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"The
average time it took us to have the conditions set, which means
full battle readiness set, is five minutes. I don't know whether
you appreciate how fast that is. If General Quarters sounds at 4:30AM,
the entire ship except the people on watch are in their sacks. You
have to get out of bed. There are men every where. Put on your clothes;
travel probably a city block. Up and down a ladder or two, through
hatches and then get to your battle stations. Make sure all the
hatches, the bells, the ready boxes, and the gun crew, everything
that you have to do when the ship is ready to fight. Fully ready
to fight in five minutes. It is extremely fast."
- Donald R.
Wickham
"Drill,
drill, drill. Until you are blue in the face. In the daylight. In
the dark. You know, general quarters in the middle of the night.
Darkened ship. You knew where all the steps were on the ladders.
You knew where all the instructions were. In fact, you could tell
how old the people were aboard ship because if they had beat up
heads and scraped shins, they hadn't been here too long."
-
Chief John P. Van Sambeek
"General
quarters would sound anytime and I've been to battle stations more
than once just in my skivvies with my clothes under my arm. Down
the hatch I'd go."
-
Ortho E. Farrar
"When
you went to battle stations, you had to have shoes, socks, trousers,
your dungaree shirt on especially. You must remember that at Pearl
Harbor most of the men died from flash burns from explosions. You
would have to have your shirts -- shirts were long-sleeved to give
you protection from flashing guns or explosions, to keep you from
being burned. We dyed our white hats blue so they wouldn't be quite
so obvious (the wood deck was painted blue also); so easy to see
from the air. Blue hats against the ship's color would be better.
What you would do if you weren't completely naked is grab your clothes
and get up there and dress at your battle station as best you could.
We took pride in the fact that we used to man the Signal Bridge
so damn quick."
-
Jackson Belford
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