Community Corner

UPDATE: USS Iowa Departing Saturday During Golden Gate Bridge Festivities

Plus, the U.S.S. Nimitz, arrived SF Bay Friday for the party making for spectacular viewing. The historic WWII battleship will pass under the Golden Gate Bridge between 2 and 3 p.m.

 

Get out your flags and cameras ready, folks. The mighty U.S.S. Iowa is leaving San Francisco Bay—for real—Saturday.

And there will be a flotilla of well-wishers already out on the bay to greet her: Her departure coincides with the numerous events planned for the 75th Anniversary of the Golden Gate Bridge.

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The U.S.S. Nimitz, homeported in Everett, arrived in San Francisco Bay Friday, making for some spectacular viewing, and possibly a chance to photograph the two ships together, all with the historic bridge on her party weekend. 

At about 10:20 a.m. Thursday, the Pacific Battleship Center announced the departure via its Facebook Fan Page:

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"USS IOWA will be departing the Port of Richmond, CA on Saturday, May 26 at 1100. IOWA is expected to be transiting under the Golden Gate Bridge on its 75th anniversary between 1400 and 1500 (2:00pm and 3:00pm). If you will be on a small boat, we encourage you to watch ship and boat traffic closely and please be safe!"

Her , but bad weather and high seas forced days' long delay. Perhaps to happy conclusion, since the festivities will be even bigger as the maritime community—and everyone else—comes out in force this holiday weekend for the bridge party. Bring out the fireboats!

The U.S.S. Iowa, the last of the battleships, is headed to Los Angeles, where it will become a floating museum—the last of its WWII sister ships to be restored and opened to the public—in San Pedro.

The U.S.S. Iowa (BB-61) is the first of four “Iowa Class Battleships” from World War II. It is the last such ship to find a permanent home befitting its storied past. The other three are the U.S.S. New Jersey (now in Camden, N.J.), U.S.S. Missouri (at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and historic, for Japan's unconditional surrender was signed on its decks), and U.S.S. Wisconsin (in Norfolk, VA).

In the 1980s, then-Mayor Dianne Feinstein lost a bid to homeport the U.S.S. Missouri in San Francisco. Efforts to keep the Iowa in the Bay Area also failed more recently.

If you read Los Altos Patch writer Parke Ballantine's story in January about as volunteers lovingly cared for it while it was berthed in Richmond undergoing repairs, that was your last chance to walk her decks while in the Bay Area.

The next chance? San Pedro, where the ribbon-cutting will take place on July 7.

It will take about three to four days for the U.S.S. Iowa to make its way to Los Angeles. You can follow the batteship's progress, real-time, from the Pacific Battleship Center website. Wednesday morning, Southern California publications were already trumpeting news of its  departure.

Plan to find a spot around San Francisco Bay to wave goodbye Saturday.

Watch Patch for updates on this story.


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