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Naval Shipyards, Repair Facilities and Dry Docks


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Salvage Sailor

Aloha Everyone,

 

Another topic for the Naval collectors. Post your patches and items related to Naval Shipyards, Ship Repair Facilities (SRF), Dry Docks and other maintenance facilities here.

 

First up Porthmouth Naval Shipyard, established in 1800

 

Sails & Smoothbores to Atoms & Missiles

Dedicated to Submarine Progress

 

Portsmouth Naval Shipyard 001.jpg

 

Portsmouth Naval Shipyard 002.jpg

 

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Salvage Sailor

 

SRF YOKOSUKA 001.jpg

 

SRF Yokosuka - U.S. Naval Ship Repair Facility, Yokosuka Japan

 

SRF YOKOSUKA 002.jpg

 

SRF Yokosuka Japan 001.jpg

 

SRF Yokosuka - U.S. Naval Ship Repair Facility, Yokosuka Japan

 

SRF Yokosuka Japan 002.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

USS ARD-16, ARD-12 Class Auxiliary Repair Dock

Built at Pacific Bridge, Alameda, CA in 1943 and commissioned in 1944

 

ARD 16 USS ARD 16 Hilborn Hamburger 001.jpg

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This was in a grouping of junk patches that I got real cheap on eBay. I had to look up what S.C.R.F. stood for which is Small Craft Repair Facility.

 

post-1389-0-31664900-1551423974.jpg

 

post-1389-0-79070100-1551424020.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

Nice one Tonomachi, I've got the same patch but not as clean as yours.....

 

 

 

Norfolk Navy Yard WWII Victory 001.jpg

 

Norfolk Navy Yard, World War Two Victory patch

 

Norfolk Navy Yard WWII Victory 002.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

Long Beach Naval Shipyard (NSY), Long Beach, CA

(Terminal Island Naval Shipyard est. 1938) Closed due to the 1997 BRAC.

 

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Navy presence on Terminal Island started in 1938. The Terminal Island Naval Dry Docks were authorized in June 1940, and construction began in August 1940 on one large drydock and two smaller docks. Recreation facilities, personnel and shop buildings were ordered in February 1942, and work began on Drydocks 2 and 3 and several piers in April 1942. On 9 February 1943, the Secretary of the Navy established the facilities as the US Naval Dry Docks, Roosevelt Base, California. Also in 1943, a barrack for Marines was built, work began on another approach pier, a 50 short tons (45 t) drydock crane was erected, and several shop buildings were started. In 1944, work started on the pontoons destined to be used in a "temporary" bridge to Terminal Island. The pontoon bridge would not be removed until the opening of the Gerald Desmond Bridge in 1968. The name of this facility was changed to Terminal Island Naval Shipyard on 30 November 1945. On 15 November 1946, the adjoining Naval Station Long Beach was established. The shipyard was renamed to Long Beach Naval Shipyard (NSY) in March 1948.

 

Long Beach Naval Shipyard 002.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

post-2322-0-89708600-1557604438.jpg

 

San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard (1965-1970) The San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard was a short-lived shipyard formed in 1965 as the combination of the San Francisco Naval Shipyard (aka Hunters Point) and the Mare Island Naval Shipyard. The combined yards were the largest naval shipyard in the world, but the desired cost savings did not materialize, and the two yards reverted to separate existences in February 1970. The shipyard was used for radioactive testing when the United States was testing the atomic bomb. The site has since been contaminated. Now the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard is a Superfund site, as designated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). It is the Navy's job to clean up the site to "reasonable" levels to those who live adjacent to the shipyard.

 

San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard 002.jpg

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Salvage Sailor
post-2322-0-85206400-1557604838.jpg
 
Hunters Point Naval Shipyard (1974-1994) aka San Francisco Naval Shipyard 1941-1974

 

The shipyard was purchased by the Navy in 1940, a year before the attack on Pearl Harbor. It began operations the next year as the San Francisco Naval Shipyard, and operated until 1974 when it was deactivated and renamed Hunters Point Naval Shipyard. Used commercially for a time, in 1986 it was taken over by the Navy again as the home port of the USS Missouri battlegroup, under the name Treasure Island Naval Station Hunters Point Annex.

 

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The base was named redundant as part of the Base Realignment and Closure effort in 1991, and was closed permanently in 1994. Since then the site has been part of a superfund cleanup effort to remediate the leftovers of decades of industrial and radiological use.

 

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Salvage Sailor

 

San Francisco Naval Shipyard PWC MUC 001a.jpg

 

San Francisco Bay Public Works Center - Meritorious Unit Commendation (MUC)

SF Bay, Hunters Point, Mare Island, Treasure Island

 

San Francisco Naval Shipyard PWC MUC 002a.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

1593598265_MareIsland001.jpg.3c3f161b1b644142fbdff167727c62b9.jpg

 

Mare Island Naval Shipyard (MINSY) 1854-1996 The Mare Island Naval Shipyard (MINSY) was the first United States Navy base established on the Pacific Ocean. It is located 25 miles northeast of San Francisco in Vallejo, California. The Napa River goes through the Mare Island Strait and separates the peninsula shipyard (Mare Island, California) from the main portion of the city of Vallejo. MINSY made a name for itself as the premier US West Coast submarine port as well as serving as the controlling force in San Francisco Bay Area shipbuilding efforts during World War II. The base closed in 1996 and has gone through several redevelopment phases. It was registered as a California Historical Landmark in 1960, and parts of it were declared a National Historic Landmark District in 1975

 

Mare Island Naval Shipyard 001.jpg

 

Mare Island Naval Shipyard 002.jpg

 

Mare Island Naval Shipyard 003.jpg

 

Mare Island Naval Shipyard (MINSY) 1854-1996

 

Mare Island Naval Shipyard 004.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

post-2322-0-71250600-1560715264.jpg

 

BOSTON NAVAL SHIPYARD - The Boston Navy Yard, originally called the Charlestown Navy Yard and later Boston Naval Shipyard, was one of the oldest shipbuilding facilities in the United States Navy. It was established in 1801 as part of the recent establishment of the new U.S. Department of the Navy in 1798. After 175 years of military service, it was decommissioned as a naval installation on 1 July 1974.

 

Throughout its history the Charlestown Navy Yard has been referred to by a number of different names. Navy tradition dictates that a shore station or yard was named after the largest city in the geographical area—in this case the U.S. Navy Yard, Boston. However, most yards were known by multiple names, the alternative, like Charlestown, usually being the name of the actual place where the yard was located. Throughout the 19th century, "navy yard at Boston " and "navy yard at Charlestown " frequently appeared in both correspondence and Congressional legislation, often interchangeably. It does not appear that there was ever a formal order naming the facility until the November 1945 reorganization of naval shore establishments, when it became the Boston Naval Shipyard.

 

Boston Naval Shipyard 002.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

SRF GUAM - Ship Repair Facility Guam, Ship Fitter Divers billet, Apra Harbor, Agana (Hagatna)

 

SRF Guam Diver 001.jpg

 

SRF Guam Diver 002.jpg

 

SRF GUAM 001.jpg

 

SRF GUAM - United States Naval Ship Repair Facility Guam, Apra Harbor, Agana (Hagatna)

 

SRF GUAM 002.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

post-2322-0-61417600-1576462777.jpg

 

Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard - We Keep Them Fit to Fight - Gemsco, 1950's

 

Pearl Harbor  Naval Shipyard 002.jpg

 

Pearl Harbor  Naval Shipyard 003.jpg

 

Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard - No Ka Oi (The Best)

 

Pearl Harbor  Naval Shipyard 004.jpg

 

PEARL HARBOR NAVAL SHIPYARD & IMF, Hawaii - Pearl Harbor,
The Navy's No Ka Oi Shipyard iconic and historic building.

 

NAVSEA PEARL HARBOR

 

Pearl Harbor  Naval Shipyard 005a.jpg

 

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Salvage Sailor

"The oldest vessel in the Naval Register (with the exception of USS Constitution)"

 

DYNAMIC (AFDL-6) - AFDL-1 Class Small Auxiliary Floating Dry Dock: Laid down, date unknown, at Chicago Bridge and Iron Co., Eureka, CA. Delivered and Commissioned, USS AFD-6, 1 March 1944

Decommissioned and placed in service, date unknown. Redesignated AFDL-6, 1 August 1946, Named Dynamic, date unknown. Current Disposition, in service at NAB Little Creek, VA, Mid-Atlantic Regional Maintenance Center's (MARMC)

 

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Dynamic is a single, rigid piece floating dry-dock designed for a maximum lift capacity of 950 light/tons. The dry dock was designed under the direction of the Bureau of Yards and Docks and was constructed by Chicago Bridge and Iron Company of Eureka, Calif. Construction was completed on March 11, 1944. Dynamic is the oldest vessel in the Naval Register (with the exception of USS Constitution), and will turn 76 years old in 2020.

 

USS AFDL 6 DYNAMIC 002.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

post-2322-0-62962300-1586144385.jpg

 

USS RICHLAND (YFD-4, AFDM-8) AFDM-3 class medium auxiliary floating drydock built in California for the U.S. Navy, in service 1944 to 1997. YFD-64 was redesignated AFDM-8 on 1 August 1946, placed in service at Guam on 1 January 1947. The floating drydock supported Fleet Ballistic Missile submarine maintenance at Guam for over forty years. She was named Richland on 6 April 1968. The drydock was struck from the Navy List on 22 August 1997 and transferred to the local redevelopment authority in Guam on 6 April 1999

 

USS AFDM 8 002.jpg

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Salvage Sailor

127879730_USSARD29001.jpg.d9797c56f480dd0a8e43b9c54daa8a11.jpg

 

USS ARCO (ARD-29)

10" Vietnam era jacket patch made in Japan circa 1967-1971

 

ARD-12 Class Auxiliary Repair Dock:  Laid down in 1944, at Pacific Bridge Co., Alameda CA.
Placed in service in 1944 at Naval Repair Base San Diego, CA.
Commissioned, USS ARD-29, 23 June 1945, LT. Hector Phillips, USNR, in command
During WWII USS ARD-29 served at San Diego and after World War II she served at Guam and Okinawa until transferred to the Submarine Base Pearl Harbor
Returned to Guam to serve from 1959 to 1971
Named USS Arco (ARD-29), 28 March 1967 at NAVSTA Guam, M.I. 
Decommissioned, 1 November 1971
Transferred on loan to Royal Iranian Navy, renamed Drydock No. 400
Struck from the Naval Register in 1977

Still serving in the Iranian Navy as Drydock No. 400

 

USS ARD 29 002.jpg

 

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Salvage Sailor

USS ALAMOGORDO (ARDM-2) ex-ARD-26

ARD-12 Class Auxiliary Repair Dock / ARDM-1 Class Medium Auxiliary Repair Dock 1985. 

 

IMG_1984.JPG.375016e91febd7c59e66a97e5b3df89e.JPG

 

She was renamed ALAMOGORDO in 1965 to serve as the drydock for SUBRON 18 in Charleston, S.C.

843942031_ARDM2USSALAMOGORDO004.jpg.be563e5e994b3e933dbbc61884d78911.jpg

 

2096021116_SUBRON18EIGHTEEN001.jpg.998d0ab7fb96194dec9879cc635bb17d.jpg

 

IMG_1985.JPG.c19ec8cdf0a8fa911a0eacdab288c71e.JPG

 

IMG_1986.JPG.5535f184116d308098feae1f688b2c21.JPG

 

 

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Salvage Sailor

SHIP REPAIR FACILITY SUBIC BAY (SRF SUBIC BAY) Vietnam war era local PI made patch

1533536391_SRFSUBICBAY001.jpg.bfb7e29be294849546454c2bb9aa9842.jpg

 

SRF_Subic_Bay_and_USS_Brunswick_June_1991.jpg.fee18a23bc53d378f788c98b550c7c61.jpg

Already in dis-repair at the end of the Vietnam War - Note the Salvage Tug USS BRUNSWICK at center, mid 1970's

 

348349892_SRFSUBICBAY002.jpg.2f1c8650542dd890b2e07d0f0cd4fc85.jpg

 

and....

NAVAL SUPPLY DEPOT SUBIC BAY, 1991 DESERT SHIELD - DESERT STORM

922124909_NSDSUBICBAY1991001.jpg.ce59e55fafeb4df8e14cbc71ac274ae8.jpg

 

1402965961_SBU12SubicBaySEAFOX.jpg.0666fc3c6003e83b620e3086121ea4a5.jpg

SBU-12 SEAFOX

 

1205512693_SBU12SubicBay01.jpg.39f3a24157ee502caada1dec52bee6f5.jpg

SBU-12

 

1233423161_SBU12SubicBay.jpg.e46cda268209413aac0a00ec61cfdf58.jpg

SBU-12 SEAFOX at Subic Bay, PI

 

1800712343_NSDSUBICBAY1991002.jpg.f537724c95a22b3b72d4cab31046593f.jpg

 

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Salvage Sailor

SUPSHIP Jacksonville, Florida

SUPERVISOR OF SHIPBUILDING, CONVERSION AND REPAIR - U.S. NAVY

MAXIMUM ENDEAVOR

1299791232_SUPSHIPJacksonville001.jpg.3fe59ae118544f40305b47f753c1ebfe.jpg

 

751200957_SUPSHIPJacksonville002.jpg.a76a603a4ef0607423576cd75acba015.jpg

 

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Salvage Sailor

Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, officially Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility (PSNS & IMF), is a United States Navy shipyard covering 179 acres (0.7 km2) on Puget Sound at Bremerton, Washington in uninterrupted use since its establishment in 1891; it has also been known as Navy Yard Puget Sound, Bremerton Navy Yard, and the Bremerton Naval Complex.

 

1442190470_PugetSoundNavalShipyardBremertonWashington001.jpg.4b3b0d01014cbea085c89cacb658c51c.jpg

 

795321486_PugetSoundNavalShipyardBremertonWashington002.jpg.070c67c295af03ae7d6a07444059b85c.jpg

 

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Salvage Sailor

NORFOLK NAVY YARD WWII

1716674810_NorfolkNavyYardWWIIVictory001.jpg.50cc5260e350724f30a1685129495b57.jpg

 

Norfolk Navy Yard WWII V for Victory Patch

 

1741660362_NorfolkNavyYardWWIIVictory002.jpg.e56215399477bbe0841485599f0afcf8.jpg

 

NORFOLK NAVAL SHIPYARD (NNSY)

Portsmouth, VA

1808396885_NorfolkNavalShipyard001.JPG.82185230039535d800fd41800c74e28d.JPG

 

SERVICE TO THE FLEET - UNDER FOUR FLAGS

 

1657573652_NorfolkNavalShipyard002.JPG.5badfde7d19fa03c334d84d71460a281.JPG

 

1309683462_NorfolkNavalShipyardMarineMachineShop001.JPG.c0bcdcb65070b0f3a604cc20fb7a3b6e.JPG

 

Marine Machine Shop 38 - Norfolk Naval Ship Yard

 

508552917_NorfolkNavalShipyardMarineMachineShop002.JPG.1bde5863335ed70f7b9302c38a3fa6f0.JPG

 

NORFOLK NAVAL SHIPYARD TIGERS

Nuclear Tiger Team

1856840758_NorfolkNavalShipyardTigerTeam001.JPG.10ab3ca815fad057cad2cd634423888b.JPG

Coverall patch

323738253_NorfolkNavalShipyardTigerTeam002.JPG.126dfd17ff21de7f1ec2d424532a9de3.JPG

 

NORFOLK NAVAL SHIPYARD POLICE

1361448701_NorfolkNavalShipyardPolice001.JPG.7ceba338d0210af4ae1d159ad791cfa3.JPG

 

2119844300_NorfolkNavalShipyardPolice002.JPG.3a82b0ca18156ddc58e52ea09278f666.JPG

 

NNSY NAVY EXCHANGE

Swiss Tex 1970's

176026917_NorfolkNavyShipyardSwissTex001.JPG.124cd9dc4f5de66437baf3fc6f1bc1de.JPG

 

SIMA NORFOLK

Shore Intermediate Maintenance Activity

2031054005_SIMANorfolk001.JPG.d1831027eabf6a0dd121e277872847bc.JPG

HELPIING THE FLEET HELP THEMSELVES

630363820_SIMANorfolk002.JPG.aa1c4e96f0f4f45a78c53a7a9a888bb0.JPG

 

 

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Salvage Sailor

SUPSHIP BATH MAINE

Supervisor of Shipbuilding, Conversions and Repair

Founded in 1931, Gemsco patch circa 1950's

SUPSHIPBathMaine001.JPG.b3c42f15bf213533dda849c0ee81f0df.JPG

 

SUPSHIPBathMaine002.JPG.b727231c75cf72f9bac812a6b2eb25d5.JPG

 

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On 2/9/2022 at 8:40 PM, Salvage Sailor said:

SHIP REPAIR FACILITY SUBIC BAY (SRF SUBIC BAY) Vietnam war era local PI made patch

1533536391_SRFSUBICBAY001.jpg.bfb7e29be294849546454c2bb9aa9842.jpg

 

SRF_Subic_Bay_and_USS_Brunswick_June_1991.jpg.fee18a23bc53d378f788c98b550c7c61.jpg

Already in dis-repair at the end of the Vietnam War - Note the Salvage Tug USS BRUNSWICK at center, mid 1970's

 

348349892_SRFSUBICBAY002.jpg.2f1c8650542dd890b2e07d0f0cd4fc85.jpg

 

and....

NAVAL SUPPLY DEPOT SUBIC BAY, 1991 DESERT SHIELD - DESERT STORM

922124909_NSDSUBICBAY1991001.jpg.ce59e55fafeb4df8e14cbc71ac274ae8.jpg

 

1402965961_SBU12SubicBaySEAFOX.jpg.0666fc3c6003e83b620e3086121ea4a5.jpg

SBU-12 SEAFOX

 

1205512693_SBU12SubicBay01.jpg.39f3a24157ee502caada1dec52bee6f5.jpg

SBU-12

 

1233423161_SBU12SubicBay.jpg.e46cda268209413aac0a00ec61cfdf58.jpg

SBU-12 SEAFOX at Subic Bay, PI

 

1800712343_NSDSUBICBAY1991002.jpg.f537724c95a22b3b72d4cab31046593f.jpg

 

The boat below a Sea Fox the navy did away with due to injuries waves would make the canopy collapse on top of crew members in the boat. That had all these replacement engines V-6 92 turbos for those Sea Fox so in SBU XI we swapped out these slow V-8 in the MATC troop carriers with those V-6 92 turbos and increased the speed to about 30 knots. The boats in the photos you posted are PB MK III.

D-1.jpg

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Another unit I was in was SIMA in Alameda any patches for SIMA there was in the sail loft for a few years there. Seen a patch for the base but not SIMA there.

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