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USS Missouri: Served in World War II and Korean War

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Life was exciting for 23-year-old Ensign Lee Royal in the summer of 1950. The tall, slim Texan had recently graduated from the United States Naval Academy and reported for duty on board the most famous warship in the world, the USS Missouri. Royal was wearing the gold bars of a commissioned officer, a step up from the previous year when he had served on the same ship as a midshipman on a training cruise.

The Missouri had visited England during that cruise, and Royal and two classmates had been brash enough to go to Chartwell, Winston Churchill’s country home. They wanted to shake the hand of the former British prime minister. Churchill had been even more obliging than that, taking the three young midshipmen on a tour of the grounds and then presenting them with books, cigars, and wine. An amazed bodyguard told them privately that the British statesman had been much more hospitable to them than to many of his famous visitors. The guard mentioned that Churchill was fond of navy men, Americans, and young people. The midshipmen belonged to all three categories.

By 1950, the Missouri was the U.S. Navy’s only active battleship–just a decade after the navy had considered battleships to be its foremost fighting ships. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, however, had dramatically changed the situation. Soon aircraft carriers and submarines became the navy’s primary offensive weapons, while battleships were relegated to a secondary role. They had been designed to fight gun duels against large surface vessels, but those encounters rarely occurred in World War II. The United States entered the war with a number of old, slow battleships commissioned between 1912 and 1923, which were primarily used for shore bombardment and to support amphibious landings. Only the navy’s 10 new battleships, commissioned between 1941 and 1944, were fast enough to travel in aircraft carrier task groups and provide antiaircraft protection.

The USS Missouri was the last battleship the navy completed. Commissioned in June 1944, she reached the Western Pacific war zone in early 1945. The ship served with carrier forces in support of landings at Iwo Jima and Okinawa, and near the end of the war, the Missouri’s 16-inch guns bombarded industrial targets in Japan itself.

‘Mighty Mo’ became world-famous as the site of the Japanese surrender ceremony in Tokyo Bay on September 2, 1945, bringing World War II to an end. The Missouri and dozens of other U.S. warships arrived home to a triumphant welcome, but the nation demobilized rapidly once the hostilities ceased. At the end of the war, the navy had 23 battleships in commission but soon began withdrawing them from active service–mothballing the newest ones and scrapping the oldest. The return to peacetime defense budgets emphasized the fact that the battleships’ period of primacy was over.

By the summer of 1950, the Missouri had been downgraded from a full-fledged warship to a training vessel with a reduced crew. Economy-minded Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson would have preferred to decommission the Missouri entirely to save money, but President Harry S. Truman wouldn’t allow it. The president was particularly fond of the ship. Not only was she named for his home state, but his daughter Margaret had christened her.

When Lee Royal returned to the Missouri the year after his visit with Churchill, the ship was making another training cruise, but this time budget considerations limited her itinerary to the western Atlantic Ocean. Still, Royal found it an enjoyable experience, particularly when the battleship made a port visit to New York City in mid-August. One evening Royal and a date went to see a Broadway musical. When he returned to the ship at one in the morning the officer on the quarterdeck asked him, ‘Did you have a good time?’ The ensign replied that he had. ‘Good,’ the officer said, ‘because that’s the last one you’re going to have for some time.’ The Missouri was going back to war.

The korean war had begun a month and a half earlier, on June 25, 1950. As Communist North Korea army units advanced into South Korea, President Truman committed American troops to the hostilities. Because the Missouri possessed the only active 16-inch guns in the fleet–an important factor in the planning of amphibious assaults–she received orders to report for duty half a world away.

Five years earlier, General of the Army Douglas MacArthur had accepted the Japanese surrender on the captain’s veranda deck of the Missouri. Now the general was planning an invasion at the port of Inchon, behind North Korean lines. He scheduled the action for mid-September and wanted the Missouri’s big guns to stop North Korean traffic on roads leading into the Inchon-Seoul area.

The Missouri’s crew had much to do. The ship traveled first to her home port of Norfolk, Virginia, where she spent four days and nights taking on supplies of food, fuel, and ammunition. The battleship’s peacetime crew increased to a fighting complement of 114 officers and 2,070 enlisted men.

On Saturday morning, August 19, 1950, the 887-foot-long warship cruised through Hampton Roads and Thimble Shoal Channel and into the Atlantic Ocean. The same routine trip had been a disaster seven months earlier. On January 17, while leaving for a training cruise to Cuba, the Missouri had run aground in the same port, a huge embarrassment for the navy. Captain William D. Brown was relieved of command shortly after that.

The Missouri’s role in the Inchon mission was considered so important that she went to sea in the face of threatening weather. That night newly appointed Captain Irving Duke and his crew paid heavily as they encountered a hurricane off North Carolina. Under normal conditions the Missouri was rock steady, but these waters were anything but normal. The wind and waves sent two helicopters over the side and caused serious damage elsewhere. Trying to outflank the storm had been a calculated risk, and the ship suffered for it.

The battleship passed through the Panama Canal and into the Pacific Ocean and proceeded to Pearl Harbor for repairs and installation of antiaircraft guns that had been removed after World War II. She then continued westward–through the Philippine archipelago and toward Japan.

Nature, though, didn’t respect the navy’s scheduling. Typhoon Kezia lay in the ship’s path. This time, Captain Duke took a more deliberate approach, following a course that diminished the risk of storms. The ship came through unscathed, but the delays from the repair period and the zigzag course kept the ship from reaching Korea in time for the Inchon invasion.

Up until this point the fighting in Korea had not been going well for the ill-prepared United Nations forces. The North Koreans had pushed steadily southward, driving the U.N. troops into the Pusan perimeter at the southern end of the Korean peninsula. MacArthur’s invasion at Inchon, however, proved to be a brilliant success even without the Missouri’s firepower. When it became apparent that the battleship could not make it to Inchon in time for the invasion, which had to be precisely timed to take advantage of the tides, the Missouri received orders to bombard North Korean transportation facilities and ground troops along the way. When the ship finally reached Inchon on September 21, MacArthur, an old soldier who was then 70, came aboard for a visit.

Members of the ship’s Marine detachment scoffed at the theatrical general, whom some people scornfully referred to as ‘Dugout Doug.’ Some of the men under MacArthur’s command during World War II had given him the nickname due to his absence during the siege of Bataan on the PhilippineIslands.

When the five-star general arrived on board, he spoke with Captain Lawrence Kindred, commanding officer of the Missouri’s Marines. The general told him, ‘I have just returned from the far north, where your comrades-in-arms are in close combat with the enemy. And I wish to report to you that there is not a finer group of fighting men in the world than the U.S. Marines.’ The previously skeptical Kindred became an instant MacArthur fan.

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  1. 3 Comments to “USS Missouri: Served in World War II and Korean War”

  2. would like to know if any crewmembers lost their hearing due to the 5″ guns firing.
    you may email me with this info or call 704 841-8097

    By Pangalos, Christos on Aug 1, 2008 at 2:35 pm

  3. regards to my question on hearing loss.I am referring to the Korean war era. I was in the 4th division
    from 8/50 - 11/53.

    By Pangalos, Christos on Aug 1, 2008 at 2:39 pm

  4. Many countries them must to make care, plus to stay aware at
    many from the ambassador people, from the united states
    country, that after the attack at, the house from the American
    government in the 1963, many them say that the American
    ambassador people, them got change for another peoples, many
    them say that the soviet gov, them did those changes, many
    other say, that, many of those ambassador people, them just
    despair, because them been hijacked, by others governments,
    after the attack from the 1963, many world’s countries, them
    doesn’t are know that many diplomats them despair, the house
    from the American government, them lost communication with
    many from them embassies around the world.
    But many world’s countries governments them are noticed, that
    the American house from the government, them lost
    communication with them embassies, on porpoise, it because the
    united states government, them got hijacked, by the German
    government, first the Germans them did the hijacked with
    intelligence, since the 1961, after the Germans them did the
    attack with weapon, until to drive with the united states
    government, a few countries them were jealous at the Americans
    life style.
    The Germans and the Mexicans in the most, them said them hate
    the Americans with a lot, them start to buy weapons to kill to
    them,
    Some person them noticed that the American ambassador in
    Mexico, after 1963, he start to say that he doesn’t want, to talk,
    with the American government, stept gov. the American new
    government, them were not talking with none ambassador,
    because the many American ambassadors them were scare at the
    new German government, inside the white house, plus the many
    American ambassador them were saying, them doesn’t want
    believing the new American government them are making fine
    the united states politics, the new American government, them
    start to suggest to many American ambassadors, to make deal
    with the new American German government, many American
    ambassadors them reject, saying that them can’t make business
    with sachems German person, the Germans again them start to
    say to the American ambassador people, to deal with the new
    American government, many American ambassador them start
    to be scare, some of them, them start to be back to the united
    states, still many consulates, embassies, them doesn’t want to
    talk with the American ambassador, the German American
    government, them open new offices from them new ambassadors.
    Many world public must to notice that the American peoples
    government, them are not, in good manners because them follow
    to kill to many American ambassador in México, those scene
    them were around in México and Guadalajara, some how the
    American ambassador in Mexico, since the 1974, he does working
    for the German and Mexican government, after them fight to kill
    to the truth American ambassador.
    The consulates from Mexico some of them, still them are working,
    with the same crew diplomats, still them aren’t in fine relations
    with the American gov, people.
    In between the past governmental people, and the foreigners new
    government people after the 1963, Them as fighting because, the
    truth born Americans, them doesn’t want, to the foreigners in
    them country, some how that it is crude fight because the
    Mexican government in the Mexican country, them give the
    hand to the Germans, to can kill to the American diplomat people
    from the past constitutional government, many American
    diplomats them want to stay to make safe for them constitutional
    government, this it is a proud fighting for the born American
    people.
    God bless, some day the proud American people them win them
    same government, again.
    But not the foreigner public inside the American government,
    Many witness them say the Germans and other foreigner them
    took hijacked to the American house for the government.
    Many diplomats them say at the Germans inside the white house.
    The Americans said still them are have powerful, friends, because
    them truth constitutional government.
    Proud American diplomats them said still them are have good
    friends government from the past before the 1963, of course
    many world countries them said to the American public that the
    American attack,
    Were made by the Germans and mex.
    The attack at the American expresident in the 1963, it were
    because the Mexican expresident 1958 to 1964 and the German
    expresident 1962’s.
    Them fight back at the American expresident, from 1962 to
    1963.
    The American expresident from 1961 to 1963.,
    He were call to stay aware, at the Mexican expresident 1958 to
    1964,
    By the American expresident 1957 to 1961.saying that Because,
    the Mexican he does, fighting at the American country, with
    soviet and German help.
    Those some American’s enemies governments, them were
    fighting to the American expresident 1961 to 1963, by phone by
    dating, with asking for money, to go on mad, an to answer back
    with a ever ready war, at the expresident 1961 to 1963.,
    The American expresident 1961 to 1963 he command the war at
    the Mexican country, because the Mexican making communism
    since the 1958 to every time, he, the American government, he
    talk with his government, in about it, the American government
    them approve the war at the Mexicans.
    Faster the Mexicans them pay to the soviets and Germans, with
    he Mexican country, for them to spend and the American
    country, and public and Americans diplomats, the Mexican
    expresident 1958 to 1964, he had ready the war at the
    Americans, he just want it to the American to answer back, that
    it is why? The Mexicans them killed to many Americans
    ambassadors, since that time 1963 until the present, the real
    powerful war it is because the Swiss bank them are paying the
    war with Swiss money buying American politics and American
    military to stay quiet. Still the Germans and mex, making this
    same war, with mad a lot.
    Them are going to be the same, German government people,
    those driving from inside the united states government.
    The ones spending fights at the same as American country people
    and truth born American public.
    The German government inside the white house, them call it
    may be the Germans inside the American government them
    effort, to the irak government people to spend fights at the truth
    born American people.
    It is very evidently in Mexico the German power driving with
    man from irak making as Mexican native person, with a Mexican
    head, but the irak man in Mexico them are monitored by German
    government people.

    By anonymous on Nov 14, 2008 at 9:17 pm

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