HRNM Historian
The launching invitation for USS Wisconsin. (Robert M. Cieri via Navsource.org) |
"Remember Pearl Harbor" is a common refrain on December 7, and remembrances of that tragic day reverberate at this time each year. While the need to remember those who perished and the lessons that have been learned since then is beyond question, let the fact not be lost among the yearly recitations that the national leadership had not been asleep at the wheel. Throughout the decade prior to the attack, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, supported by staunch allies in Congress such as John C. Stennis, had produced the road map and the funding that would deliver final victory over the perpetrators of the Pearl Harbor attacks. American industry was equally up to the task to follow the roadmap and judiciously use those funds to produce warships superior to those of the Axis, as exemplified by the launch of USS Wisconsin (BB 64) into the Delaware River on December 7, 1943.
USS Wisconsin (BB-64) being prepared for launching on December 4, 1943. (Naval History and Heritage Command image) |
Mrs. Madge Goodland, sponsor of the battleship Wisconsin and wife of Wisconsin governor Walter S. Goodland, christens the vessel. (Dale Hargrave via Navsource.org) |
Over 40,000 tons of steel shaped for speed slides down the ways at Philadelphia Naval Shipyard on December 7, 1943. (Scott Koen via Navsource .org) |
Wisconsin floats free after |
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