Gone From My Sight
by Henry Van Dyke
I am standing
upon the seashore. A ship, at my side,
spreads her white sails to the moving breeze and starts
for the blue ocean. She is an object of beauty and strength.
I stand and watch
her until, at length, she hangs like a speck
of white cloud just where the sea and sky come to mingle
with each other.
Then, someone at my side says, “There, she is gone.”
Gone where?
Gone from my sight. That is all. She is just as large in
mast,
hull and spar as she was when she left my side.
And,
she is just as able to bear her load of living freight to her destined port.
Her diminished
size is in me — not in her.
And, just at the moment when someone says, “There,
she is gone, ”
there are other eyes watching her coming, and other voices
ready to take up the glad shout, “Here she comes!”
And that is dying…
THE SHIP'S WHO WORE THE CONCORD NAME!
As webmaster, I received an email last month from the daughter of a USS CONCORD sailor who had recently received a lot
of old photos from here step-mom. Among those were her Dad's Navy pictures and she wanted to know if we, the association, would
be interested in seeing them. She said his name was Darwin W. McMahon and would have served on the CONCORD between 1935 -
1939. I thanked her for considering our website and contacting us but explained that there was more than one ship that had
worn the name and the one her dad was on was most likely CL-10. It got me to thinking however that a CONCORD sailor is a CONCORD
sailor and it if she wished to share some of her stuff I would add it to our site. I did a little research and here goes.....................By
the way Jo Ann if you are reading this, thanks for the idea and your dads service to the ship and the country! A final
note. Jo Ann wrote back and said that her Dad had been a member of a USS CONCORD Association "the Minutemen" and
she has searched and found one man from that group still with us at age 93. WOW!
Curtis Creek sent in information about another WWII veteran (his grandpa) who sailed USS CONCORD
CL-10. Very interesting to say the least and gives an insight into what the Navy was like back in the early 40's! Scroll to
the bottom to read Curtis's email and his grandfathers stories about his time on our namesake.
**************BREAKING NEWS***************
I just received an email from a member of our nations "Greatest Generation" who actually
sailed on USS CONCORD CL-10, and served with Bud (Marvin Eugene " Bud " Law) Curtis Creek's Grandpa 'story and
photo at the bottom of this page'. What a treat to have John Parr's story at our Concord site and it is posted
below along with a link to his scrap book............enjoy!
I
Found your info page on USS Concord(CL-10)
Bud and I were close friends on the Conc in the same division.
I have some material you could
add to your history.
When we left Japan after the surrender we were sent to Boston for Navy Day 1945.
Because the ship was named
after Concord Mass, we went there. Our Mascot was a brass Minuteman.
Our Task Group accepted a separate Peace signing in Omato-Amaori
Harbor.
Our Com. Officer was
a photographer and he recorded it for the Task force'
When we arrived in Boston the Navy Dept made booklets of
the signing and the 5 ships in the Task Group gave them to the visitors visiting the ship.
I keep one in a scrap book
for many years and it began to crumble. I was able to transfer it to my computer.
If you would like to add it
to your history, I would be glad to send it too you.
My friend Bud and I were the 2 youngest in the crew. I went
in on my 17th birthday and Bud who was from Alva Ok. Where his father was sheriff, was 15. He was such a devil his father
signed for him as 17 to keep him out of jail.
Click below
to view John's scrap book:
The first mention of a USS CONCORD was a brief line in Wikipedia of A sloop-of-war launched in 1828 and commanded
by Commodore Matthew Perry in 1830. Unfortunately she was lost when she ran aground on a sand bar off Mozambique.
USS CONCORD (PG-3) was the second ship to wear the title and was a 1710-ton gunboat of the Yorktown class according to
the Naval Historical Center. She was commissioned in 1891 and operated in the Atlantic area until 1893 when she
was transfered to the Pacific for the rest of her career. She saw battle in the Spanish American War and participated in the
Battle of Manila in 1898. After 1898 CONCORD served in the Philippines area and the Pacific until she left active service
in 1909.
USS Concord (Gunboat # 3, PG-3) |
|
USS CONCORD (SP-773) 1917 - 1937, was the third ship of this title and later was renamed Mendota and Muscotah (both as
YT-33). A 353 gross ton tug built in 1898 at Philadelphia, she was commandeered by the Navy from the Staples Transportation
Company of New York in 1917. Later purchased outright, she was placed in commission after outfitting by Boston Navy Yard.
Late in 1917 she helped tow French submarine chasers from Bermuda to the Azores, then went on to Brest, France where she served
through the end of WWI and for nearly another year afterwards. Returning to the US IN November 1919, she was assigned to the
Washington Navy Yard. In 1920 she was redesignated YT-33 and renamed Mendota. She was again renamed in January 1932 becoming
Muscotah, and remained active until placed out of service November 1934. She was sold at the end of April 1937 as per the
Naval Historical Center.
USS Concord (SP-773) |
|
U.S. Naval Historical Center Photograph |
This brings us to our Predecessor USS CONCORD (CL-10) 1923 - 1947, the ship sailed by Jo Ann's dad Darwin McMahon.
A 7050 ton Omaha class light cruiser she was built in Philadelphia and Commissioned November 1923. Designed for combat, the
vessel carried 12 six-inch guns, 4 three-inch guns, 3 anti-aircraft guns, 6 torpedo tubes, 2 catapults and 2 seaplanes. In
1924 she made her shakedown cruise in the Med and around Africa. During the next several years she served with the Lant based
Scouting Fleet making occasional visits to the Pacific for Fleet maneuvers. Her homeport was changed to SanDiego in 1932 and
she operated mainly in the Pacific afterwards. As tensions with Japan increased she moved with the Battle Fleet to Pearl Harbor
in 1940. When the US entered WWII in 1941, she was on the West Coast undergoing overhaul. She served in the Southern Pacific
February 1942 escorting convoys and patrolling off Central and South America. September - November 1943 she served as
flagship to Real Admiral Richard Byrd during his survey of Southeastern Pacific islands. An accidental
gasoline explosion during this cruise damaged the ship and 22 crew members lost their life. Following repairs she was
transferred to the northern Pacific and spent the rest of WWII patrolling, interdicting enemy shipping and conducting bombardments
of facilities in the Kuril islands area. Just after the end of the fighting, she supported the occupation of northern Japan.
CONCORD passed through the Panama Canal October 1945 and was decommissioned at Philadelphia. She was sold for scrapping in
January 1947.
USS CONCORD(CL-10) at Algiers, Algeria, late 1923 |
|
U.S. Naval Historical Center Photograph |
Darwin W. McMahon's personal pictues aboard USS CONCORD CL-10:
Darwin W. McMahon (April 1915 - February 1986) |
|
Jo Ann still holds the ribbon from his hat! |
Catapulting one of her two sea planes! |
|
New Years feast! |
|
Cigars, cigarettes and coffee made this meal complete! |
Hi my name is Curtis Creek. My Papaw was in WWII on the USS Concord CL-10. Here is his story that he wrote, and was printed
in a book. I hope you can put this on your web page. I have read this story so many times,but he has told us this story more
than I can ever count. Of course all of this story is true, this is a cleaner version. Us grand kids have heard all the horror
that happend on his ship. Things that brought tears to my Papaws eyes, and he was a man that never cried. I sure miss my Papaw....RIP
PAPAW .....
Marvin Eugene " Bud " Law
1927 - 2010