- JoeZ said...
Tom: I remember as a boy my Dad taking me down to the terminal when Navy ships docked. They often allowed tours on certain days. My Dad told me prior to WWII he remembers the Japanese ships buying scrap metal which he said later they paid us back with bullets. His parents lived on Cliff St. and we would often visit the terminal and go fishing too.
- Anonymous said...
Joe, my Dad took me on those same tours. I believe they were light destroyers. Speaking of "buying iron" most of the tonnage we dropped during "The Nam" was sold to the Belgians as scrap. They sat on them and we bought the 500 pounders back at a hefty premium a few years later.
Tom, do you remember Mike Rafferty who led the Notre Dame radio club, WB2GZC? He was a great fellow.
Ed Millerick
TOM GLOVER
Tom: I remember as a boy my Dad taking me down to the terminal when Navy ships docked. They often allowed tours on certain days. My Dad told me prior to WWII he remembers the Japanese ships buying scrap metal which he said later they paid us back with bullets. His parents lived on Cliff St. and we would often visit the terminal and go fishing too.
ReplyDeleteJoe, my Dad took me on those same tours. I believe they were light destroyers. Speaking of "buying iron" most of the tonnage we dropped during "The Nam" was sold to the Belgians as scrap. They sat on them and we bought the 500 pounders back at a hefty premium a few years later.
ReplyDeleteTom, do you remember Mike Rafferty who led the Notre Dame radio club, WB2GZC? He was a great fellow.
Ed Millerick
Thanks Tom. I was born in 1962, had NO IDEA ships like this ever came to Trenton until seeing this post. Ya learn somethin new every day:)
ReplyDelete