Gerald Ford

Sawdust

New member
RIP old shipmate.

Gerald Ford was a shipmate in 1945 and 1946 aboard the CVL USS Monterey in WWII. Certainly not the dummy the press made him seem to be. Almost lost him during a typhoon when the hangar deck was on fire and planes were broken loose and smashing into planes still secured. He almost got washed over the side while helping to fight the fire.

Dusty
 
Yes, no matter what you think of how he became POTUS or who he replaced or why, he did the right things for this country at the time and I respect him for that!

Hey Dusty, did you know John Paul Jones too? :roll: :shock: :P

Charlie
 
Dusty - I agree with you about Gerald Ford. When he was president, I thought the media reported truthfull facts, so I made a big mistake and voted for Jimmy Carter. Since then I've learned the truth about the media.
_______
Dave dlt.gif
 
Dusty, old friend and shipmate, this one is for you...

THE NEW YORK TIMES

Op-Ed Contributors
How Lieutenant Ford Saved His Ship

By ROBERT DRURY and TOM CLAVIN
Published: December 28, 2006
East Hampton, N.Y.

FOR Americans under a certain age, Gerald Ford is best remembered for his contribution to Bartlett’s — “Our long national nightmare is over” — or, more likely, for the comedian Chevy Chase’s stumbling, bumbling impersonations of him on “Saturday Night Live.” But there’s a different label we can attach to this former president, one that has been overlooked for 62 years: war hero.

In 1944, Lt. j.g. Jerry Ford — a lawyer from Grand Rapids, Mich., blond and broad-shouldered, with the lantern jaw of a young Johnny Weissmuller — was a 31-year-old gunnery officer on the aircraft carrier Monterey. The Monterey was a member of Adm. William Halsey’s Third Fleet, and in mid-December, Lieutenant Ford was sailing off the Philippines as Admiral Halsey’s ships provided air cover for the second phase of Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s “I shall return” Philippine invasions.

The Monterey had earned more than half a dozen battle stars for actions in World War II; during the battle of Leyte Gulf, Lieutenant Ford, in charge of a 40-millimeter antiaircraft gun crew on the fantail deck, had watched as a torpedo narrowly missed the Monterey and tore out the hull of the nearby Australian cruiser Canberra. Two months later, in the early morning hours of Dec. 18, the Japanese were the least of the Monterey’s worries, as it found itself trapped in a vicious Pacific cyclone later designated Typhoon Cobra.

Lieutenant Ford had served as the Monterey’s officer of the deck on the ship’s midnight-to-4-a.m. watch, and had witnessed the lashing rains and 60-knot winds whip the ocean into waves that resembled liquid mountain ranges. The waves reeled in from starboard, gigantic sets of dark water that appeared to defy gravity, cresting at 40 to 70 feet. In his 18 months at sea, Lieutenant Ford had never seen waves so big. As breakers crashed over the carrier’s wheelhouse, he could just barely make out the distress whistles sounding about him — the deep beeps of the battleships, the shrill whoops of the destroyers.

After his watch Lieutenant Ford had strapped himself into his bunk below decks, and it seemed that his head had barely hit the pillow when the Monterey’s skipper, Capt. Stuart H. Ingersoll, sounded general quarters, calling all hands to their stations. Lieutenant Ford bolted upright in his dark sea cabin. He thought he smelled smoke amidships. Racing through a rolling companionway dimly lighted by red battle lights, he reached the outside skipper’s ladder leading to the pilothouse and began to climb. At that precise moment a 70-foot wave broke over the Monterey. The carrier pitched 25 degrees to port, and Lieutenant Ford was knocked flat on his back. He began skimming the flight deck as if he were on a toboggan.

Just as he was about to be hurled overboard, Lieutenant Ford managed to slow his slide, twist like an acrobat, and fling himself onto the catwalk. He got to his knees, made his way below deck, and started back up again.

By the time he reached the Monterey’s pilothouse, the fighter planes in its hangar deck had begun slamming into one another as well as the bulkheads — “like pinballs,” Mr. Ford recalled 60 years later — and the collisions had ignited their gas tanks. The hangar deck of the Monterey had become a cauldron of aircraft fuel, and because of a quirk in its construction, the flames from the burning aircraft were sucked into the air intakes of the lower decks. As fires broke out below, Lieutenant Ford remembered the smoke he smelled when he’d bolted from his bunk.

Admiral Halsey had ordered Captain Ingersoll to abandon ship, and the Monterey was ablaze from stem to stern as Lieutenant Ford stood near the helm, awaiting his orders. “We can fix this,” Captain Ingersoll said, and with a nod from his skipper, Lieutenant Ford donned a gas mask and led a fire brigade below.

Aircraft-gas tanks exploded as hose handlers slid across the burning decks. Into this furnace Lieutenant Ford led his men, his first order of business to carry out the dead and injured. Hours later he and his team emerged burned and exhausted, but they had put out the fire.

Three destroyers were eventually capsized by Typhoon Cobra, a dozen more ships were seriously damaged, more than 150 planes were destroyed, and 793 men lost their lives. It was the Navy’s worst “defeat” of World War II. But the Monterey and nearly all of its men survived to take part in the battle of Okinawa, and the future president ended his Navy stint in 1946 with the rank of lieutenant commander.

Like his fellow World War II veterans, Mr. Ford returned home and resumed his life, rarely speaking publicly of his heroism. But in contrast to the public’s image of him as a clumsy nonentity, Mr. Ford was a man whose grace under pressure saved his ship and hundreds of men on it.

Robert Drury and Tom Clavin are the authors of the forthcoming “Halsey’s Typhoon: The True Story of a Fighting Admiral, an Epic Storm and an Untold Rescue.”

Sorry for the length, didn't seem right to edit it.

Charlie
 
Thanks for posting Charlie. Information like this would have been missed (by me anyway) with all the other priorities on-going in life. Makes one step back and take perspective on how bad things were during the war and not just from the enemy. Very interesting, I plan to research more on this. Thanks again.
 
President Ford should go down in History as a President that pulled the nation together in one of her darkest hours; the resignation of a President. In looking back, my humble opinion is he was exactly what the country needed at that time... a moderate that was liked and generally accepted by both parties, fair handed, and insightful as to the best way we, as a nation, should take in getting past the Nixon/Watergate ordeal. He granted Mr. Nixon a full and unconditional pardon for the Watergate fiasco.

Back then I thought it was a travesty of justice for him to grant the pardon to Mr. Nixon. But in reflection... I am not so sure it would have done anyone any good, other than supplying the democrats election year fodder, if Mr. Nixon had been prosecuted.

President Ford did what was best for the country knowing full well the pardon would most likely cost him the upcoming election 20 or so months later.

President Ford literally fell on his sword for the good of the Presidency and the nation when he granted the pardon. As was seen in the next election, the pardon most likely was the contributing cause for him losing the Election to Mr. Carter.

My flag is at half mast...

Butch
 
It seems incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid isn't gonna bother clearing his schedule in order to attend President Ford's funeral.
 
Yes, Charlie,

He was a good shipmate. Those of us left from Monterey will hum taps - each in his own way. The typhoon next spring was even worse IMO, but we didn't get any fire damage altho' yer bud Dusty did his best to wipe out the island structure with his inverted TBM torpedo bomber. :shock: - Gerry hated me because I didn't take out the big radar too so the ship could go back to the yard.

Dusty (Scotch night!!)
 
Thank you for the comments about Gerry Ford. He was the right man at the time, and his actions immediately after Richard Nixon resigned, were the best thing for the country.

I knew that he was a great football player. I never knew he was a war hero.

Thank you for the information.

Fred
 
Butch":1p5k0ilo said:
My flag is at half mast...
Butch

Mine too!

I've enjoyed reading the historical contributions of the WW II carriers from our "more mature" C-Brats :lol: )

Which has prompted me to gain a bit more knowledge....hence the following "trivial (although not so trivial) question).

Which Aircraft Carrier in Halsey's fleet was the first and probably the only aircraft carrier to have rigged and actually used a sail to navigate by?
 
I'd have to "guess" the USS INTREPID (CVS-11) :lol:

From the USS INTREPID deck log of 1944:

19 February: Strong winds swung her back and forth and tended to weathercock her with her bow pointed toward Tokyo. Sprague later confessed: "Right then I wasn't interested in going in that direction." At this point the crew made a jury-rig sail of hatch covers and scrap canvas which swung Intrepid about and held her on course.

Who you callin' mature?? I'm proud of my immaturity... :roll: :embarrased

Charlie[/b]
 
Charlie you are the winner!

My dad was a Chaplain on the Intrepid in WW II.

To paraphrase from one of dad's Intrepid books....After taking a torpedo hit on the starboard quarter on 17 Feb. 1944, jamming the rudder (and basically making it look like a "huge potato chip"), the crew rigged a jib sail out of cargo nets, hatch covers, and canvas that extended from the flight deck to the forecastle. Additionally all possible cargo weight was moved aft to bring her bow futher out of the water and presenting it to the wind. Simultaneously the aircraft were moved to the forward end of the flight deck where they too added to the surface area acting as head sail.
 
Great Story, borne out by the Deck Log leading up to the earlier entry..

17 February 1944: That night an aerial torpedo struck Intrepid's starboard quarter, 15 feet below her waterline, flooding several compartments and jamming her rudder hard to port. By running her port engines and stopping her starboard engines, Captain Sprague kept her on course.
17 February–18 February: The 3 carrier groups sank two Japanese destroyers and 200,000 tons of merchant shipping in 2 days of almost continuous attacks in Operation Hailstone. The carrier raid demonstrated Truk's vulnerability and thereby greatly curtailed its usefulness to the Japanese as a base.


Charlie
 
Hey DaveS -

Better watch that "more mature" ship -- I'll have them cancel your AARP membership! :lol: :roll:

Have a HAPPY NEW YEAR and lets gargle with some of that great Snoqual. mouth wash SOONEST!

Dusty
 
Sawdust":210aui3w said:
Hey DaveS -
Better watch that "more mature" ship -- I'll have them cancel your AARP membership! :lol: :roll:
Dusty

Good morning Dusty! Yah I guess I should be careful... :roll: ...I figured Charlie would be right on top of the Intrepid information....and I knew that you would especially since I'd shared dad's book with you at one of our gatherings several years ago.

When I was in Viet Nam in '66 - '67, I read in the "Stars and Stripes" that the Intrepid was off the coast of V.N. and I wrote to dad and said ...."nice to know that you are out there!".

I've always wanted to visit the Intrepid in N. Y. but now that it is in for maintenance again, I'll have to wait a bit longer.

You guys have contributed so much to our country and to C-Brats....Thanks a bunch!

(I've got to sign off now and get some work done around the farm....Happy New Year!).
 
DaveS- As the son of a chaplain you probably know that there is a apochryphal story that a mess cook at the Last Supper was named "Dusty". To be serious for a moment, those guys in WWII, from the highest admiral to the lowest mess cook, really did save the world.
 
I'm sitting here watching the funeral procession on c-span and thinking of when I was fortunate enough to meet and shake hands with President Ford about 25 years ago, after he was out of office.

I was the treasurer of a large company and Fidelity Investments invited a group of us, their clients, to a dinner with the former president in Boston. When I was waiting in the receiving line it dawned on me we had something in common - true story - we both owned golden retrievers from the same blood line, mine out of Tidewater Kennels in Maryland.

When I shook his hand I mentioned this and there the line stopped while the President told me a story about the great dog he had!

Great guy - long life - sure wish all the pols had his integrity.
 
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