From the Florida coastline near Mayport the distinctive gray hull of the carrier appeared on the horizon and grew larger as she made her way home for the final time. The date was 21 April 1977, a Thursday. Popular in movie theaters was Woody Allen’s Annie Hall and on Broadway the musical Annie opened for the first of 2,377 performances. Billy Martin managed the Yankees, Jimmy Carter was in the White House, and television viewers tuned into such shows as Happy Days and M*A*S*H. For the hundreds of men on board the aircraft carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt (CVA 42), there were mixed emotions, the joy and happiness of returning to the embrace of loved ones after many months at sea tempered by the realization that their ship would never again put to sea, her scheduled decommissioning in October followed by the unfortunate fate that met many fighting vessels, consignment to the scrap heap.
It was a far cry from the brilliant fall afternoon of 27 October 1945, Navy Day, when beneath sunny skies against the backdrop of the New York City skyline the carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt officially joined the fleet. “Built for war, commissioned under skies for peace, the mighty USS Franklin D. Roosevelt…was dedicated…as a nation’s insurance against aggression,” recounted the New York Times, the official speaker for the event none other than President Harry S. Truman, who called her “a mighty mass of steel…dedicated to the cause of peace.” In contrast to today, when most aircraft carriers are christened with the names of the nation’s Chief Executives, Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first flattop named after a U.S. President, one who had once served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy during the First World War and led the mightiest navy in history during World War II before his death in April 1945. In fact, his passing had changed the course of the ship’s history. She had originally been christened Coral Sea, but her name had been changed to honor FDR. One of the new Midway-class battle carriers, the ship bristled with a combination of 5-inch, 40 millimeter, and 20 millimeter gun mounts, the memory of Japanese kamikaze attacks not lost on her designers as they outfitted her with defensive firepower. Yet, in the coming years Franklin D. Roosevelt would serve on the front lines of a very different war, beginning with her maiden voyage to the Mediterranean in 1946, during which she made a port call in Athens to bolster the Greek government’s efforts to thwart attempts by Communists to seize control. Nearly three decades later, in late-1973, she steamed Mediterranean waters during the Yom Kippur War, her deck serving as an intermediate airfield for A-4 Skyhawks sold to Israel for a time during a tense period in a troubled region of the world.
During her service, Franklin D. Roosevelt was at the cutting edge of the technological advancement of naval aircraft. In 1946, Lieutenant Commander James Davidson and Marine Lieutenant Colonel Marion Carl, USMC, conducted jet suitability tests on the deck of the ship flying an FD Phantom and a P-80 Shooting Star respectively. The following year the first fleet use of a helicopter from a carrier occurred while FDR was underway in the Atlantic Ocean. Franklin D. Roosevelt was also at the center of the Navy’s efforts adapt to the post-World War II tactical environment. In September 1949, the carrier hosted Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson, all of the service secretaries, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Omar Bradley for a demonstration of naval power, launching aircraft to thwart a mock attack by a submarine, sending an F2H Banshee to 40,000 ft. to intercept an attacking bomber, and launching a P2V-3C Neptune in a spectacular Jet Assisted Take Off (JATO) for a flight across the country to California, demonstrating the range and versatility of carrier-based aircraft in delivering nuclear weapons. Her final cruise, which concluded on 21 April 1977, included the embarkation of AV-8A Harriers of Marine Attack Squadron (VMA) 231, the historic “Ace of Spades” squadron, marking the first deployment of Vertical Short Take Off and Landing aircraft on board a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier.
FDR’s sole opportunity to flex her muscles in combat came in the waters off Vietnam in 1966. Normally an Atlantic Fleet carrier, Franklin D. Roosevelt commenced launching her first strikes against enemy targets on 7 August, completing her final line period on 27 December. All told, she spent ninety-five days on the line launching combat missions, her embarked air wing losing seven aircraft to enemy fire and eight more in operational accidents. Interestingly, the first pilot shot down was Lieutenant Allan R. Carpenter, who was rescued on 21 August 1966 after bailing out of his stricken A-4E Skyhawk. On 1 November 1966, the VA-72 pilot had another unlucky day when his aircraft was hit over Haiphong. This time, he was captured when he parachuted to the ground and held as a prisoner of war until repatriated in 1973.
In here thirty-two years of service thousands of men served in the carrier nicknamed the “Foo D. Roo.” Counted among her skippers were some of the most notable names in naval aviation, including George W. Anderson (future Chief of Naval Operations), John S. Thach (World War II fighter ace and inventor of the “Thach Weave”), “Jig Dog” Ramage, and “Chick” Hayward, both leading figures in the carrier-based heavy attack mission. Others are not individually named in the history books, but collectively they made history. As Eleanor Roosevelt wrote in her My Day newspaper column on 3 December 1945, the eve of the ship’s departure on her shakedown cruise,” Officers and men alike carry a heavy responsibility, for this ship, like many others belonging to our navy, will visit many ports throughout the world, and the men on board can carry a message of good will and foster friendship between our nation and other nations of the world…I hope my husband’s spirit of good will will go with the ship and bring her good luck.” Her hope was indeed fulfilled.
Pictured above, the insignia of Franklin D. Roosevelt featured the torch of the Statue of Liberty in commemoration of her mission to preserve freedom and symbolizing the home state of her namesake. Franklin D. Roosevelt, flying the national flag of Greece, makes a port call in the Bay of Piraeus during September 1946. AV-8A Harriers of Marine Attack Squadron (VMA) 231 pictured on the deck of the carrier with other Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 19 aircraft during the final deployment of Franklin D. Roosevelt during 1976–1977.