810_048.JPG: SWONS
The Shipbuilding Women of the Navy, Boston Naval Shipyard, 1941-1945
The Boston Navy Yard & World War II
CHARVC_190810_053.JPG: SWONS
The Shipbuilding Women of the Navy, Boston Naval Shipyard, 1941-1945
Women Enter the Navy Yard
CHARVC_190810_057.JPG: SWONS
The Shipbuilding Women of the Navy, Boston Naval Shipyard, 1941-1945
Mobilizing a Nation
CHARVC_190810_063.JPG: SWONS
The Shipbuilding Women of the Navy, Boston Naval Shipyard, 1941-1945
The Realities of Navy Yard Work
CHARVC_190810_067.JPG: SWONS
The Shipbuilding Women of the Navy, Boston Naval Shipyard, 1941-1945
Good Times, Tragedies, and Victory
CHARVC_190810_074.JPG: SWONS
The Shipbuilding Women of the Navy, Boston Naval Shipyard, 1941-1945
Doing their Bit, at Work and at Home
CHARVC_190810_080.JPG: SWONS
The Shipbuilding Women of the Navy, Boston Naval Shipyard, 1941-1945
Red Leave, Black Leave, and the Last Leave
CHARVC_190810_094.JPG: Physical Plant
CHARVC_190810_100.JPG: Ropewalk
CHARVC_190810_116.JPG: Rope Manufacturing Process
CHARVC_190810_129.JPG: The 19th Century
"The naval history of Boston... demonstrates the growth and development of a great naval establishment for the building and repair of the ship of the United States."
-- Rear Admiral George Henry Preble, USN, 1883
CHARVC_190810_131.JPG: Shipyard Trades
CHARVC_190810_147.JPG: Officers and Gentlemen
CHARVC_190810_150.JPG: Officers and Gentlemen
CHARVC_190810_166.JPG: From Wood and Sail to Steel and Steam
CHARVC_190810_175.JPG: Preparing for New Technology
CHARVC_190810_183.JPG: The Yard in the Civil War
CHARVC_190810_187.JPG: Dry Dock Operation
CHARVC_190810_192.JPG: The 20th Century
"The Boston Naval Shipyard and its officers and employees play a large and sustaining role in the service of the Navy and of the nation."
-- U.S. Representative John W. McCormack, 1950
CHARVC_190810_195.JPG: Ships and Shipbuilding
CHARVC_190810_197.JPG: The "Modern" Navy Yard, 1890-1974
CHARVC_190810_201.JPG: Ships and Shipbuilding
CHARVC_190810_216.JPG: Chain Forge and Foundry
CHARVC_190810_219.JPG: Chain Forge and Foundry
CHARVC_190810_229.JPG: Technologies of Transformation
CHARVC_190810_235.JPG: William Draper
Blacksmith Shop, Boston Navy Yard, 1942
CHARVC_190810_247.JPG: World War I and World War II
CHARVC_190810_256.JPG: The Cold War Era, 1945-1974
CHARVC_190810_267.JPG: Rotted Timber from USS Constitution
One of the most common repairs to USS Constitution through the years involved replacing rotted planking and timbers.
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Wikipedia Description: Charleston Naval Shipyard
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charleston Naval Shipyard (formerly known as the Charleston Navy Yard) was a U.S. Navy ship building and repair facility located along the west bank of the Cooper River, in North Charleston, South Carolina and part of Naval Base Charleston. It began operations in 1901 as a drydock, and continued as a navy facility until 1996 when it was leased to Detyens Shipyards, Inc. during down-sizing.
The yard first produced the destroyer USS Tillman (DD-135), then began to increase production in the 1930s. A total of 21 destroyers were assembled at the naval facility.
In 1931, Ellicott Dredges delivered the 20-inch cutter dredge ORION still in operation at the old Charleston Naval Shipyard.
"Two of the largest vessels ever built at the yard were two destroyer tenders, the Tidewater (AD-31) and the Bryce Canyon (AD-36). The Keels of these ships were laid in November 1944 and July 1945, respectively. Peak employment of 25,948 was reached in July 1943.
After the war, the shipyard was responsible for the repairs and alterations of captured German submarines. In April 1948 Secretary of the Navy John L. Sullivan told Charleston's Representative Rivers and Senator Burnet R. Maybank that the Navy planned for CNSY to become a submarine overhaul yard and would ask for an initial appropriation for a battery-charging unit.
The first submarine, the Conger (SS-477), arrived for overhaul in August 1948. the shipyard expected to overhaul about 132 ships during the year, and its work force had stabilized to nearly 5,000 persons.
North Korean invasion of South Korea in June 1950 increased production once again. By 1951 the shipyard was back to over 8,000 employees. In all, the shipyard activated forty-four vessels and converted twenty-seven for active fleet duty during the Korean War.
Submarines continued to be built into the 1960s along with missiles, and nuclear submarine overhauls took place like with th ...More...
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Directly Related Pages: Other pages with content (MA -- Charlestown -- Charlestown Navy Yard) directly related to this one:
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2019_MA_CharlestownNY_WCDI: MA -- Charlestown -- Charlestown Navy Yard -- We Can Do It Weekend (49 photos from 2019)
2019_MA_CharlestownNY: MA -- Charlestown -- Charlestown Navy Yard (60 photos from 2019)
2001_MA_CharlestownNY: MA -- Charlestown -- Charlestown Navy Yard (13 photos from 2001)
2019 photos: Equipment this year: I continued to use my Fuji XS-1 cameras but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
Trips this year:
a four-day jaunt to Massachusetts (Boston, Stockbridge, and Springfield) to experience rain in another state,
Asheville, NC to visit Dad and his wife Dixie,
four trips to New York City (including the United Nations, Flushing, and the New York Comic-Con), and
my 14th consecutive San Diego Comic-Con (including sites in Utah).
Number of photos taken this year: about 582,000.
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