![Aerial view of the cruiser USS Nashville underway, Pacific 1944 [Colorized by WW2DB]](/images/ai/20230224/60c175c556e99.jpg)
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Caption | Aerial view of the cruiser USS Nashville underway, Pacific 1944 [Colorized by WW2DB] ww2dbase | ||||
Colorization Note | This photograph was originally a black and white photograph; the colorized version presented here was a derivative work by WW2DB. The colors used in this version were speculative, and could be significantly different from the real colors. Processed using Adobe Photoshop Image Processor, with default neural filter, selecting "None" as the profile. View the original black and white photograph at its own permanent page. | ||||
Photographer | Unknown | ||||
Source | ww2dbaseUnited States Navy | ||||
More on... |
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Photo Size | 1,200 x 773 pixels | ||||
Added By | David Stubblebine | ||||
Colorized Date | 24 Feb 2023 | ||||
Licensing | Public Domain. According to the United States copyright law (United States Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105), in part, "[c]opyright protection under this title is not available for any work of the United States Government". Please contact us regarding any inaccuracies with the above information. Thank you. |
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Visitor Submitted Comments
2.
David Stubblebine says:
26 Jun 2021 01:12:05 PM
Craig R (above):
I think you are absolutely correct right down the line. I think the port catapult is swung out because it is streaming the tow line for the recovery mat. The opening in the deck to the aircraft hangar became significant later when the aviation unit was assigned the Curtiss SC Seahawk as a replacement for the Vought OS2U Kingfisher (seen here). The Seahawk was a larger airplane with folding wings that created an awkward shape and had problems fitting through the hangar opening, particularly while underway. Nashville war diaries from that period devote significant space to complaining about how ill-suited the Seahawk was as compared to the Kingfisher.

26 Jun 2021 01:12:05 PM
Craig R (above):
I think you are absolutely correct right down the line. I think the port catapult is swung out because it is streaming the tow line for the recovery mat. The opening in the deck to the aircraft hangar became significant later when the aviation unit was assigned the Curtiss SC Seahawk as a replacement for the Vought OS2U Kingfisher (seen here). The Seahawk was a larger airplane with folding wings that created an awkward shape and had problems fitting through the hangar opening, particularly while underway. Nashville war diaries from that period devote significant space to complaining about how ill-suited the Seahawk was as compared to the Kingfisher.
All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.
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25 Jun 2021 12:02:40 PM
This is an interesting photo, and appears to show the Nashville during floatplane recovery.
Note the 'extra' wake just off her port quarter, indicating that she's dragging a recovery net to help retrieve a floatplane after it lands; it's possible that this photo was taken from that very plane, though I have no way of knowing for certain.
Also of interest is another floatplane mounted on Nashville's port catapult, which is swung out; the plane is perched over the water. Between Nashville's catapults (just forward of the aircraft handling crane, which is also swung outward over the water) is a large, rectangular open area at the stern. This is the hangar area for the ship's floatplanes.