I visited this Spanish-American War era ship, tied up at a dock in Philly across from the New Jersey... oddly enough, the New Jersey being docked in, well, New Jersey.
The Olympia belongs in Olympia. Is their enough oxygen left in that city to realize that? CDR Salamander, who, for whatever the reason believes it should be in DC of all places, gives us a look:
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Buying history
She waits. The silence among Navy Leadership on this topic still takes me back a bit. Silence from Navy alumni in Congress. Silence among recently retired CNOs.
The USS Olympia is now officially on the market.I like Baltimore best - but she belongs in DC.
The caretaker of the floating museum--the Independence Seaport Museum in Philadelphia--has invited potential buyers to kick the tires of the former warship during a three-day summit this week.
Groups from Baltimore, South Carolina, San Francisco and Philadelphia are vying for the iconic ship.
The Olympia was commissioned in 1895 as one of the first warships designed for electricity. The last surviving ship of the Spanish American War, the Olympia also saw combat during World War I.
"The period of this ship saw vast changes in navies. America was coming out as a world power," said Mike Kearny of Jenkins Hill International, a Delaware County-based consulting firm bidding for the Olympia. "She's the only ship from that era, very unique and important to preserve."
The ship is in desperate need of maintenance. It has not been dry-docked in 55 years and rests in the silt on the bottom of the Delaware River. The ship has risen with the river tide and then settled back down into the mud, every six hours, for 55 years. Each cycle damages the hull a tiny bit more.
I still don't understand the silence - almost shame about her. Amazing.
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