Fried Chicken In Portland
Oregon
Name: Leo Medrano MM3, Mike Division
Email: Not computer literate
Greetings to all "Fighting Saint" shipmates.
I will never forget the time the USS SAINT PAUL went on a goodwill
cruise to Portland, Oregon. It was during the famous
Rose Festival.
It
was amazing how the roses would be in full bloom during the winter
season. It was more amazing to see
and be a part of the navigation
done
through the Willamette River. I thought it would really be impossible
for the USS SAINT
PAUL to navigate and much less, sail through
a river.
However, much to my amazement it did. More amazing was how all the
crew
was treated once we tied the ship to a tree in
Portland. The pier was
filled with people of all ages welcoming the
ship and its crew to the
city of Portland, Oregon. When got off the ship
the people, especially
the girls, wanted our autograph.
It was then that I knew how a movie
star feels when surrounded by fans. My friend
and I had not walked
three blocks when we
got a ride with two girls driving a brand new car.
They treated us to fried chicken and french
fries. They gave us a tour
of their
proud and beautiful city. After night fell on us they took us
to what looked like a very dark park with
not a single light. We had
a
picnic and ate the rest of the left-over-chicken. In the early morning
when the sun started showing its rays
of light my friend
got up
screaming. I woke up and next thing I know he is next to me asking me
if I knew where we were. I looked around
and found
out we had spent the
night in a cemetery. I will never forget Portland, Oregon; the girls
that gave us a ride; the chicken and to
say the least, the cemetery.
[TOP]

An Officer and A Gentleman
Name: (Memories submitted by) Bill Lauterbach 6th Division Officer, 1956
Email:
wclauterbach@earthlink.net
Anecdotes about C.V. Ricketts who was captain in 1955-1956
As a Lt. on December 7, 1941, he was the assistant gunnery officer on
the USS West Virginia. On his own, he went to damage
control central
and
prevented her from capsizing. She had seven torpedoes in her side just
like the Oklahoma. Look at pictures
of Pearl Harbor, and you see
the
West Virginia next to the Tennessee and it does not look like she sunk,
but she did. I do not
believe that any one on the St. Paul knew
that Captain Ricketts was the one who had saved the West Virginia. I
found out about
it after my wife got me a series of Morrison’s naval
history series.
He would come to the wardroom and apologize to the
officer’s of the
deck for taking the Conn away from them. No captain needs to
apologize
to any OOD! He was a gentleman.
He knew that whatever happened, the St.
Paul would be his last ship command.
The way he first handled the ship to come along
side to pass messenger
mail was so much different. We were ahead of the ship to which
we were
to go alongside, so the normal
procedure was to shear out of line, slow
down until we were behind the ship to which we were to
pass the mail, then
speed up
and come alongside, slowing down as we approached. This is NOT
what Captain Rickets did! He ordered full
speed and right rudder,
which
caused the EXEC and the Navigator to turn away, leaving only the OOD,
JOD, and me the JOOD to watch.
This caused the
ship to move in a large
circle slowing down as he approached the ship’s course ending up behind
the ship to which we were
to pass the mail, and proceeded from that
position in the normal manner. This way he maintained a maximum amount
of
steerageway.
When a friend of mine had the duty, and had permission to go ashore to
pick up his wife and parents and was waiting
for the officer’s motor
boat, another Captain Ricketts anecdote occurred. He comes and asks Fred
what he is doing. Fred explains
that he has the duty and has
permission
to come ashore to get his family and is waiting for the officer’s motor
boat to take them to
the ship for dinner. Captain Ricketts
says, “Why wait”, he then
helps Fred’s mother and wife into the gig and tells Fred to get into the
gig and then gets into the gig himself; the
gig heads toward the ship.
What happens next is what is interesting, as the captain, he should
go up
first and receive the honors, but no,
Captain Ricketts helps the ladies
on to the gangway and tells Fred to go up with his family
and then he
went up last. Captain Ricketts was an
officer and a gentleman!
As 6thdivision officer, I had to take a man to Captain’s
Mast. Captain Ricketts required that the division officer write a report
on
what you
thought of the man and what you recommend for punishment. He
read my recommendations, ‘read the man out’ saying
how much he was
disappointed in him, and how he had wasted “Mr. Lauterbach’s time.” He
then told me to handle the matter.
This way, I could hold the
man’s
liberty card, and no mark would show on his service record. Not right by UCMJ, but one of Captain
Ricketts’ fortes was leadership
in this
fashion.
I by now was a qualified OOD, it was a mid-watch, the war was over, and
we were steaming between Japan and Korea. Captain
Ricketts is
asleep in
his sea cabin. We get a visual and radar contact with constant bearing
and decreasing range. I notify Captain
Ricketts. He
tells me to
notify him when it is at a certain range. I do so. He comes
out of his sea cabin. It is obvious to him that
it is a trawler with a
net over the
side with a light on to attract fish into the net and it
will pass about 50 yards or so by our
starboard side. He also believes
that the crew is
asleep. He then blows our ships whistle and says, “I
understand that this is customary
around here. Good night!” The bridge
watch could hardly
stand up they were laughing so hard.
Again, while I was OOD and we were steaming after gunnery exercises of
off San Clement at 10 Kts, Captain Ricketts ordered
consecutively
Standard, Full, and Flank speeds, at which the engineering watch called
on the phone asking, “What was going on?”
I replied, “The captain has
the conn” Later Captain Ricketts ordered back full emergency! Again, the
engineering watch called and
got the same response from me.
Captain
Ricketts said that he wanted the engineers to respond immediately to
engine orders when
they are given.
Captain Ricketts was selected for Rear Admiral while on the St. Paul
and was not in the promotion zone. He later
became COMSIXTHFLT and
died
Vice Chief of Naval Operations from what I understand. Again, he was an
officer and a gentleman!

On the photo above left, shows
the last round of the Korean war fired from the middle gun of turret No.
2.
The
photo on the right above COMCRUDIVONE RAD HARRY SANDERS; Last
shot Korean war 8" Round, USS SAINT PAUL,
July 27, 1953.
[TOP]

Reference Her Father
Name: Elizabeth Lopez
E-mail: hippie01@gmail.com
The most important thing that I could say about my father, Erasmo O.
Tovar, and the Navy is one word - Proud!!
My father enlisted in the Navy at the age of 21 years old. His passion
for what the Navy and the world had to offer was endless.
The stories
that my father told us was that he enjoyed traveling (Hawaii, Japan,
Taiwan & Philippines), cooking in the kitchen
and having fun with his
buddies. He had a position as -Masters of Arms and Crewman.
I just wished that he could of seen what the world had to offer him of
the past and memories of his cruise ship.
We are very proud of you Dad and your accomplishments.
Erasmo Ortiz Tovar BM3
Erasmo Tovar-Top Right
Erasmo Tovar - Middle
[TOP]

Loretta Creelman
Name: Loretta Creelman
Email: lcreelman@verizon.net
My father, Eddie C. Cadena was from Saspamco, Texas. He served aboard
the USS SAINT PAUL in Bravo Division in 1953-1956
with the Korean
War
Service. He was under the area command of the Commandant Eleventh Naval
District. He was awarded
the Korean and China Service
Medals.
He met my Mom when he was stationed in Long Beach, California at what
was then called "The Pike." My father loved to travel
and especially
the Navy.
My most happy moments were when he took us to see the ships in the
harbor. In particular, it was a special moment when he
took us to the
open house the USS SAINT PAUL had when it was in Long Beach, California
during the 1960's.
My father was very proud of the USS SAINT PAUL CA-73. I hope someone
recognizes my dad and will share some stories or photos.

Eddie C. Cadena
Eddie C. Cadena (On right second row)
[Top]

Fish Heads In Yokosuka Japan
Name: Mario Chavez
Email: mario_chavez@msn.com
I will never forget the first time we had liberty
call in Yokosuka, Japan. My friend Leo and I went ashore to check the
place out.
After spending some time in the Cabaret Black Rose and had a
couple of cool ones we started getting hungry and decided to get
something to eat. Suddenly, we remember we were in another country
faraway from our hometowns. There was no way we
were going to be able
to order "Tacos," "Enchiladas," much less "Chile Rellenos" with beans.
Leo said not to worry, he knew how
and what to order. Once we found a restaurant, we thought we liked, we went in and sat down. A Japanese
waiter quickly
presented us with a menu. I for one did not know what to
do with it. Everything was in Japanese. I asked my friend Leo what he
was going to order. I figured he knew because he kept on looking at the
menu like as if he was reading it. Soon a Japanese waiter
showed up,
Leo told him to get us some Saki, and he pointed to some plate on the
menu. I sat there and took in the scenery.
The waiter at once brought
us the Saki and he placed it delicately on our table.
Being Hispanics,
for some reason we decided to treat the Saki like as if it was a shot of
"Tequila." We gulped the Saki in one
"wham" and asked the waiter for
some lemon wedges. The waiter noticing what we had done, and with his
eyes growing as big as
the eyes on the fish heads, he had brought us,
stared at us straight in our eyes. The waiter said something about the
Saki, with his
eyes popping out of their sockets, and by expression and
sign language, we gathered that Saki was not supposed to be treated that
way. I was not paying too much attention to his rebukes since, I was
surprised and shocked to see a plate in front of me filled with
fish
heads, with huge popping eyes on white rice. Needless to say, our first
dinner in Japan was white rice.
Before leaving the Cabaret Black Rose, my friend Leo
got the scare of his life. We had been relaxing and drinking an ice,
cold, beer
in a can. After a while, when we were about ready to leave,
Leo crushed the empty can of beer like they do in Topeka, Kansas
to show
their strength and machismo. I guess. Suddenly, a Japanese man, of
short stature, got off the bar stool where he had been
seating. He
approached my friend Leo in an angry and almost criminal way and started
yelling at the top of his lungs in Japanese at Leo.
Both Leo and I sat
frozen on our bar stool not knowing what was going on, and much less why
the Japanese man was so upset at Leo.
The bartender came over and started calming the Japanese man. After an eternity, the angry and with
murder in his eyes Japanese man
left the bar. It was then the bartender
told us in broken English the man had gotten upset because Leo crushed
the beer can, as they
do in Topeka, Kansas. He went on to explain that
in Japan the tin from the cans are a livelihood to the Japanese people.
They made
a living making little cars and all kinds of trinkets from the
tin cans. In short, Leo was destroying their economy.
After all
that had happened to us on our first outing in Japan, Leo and I decided
to be enlightened with the Japanese culture before
we went on liberty
again.
[TOP]

Dear Shipmates,
Many thanks and my greatest appreciation to Peter A. Pizzi (4th
Division, 1961-1964) who let me borrow the
1962 Cruise Book.
The 1962
Cruise Book is now shown in the web site.
Many thanks also, and my greatest appreciation as well to
Stephen R. Dall
(Mike Division, 1968-1969) for letting me borrow the
1966, 1967,
1968 and
1969 Cruise Books, which are now
displayed on the
web site. I am very thankful to Mrs. Joan Irwin, wife of the late
Commander Kay Irwin, who loaned me the 1960
Cruise Book.
That Cruise Book may also be seen in this
web site.
Many thanks and appreciation to Robert L. Stutz
(Echo Division, 1955-1960)
for lending me the
1956-57, 1958
and 1959 Cruise
Books. I thank
Tom Barbero (Mike Division 1967-1970)
for making it possible
to show the 1970 Cruise Book on the web site. The
1945,1951, 1952, 1953 and 1954 Cruise Books are courtesy of
The USS SAINT
PAUL ASSOCIATION
Archives.
Photo Sets Needed:
I am interested in photos of the Decommissioning (1971) of
the Ship photos. Also photos of the Portland, Oregon Goodwill visit.
It will
be greatly appreciate it if you let me know if you
know of someone that might be willing to lend the
above-mentioned
photos. It will be appreciated if you give them my email address
mario_chavez@msn.com or my cell phone number,
(915) 491-7353.
Thank
you very much.
Webmaster,
Mario Cesar Chavez
[TOP]

A Promised Pot
Lunch A Blessing and A Date
Name: Tim Jones, Machinist Mate; Aboard
the Saint Paul January 1969 until the end.
E-mail:
jonzee2000@yahoo.com

“Now hear this, Liberty Call, Liberty Call! Liberty commences at 1600
for sections 2 & 3…”
This was the most welcome sound to come over the 1MC.
It was January 1969, San Diego, California. I’ve just been paid, $45.50
in cash. It’s Friday night and I have the weekend off.
I’ve just spent
my first week on the ship in the bilge, in Main Control, chipping paint.
The recruiter never told me about this.
What’s a sailor to do?
Since this $45.50 has to last 15 days, I head to the Mess Deck and fill
up on some of that good old Navy
chow. Cup of Joe, Mystery Meat,
Reconstituted Milk, Powdered Eggs and Bug Juice! Ah, the memories.
Now I have my belly full, I hit the rain locker for a shower, and get
into my standard issue wool dress blues. Two red stripes
and one
military
service ribbon. Those old salts in their gabardines sure look
good. I think I’ll get a set of those when we get
to Hong Kong and maybe
a tattoo
as well. I gather my forty-five bucks, my Liberty Card and head
topside to catch the water
taxi to the beach for a night of walking up
and
down Broadway. That’s all there was to do. No money, no car, 18
years old,
and not old enough to bar hop either; Just walk up and down
Broadway. And man was that weird.
Everyone wanted a piece of you. The Jewelry salesman, for one, would try
to sell you a diamond ring for your girlfriend back
home. And you
know
she’s in the backseat of your best friends 1956 Olds Rocket 88, steaming
up the windows at the drive-in
movie. To add to all this, the
tattoo
parlors, the transvestites, persons of unsavory character, the Holy Rollers, and the
Buddhists
tried to get
a piece of you as well. To add insult to
injury,
the street preacher in the Square would tell me they were ready to
save
my soul.
I felt like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz on arriving in
this
strange world. “This isn’t Kansas, Toto!”
After miles and miles of Broadway, my newfound friend, F.A. Booth and I
are getting hungry. Booth was from Flushing, NY. I later
realized he
wasn’t as blown away by all this strange stuff as I was, being a farm
boy, and Baptist preacher’s kid from out-in-the-boonies,
Michigan. F.A.
Booth saw some kind of opportunity in all this, but that’s another
story. We are now being approached by a couple of
good-looking girls
wanting to take us to a potluck lunch at their church. So, with nothing
better to do, we hop in a van with them
and head off to their church.
When we arrive at the church, either the potluck is over or there never
was one in the first place. The smell of food was nowhere
to be
found,
only the smell of overworked underarm pits and cheap perfume. Before we
know it, we get ushered in to our seats,
those hard, cold,
steel folding
chairs. F.A. Booth is sitting next to a gas-fired space heater. Being
respectful, we remove our white
hats. Booth set his on the
space heater.
The preacher gets up and starts preaching. It gets hot and heavy. Folks
are raising their hands in the air and before long they’re
speaking in
tongues. Now I grew up in a Baptist church, but I had never experienced
anything like this. Booth and I are doing
everything we can to keep
from
busting a gut. The preacher sees this and he starts preaching straight
at us. After a while, we just
had to get out of there. My friend
Booth
gathers his white hat off the space heater, and it is scorched brown
from the heat. It looks
more like a burned taco than a hat. Him
and I
look at each other in amazement and silently think it’s a sign from the
Lord! Anyway,
we head out of that godforsaken place before my
friend’s
white hat was thoroughly cooked.
I don’t recall if the girls who enticed us to such a painful experience
gave us a ride back downtown, or if we hitch hiked. But we
did get
back
to the ship, and Booth got reprimanded for his scorched white hat. I
don’t know whatever happened to the girls, but
we took the bait
and
didn’t get the promised potluck lunch, a blessing, or a date.
Well, so much for my first weekend Liberty Call from the USS Saint Paul
CA-73, and San Diego, California; to boot.
On March 21, 1969 the "Fighting Saint" was off for the Western Pacific,
saying farewell to her homeport of San Diego for a
seven-month cruise
to the Far East. En route to Subic Bay, the ship stopped in Pearl
Harbor for three days, where key
crewmembers were briefed by the staff
of
Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet. On April 6 when SAINT PAUL
passed near the
island of Iwo Jima, the ship's Marine Detachment
honored the 4,300 Marines who were killed while taking this strategic
island from
the Japanese during World War II.
On April 10 the ship arrived in Subic Bay for a scheduled 10-day
re-gunning period. But, on April 15, after North Korean jets shot
down
an
unarmed Navy EC-121 reconnaissance plane off the coast of Korea, the USS
Saint Paul received orders for emergency
sortie. The ship was
underway at first light the next morning for the Sea of Japan to join
Task Force 71, the largest naval force
assembled since the Korean
Conflict.
I just remember being afraid. I had been introduced to the city of San
Diego and all its outlandishness at the time. We were now
cruising
on our way to Viet Nam. The hours were long and the work was hard. The
engine room was 135 degrees. There was no
air-conditioning on
the ship, at least not on any space I had access to, including our
sleeping quarters. Mike division was located
over the aft engine room
and
under the number three turret of the eight-inch turrets. We slept on
canvas bunks lashed to an aluminum
frame. When the gun turrets fired
their salvos, it would almost bounce everyone up on our bunks like being
on a trampoline. We ate,
slept, dreamed and lived with heat rash.
I was beginning to think if the Viet Cong didn’t kill us the wartime
situation aboard the
ship would. I thought I would never see my family
again. I was weak as I was still recovering from mononucleosis that
nearly killed
me right before going to boot camp.
When we received the emergency order to leave Subic at first light for
the coast of Korea, all the deck plates had been removed
from the
engine room. We had pulled up all the steel deck plates and were going
to replace them with aluminum. The ship got
emergency orders to
get underway and we worked 36 hours strait while underway
replacing the deck plates. When we finally
finished the job, I was so
tired I
rested my sore and tired body down on a 135-degree diamond plate deck
plate and fell asleep.
I remember waking up with diamonds burned
into my skin on my back. I was sure I was going to die. The worst thing
about it was
the diamonds weren’t real.
As soon as we got to the gun line off the coast of Viet Nam, I was sent
to Mess Cook duty. Now this turned out to be a good gig.
No watch to
stand, the best chow, and not nearly as hot as the engine room. I
spent most of my time in the Spud Locker, putting
potatoes into a
potato-peeling machine. It was here I made a new friend, Henry Wayne McKinney
(Mac), from Mesquite, TX. He
had brought his music with him and
I was introduced to Country Music, the traditional style. It was
great listening to that music.
We became best of friends.
After 30 days of mess cooking, I was sent back to the engine room. I
volunteered for more mess cooking, but no dice. “Back to
the engine
hole snipe!”
We finished the cruise and went back to San Diego in October. I
miraculously, lived through it. I was no longer a BOOT. I was a
salty
dog.
Life had to be better from then on.

[TOP]

Name: Tony Esquivel
E-mail: aesquivel5@houston.rr.com
Death Was Just Moments Away
H o u s t o n i a n E s c a p e d I n S h i p E x p l o s i o n
Seamen Tony Esquivel of Houston was on the cruiser St. Paul when an
8-inch gun turrent(sic) explosion killed 30 of his shipmates
on April 21.
But death was very close for Esquivel… only a moment or two away.
Now that the censors have lifted the cloud of secrecy his story can be
told. And he told it in a letter to his brother, E. M. Esquivel
of 7331 Ave. K.
‘Just Lucky’
“Our division was just lucky I guess,” the 23-year-old sailor wrote.
“We had just gotten out of there. It was just a matter of minutes.”
Seaman Esquivel didn’t say where he was at the time of the blast which
occurred while the battle-scarred cruiser was shelling the
Korean coast; but he continued:
“I was worried at first because I couldn’t find my buddy, Arthur. At
the same time he was worried about me. I was really glad to see
him out of danger. Will Never Forget
“It was pretty bad, believe me; something that I will never forget. I
have seen dead men before, but nothing like what happened here.
These guys were burned to death.”
Seaman Esquivel said no one knows how the explosion occurred because,
“none of them lived to tell the story.”
The sailor attended Edison Junior High School. He enlisted in 1948.

The Houston Press
Vol. 1 No. 184
Houston, Texas, Friday, April 25, 1952
U. S. CRUISER BLAST! 30 DIE
T u r r e t E x p l o d e s O f f K o r e a
TOKYO. Saturday, April 26, --(UP)—An
explosion in the forward turret of the U.S. heavy cruiser St. Paul
killed 30 men Monday while
the ship was firing on Communist targets
in Korea, the Navy announced today. The explosion was not caused
by enemy action.
It was the heaviest casualty suffered by
any U. S. ship in the Korean war. The previous high casualty list was
26, suffered when the
destroyer Walke hit a mine near Wonsan
June 12, 1951.
Details were lacking. A Navy spokesman
in Tokyo said a powder bag may have caused the fire, leading to a heavy
explosion inside the
turret. The explosion may have
flashed down inside the turret’s armor to kill the men in the upper
ammunition handling room.
Every man within the vicinity of the
explosion was killed, the Navy said. There were no wounded.
(In Washington the Navy said
notification of next of kin had been delayed slightly because of the
Western Union strike. Notifications
were sent by special delivery air mail
instead of the customary telegram.)
The St. Paul retired from the action
only long enough to put the dead aboard the American hospital ship
Haven, which steamed north
from Pusan to the scene of the accident,
just off Komo, a North Korean coastal town about halfway between the
front battle lines and
Wosan on the Sea of Japan.
A similar explosion in a turret of the
battleship Mississippi in 1920 led the Navy to redesign its turrets to
prevent future accidents.
Rear Adm. Earl E. Stone, commander of
Cruiser Division One, who uses the St. Paul as his flagship, ordered an
immediate investigation
of the accident.
The St. Paul’s commander, Capt. Roy A.
Gano, Falls Church, VA. kept his ship in position and continued action
against the Communists.
The St. Paul is a 17,400-ton ship of
the Baltimore class and is a veteran of World War II. Instead of being
put into mothballs as were
most of the heavier U.S. ships she
continued on active duty on the China station. She is now
on her second tour of duty in Korean waters,
having arrived back from the States on
Nov. 21, 1951. Her wartime complement is 1700 officers and men.
_____________________________
[Top]

Name: Arthur
Rodriguez
E-Mail: Arthur recently had a stroke. To contact him
e-mail his friend Tony Esquivel: aesquivel5@houston.rr.com

45 Children In Korea Call Him ‘Pop’
By THOMAS MARTIN
Press Staff Writer
When the heavy cruiser St. Paul slid into Inchon harbor the night of
Sept. 15 the coast line and shore emplacements had
already tasted the lethal power of its guns.
From dawn until late morning of Sept. 15, St. Paul, its sister ship
the Rochester and the big Mo had pounded Inchon prior to the
landing.
Arthur Rodriguez
A Royal Welcome
Then the invasion was pulled off and in several days the St. Paul
was read to sail again.
But now when the St. Paul pushes into Inchon, past the little Island
of Fusshi-To, it gets a royal noisy reception from 45 homeless
orphaned
waifs, one man and two women on the Island.
The ship’s crew is one, great big, adopted God-father to the
children—and the kids are the unofficial wards of the ship’s crew.
Houston Man on Crew
One of the crew is 20-year-old Arthur Rodriguez, son of Mr.
And Mrs. Ygnacio Rodriguez, of 17065 Elysian, and his account of the
finding of
the children was contained in a letter to Mrs. Felix Morales, wife
of the owner of the Morales Funeral Home.
“On the island are 45 children,” wrote dark-haired Rodriquez. “They
are taken care of by a man and two women, and we found them when
we went over to fix a lighthouse.
“The kids range in age from 3 to 11 and they were all cold, hungry
and sick.
All Chipped In
“When the crew found out about it, they all chipped in something for
the kids—like soap, blankets, candy and some clothing. We could not
give them too much in the way of clothes, because ours were too big.
“But the doctor came over, too, and soon the kids that were sick
were feeling better. We even made little canvas shoes for them, and
we
brought our tools over and fixed up a place with an old pot-bellied
stove we found.
“Now they’re warm and feeling better, but they still need more
things.”
‘Hurts to See Them’
Then young Rodriguez asked for help.
“It really hurts to see those little kids,” he wrote. “and we all
hoped none of our kids would ever be like that. That’s why I’m
asking you for
help.”
“Can you do anything to help these kids? Anything you could send
them they would appreciate. We help them as much as we can, but they
need
more.”
Help on Way
Young Rodriguez may get more help than he bargained for—and his
appeal may bloom into a full-fledged, unofficial relief program.
Mrs. Morales is fixing up a basket and is getting her friends to
pitch in.
Arthur’s parents are pitching in, getting things together and
marking them care of the Port Director, Inchon, Korea.
Sisters Pitch in Too
Arthur’s three sisters, Irene and Dora Gonzales, who married
brothers, and Maggie, are helping and getting friends to help, too.
No wonder the St. Paul gets a cheer when it passes Fusshi-To in
Inchon Harbor.
______________________________________
[Top]

Name: Tony Esquivel
E-mail: aesquivel5@houston.rr.com
My Most Memorable Experience
The Midshipmen Cruise
1950
All I can remember
about the training cruise from San Francisco to Pearl Harbor was that we
worked the Midshipmen hard.
I remember in
particular a tall, young midshipman who was ready to do anything he was
told to do; running here, there and everywhere.
After a while I
realized how difficult it was to be a midshipman, because many sailors
took advantage of their status and position
and in a
sense introduced them into what it took to be a regular sailor. I know
it was hard on this particular individual because he
had no choice but
to follow orders. However, everything he did was not considered as
being 100 percent of what was expected of
him as a
midshipman. I know he was happy and glad when the USS Saint Paul
arrived in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii where all the midshipmen
on the
Midshipman Cruise got off the
ship.
Four years later I
was aboard the USS Menifee (APA-202), and once a week I would be
scheduled to stand the Boatswain watch, or the
Quarterdeck watch.
It seemed that this particular officer and I were always on the same
watch. One evening while on watch he told
me he thought he
knew me from somewhere. That I looked familiar to him, but he could not
place me. I told him the same. He looked
familiar to me, but
I could not place him either.
We went over the
same query every time we were standing watch together. Finally, one
evening, after talking about all the places he
had been to,
and all the places I had been to, it dawned on him to ask me if I had
ever had duty aboard the USS Saint Paul. He wanted
to know if I was
aboard during a Midshipman Cruise from San Francisco to Pearl Harbor. I
answered him and remembered and he looked
at me and
remembered also.
We continued to
stand watch together, but never talked about the Midshipman Cruise
anymore.
I will say this: He
is an Officer and a Gentleman and if he ever reads this short memoir; sir, I
would like to talk to you. Only you know
who I am.
Tony Esquivel 7th Division, USS Saint Paul CA-73.
[TOP]

Cherished Memory
Artist Arthur Beaumont
Name: Esther Humeston
Subject: Arthur Beaumont's paintings
After watching the Arthur Beaumont Sketches in the USS SAINT PAUL'S
Associations web site, a cherished memory came to my
mind: Arthur Beaumont's wife, Mrs. Beaumont, was the girl's
vice-principal of Stevenson Jr. High School in East Los Angeles
where I attended, during 1946-47. She was a very elegant lady and well
liked. We had the pleasure of seeing her husband's paintings
that she brought to school for all to appreciate. Years later, my
husband and I both had the pleasure of viewing them together
at the Marine Museum in San Pedro, California. It gave me much
satisfaction to realize that I had, somewhat, touched base with
this marvelous artist.
[TOP]

She Was A Beauty
Long-Slim-Riding In The Stream
Name: Chuck Lord
Subject: Aboard the ship for the first time
It was April or early may 1955.
After boot camp leave, I enjoyed temporary quarters at Terminal
Island. I was finally told by the duty officer the Saint Paul was
anchored out and that I could get aboard by taking the Saint Paul’s
liberty boat from the Pico street landing in Long Beach. I took
my orders and seabag and waited at the landing. Soon, in came the
boat. I climbed aboard. I would eventually be the engineer
on this boat and a dammed good one as expressed by all the coxswains
for which I worked. As the boat slipped away from the
landing, I started to see her. Ah, she was a beauty;
long-slim-riding softly in the stream.
We came alongside and I climbed the gangway, saluted the flag flying
aft, and asked permission to come aboard. I knew just what
to do. The boot camp had trained me well. I was assigned a temporary
rack for the night. With no one to report to, I had chow
and went topside to look around. The sun was starting to set; a
glorious California sunset. As the sun receded in the West, the
lights
of Long Beach started to flicker on like so many fireflies. The sky
grew darker and was filled with stars. Slowly, a full moon ascended.
I was standing on the fantail - entranced. The ship softly undulated
on the rippling current. It was an evening I will never forget.
The long adventure aboard the USS SAINT PAUL had started..........

Dee Suzuko and Chuck Lord in Keelung, Taiwan 1956
Chuck Lord
Nick Moreland
[TOP]

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