Saturday, January 19, 2008


More general information about the history and service record of the USS Yorktown is available at http://www.yorktownsailor.com, with a link below saying "Click here to watch the 61 minute Academy Award winning film, "The Fighting Lady." I will admit that it took me three tries to get it to load entirely, but the result is a computer screen sized version of the whole movie, and in the slightly different version from the standard release that we will see on board.

I highly recommend watching this if you can, and then still going to see it on the huge screen on the hangar deck Saturday night, because a) seeing it right where much of it was filmed literally feels different, and b) the small version will get you oriented for the wandering about we'll do all through Friday night and Saturday, while the big screen just caps out your experience in a very meaningful way.

If you don't know much about World War II or life in the wartime Navy (let alone Naval aviation), this is the perfect preparation. I wish they showed it Friday night, but since they don't, click on the link and give it a watch before the trip.

Scroll on down this page for Mapquest links and address details for your preferred map program, hotel info for early departers (or slow returners) in Beckley WV, and lots more orientation info.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Evenings on the Yorktown

Each night at 8:00 pm a movie will be shown in the vast theater made out of the forward bays of the hangar deck, the Smokey Stover Theater. Who was Smokey Stover ? You'll find out on Saturday night, when you watch the remarkable 1944 movie, shown in theaters all across the United States and Europe, "The Fighting Lady."

But first is Friday night, and I have to be honest with you. "Tora, Tora, Tora!" is a remarkable movie in its own right, a two hour twenty minute all-too-thorough view of the steps leading to Pearl Harbor. Made in 1970, it was the first joint Japan/US effort in movie making, and the noted director Akiro Kurosawa ("Rashomon") shot most of the Japanese half . . . which is verrrrry Japanese. When it isn't fairly tedious it can be, well, odd. Call it a cultural encounter.

If you and your child love history, especially WWII history, this can be interesting stuff. And when the story finally reaches the actual attack on Pearl Harbor, including extensive footage of planes launched from carrier decks which are in fact all filmed on board the Yorktown (as is the final shot of the Enterprise entering Pearl; not the Big E, but the Yorktown), the story becomes dramatic and exciting -- it's also almost two hours into the movie.

If you're still up, it's good. You've been warned.

For the Wikipedia entry, and IMDB page (click IMDB's trivia link for some intriguing notes), try these links:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tora%21_Tora%21_Tora%21

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066473/

What you shouldn't let discourage you, after the length and relative tedium of much of "Tora, Tora, Tora!" is to miss Saturday's feature, "The Fighting Lady." Released when victory looked likely but not assured, even the actual name of the ship had to be hidden, giving the Yorktown her lasting nickname.

This film is largely documentary footage, of actual air camera footage from the aircraft and filming on board at the Marianas and Leyte. It is stirring and moving and occasionally heartbreaking, and is less than an hour. DO NOT MISS the movie Saturday night, please. One of the many compelling aspects of this movie is the realization, as you listen to the narration, that they really didn't know for sure how the war would turn out. It seems so inevitable from our vantage, and there is plenty of confidence by the time Robert Taylor voiced the soundtrack in 1944, but it wasn't so long for them since they weren't sure, and they still couldn't tell exactly how it would end.

The Manhattan Project was still as top secret as the actual name of the ship that starred in the movie, the USS Yorktown. Outside of a few scientists in the New Mexico desert and a handful of politicians in DC, no one had a clue how the war actually would end other than in a lengthy, painful, horrid invasion of Japan itself. You get a sense of that resolve and dread, and a great deal of pride, watching "The Fighting Lady" while aboard that self-same ship.

Those wiki and imdb pages are:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fighting_Lady

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0036823/

Finally, for a general look at the ship we'll be aboard for two nights, rich with links, including to the largest battleship ever built which the Yorktown helped to sink, the Yamato, just click:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Yorktown_%28CV-10%29

Saturday, January 5, 2008

For those getting a head start...


...an ideal location for Thursday night lodgings on the way to Charleston, SC:

Country Inn & Suites By Carlson Beckley

2120 HARPER ROAD
BECKLEY, WV 25801
(304) 252-5100
Map & Directions

http://www.countryinns.com/beckleywv

[nope, we don't get a percentage, but a bunch of us have stayed here in the past]

From the USS Yorktown Association website [Links are mine]

"Apollo 8 Recovery Operations and deployment to Atlantic Fleet

Yorktown arrived back in Long Beach on 5 July 1968 and entered the Long Beach Naval Shipyard that same day for almost three months of repairs. She completed repairs on 30 September and resumed normal operations. Late in November and early in December, she served as a platform for the filming of another movie, "Tora! Tora! Tora!," which recreated the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. In December she served as one of the recovery ships for the Apollo 8 space shot. The two unique missions mentioned above were conducted out of Pearl Harbor."

[Jeff again: Yes, that's right -- along with distinguished service in World War II, the Yorktown was filmed in the first joint Japan/US movie ever filmed, and it was about Pearl Harbor: "Tora, Tora, Tora!" This movie will be shown at 8:00 pm on Friday night onboard, and is almost three hours long, taking us right up to "Lights Out." Both the US and Japanese aircraft carriers seen in the movie, including the night launches of Japan Air Force Zeros which are one of the most dramatic parts of an otherwise fairly tedious movie, are all shots of the Yorktown. Then she sailed to pick up the astronauts who were the first to circle the moon, Apollo 8: Borman, Lovell, and Anders.]

Coming soon . . .

. . . info on places to stay halfway down on Thursday night; i recommend a 2 pm departure on the 14th of February, and driving to Beckley, WV. It makes the trip on Friday much more pleasant and gives you the chance to add a side-trip on the way down; yep, i'll be posting ideas for Friday or Sunday/Monday return side-trips as we get closer! But hotel info will be next.

Friday, Feb. 15 -- 6:00 pm

Our mustering-in for boarding the ship and initial orientation is at 6:00 pm on Friday, Feb. 15, though dinner is on your own; there will be some time to go back ashore and forage for provisions before the evening orientation and movie.

Your $75 covers Saturday breakfast, lunch, and dinner, plus Sunday breakfast; if you plan to leave Saturday afternoon/evening and not stay aboard that night, make sure to let Jeff know.

We will want all Scouts in uniform for Saturday after breakfast for a group picture on the hangar deck and to raise flags at Fort Sumter, embarking (as things currently stand) at 10 am at the foot of the dock. Casual wear all other times!

Family on-shore overnight will pay $15 for full access to the ship on Saturday, and $8 for the boat trip *as available* which we can't yet guarantee. There will be 470 people sleeping on the Yorktown Friday night, of which we're just 75; Saturday night will be a bit quieter at 200, but they'll need us cleared out by 9 am Sunday for 500 coming in that day.

Check back regularly for updates and fun information to get the most out of your trip!