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Gentlemen: There has been a memorial to the USS Indianapolis, CA-35
for several years and on July 7th. a Museum was opened in her memory.
Both will be on Wednesdays "A" tour...
Our guest speaker for the banquet will be Mr. Ken McNamara, Executive
Director, (Also a former swab), of the new museum who will share the
story of the USS Indianapolis and her tragic demise.
I assure you this will be a captivating presentation and beat
the h... out of a sub commander discussing his family & career...
Dan Moore
2007 Reunion Chairman
On July 26, 1945, the USS Indianapolis (CA-35) delivered key
components for the world’s first operational atomic bomb to the
island of Tinian in the South Pacific. After completing this
mission, the cruiser proceeded to the Phillippines, to participate
in war activities and the pending invasion of Japan.
A few minutes after midnight on July 30, 1945, the USS Indianapolis
was torpedoed by the Japanese submarine I-58 and sank into the sea
in just 12 minutes, taking 297 men with her. Approximately 900 of
the original 1,197 men on board were left floating in darkness,
without lifeboats, in shark-infested waters. Due to communications
problems, the ship was never missed. By the time the survivors were
spotted by chance four and a half days later, only 317 were left;
the other crew members were victims of injury, exposure and shark
attacks.
The USS Indianapolis deserves a place in history not just as one of
the worst at sea naval disasters in history, but also for its
pivotal role during and at the ending of World War II. The ship, a
610 foot, 9,800-ton Portland class heavy cruiser was commissioned in
1932. She was selected as his “Ship of State” by President Franklin
D. Roosevelt. During the war, the USS Indianapolis became the
Flagship of the Fifth Fleet, endured a Kamikaze attack and was part
of some of the most decisive battles of the war and earned 10 battle
stars.
The USS Indianapolis Museum, located in the ship’s namesake city,
will provide a permanent home for the archives, artifacts and
memories of all the men who served on this historic cruiser from
1932 to 1945.
The history of the USS Indianapolis must be remembered and
memorialized for future generations. The time to do so is now—while
some survivors are still with us. The story must be told to educate
future generations about the sacrifices these hero's made for the
"cost of freedom."

Crewmen display the Presidential Flag below the ship's brass data
plaque, as she carried President Franklin D. Roosevelt on his "Good
Neighbor" cruise to South America in late November 1936.
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