T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1693.1 | | TUNER::HO | | Thu Mar 28 1991 18:14 | 20 |
| Similar rumors have surfaced from time to time over the years. A
friend who knew the captain from a few administrations back was active
in a campaign to have sails made for such a trip. Not much came of it.
Making the generous assumption that the refit will make the hull and
rigging structurally capable of sailing, there are still the problems of
finding suitable crew and inventing a justifiable excuse for
undertaking such an adventure.
The crew problem would likely be the more insurmountable of the two.
How many people in the Navy know how to sail a square rigger? Probably
-0-. But with training and enough 18 year olds who don't know any
better, anything is possible.
With SDI starving for funds, four magnificent battleships about to be
retired, and a whole fleet of B2 bombers in need of care and affection,
can we justify such a cavalier expenditure of precious taxpayer
dollars???
- gene
|
1693.2 | No public money for refit? | THEBAY::ALTMANNKE | | Thu Mar 28 1991 19:09 | 10 |
|
RE: .0
<<<According to standing law,
<<<public money cannot be used towards refit of a Commissioned Government
<<<vessel.
Hmmmm. Who paid to refit the Battleships to fire cruise missiles?
Kerbey
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1693.3 | $$$ the big problem. | ROYALT::FGZ | Federico Genoese-Zerbi | Thu Mar 28 1991 19:13 | 16 |
|
I don't think finding a crew would be so tough. The Coast Guard had a square
rigger that they use for training and I think all midshipmen have to serve on
it for a summer. The Navy has a similar program, although I'm not sure if
they have a square rigger--would not surprise me to find out they did.
Money though is a bigger problem. But then again, with private funds
(provided that gets allowed), you don't run afoul of congressional efforts (HA!)
to cut the budget.
I wonder what condition this ship is really in. Could cost millions to get
her in sailing shape, but then again, I'd DEFINITELY want to be out there
seeing it if it happened.
F.
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1693.4 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Fri Mar 29 1991 09:12 | 101 |
| Note 1693.2 SAILING THE U.S.S. Constitution 2 of 3
THEBAY::ALTMANNKE 10 lines 28-MAR-1991 19:09
-< No public money for refit? >-
> Hmmmm. Who paid to refit the Battleships to fire cruise missiles?
Kerbey,
You misunderstand. The government can appropriate money from the
treasury, but you cannot walk up to the Commander and give him a check.
See the difference?
Gene,
Your point is well taken. Another argument against are the starving
and homeless people in the very district the Constitution sits in.
So I think that if the Navy can get special dispensation to use money
collected at fundraisers, then we avoid a whole lot of trouble. The
Captain rells me that wherever he goes to give lectures (all over the
country), he gets offers of money from the people. One guy was ready to
write out a $1000 check. But the Captain couldn't take it because of
the law.
Crew,
My idea is to skim 2 or 3 Navy ROTC cadets from each state, and post
them to Constitution. They take summer cruises anyway. Also, get a few
from the Academy.
THEN you can get some from the Eagle (Coast Guard Training Bark) to
leaven the ranks with somewhat experienced crews. The Navy has no
sailing training ship of its own.
The benefit of using Cadets is that Cadets from the Navy might be
willing to listen to a Coast Guard Cadet with a bit of square rigger
experience. Whereas a navy Seaman is not likely to listen to a cadet.
By the way, the Coast Guard has already offered to train whatever crew
gets raised for the venture, on the Eagle.
Condition of the vessel.
I am no surveyer, but in restoring my 70 year old wooden boat, I know
rotten oak when I see it. We went over every inch of that ship. As far
down as you can get - I was sitting on ballast stones - from stem to
stern.
If you stand at the bow of the Orlop Deck, and look aft, you can see
the deck slope upwards to a point where the deckbeam (underneath) has
made a peak, and then see the deck slope back down. Dagger Knees are
separated from their attach points by as much as an inch (in the bow
and stern). They estimate that there is about a 15 inch hog in the keel
which is causing all of this.
The foremast is wobbling so much in high winds that you can see how
the shims on the Orlop deck are being moved out of position.
The ceiling (not overhead) looks good, but in places where they have
removed the ceiling, you can see the original frames directly. MANY
copper clench pins have failed. Some frames are a bit rotted.
Breasthooks look ok (one is severly checked), but are separating from
their positions dure to either fastener failure, hogging (twisting,
actually), or both. In the extreme bow I saw the frames directly, and
some copper pins have been replaced by hardwood dowels and epoxy. AND
THE DOWELS DID NOT HAVE WEDGES DRIVEN INTO THEM (this is bad practice).
Now, over the years, the hog has increased. As they would replace
pieces of the ship, the hog was more or less "locked in". So the main
effort will be to cure the hogging. What amount of hog would be
acceptable, I cannot say.
Topsides, I noticed a few items:
The heel of the Main Topmast is severly cracked. The Captain tells me
that only 1/3 (!) of the STANDING rigging is in place. Some surveyors
attribute the hoggin to that. Only a third of the running riggin is in
place, but you would expect that.
So that's what I noticed when the Commander took me through the
vessel. No doubt there is more - much that escaped my inexperienced
eye.
But I would argue that the vessel itself is at risk unless the
problems are dealt with. Forgetting the notion of sailing, the vessel
needs an extensive overhaul. The Navy has tentatively planned a small
overhaul in 1992, with a major refit in 1998.
The Captain argues (correctly I believe), that:
1) If you wait another 8 years the problems will be more costly to fix
as they continue to get worse over the 8 years.
2) Every time you put her in dry dock, you stress the vessel.
3) Why pay the costs of 2 overhauls when you can do the entire job in
one?
4) Do it now so that she is fit for her bicentennial.
Gregg
|
1693.5 | | ICS::R_GREEN | Ron Green 223-8956 | Fri Mar 29 1991 10:28 | 20 |
| I've been visiting the Constitution since I was a kid. A great trip
for the romantic history hound.
To me, the value of the vessel is not her sailing abilities but her
inspirational qualities. She should be preserved and maintained in
some state that captures her status as a memorial to the idealism of
the founding of the nation and the patriotism of the crews who served
aboard.
What a thrill it was to stand on HMS Victory in Portsmouth, England or
USS Olympia in Philadelphia. Not really important that neither is
sea-worthy. Victory is, in fact, in a dry-dock which in itself has
historical significance.
Placing a shrine in harms way doesn't stike me as a good strategy for
preservation. A couple of tens of millions of dollars so that ship
can move to Marblehead under sail for an afternoon commander's reception??
What conceit.
Ron
|
1693.6 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Fri Mar 29 1991 10:42 | 16 |
| Ron,
A couple points;
1) The conceit you accuse the present commander of having is a bit
misplaced since he'llbe retiring the September. He'll be totally out of
the picture by 1998.
2) The stay at Marblehead is for a week. The general public will have
access to the ship as well as the ability to see it under sail all
along the North Shore.
3) Who says that, if the sail is successful, Marblehead will be the
ONLY place it ever sails to?
Gregg
|
1693.7 | Do It!!! | SQPUFF::HASKELL | | Fri Mar 29 1991 13:07 | 22 |
| What an inspiration that grand old lady has been to all sea loving
people of this nation.
Many years age, my uncle served as an ensign aboard her for one
of his tours of duty while in the navy. He entered as a seaman at
17 and retired 47 years later as a Lt. Cmdr.
Restore her? Hell yes.
Start a fund raiser to restore her physically and to rig and bend
on sails.. Why not?
Write our people in Congress to get a bill passed to allow this
to take place.
How much nicer it would be to see this grand old ship under sail
greeting all those foreigh tall ships when they visit Boston.
For a weeks time, let the Coast Guard man her, they have the
experience.
Paul
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1693.8 | It's soapbox time! | AKOCOA::DJOHNSTON | | Fri Mar 29 1991 14:12 | 15 |
| The Constitution is a true national monument. For this nation to even
think of risking her to the ravages of time while there is something
that can be done about it is tragic. We p*ss away more money every day
as a nation than it would take to put her back into shape.
Now, what do I mean by "shape"? Sailing condition? No. Stabilize
Ironsides to last a long time in the duty she is now pulling. that is
as a stationary historical site. The difference is probably great. No
less of a task, but different in function. I would rather have
Ironsides there for my grandkids to see, feel and touch than I would
like to see her do a stunt voyage. The two may not be mutually
exclusive, but to focus on the primary mission seems like a good idea
to me.
Dave
|
1693.9 | Keep Her, Sail??? | OTOA01::BARNARD | | Tue Apr 02 1991 14:39 | 18 |
| I would have to agree with the the previous response. I remember seeing
Ironsides as a kid nearly 30 years ago. I have a model at my parents
house that my brother and I (I'm sure my father did most of the work)
built. I hope to take my girls there when they are a little older.
I would like the ship to be there for many more years. Taking her to
sea may be a far greater risk than some would imagine. I would also
comment that 8 years more before a major refit should not make as big a
difference as one would think. After all the ship is 200 years old.
Maybe now though is not the right time. I agree with the need to
preserve historical artifacts. But to spend an excessive amount on
this ship while so much rebuilding must go on in our community and
society does not seem prudent.
Keep her and preserve it.
S.
|
1693.10 | Constitution never avoided risk before | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Tue Apr 02 1991 14:44 | 14 |
| RE: .9
as far as cost is concerned the idea is to get Congressional approval
to use funds that people send in as opposed to Federal Money. Already
the Commander has been offered thousands wherever he goes.
As to not sailing due to fear of losing the ship - when has she EVER
refused a risky situation? There are dozens of rebuilt wooden vessels
sailing the seas on much more hazardous voyages than a few miles to
Marblehead. BTW, there will be tugs trailing a ways behind just in
case. Like any voyage, safety depends upon a small dose of pessimism
and good contingency plans.
Gregg
|
1693.11 | | CUPMK::ROBINSON | | Tue Apr 02 1991 16:05 | 16 |
|
Wasn't the Constitution refitted to its current condition (that is,
a ship rather than a floating office) with funds raised by
schoolchildren many years ago? Perhaps the "standing law" that
prohibits public funding for a commissioned vessel was not in effect
then, or perhaps the Constitution was not in commission. But there
would seem to be a precedent for using contributions to refit this
ship. After all, we're talking about a historical resource, not a ship
of the line. The fact that it's in commission shouldn't be an
obstruction.
Yeah, I'd contribute some bucks. I don't see the money I'd give (and
hopefully, Digital would match) to be dollars that would otherwise go
to rebuild highways or revitalize the American industrial base. It
would just be a few fewer dollars for Jerry's kids or an alumni fund.
|
1693.12 | | TUNER::HO | | Tue Apr 02 1991 19:36 | 31 |
| The Constitution is like my grandfather's axe. My father replaced the
handle and I replaced the head but it's still my grandfather's axe.
Clearly, it's the concept and not the physical entity that's the
important thing. Wooden fighting ships, I've read, needed major
overhauls after each campaign. It wouldn't be surprising if within two
decades after commissioning, over 50% of the original Constitution got
replaced. There have been many refits since then and most of what is
normally in view is un-original.
If the Constitution's mission is to induce patriotic fervor, I believe
that purpose is best served by restoring her to her fighting/sailing
prime. It was done with the J-boat Endeavor. She gets sailed,
chartered, and even raced and no one worries about her sinking (except
the insurance company).
If all we want is a historic relic, let's cut away everything
put on since 1812 and put a few ribs and worm eaten keel timbers on
display. That's like pointing to a surviving set of George Washington's
false teeth and saying "that's the father of our country".
If the next refit is to be a major one with a lot of material being
replaced, there is the opportunity for the whole thing to be self
financing. Take a Sawzall, cut away everything we don't want to keep,
saw it into 3" x 5" pieces, package it tastfully in twist tie baggies,
and sell them to the public at $5.00 a pop. They'll look great on the
mantlepiece next to the Berlin Wall fragments and the Franklin Mint
Elvis memorial plate collection. The proceeds should cover labor and
materials for the new Constitution, maybe even a new set of sails.
- gene
|
1693.13 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Wed Apr 03 1991 10:00 | 21 |
| Re: .11
Yeah - in 1927, schoolkids pennies were collected for a refit. But
that was before the present law that inhibits that.
We are currently trying to get Rep. Kennedy to introduce the
legislation that is presently on his desk (and has been for 2 years)
which would give us special dispensation.
Gene,
Interesting you should mention selling pieces. The rudder was removed
and all the copper sheathing taken off to check out the wood. The
sheathing cannot be reused, so one idea is to melt it down and make
coins that are partly "Constitution Rudder Sheathing Copper", and sell
them. So your idea is not so far fetched.
BTW, the Dry Dock - Constitution was the first ship and the LAST ship
to use it - is being rebuilt out of Constitution funds.
Gregg
|
1693.14 | Call 1-800-IRNSIDE | AKOCOA::DJOHNSTON | | Wed Apr 03 1991 11:29 | 20 |
| Re: previous
Now if you REALLY want to raise funds, melt the copper sheathing into
ELVIS memorial coins. Maybe rename the ship U.S.S Graceland.
The Endeavour is really a brand new boat using the original design and
a few (very few!) pieces just for conversation. While the Constitution
may not be "original" it's not this scale of rebuild either.
The Air and Space museum in Washington D.C has the Apollo module that
carried the astronauts to and from the moon on display. Just seeing it
is eery and impressive. They have no plans (that I know of anyway) to
reorbit the module every now and then to reinforce in the public's mind
what it was used for.
To refit the constitution for sailing would be neat, but what you would
have left would be even less original than what we have now. And
truly, what is the point?
Dave (who swears he's not a commie or anything!)
|
1693.15 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Wed Apr 03 1991 12:38 | 15 |
| Dave,
We all know you are not a commie. :^)
But the fact is that the refit needed for sailing is the exact same
refit if you weren't going to sail, as far as the hull and masts go.
And commands most of the refit budget.
It's only the rigging and sails that are an addition.
And as far as the rigging goes, only ***1/3**** of the standard
rigging is actually rove. Some theorize that the lack of standing
rigging is contributing to the hogging.
Gregg
|
1693.16 | | VAXUUM::FACHON | | Fri Apr 05 1991 14:18 | 14 |
| As the great, great, great, great, great grandson of
a former Captain and Sailing Master of the Constitution, I'd
love to see her under canvas and would try like heck to wangle a ride.
If the difference between a "preservation" refit and a sailing
refit is basically the rig -- that's probably debateable -- then why not
do it? Sure, they don't plan to re-orbit the LEM, but that was
*never* the intent. The Constitution made many voyages
and is a commsioned vessel, and much of her inspirational
mystique lies in the perception of her readiness to do battle
again -- a venerable patriot ever ready to heed the call
to duty. Talk about punctuating the patriotic fervor of
the day! But whether of not *that's* a good idea...
Dean
|
1693.17 | My money is on Constellation | GUCCI::KILGORE | Dan @ Washington | Wed Apr 10 1991 15:32 | 8 |
| Let's not forget her sister ship The U.S.S. Constellation, harbored in
similar fashion in Baltimore.
After refitting, I can see great days of match racing, along the
Atlantic coast. We set an olympic course with 50 mile legs and have
D.C. and Ted Turner on each poop-deck. Could be VERY INTERESTING at the
weather mark. The ESPN contract alone could cover much of the refit
costs. (;>
|
1693.18 | No, prime the cannon THEN flog that man! | MILKWY::WAGNER | | Mon Apr 15 1991 12:51 | 12 |
|
Yes, but where do you find gunners these days? Hmmm, maybe the
powder-monkey position is still open...
Yep, REALLY interesting roundings, depending on whether grapeshot
is allowed. Really messes up the Kevlar topsails. Maybe USYRU
should make a water-ballons only rule. Protests decided when the
survivors are fished out of the water.
THAT's entertainment!
Scott.
|
1693.19 | | SHIPS::GOUGH_P | Pete Gough | Tue Apr 16 1991 03:35 | 9 |
| Well I suppose we could try and get HMS Victory fit for the water again
and have some match racing around the cans in the Solent run by the
Royal Yacht Squadron followed by a series run by a certain
yacht club in New York.........
Pete
|
1693.20 | Not one rotted rib remains | ELWOOD::KEENAN | | Tue Apr 16 1991 12:54 | 10 |
| The ship anchored in Baltimore is NOT the Constellation. In the
mid-1800's, Congress was authorizing money for ship repair but
no money for new construction. The Constellation was a wreck. They
"repaired" her by hauling her into a large building, chopping her
into pieces and burning the evidence. Then they built a new ship
from scratch.
One of this countries older arms scandals.
Paul
|
1693.21 | What a Ship!!! | GLDOA::ROGERS | | Tue Apr 16 1991 22:32 | 24 |
| Seems to me that the weather mark had better not be too far to weather
if I remember anything about square rigger's beating abilities. What I
would love to see is a ripple broadside. This baby carries 32 pounders
on the gundeck, absolutely unheard of in a frigate of her time.
The british navy put 12 pounders on their 28-32 gun frigates and 18
pounders on the larger 36+ gun frigates. 74's, line of battle ships,
which the Constitution certainly was not, carried 18 pounders on the
upper deck and 24pounders on the lower gundeck. Only the three
decker's carried 32 pounders in the Royal navy.
Any doubt why the Constitution never lost a ship to ship duel? A common
spec for the time was that a 32 pounder would drive a ball through
three feet of oak at one mile. Constitution carries 32 of these on the
gundeck. The only place they served on british frigate was as bow
chasers, also known as the "long nine"(nine feet long).
Just think of a mock battle in New York or Boston harbor between two of
these beauties. Nothing like this has been seen for 150 years. These
ships carried 360+ crew and still could not fight both sides and sail
her at the same time.
This would be spectical to see.
|
1693.22 | Bang! Boom! Protest! Ouch! | MILKWY::WAGNER | | Wed Apr 17 1991 13:05 | 10 |
| Cannons on the racers insteada the RC boat?
Like it!
`course NYYC may get a bit nervous, or at least outfit with a few
Patriots... and stand off a few miles!
What a show.
Scott_who_still_likes_waterballons
|
1693.23 | It's been done before, sort of... | ESKIMO::CURRAN | | Thu Jun 27 1991 22:15 | 14 |
|
When the Navy decommissioned the USS Nautilus SSN-571, the plan
was to send it to a boneyard. The people of southeastern Conn and many
of the submarine veterans got together and raised 5 million dollars to
build a memorial. Legislation was passed, the Nautilus was towed back
to Groton (courtesy of the Navy!) and active duty personnel are there
as tour guides.
I'm sure a city like Boston and the sailing community could raise
the money to refit the Constitution. To see history under sail would
be inspiring.
Dave
|
1693.24 | Its happening | SMURF::LIU | | Mon Aug 19 1996 16:37 | 4 |
|
Today's Globe says that they're going to do it. North is
building sails. A crew is being formed and will sail the
Eagle for practice. Should be a sight.
|