| Time Was Near For Commissioning
Soon,
additional crew reported for duty. Repair
personnel came in from the Philadelphia Navy yard but most
of the crew came in from Newport, Rhode Island. I was
relieved of my duties in the Yosemite office and spent
more time aboard the ship checking out the
refrigeration units. We had an older man
with us in his thirty's we called "Pappy" Wier.
One day, as we were busily insulating the wall of our
food storage locker, Pappy decided to take a nap
inside one of these fiberglass containers. It looked
and felt like cotton. A while later, when he crawled
out, his skin started itching like crazy, even a
shower wouldn't help. He had millions of little glass
spears in his body - After a week or so, nature took
over and he got relief.
The Launching Of The
USS Yosemite
The keel of the Yosemite was laid on January 19, 1942
which seems like a long time ago. The ship was
starting to look sharp. Painters put on our North
Atlantic camouflage in grey, blue, black and white.
The launching was May 16, 1943.
I recall the day we were commissioned on March 26, 1944. We left our barracks early in
the morning with all of our gear. Going up the
gangplank and saluting the colors was an exciting
time. We all got dressed in whites and waited at our
assigned division locations. Captain George C. Towner
was our
first captain and Lieutenant Commander Wallace H. Gregg
was our Executive Officer.
Regular ship routine was then initiated and we seemed
ready to go to sea.
The ship was docked at Clyde-Mallory Dock and we didn't go very far the first few days.
Supplies and especially food for the crew had to be
loaded. The crew in
the ice room had plenty to do supervising the loading
inside the lockers. As the salami, baloney and cheese came
aboard, a strange thing happened. Our ice storage
locker soon had a full complement of food for late night
snacks. Later, we got so tired
of the baloney and cheese, we gave the locker a good
cleaning and sent the loot to deep-seven when we were
at sea.
After about two weeks we left Tampa with a destroyer
escort on our way to Hampton Rhodes and the safety of
Chesapeake Bay. We cruised there for a while and even
saw Annapolis. Finally we sailed into Norfolk Navy
Yard for a couple of days.
First General Quarters
After we were out at sea for a while with our
destroyer escort, the USS Winslow, we had a little
excitement. It was almost dark when the destroyer
sonar picked up something. I remember the gonging of
the
General Quarters alarm and someone yelling that it was not a
drill. It was almost bedlam in the lower deck. I had
come out of the ice machines to take readings in the
locker when the alarm went off. One seaman ran up a
ladder with a battle lamp fully lit until he was
tackled to keep the light from showing. It was confusion, the lights dimmed and the
ship started some fast maneuvers. One man who was
working on the big crane couldn't get down but
reported seeing the wake of a torpedo off our bow.
Radio Berlin later said a sub sank the USS Yosemite.
Luckily nothing really happened to the Yosemite. Some
crewmen later reported seeing depth charges dropped
close to us during the prior nights encounter. All
hands not on watch had to attend briefings at their
battle stations. My briefing was a damage control
meeting in the mess hall right above the ice machines.
I got a pail to sit on because I wasn't on watch. As
the meeting went on and on and on, I got tired. Well,
I fell asleep. When I awoke, I was alone setting
on my pail, everybody else had left. I tried to get
down the ladder to the ice machines before anyone
noticed but I did get the He-Haws from some of the
cooks and the mess crew. Well, at least if I wasn't
tied to securing the ice machines, I was part of the
repair group located in the mess hall. |