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  • War History Online

    134 Lives Were Lost In the Deadliest Incident on a US Navy Vessel Since the Second World War

    By Samantha Franco,

    11 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2jnTTo_0ujA1K0E00

    The USS Forrestal (CV-59) served in the US Navy for nearly four decades, participating in a wide range of combat operations. Nonetheless, the most infamous incident in her history was the devastating flight deck accident in 1967, resulting in significant loss of life and extensive damage to the carrier.

    Following the tragedy, a positive development arose: the Navy promptly implemented training reforms in response to the event.

    The USS Forrestal 's early service in the Atlantic and Mediterranean

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    Aircraft lined up on the angled flight deck of the USS Forrestal (CV-59) while on deployment in the Mediterranean Sea with the US Sixth Fleet, October 1957. (Photo Credit: Keystone / Getty Images)

    The USS Forrestal was the lead ship in her class of aircraft carriers and was commissioned on October 1, 1955.She was the first carrier specifically designed to operate jet aircraft, marking her as the Navy's first "supercarrier."

    Forrestal began her service in the Atlantic Ocean during the Suez Crisis and was assigned to the Mediterranean with the US Sixth Fleet. Before being deployed to provide extra airpower during the Vietnam War , she was stationed off the coast of Beirut during the 1958 Lebanon crisis for three days.

    In November 1963, Forrestal made history when a Lockheed C-130 Hercules executed 21 full-stop landings and takeoffs on her deck, establishing a record for the largest and heaviest aircraft to land on a carrier. The following year, US President Lyndon B. Johnson sent the vessel to Brazil to aid the successful military coup d'état against President João Goulart.

    The explosion on that fateful day

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    The USS Forrestal (CV-59) was devastated by a rocket explosion off the coast of Vietnam, July 1967. (Photo Credit: Marka / Universal Images Group / Getty Images)

    In June 1967, the USS Forrestal was positioned in the Gulf of Tonkin, near Vietnam's northern coast in the South China Sea . During this time, aircraft from Attack Carrier Air Wing 17 (CVW-17) carried out numerous successful missions from the carrier, marking it as the Navy's most intense air raid operation up to that point.

    On July 29, 1967, an electrical malfunction aboard a McDonnell Douglas F-4B Phantom IIs on the Forrestal caused an Mk 32 "Zuni" Five-Inch Folding-Fin Aircraft Rocket (FFAR) to accidentally fire. It streaked across the deck and struck a parked, combat-ready Douglas A-4E Skyhawk , dislodging its 400-gallon external fuel tank. Senator John McCain was in the Skyhawk but managed to escape from the cockpit.

    The collision ignited fuel from the A-4E, starting a fire that quickly spread. The initial explosion killed the first two firefighting teams trying to contain the blaze. Over the next five minutes, nine more explosions occurred following the rocket launch. The growing inferno eventually detonated a 1,000-pound AN-M65 bomb.

    The losses onboard the USS Forrestal were devastating

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    Crewmen stand amid the smouldering ruins on the deck of the USS Forrestal (CV-59). (Photo Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

    The fire raged on, trapping pilots within their aircraft. A full day passed before authorities managed to contain the blaze, a task made arduous by the initial bomb detonation that ruptured the flight deck, enabling fuel to seep downwards into the USS Forrestal's lower levels. Subsequent explosions further compromised the deck, resulting in the tragic demise of 50 crew members when one blast erupted directly above their sleeping quarters.

    The valiant efforts of the destroyers USS Rupertus (DD-851) and George K. MacKenzie (DD-836) were crucial in finally quelling the flames, revealing the staggering extent of the casualties. Many wounded were transported to the hospital ship USS Repose (AH-16).

    Tragically, the disaster resulted in the loss of 134 sailors, with hundreds more left injured. Additionally, over 20 aircraft, including F-4Bs, A-4Es, and North American RA-5C Vigilantes, were obliterated, leaving the aircraft carrier herself with damages exceeding $70 million .

    Fires at sea present a terrifying predicament for sailors: confront the flames, succumb to the blaze, or leap into the unforgiving waters. There's no sanctuary. While some aboard the Forrestal managed to survive the catastrophe, others met a crueler fate. The explosions marked the deadliest incident on a US Navy vessel since the Second World War .

    The US Navy changed its training

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    US Navy recruits practice using a firehose during firefighter training at Naval Station Great Lakes in Illinois. (Photo Credit: Ralf-Finn Hestoft / CORBIS / Getty Images)

    After the incident, the Navy conducted an extensive review of its firefighting training procedures, revealing a permissive environment, insufficient firefighting skills among sailors, and sluggish responses to unexpected accidents.

    Led by Rear Adm. Forsyth Massey, the Aircraft Carrier Safety Review Panel, which investigated the tragedy, concluded that "Poor and outdated doctrinal and technical documentation of ordnance and aircraft equipment and procedures, evident at all levels of command, was a contributing cause of the accidental rocket firing."

    In response to the events on the USS Forrestal , the Navy started a huge overhaul of its training program, incorporating new protocols and enhancements. Despite the tragedy, the Navy gained invaluable insights and implemented critical firefighting training for its sailors, which is still in practice today. The objective was to prevent any such incidents from ever happening again.

    The USS Forrestal remained in service for several years after

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    USS Forrestal (CV-59), 1992. (Photo Credit: L Smith / Classicstock / Getty Images)

    Surprisingly, the explosions on July 29, 1967, didn't inflict enough damage to prevent the USS Forrestal from being repaired. Once cleared to return to duty, the aircraft carrier was deployed to the Mediterranean multiple times, participated in the 1981 Gulf of Sidra incident , took part in Operation Earnest Will in the Middle East and was placed on standby during the Gulf War .

    After providing air support during Operation Provide Comfort in 1991, Forrestal transitioned into a training carrier and was re-designated AVT-59. In 1993, she was decommissioned. Twenty-three years later, in 2015, she was ultimately scrapped following unsuccessful efforts to convert her into a museum.

    Are you a fan of all things ships and submarines? If so, subscribe to our Daily Warships newsletter!

    Currently, a model of the vessel is exhibited in the "America's War in Vietnam" section at the National Museum of the US Navy.

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