Rear Adm H.K. Hewitt (NHHC Image) |
Amphibious Force Atlantic Fleet (AMPHIBLANT) had been established five months earlier under Rear Adm. Roland M. Brainard, who was replaced by Rear Adm. H. Kent Hewitt the following month. Its headquarters was originally posted to Building 138, near the docks of Naval Operating Base Norfolk that was already functioning as headquarters for the Subordinate Command, Surface Force Atlantic Fleet. "It was like the Joads moving in on country cousins," wrote one junior member of the staff of the experience of trying to coexist in a "two-story wooden shack... that bulged with more life than a guinea-pig hutch." When Hewett arrived to inspect his new office, wrote the lieutenant, "[t]he admiral said nothing, but in his astonishment, he replaced his pipe in his mouth, bowl first."
Hewett quickly came to the conclusion that a larger headquarters would be required for his joint Navy-Army staff. "Early steps were inaugurated," he wrote later, "to find a satisfactory location which would give us what our enemies would have called lebensraum." No larger buildings could be secured on NOB (now known as Naval Station) Norfolk or the adjoining naval air station, so he turned to the nearby Nansemond Hotel, built on the site of an earlier Nansemond Hotel that had been erected to welcome visitors to the 1907 Jamestown Exposition, but had burned to the ground in 1920. The 125-room hotel already housed an Army squadron headquarters, but that was to change after AMPHIBLANT came knocking.
By the time it was officially established as Headquarters, Amphibious Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet in early September, the hotel had been transformed into a garrison. Nissen huts to billet enlisted Soldiers and Sailors were also constructed next door at the Susan Constant Shrine Park, advancing the military mission of the former vacation retreat. With its red tile roof, Moorish architectural features and stucco exterior, surrounded by barbed wire fences and armed sentries, the hotel became Norfolk's latter-day version of the Alamo. Like the Alamo, it was prepared to be attacked. Troops stormed the beach in front of the hotel, day and night, over the following months. Unlike the Alamo, it was all for training.
The lobby and registration desk of the Nansemond Hotel in 1940. (Courtesy of the Ocean View Station Museum, Norfolk, Virginia)
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The Nansemond Hotel entrance, taken sometime during the 1940s.
(Courtesy of the Ocean View Station Museum, Norfolk, Virginia)
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The heavy cruiser USS Augusta (CA 31) in April 1942. (NHHC Image) |
Needless to say, its military trappings were gone, yet its historical role in the defeat of Nazi Germany would not be forgotten. An "Operation Torch Room" was dedicated at the hotel in October 1969 to commemorate the special role the hotel played in retaking North Africa and Europe from the Axis powers. Tragically, many of the artifacts and mementoes put on display there were themselves torched as the 52-year-old hotel went up in flames in November 1980.
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