Photo, Print, Drawing U.S. Naval Operating Base Guam, Ship Repair Facility, Wharves Love, Mike, and Nan, Apra Harbor, Inner Harbor, Santa Rita, Guam, GU U.S. Naval Base Guam, Ship Repair Facility, Wharves Lima, Mike, and November
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About this Item
Title
- U.S. Naval Operating Base Guam, Ship Repair Facility, Wharves Love, Mike, and Nan, Apra Harbor, Inner Harbor, Santa Rita, Guam, GU
Other Title
- U.S. Naval Base Guam, Ship Repair Facility, Wharves Lima, Mike, and November
Names
- Historic American Engineering Record, creator
- 5th Naval Construction Brigade
- Ruzicka, Dee, historian
- Franzen, David, photographer
- Consaga, Victor, photographer
- Mason Architects, Inc., contractor
- U.S. Department of the Navy, sponsor
- McPartland, Mary, transmitter
Created / Published
- Documentation compiled after 1968
Headings
- - wharves
- - war (World War II)
- - quays
- - military facilities
- - naval yards & naval stations
- - gantry cranes
- - Guam--Guam--Santa Rita
Latitude / Longitude
- 13.4406,144.664475
Notes
- - Significance: Wharves Love, Mike, and Nan (L, M, and N) are significant for their association with the Ship Repair Facility (SRF) at U.S. Naval Operating Base Guam during the final months of World War II, and during the Cold War. The wharves were an important component of the base, which was developed to support the U.S. fleet in an invasion of Japan (that was ultimately never executed). As part of the second largest overseas American port at the end of World War II, the wharves served an important function berthing Pacific theater ships undergoing repair in Guam. The wharves are also significant as an example of wharf design and engineering at Inner Apra Harbor, featuring backfilled sheet pile quay walls. This alternative construction method was used as an expedient to the more accepted practice of building cast concrete wharves atop driven pilings. The wharves' rapid construction in 1945 was essential to facilitate fleet movement in the western Pacific and to quickly build a base capable of supporting an invasion of Japan. Although after the end of World War II operations at Apra Harbor were reduced in scope, the wharves maintained their functionality to support the requirements of the U.S. Navy missions in the western Pacific during the Cold War.
- - Survey number: HAER GU-11-A
- - Building/structure dates: ca. 1945 Initial Construction
Medium
- Photo(s): 28
- Data Page(s): 26
- Photo Caption Page(s): 3
Call Number/Physical Location
- HAER GU-11-A
Source Collection
- Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress)
Repository
- Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Control Number
- gu0022
Rights Advisory
- No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. https://aj.sunback.homes/rr/print/res/114_habs.html
Online Format
- image
Part of
Format
Contributor
- 5th Naval Construction Brigade
- Consaga, Victor
- Franzen, David
- Historic American Engineering Record
- Mason Architects, Inc
- McPartland, Mary
- Ruzicka, Dee
- U.S. Department of the Navy