Fortress Astoria. Reflections by Brian D. Ratty If we ignore our history, we are destined to repeat it

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Fortress Astoria Reflections by Brian D. Ratty 2016 If we ignore our history, we are destined to repeat it In the dark, early days of WWII, my family moved to the north coast. I was just a young un in short pants at the time and had many heroes. They included Roy Rogers and Gene Autry, of course, but my biggest heroes were the brave and bold Navy pilots that I watched working with my father at the Astoria Naval Air Station. That s what I wanted to be: a pilot a Navy pilot. Astoria, Oregon, played a pivotal role in helping America win the war. This bustling little fishing and logging community on the Columbia River helped to provide a fleet of 455 ships and thousands of fighter planes to the war effort. Shortly before America entered the war, in 1940, a man by the name of Henry J. Kaiser secured a contract to build 31 cargo ships for the British government. The Brits were in a bad way, standing alone as they fought the Nazis in Europe. They needed help, and the American government was beginning to provide them with much-needed war materials. 1

Kaiser was a genius of a man, with a worldwide reputation as a can-do industrialist. He had recently completed the Hoover Dam, finishing the project in half the time and under budget. If you needed something BIG done, Kaiser was your man. With the British contract in hand, Kaiser searched the communities of the West Coast for the best locations to build his shipyards. The sites had to be on a navigable waterway, with a large local workforce and a good transportation system. In addition, the locations had to have access to cheap energy, as his shipyards would run twenty-four hours a day. His first selection was ninety miles upstream from Astoria, on the shores of the Columbia River, next to Portland, Oregon. This area offered low-priced hydro power and had a large population nearby, with excellent rail connections. As the shipyard was being built, Kaiser and his nautical engineers designed the first Liberty ship. Their concept was simple: make the ships durable, inexpensive and easy to build. During the course of WWII, eighteen American shipyards would build 2,710 Liberty ships, using the Kaiser design. On May 19, 1941, Kaiser s Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation launched the very first Liberty ship, The Star of Oregon. However, the first five ships built that year were all sunk in action within months of their commissioning. England was losing the war! After the surprise attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, America entered WWII. As Kaiser constructed another shipyard, across the river in Vancouver, Washington, he and his engineers designed a new type of aircraft carrier that would become known as the Casablanca-class Escort Carrier. The baby-flattops would be built using the standard hull of the Liberty ship, with a flight deck on top. These small carriers would be used for convoy duty and to resupply the larger fleet aircraft carriers with planes and crews. The concept was again simple and easy to build. Within months of finishing the plans, Kaiser had a U.S. Navy contract to build fifty ships. During the war, Kaiser also expanded his operations in Oregon and built more Liberty ships, landing craft, and T2 tankers for the U.S. Maritime Commission. Aircraft carriers need planes and crews, and that s where Astoria came in. The Navy already had a Naval Air Station (NAS) on Tongue Point, just east of town, where PBY Catalina seaplanes arrived for coastal patrols and anti-submarine operations. In addition, Astoria had a good-sized 2

municipal airport with room to grow, and the Navy welcomed the town s deep-water location, so near to the mouth of the Columbia River. Best of all, the entire estuary was protected by the 249th Coast Artillery. Fort Columbia and Fort Canby stood on the north side of the river, with Fort Stevens on the south shore. Those units also maintained and mined the mouth of the Columbia River. This iron triangle of defense made Astoria a formidable fortress. My grandfather, Harry Ratty, had worked many years for the U.S. Navy, maintaining lighthouses up and down the coast. In 1940, he became the head of civilian construction at Tongue Point NAS. He and his crews built barracks, chow halls, shops, movie theaters and administrative buildings. Prior to the start of the war, my father, Dudley Ratty, did the same kind of work for the Army in Alaska. Early in 1941, with the war looming, all non-essential civilians were ordered back to the lower-forty eight. After the war started, Grandfather got Dad a job with the Navy as a civilian carpenter. He soon became the head of civilian construction for Astoria Naval Air Station. The primary mission of the Astoria NAS was to train Navy pilots and crews on the new types of combat planes that would serve on escort carriers. They would also instruct the pilots on shortfield landings and take-offs, in preparation for the small decks of the baby-flattops. Additionally, the Navy had training schools for aircraft maintenance and radio operation, a naval hospital, a receiving station, and many other U.S. Navy offices at the airfield. The runways were lengthened, new ones were added, and hangars were built to handle the flood of arriving aircraft. Astoria NAS was a fast-growing city with its own police force, chow halls, barracks, and movie theaters. New planes arrived every day from aircraft manufacturers up and down the West Coast. Each escort carrier required a minimum of twenty-eight planes. Soon, the gray skies around the airfield filled with all types of aircraft: Grumman F4F Wildcat fighters, the Avenger torpedo bombers, the Douglas SBD dive bombers and, from Tongue Point, the Catalina flyboats. As the pilots and crews trained, there were many accidents. Some planes went down during their training flights, while others crashed upon landing or, as my father told me years later, some pilots undershot the runway and ditched in the shallow, muddy waters of Young s Bay. This was a dangerous business, with young, inexperienced pilots at the controls. 3

On the home front, the tiny Astoria railroad station filled with strange faces and voices from all around America. These men and woman had different accents, uniforms, and life styles. They filled the quiet streets, bars, shops and waterfront, turning Astoria into a more diverse crab-pot. There was rationing of everything: food, gas, rubber, and scrap metal. And as the local men marched off to war, the local women stepped forward, taking over their jobs. There were women fishermen, lumberjacks, bartenders and auto mechanics. While Portland had Rosie, the Riveter, Astoria boasted the amazing and resourceful Daughters of the Columbia. Everyone pulled together for one common cause the war effort. After the Escort Carriers were completed in Vancouver, they steamed to Astoria for sea trials across the Columbia Bar. If the carrier performed to the high standards set by the many Navy supervisors aboard, the ship would be commissioned into the fleet. Once this was accomplished, the carrier sailed again for the open ocean, and waited for her aircraft and flight crews to arrive from the Astoria NAS. This marrying of ship and planes on the open sea was another very dangerous time for the untested pilots. Some had trouble landing on the small, twisting flight deck, while others over-shot the deck and crashed into the cold sea. Carrier pilots had to have nerves of steel. Finally, with all the planes recovered, the Escort Carrier, with a complement of just over nine hundred officers and men, would steam towards their first combat assignment. In less than two years, Kaiser built and delivered all fifty carriers to the US Navy. At the end of the war, America had lost twelve aircraft carriers to enemy action. Five of those sunk were Casablanca-class Escort Carriers, built on the Columbia River. Unfortunately, today not one of these ships has survived the years. They were all scrapped at the end of the war. 4

I never did become a Navy pilot, but I served in the Oregon Air National Guard as a photo reconnaissance photographer. Today, with my chin whiskers gray and my hair snow-white, I realize that my early heroes should have included ALL of the men and woman, in or out of uniform, who helped defeat the tyranny of our enemies. They preserved our freedoms and our American way of life. August 15th is the seventy-first anniversary of V-J Day (Victory over Japan Day) and the end of the war. As we all pay tribute to the WWII generation, let us never forget that we share our tomorrows because of their yesterdays! Brian Ratty is a local, award-winning author of historical fiction, and has just released his fifth novel, Voyage of Atonement. This new title completes the Dutch Clarke Trilogy, which consists of: The Early Years, The War Years and, now, Voyage of Atonement. These books tell the enthralling story of one young man and the US Marines fighting in the Pacific, before, during and after WWII. For more information: www.dutchclarke.com BOOKS MADE GREAT GIFTS! 5