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USS Mahan plaque

Article about: I was told this was a ship that saw service during Vietnam. Would this have come off of the ship or used in a different function or location? I will be listing it in the classified but want

  1. #1

    Default USS Mahan plaque

    I was told this was a ship that saw service during Vietnam. Would this have come off of the ship or used in a different function or location? I will be listing it in the classified but want to have a better idea of what it is before I do. Thanks for any help!

    image.jpg
    image.jpg

  2. #2

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    i need the dimensions to better tell you may have been an plaque of the ship !!

  3. #3

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    About 10 inches in diameter. Heavy, bronze maybe.

  4. #4

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    theese things are tough because similiar pieces where given to sailors and were put on the ship !!

  5. #5
    rathpack
    ?

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    I would be interested in buying, if you want to sell. Do you have an asking price? Thanks

  6. #6

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    Quote by rathpack View Post
    I would be interested in buying, if you want to sell. Do you have an asking price? Thanks
    Welcome to the forum! I do not have a price yet. Still trying to gather info on it. Being as you just registered and this is your first post, you must have some specific interest in this plaque?

  7. #7

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    Rathpack if you may,,please conduct any interest by PM to Helmetone and not on the open forum. It would be interesting to see what this plaque may be and I would like to see if someone can answer Helmetones Plaque identity inquiry first. Regards Larry
    It is not the size of a Collection in History that matters......Its the size of your Passion for it!! - Larry C

    One never knows what tree roots push to the surface of what laid buried before the tree was planted - Larry C

    “The farther back you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.” - Winston Churchill

  8. #8

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    Hi Larry. I might try contacting a Mahan association group and see if they could give me a hand. I found one online with a boatload (no pun intended )of past crew and email addresses. That might be a good start.

  9. #9

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    This is the only information I can find on the USS Mahan...but we all know that wikipedia is not all that precise but gives a general definition of a topic. It seems as as though this ship was commissioned in the early 1990s. Here is the link...Service history
    1990s

    The USS Mahan was commissioned on 14 February 1998 at Tampa, Florida.
    2000s

    On 16 February 2007, Mahan was awarded the 2006 Battle "E" award.
    2010s

    During a 2011 maritime security operation deployment, USS Mahan was dispatched to the Mediterranean Sea to conduct operations in Libya. Insitu Inc. announced that its ScanEagle been assisting U.S. and NATO Forces in their mission to protect civilians and reduce the flow of arms to Libya. During a 72-hour counter-terrorism surge supporting Operation Unified Protector, the ScanEagle unmanned aerial vehicle was operated organically aboard Mahan to provide intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance support. In strong winds, ScanEagle performed cooperatively with a host of US and NATO participating forces. On this deployment ScanEagles (the second aboard Mahan) the team achieved a 100 percent mission readiness rate, accruing 1,154 flight hours and 167 sorties.

    USS Mahan received the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System during the ship's 2011 maintenance availability.

    USS Mahan left Naval Station Norfolk on December 28, 2012 for a maritime security operation deployment to the United States Sixth Fleet Area of Responsibility.
    Attached Images Attached Images
    It is not the size of a Collection in History that matters......Its the size of your Passion for it!! - Larry C

    One never knows what tree roots push to the surface of what laid buried before the tree was planted - Larry C

    “The farther back you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.” - Winston Churchill

  10. #10

    Default Re: USS Mahan plaque

    larrry had given you the wrong link above and the wrong boat their was more then one uss mahan USS Mahan (DDG-42), named for Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan USN (1840–1914), was a Farragut-class guided missile frigate (destroyer leader) laid down as DLG-11 by the San Francisco Naval Shipyard on 31 July 1957, launched on 7 October 1959 by Mrs. H. P. Smith, wife of Vice Adm. Harold Page Smith, (CINCLANT at the time) and commissioned on 25 December 1960. Mahan was reclassified as a guided missile destroyer on 30 June 1975 and designated DDG-42. USS Mahan was decommissioned on 15 June 1993 and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on the same day.
    History[edit]

    During the first year and a half of her commissioned service, Mahan’s primary assignment was the testing and evaluation of her weapons systems, ASROC and Terrier missiles. A unit of the Pacific Fleet’s Cruiser Destroyer Force, she operated out of San Diego, participating in local and fleet exercises off the west coast and in Hawaiian waters. Leaving San Diego 6 June 1962, she commenced her first western Pacific deployment. For the next 6 months she cruised with other units of the 7th Fleet, taking part in antisubmarine, antiaircraft, and amphibious exercises as well as making good-will calls on ports in the Far East. Included in these latter visits was a stop at Saigon 24 to 28 October for the Republic of Vietnam’s Independence anniversary celebrations.


    Mahan in 1965-66.
    1963 brought Mahan’s entrance into the standard schedule of the Pacific Fleet, beginning with a shipyard overhaul at Long Beach Naval Shipyard. Following her yard period, she conducted training exercises off the west coast. She then departed San Diego 6 August 1963 for deployment in the western Pacific. In addition to assignments in Japanese and Philippine waters, she spent (on this tour) a total of four weeks cruising off South Vietnam before returning to San Diego 10 March 1964.
    Remaining on the west coast until late 1965, she underwent a 5½ month overhaul, 1 May 1965 to 20 October 1965, followed by test and training exercises and a demonstration of her antisubmarine warfare capabilities before members of the United States-Canadian Military Cooperation Committee 9 December 1965. During the summer of 1965, she embarked midshipmen from the Naval Academy and various NROTC units for summer training. Departing San Diego 19 October, she sailed to Pearl Harbor for antisubmarine training operations and then continued on to the western Pacific, arriving at Subic Bay 22 November 1965. Mahan operated with the 7th Fleet, spending alternate monthly periods on patrol off Vietnam, until returning to San Diego in April 1966.
    Upon arrival at San Diego 28 April, Mahan continued her previous west coast activities, local and fleet training operations, missile firing exercises at the Pacific Missile Range, and, as during the summer of 1965, the training of midshipmen during June and July. August brought the installation of a helicopter flight deck.


    A Sea King of HS-2 on the fantail of Mahan in the Gulf of Tonkin, 1967.
    The period 1 December 1966 through 4 June 1967 again saw Mahan in the western Pacific where, as before, she operated off Vietnam, patrolling the Gulf of Tonkin PIRAZ station and providing gunfire support. Arriving back at San Diego 17 June, Mahan sailed on 31 July to represent the Navy at Seattle’s annual Sea Fair. Following further coastal operations, she entered Long Beach Naval Shipyard 1 November for overhaul. This was completed late in April 1968 and Mahan remained off the west coast until departing for the western Pacific in August. She remained as a part of the 7th Fleet into 1969.
    In 1973, after 13 years of almost continuous operations in Southeast Asia, she returned to the U.S. for a much needed overhaul at Bath Iron Works, ME. On 1 April 1975, DLG-11 was recommissioned at Bath. She then joined Destroyer Squadron 4, homeported at Charleston, SC. On 1 July 1975, the ship was redesigned from DLG-11 to DDG-42 as part of a Navy-wide reclassification program.
    Mahan served as the test platform for the development of the CG/SM-2 (ER) missile program project; a new missile, designed to greatly increase the operational capability of presently installed TERRIER systems.
    Following a regular overhaul in Philadelphia from April 1980 to May 1981, MAHAN was selected to install and test the Terrier New Threat Upgrade (NTU) Combat System with the improved Standard Missile Two Block II (Extended Range). Testing lasted from October 1981- March 1985.
    This New Threat Upgrade system made USS MAHAN the most capable AAW ship afloat. The upgrade was considered for the other ships in the class, but was cancelled since modernization would not have been cost-effective given the limited service lives remaining.
    From April to November 1983, MAHAN was deployed to the Mediterranean Sea, serving most of the deployment as a member of the Multinational Peacekeeping Force off Beirut, Lebanon.
    MAHAN achieved another first in July 1985, as she successfully conducted the first Remote Track Launch on Search missile firing.
    MAHAN celebrated her 25th birthday on 28 August 1985 and departed again to the Mediterranean. During the deployment, MAHAN participated in Exercise Ocean Safari 85: a joint U.S. French missile exercise. She also represented Commander Sixth Fleet, serving as official starter for the inaugural Monaco-New York Yacht race, (hosting Monaco’s Crown Prince and the Deputy Under-Secretary of the Navy). MAHAN also served as East Mediterranean Ready Ship off of Israel and Lebanon and was involved in the Gulf of Sidra Freedom of Navigation operations off the coast of Libya.
    After returning from deployment in April 1986, MAHAN began a 10-month regular overhaul lasting from September 1986 until August 1987.
    In January 1988, MAHAN successfully completed refresher training in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba . In the spring of 1988, MAHAN participated in a joint missile exercise with U.S. and ships of the German Navy.
    MAHAN deployed with Standing Naval Forces Atlantic, from 17 June to 16 December 1989. While acting as the U.S. representative of this NATO force, MAHAN visited eight different countries and worked with fourteen ships from nine NATO nations. The crowning achievement of the cruise occurred in November 1989, when MAHAN added another first to her long list of accomplishments by firing the first SM-2 Block II (ER) in Northern Europe.


    Mahan in the Persian Gulf, 1991.
    MAHAN’s last major deployment was in support of Operation Desert Storm from 26 September 1991 through 2 April 1992. During the deployment MAHAN slipped quietly through the mouth of the Suez Canal in the early morning of 13 October, a sense of uncertainty and anticipation enveloped the ship. After five months in the heat of the Persian Gulf, MAHAN headed north, where she even crossed the Arctic Circle. The largest NATO exercise in over a decade, TEAMWORK 92 pitted the seamanship and war-fighting skills against a multi-faceted threat.
    After 33 years of faithful service she was retired from the active roll on 15 June 1993, Naval Station Charleston, South Carolina.
    Decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 15 June 1993, Mahan was sold for scrap to Sigma Enterprises on 31 August 1995. Mahan was repossessed from the scrap yard and resold on 10 February 1999 to International Shipbreakers of Brownsville, Tx for $97,275. Mahan was repossessed for a second time on 10 July 2000 after the scrap yard failed to take delivery of the ship in a timely manner. A contract to dismantle Mahan was issued in January 2003 to Bethlehem Steel-Sparrows Point of Baltimore, Md to dismantle Mahan. Mahan was repossessed for a third time after Bethlehem Steel went out of business and a new contract was issued to dismantle Mahan on 30 September 2003 to Metro Machine of Philadelphia, Pa for $3,000,000. Mahan was completely dismantled on 18 May 2004.

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