I’m not so sure that I speak for Karen but, for me, one of the highlights to our Houston visit in 2018 was a tour of the USS Texas, the last remaining Dreadnought.
What was special for me was the realisation that while my father served in the Royal Navy and aboard Cruisers during WW2 he would have been familiar with ships of the Texas’s era. I saw most of the ship though his eyes.
I was really looking forward to a return visit, hopefully taking some other Kiwi visitors along too.
Then a year or so ago we were in Auckland for one of Karen’s medical reviews. We returned to our motel room after dinner to find the TV on the History channel recounting a famous WW2 sea battle. To understand how a Dreadnought had been sunk the documentary maker went aboard the Texas to show examples of the layout. I recognised the ship as soon as it was shown.
It took me a while to get round to putting together all the video from that day, and then I lost my computers hard drive so had to do it all again. A few weeks ago I managed to get the video up on YouTube.
Then this morning I received a comment. The Texas has been towed away to be repaired and then dry berthed somewhere else. Apparently it’s presence is no longer wanted by the powers that be in Harris County.
I hope that she finds a home nearby. This is a part of history that needs preserving.
What was special for me was the realisation that while my father served in the Royal Navy and aboard Cruisers during WW2 he would have been familiar with ships of the Texas’s era. I saw most of the ship though his eyes.
I was really looking forward to a return visit, hopefully taking some other Kiwi visitors along too.
Then a year or so ago we were in Auckland for one of Karen’s medical reviews. We returned to our motel room after dinner to find the TV on the History channel recounting a famous WW2 sea battle. To understand how a Dreadnought had been sunk the documentary maker went aboard the Texas to show examples of the layout. I recognised the ship as soon as it was shown.
It took me a while to get round to putting together all the video from that day, and then I lost my computers hard drive so had to do it all again. A few weeks ago I managed to get the video up on YouTube.
Then this morning I received a comment. The Texas has been towed away to be repaired and then dry berthed somewhere else. Apparently it’s presence is no longer wanted by the powers that be in Harris County.
I hope that she finds a home nearby. This is a part of history that needs preserving.