I like the Navy. I like
standing on deck during a long voyage with sea spray in my face and ocean winds
whipping in from everywhere - The feel of the giant steel ship beneath me, it's
engines driving against the sea is almost beyond understanding - It’s immense
power makes the Navyman feel so insignificant but yet proud to be a small part
of this ship - A small part of Her mission.
I like the Navy. I like the sound of taps
over the ships announcing system, the ringing of the ships bell, the foghorns
and strong laughter of Navy men at work. I like the ships of the Navy; Nervous
darting destroyers, sleek proud cruisers, majestic battleships, steady solid
carriers, the essential fleet auxiliaries and silent hidden submarines - I like
the workhorse tugboats with their proud Indian names: Iroquois, Apache, Kiawah
and Sioux - Each stealthy powerful tug safely guiding the warships to safe deep
waters from all harbors.
I like the historic names of other proud
Navy Ships: Midway, Hornet, Princeton, Suribachi and Saratoga. The Ozark, Hunley,
William R. Rush and Turner, the Constitution, Missouri, Wichita, Iowa, Arizona
and Manchester, as well as The Sullivans, Enterprise, Tecumseh, Cole, New Jersey
and Nautilus too - all majestic ships of the line - Each ship commanding the
respect of all Navymen that have known Her - or were privileged to be a part of
Her crew.
I like the bounce of Navy music and the
tempo of a Navy band, "Liberty Whites", "13 Button Blues", the rare 72 hour
liberty and the spice scent of a foreign port - I like Shipmates I've sailed
with, worked with, served with or have known: The gunnersmate from the Iowa
cornfields; a sonarman from the Colorado mountain country; a pal from Cairo,
Alabama; an Italian from near Boston; some boogie boarders of California; and of
course, a drawling friendly Oklahoma lad that hailed from Muskogee; and a very
congenial engineman from the Tennessee hills.
From all parts of the land they came -
farms of the Midwest, small towns of New England - The red clay area and small
towns of the South - The mountain and high prairie towns of the West - The
beachfront towns of the Atlantic, the Pacific and the Gulf - All are American;
all are comrades in arms - All are men of the sea and all are men of honor.
I like the adventure in my heart when the
ship puts out to sea, and I like the electric thrill of sailing home again, with
the waving hands of welcome from family and friends, waiting on shore - The
extended time at sea drags; the going is rough on occasion. But there's the
companionship of robust Navy laughter, the devil-may-care philosophy of the sea.
This helps the Navyman - The remembrances of past shipmates fill the mind and
restore the memory with images of other ships, other ports, and other cruises
long past - Some memories are good, some are not so good, but all are etched in
the mind of the Navyman - And most will be there forever.
I like the sea, and after a day of work,
there is the serenity of the sea at dusk. As white caps dance on the ocean
waves, the sunset creates flaming clouds that float in folds over the horizon -
As if painted there by a master. The darkness follows soon and is mysterious.
The ship’s wake in darkness has a hypnotic effect, with foamy white froth and
luminescence that forms never ending patterns in the turbulent waters - I like
the lights of the ship in the dark of night - The masthead lights, the red and
green sidelights and stern lights. They cut through the night and appear as a
mirror of stars in darkness - There are rough stormy nights, and calm, quiet,
still nights where the quiet of the mid-watch allows the ghosts of all the
Sailors of the world to stand watch with you. They are abundant and unreachable,
but ever apparent - And there is always the aroma of fresh coffee from the
galley.
I like the legends of the Navy and the
Navymen that created those legends - I like the proud names of Navy Heroes:
Halsey, Nimitz, Beach, Farragut, Rickover and John Paul Jones. A man can find
much in this Navy - Comrades in arms, pride in his country - A man can find
himself and can revel in this experience.
In years to come, when the Sailor is home
from the sea, he will still recall with fondness the ocean spray on his face
when the sea is angry - There will come a faint aroma of fresh paint in his
nostrils, the echo of hearty laughter of the seafaring men who once were close
companions - Now landlocked, he will grow wistful of his Navy days, when the
seas were the largest part of him and a new port of call was always just over
the horizon.
Recalling those days and times, he will
stand taller and say: "ONCE I WAS A NAVYMAN !"
E. A. Hughes, FTCM (SS), USN (Retired)
Copyright © 1958, 1978