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Forrestal fire. from Naval Aviation News, October 1967. Personal account of the USS Forrestal fire, July 29, 1967 at the Wayback Machine (archived 20 April 2009) Virtual Wall: A Memorial to the men who died in the Forrestal fire; US Navy. Witness to History: USS Forrestal Fire Archived 5 November 2004 at the Wayback Machine. 1 August 2002.
In July fires were started on the USS Forrestal and USS Ranger, the eighteenth instance of sabotage aboard the latter vessel, a prime target back home for peace activists’ ‘Stop Our Ships’ agitation.” [45]: 258 The fire on the Forrestal resulted in over $7 million in damage and was the largest single act of sabotage in naval history.
Fighter aircraft on the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal prepare to launch for a sortie over Vietnam. Suddenly a fighter jet explodes and a massive blast rocks the ship. Despite the crew efforts the fire spread to the below deck. The disaster kills 132 personnel with a further 161 wounded and 2 missing, presumed dead.
The fire aboard Oriskany would be the first of three major fires aboard American carriers in the latter half of the 1960s. A fire aboard USS Forrestal on July 29, 1967 killed 134 sailors and injured 161, and a fire aboard USS Enterprise on January 15, 1969, killed 28 sailors and injured 314.
Almost half a century ago, one of the worst maritime disasters in U.S. history unfolded when the SS Edmund Fitzgerald cargo freighter sank in Lake Superior amid a potent storm that stirred up ...
Forrestal undergoing sea trials, 29 September 1955. Forrestal's keel was laid down at Newport News Shipbuilding on 14 July 1952. [4] During construction, her design was adjusted several times—the original telescoping bridge, a design left over from the canceled USS United States, was replaced by a conventional island structure, and her flight deck was modified to include an angled landing ...
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