USS Conestoga
Ninety-five years ago the 56 brave crew members of the USS Conestoga gave their lives in service for their country when this U.S. Navy tug sank in what is now Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary. Check out our video to learn about the mission to identify the lost wreck of the Conestoga and the importance of this historic ship's final resting place -- and stay tuned for a longer video coming this Memorial Day celebrating this valiant crew. #EarthIsBlue Naval History & Heritage Command
Transcript
Every day we would leave Sausalito to go
out through the Golden Gate
and head out to the Farallones to do our
work
in usually beautiful
weather
that belies the fact that this is an
area that
took ships sometimes
not only without warning but without
notice.
You head out there over a spot where
down below in the depths lies a shipwreck.
You launch. You wait. You anticipate. You
watch what comes back through the feed
from the robot on the bottom. Things begin to
appear. You begin to better understand
what you're seeing, what it represents.
Then you see something like this gun...
which very powerfully tells a story because it's an
artifact that
has particular importance. It's there. It shows in historic photographs
and you see it on the bottom encrusted and
changed and yet in your mind's eye, or when
you come back and look at historic
photograph, there it is... painted with a
group of smiling young men around it and it
reminds you that what you're looking at
was once not only in the land of air and light,
but a living ship with a living crew.
You come away with
a profound sense that what you're doing, what
you see, what you now must share is not
just the story of a ship, not just the
story of an expedition. There are 56 guys
whose story needs to be told and whose
families need to know where they are.
And the fact that they are now
not only resting in their ship at
bottom of the ocean, but in an area of
the country that is set aside as a National Marine Sanctuary.