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Part of USS New Orleans found

Posted on 7/9/25 at 11:34 pm
Posted by NOLATiger163
Insane State of NOLA
Member since Aug 2018
595 posts
Posted on 7/9/25 at 11:34 pm
SIAP (I looked), but part of the heavy cruiser U.S.S. New Orleans ( CA-32, Wikipedia) has been found. Its bow section, blown off by a Japanese torpedo during WWII, has been located on the ocean floor.

quote:

More than 80 years ago, the crew of the USS New Orleans, having been hit by a Japanese torpedo and losing scores of sailors, performed hasty repairs with coconut logs, before a 1,800-mile voyage across the Pacific in reverse. The front of the ship, or the bow, had sunk to the sea floor. But over the weekend, the Nautilus Live expedition from the Ocean Exploration Trust located it in 675 meters (2,214 feet) of water in Iron Bottom Sound in the Solomon Islands.

Source: CNN

The ship in better times:


And lacking its bow, back to Turret I, but still afloat:


Yes, she made it back to the U.S., got a new bow, and continued to serve. Would have been nice to have her as a NOLA (larger) counterpart to the U.S.S. Kidd in Baton Rouge. Quite a testament to the bravery and ingenuity of the U.S. sailors and the skill and care of the U.S. naval architects and shipyard workers.

This post was edited on 7/10/25 at 8:51 am
Posted by Havoc
Member since Nov 2015
37518 posts
Posted on 7/9/25 at 11:47 pm to
Thank you for this.
Posted by LordSaintly
Member since Dec 2005
42038 posts
Posted on 7/9/25 at 11:57 pm to
Cool stuff there.
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
104281 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 12:10 am to
Same thing happened to USS Minneapolis and Pittsburg. Seems to have been a design flaw in that class. Or maybe a feature, since they stayed afloat.
Posted by Riverside
Member since Jul 2022
8298 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 12:24 am to
She took a licking but kept on shipping.
Posted by Tarps99
Lafourche Parish
Member since Apr 2017
11464 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 6:14 am to
quote:

The front of the ship, or the bow, had sunk to the sea floor. But over the weekend, the Nautilus Live expedition from the Ocean Exploration Trust located it in 675 meters (2,214 feet) of water in Iron Bottom Sound in the Solomon Islands.


Could the bow or a section be raised or preserved in a way and put as an exhibit at the World War II Museum.

Maybe put a section in a large tank as testament of where some of these ships ended up.
This post was edited on 7/10/25 at 6:19 am
Posted by Koolazzkat
Behind the Tupelo gum tree
Member since May 2021
3019 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 6:15 am to
Great history lesson! I was unaware, thanks again for sharing. “We’re going home…in reverse!”
Posted by holmesbr
Baton Rouge, La.
Member since Feb 2012
3881 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 6:24 am to
My grandpa was on a sister ship, uss san Francisco, during that guadalcanal time. Fun fact, the N.O. was finishing up in dry dock on 12/7/41, it had weapons but no ammo, the San Fran was moored next to it and the weapons removed but ammo still on board. Folks ran ammo to the NO during the attack.
Posted by BobABooey
Parts Unknown
Member since Oct 2004
15916 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 6:35 am to
I heard a story a while back about the ship’s bow getting blown off. The bow veered away from the ship but then turned back into it and collided with the ship. They used to say it was the only ship in the Navy that rammed itself. I think it was the New Orleans but my memory could be failing me.
Posted by TheGooner
Baton Rouwage
Member since Jul 2016
1209 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 7:22 am to
quote:

My grandpa was on a sister ship, uss san Francisco, during that guadalcanal time. Fun fact, the N.O. was finishing up in dry dock on 12/7/41, it had weapons but no ammo, the San Fran was moored next to it and the weapons removed but ammo still on board. Folks ran ammo to the NO during the attack.


I always heard that this where the phrase "Praise the Lord and pass the ammo" came from.
Posted by SludgeFactory
Middle of Nowhere
Member since Jun 2025
2263 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 7:26 am to
What a great story. They don't make them like they used to (the MEN and the ships)
Posted by tigerinthebueche
Member since Oct 2010
37707 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 7:26 am to
quote:

Quite a testament to the bravery and ingenuity of the U.S. sailors



Yes, nothing like gazing into the black abyss of death to get oneself motivated.
Posted by NoMercy
Member since Feb 2007
4669 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 8:38 am to
Ole girl still in better shape than her namesake city.
Posted by contraryman
Earth
Member since Dec 2007
2014 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 8:45 am to
Thanks for posting this. I had only heard the of the shop not the story behind the ship. Fantastic. Will certainly pick up the book, Hell at Tassafaronga, for more on the story. I would love to see a special section at the WW II Museum on this story. Thank you.
Posted by Chicken
Jackassistan
Member since Aug 2003
26816 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 8:50 am to
What ever happened to the ship? Scrapped?
Posted by NOLATiger163
Insane State of NOLA
Member since Aug 2018
595 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 9:04 am to
quote:

What ever happened to the ship? Scrapped?

Per Wikipedia, which I think is correct (ETA--it's copied from the official DANFS):
quote:

After similar duty took her to Guam in January 1946, she sailed through the Panama Canal for a 10-day visit to her namesake city. She then steamed to Philadelphia Navy Yard, arriving on 12 March. There, she was decommissioned on 10 February 1947 and lay in reserve until struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 1 March 1959 and sold for scrapping on 22 September to Boston Metals Company, Baltimore, Maryland.

The Navy retained in service some of the WWII cruisers for many years, and others were sold off, some to South American countries, where they continued to serve. The New Orleans, being one of the older ones, made less sense to keep around. I think my 1989-90 edition of Jane's Fighting Ships lists two or three still in service in countries like Brazil and Argentina. Some of you may remember that the former U.S.S. Phoenix became the Argentine General Belgrano, which the Brits torpedoed in 1982 after Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands.

[ETA]
Mardi Gras 1946 was on March 5, so the last hurrah for the ship and crew, before going to retirement and eventual scrapping in Philly, may well have been that ten-day visit to her namesake city between January 1946 and March 12, 1946. Did she depart Ash Wednesday, after the Shore Patrol got the last celebrating sailors aboard? I hope they enjoyed some well-deserved R&R.
This post was edited on 7/10/25 at 11:48 am
Posted by CharlesUFarley
Daphne, AL
Member since Jan 2022
894 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 10:18 am to
quote:

Same thing happened to USS Minneapolis and Pittsburg. Seems to have been a design flaw in that class. Or maybe a feature, since they stayed afloat.


The navy design philosophy at the time was "All or Nothing". It primarily applied to battleships but carried over to lesser armored ships. Instead of using lesser degrees of armor over lesser critical parts of the ship, it was determined to armor all critical equipment up to standard and use nothing on spaces that were not critical.

They used "soft bows". They mainly contained anchor chains.
Posted by GasMan
north Mississippi
Member since Sep 2003
1409 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 10:57 am to
She was a good-looking ship.
Posted by vl100butch
Ridgeland, MS
Member since Sep 2005
36666 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 11:12 am to
It would have been really nice to have her as part of the WW2 Museum, but she was an older CA in mothballs that had heavy wartime service and was scrapped at the same time as the rebuilt battleship survivors of Pearl Harbor (Tennessee, California, West Virginia, and Colorado)

Remember, in 1959 the only WW2 warship saved as a memorial was Texas and that was because Chester Nimitz was CNO when the ships were chosen for the Bikini Atoll atom bomb tests.

Hell, they couldn't come up with the money to save Enterprise in 1959.
Posted by threedog79
Member since Sep 2013
3756 posts
Posted on 7/10/25 at 12:01 pm to
Im 15 years late to the party but the series The Pacific (2010) on Netflix is extremely well done. Follows Eugene Sledge of Mobile, Alabama and “Snafu” a guy from Louisiana as main characters.

Excellent series and based off Sledge’s memoirs. Those baws went through multiple layers of hell. Truly a different generation of men.
This post was edited on 7/10/25 at 1:35 pm
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