Surprising fix brought crippled aircraft carrier home during WW2
(NewsNation) — Memorial Day is a time to pause and remember the U.S. service members who made the ultimate sacrifice.
A new book about World War II, 'The Sailing of the Intrepid: The Incredible Wartime Voyage of the Navy's Iconic Aircraft Carrier,' also recognizes enlisted personnel who defied the odds through determination and resourcefulness.
The USS Intrepid is today a museum ship docked on the Hudson River in New York. But before it became a tourist attraction, the aircraft carrier known as 'The Fighting I' was a hard-working member of the Pacific Fleet.
100-year-old Navy vet keeps World War II spirit alive
In February 1944, a deadly torpedo strike jammed the ship's rudder so that the vessel could only move in circles, more than 3,000 miles from its Pearl Harbor base. 'The Sailing of the Intrepid' tells the story of problem-solving under desperate conditions.
'We're living in a nation that's so divided,' co-author Montel Williams told 'Elizabeth Vargas Reports' on Friday, the start of Memorial Day weekend. 'Think about 3,000 young men from all over the country who came together to realize, 'We are not going to let this thing fall into the hands of an enemy.''
Surviving crew members scrambled to find canvas aboard the ship and created a massive sail that was affixed to the ship's front.
'Not to actually be the propulsion,' Williams explained, 'but to actually counterbalance the effects of the wind and the currents, to allow it to sail straight 3,300 miles back to Hawaii.'
He said the Intrepid was repaired and redeployed and suffered additional attacks from the Japanese in the Pacific Theater. The aircraft carrier was decommissioned in 1974 and set to be scrapped. Instead, it was privately purchased and turned into a museum.
Williams, a former television host who served in the Navy and Marines, collaborated with author David Fisher to write the ship's story.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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