USS
SARATOGA AIRCRAFT CARRIER
AT
DELAWARE
BREAKWATER
1968
HISTORY
Lewes
resident, Delaware Bay & River pilot, J. Wright Rowland,
had
no problem as the pilot of the Saratoga , going up river from
the
Delaware
Breakwater Monday, January 7 1968.
There
was a 25 knot or higher wind from the northwest as Rowland
stood
on the navigation bridge with about 40 Navy officers and seamen
for
the trip from the Delaware Breakwater to Philadelphia Navy Yard
where
she will be most of this year until December undergoing overhaul
costing
forty million dollars. The waters were choppy, lots of ice , it
was
cold
at 6:30 am when he was able to board.
He
spent the day until 3 pm on the bridge with the carriers captain
and
10
Navy men talking with crew in the engine room, the steer engine
room,
the
bow, the stern and all along the sides. There he stayed until the
docking
pilot
, a Coast Guard officer, took over and spent two hours docking.
The
Saratoga is 1039 feet long with a 130 foot beam at her keel and
weighs
about 68,000 tons.
For
Rowland is was part of a days work as the night before he took a
ship
through
the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal to Philadelphia up the
Delaware
River.
Abstract:
Wilmington News Journal , Tuesday, January 9, 1968
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