| Essex Class (*) Aircraft Carrier | |||||
| Ordered | Laid down | Launched | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Stricken |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 Aug 1942 | 15 Mar 1943 | 20 Aug 1944 | 28 Jan 1945 | 8 May 1963 | 1 May 1973 |
| Builder: Philadelphia Navy Yard, Philadelphia, PA (*) "Long Hull" group, aka Ticonderoga Class |
|||||
| Click On Image For Full Size Image |
Size | Image Description | Contributed By And/Or Copyright |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name |
||||
| Antietam NS023636a |
122k | CV-36 was named after a major battle in the American Civil War fought along Antietam Creek near the town of Sharpsburg in northwestern Maryland. It was the climax to the first of General Robert E. Lee's two major attempts to bring the war home to the North. Fought on 17 September 1862, it is renowned as the bloodiest single day in American military history. Though the battle ended in a tactical draw, it was a northern victory strategically because Lee was forced to withdraw, give up the offense, and resume a defensive posture in northern Virginia. Ships that had previously borne the name:
NS023636a: Antietam. Map courtesy of Google Maps. NS023636: Battle of Antietam, the charge of Iron Brigade near the Dunker Church, on the morning of 17 September 1862. Painting by Thure de Thulstrup (1846–1930). Chromolithograph published in 1887 by Louis Prang and Company. Source: website of the Old Print Shop, New York City. |
Text courtesy of DANFS,
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Illustration courtesy of Wikipedia |
|
| CV-36 Antietam NS023636 |
106k | |||
| 1945–1963 |
||||
| CV-36 Antietam NS023671 |
918k | "PREFABRICATED SHIP—A huge pre-welded island, three deck levels high, is lifted into place on aircraft carrier Antietam at the Philadelphia Navy yard in speeded up building system." The Sub, Groton, Connecticut, Thursday, 12 October 1944. |
Chronicling America, via Michael Mohl |
|
| CV-36 Antietam NS023667 |
115k | Mrs. Eleanor Davies Tydings Ditzen, wife of Senator Millard Tydings, D-Md., christening Antietam (CV-36), Sunday, 20 August 1944. |
S. Dale Hargrave | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023640 |
149k | USS Antietam (CV-36) anchored off the Philadelphia Navy Yard, 28 April 1945, beginning post-shakedown availability. Navy Yard Philadelphia, Pa., photo # 1124-45. US Navy and Marine Corps Museum/Naval Aviation Museum photo # 1996.488.061.003. |
US Navy and Marine Corps Museum/Naval Aviation Museum, via Mike Green | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023638 |
101k | USS Antietam (CV-36) off the Philadelphia Navy Yard, Pennsylvania, 2 March 1945. She is painted in camouflage Measure 32, Design 17a. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History & Heritage Command (# NH 97363). |
Robert Hurst | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023638a |
176k | Aerial off the bow view of USS Antietam (CV-36) underway off Philadelphia Navy Yard, 2 March 1945. Navy Yard Philadelphia, Pa., photo # 1129-45. US Navy and Marine Corps Museum/Naval Aviation Museum photo # 1996.488.061.005. |
US Navy and Marine Corps Museum/Naval Aviation Museum, via Mike Green | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023638b |
81k | Surface view, stern, of USS Antietam (CV-36) underway off the Philadelphia Navy Yard, 2 March 1945. Navy Yard Philadelphia, Pa., photo # 1128-45. National Museum of Naval Aviation photo # 1996.488.061.007. Robert L. Lawson Photograph Collection. |
US Navy and Marine Corps Museum/Naval Aviation Museum, via Mike Green | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023656 |
190k | Starboard bow view of USS Antietam (CV-36) anchored and being maneuvered by a tug. Unknown location and date. Australian War Memorial, photo # 302539. |
Mike Green | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023657 |
215k | Undated view of USS Antietam (CV-36) anchored at Sydney, NSW, Australia. Australian War Memorial, photo # 302540. |
Mike Green | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023625 |
31k | USS Antietam (CV-36) anchored off Norfolk, VA, mid-July 1945. Source: Kitsap County Library System. |
Tracy White, Researcher @ Large | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023625a |
375k | Same photo as above, (apparently) used for commercial purposes and stamped: "U.S.S. Antietam. 'Flying Hotel' 27,100 ton Aircraft Carrier. Length 855'10" 150,000 h.p. speed 30 knots. Main battery 12-5"/38. Aircraft 80. Crew 2500." |
Jim Kurrasch, Battleship Iowa, Pacific Battleship Center | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023668 |
450k | Victory dinner aboard USS Antietam (CV-36) celebrating Japan's surrender, 22 August 1945. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) photo, # 80-G-338366. |
NARA | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023622 |
171k | View of fueling and high-line activity aboard USS Antietam (CV-36), 23 August 1945, as seen from USS Harrison (DD-573). Air Group tail markings are clear. Antietam, Harrison, and Ringgold (DD-500) were detached from TF-38 and en route to Guam at that time. Photos by Tom McCann, Swede Gronlund. |
John Chiquoine | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023622a |
329k | |||
| CV-36 Antietam NS023676 |
125k | USS Antietam (CV-36) alongside oiler USS Chiwawa (AO-68), 6 September 1945, operating off Korea in Task Force 72. This image shows the added structure on the starboard face of the island. From a USS Chiwawa web site. |
John Chiquoine | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023688 |
598k | A TBM-3E Avenger from Torpedo Squadron (VT) 89, off USS Antietam (CV-36), flagship of Task Force (TF) 72, flies over the Great Wall of China north of Peiping/Peking (Beijing) China, 9 September 1945 while supporting the VII Amphibious Force off northern China (G. Willard Lindberg served on Read Admiral J.J. Clark's staff of Commander Carrier Division Five, which constituted Task Group 58.1 of Task Force 58 under Admiral Mitscher, from March 1944 through June 1945. He also served on the staff of CARDIV5 when it constituted Carrier TF72 supporting the occupation of China and Korea from August through October 1945. He was on board Antietam at that time. He then went to Shanghai for his last duty station from November 1945 through early April 1946.) |
Michael Lindberg on behalf of his father, G. Willard Lindberg Y2 USNR. | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023688a |
440k | A TBM-3E Avenger from Torpedo Squadron (VT) 89, off USS Antietam (CV-36), flagship of Task Force (TF) 72, flying over northern China in support of U.S. occupation force, 9 September 1945. |
||
| CV-36 Antietam NS023664 |
502k | Aerial of Jinsen (Inchon), Korea, 19 September 1945. Photographed by aircraft from USS Antietam (CV-36). Photographed from reference card. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) photo, # 80-G-416792. |
NARA | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023621 |
249k | USS Antietam (CV-36) at Guam in 1945 (October?). Photo taken from USS Hooper Island (ARG-17). |
Lannis E. Huckabee COL(ret) USA | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023645 |
344k | A TBM-3E Avenger of Torpedo Squadron (VT) 95 in flight over USS Antietam (CV-36) off Hawaii, possibly in 1945. US Navy and Marine Corps Museum/Naval Aviation Museum, photo No. 1996.253.1559. Robert L. Lawson Photograph Collection. |
Mike Green Pieter Bakels |
|
| CV-36 Antietam NS023669 |
88k | USS Antietam (CV-36), Curtiss SB2C Helldiver aircraft on the carrier's flight deck, with officers and men on her island watching flight operations, circa 1946–47. The plane in the left foreground is an SB2C-5, Bureau # 83332. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command, # NH 97366. |
Courtesy of Scott Koen & ussnewyork.com | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023685 |
221k | USS Antietam (CV-36) anchored off Truk Atoll in the Caroline Islands, June 1947. National Naval Aviation Museum photo, # 1996.488.061.008. |
Mike Green | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023670 |
890k | USS Antietam (CV-36) just passed under the Golden Gate Bridge (Note shadow of the bridge's roadway). She is likely heading for Naval Air Station Alameda. Probably in October 1947. Courtesy of the Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum. |
Darryl Baker | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023641 |
167k | USS Antietam (CV-36) off San Francisco, 18 November 1948. Courtesy of the Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum. |
Darryl Baker | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023629 |
99k | Undated photo of Antietam at Hunters Point, San Francisco, in the early 1950s—at least before August 1952, when she left for the East Coast to receive her angle deck. It could be when she was reactivated for service in Korea. Source: San Francisco Naval Shipyard – Hunters Point, Historical Shipyard Photographic Collection 1904–74 NARA Pacific Region (San Francisco). |
Tracy White, Researcher @ Large | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023642 |
121k | USS Antietam (CV-36) was re-commissioned on January 17, 1951 at Alameda Naval Air Station. Left to right: CAPT George J. Dufek (CO Antietam) receives a flag from VADM George E. Murray (Commander, Western Sea Frontier), Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz and CAPT J. P. Heath (Chief Staff Officer Western Sea Frontier). Courtesy of the Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum. |
Darryl Baker | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023659 |
359k | A Corsair launching from USS Antietam sometime in the 1950s. |
Collection of Ray D. Bean, via Yu Chu |
|
| CV-36 Antietam NS023612 |
57k | USS Antietam (CV-36) at sea on 27 August 1951, shortly before deploying for Korean War duty. Crewmen are in formation on her flight deck, spelling out "The Flying =A= is on the way". Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives (photo # 80-G-448673). |
Scott Dyben | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023613 |
106k | Off Pearl Harbor, Oahu, Hawaii, en route to the Far East for her first Korean War deployment. Photo is dated 26 September 1951. Diamond Head is faintly visible in the right distance. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives (photo # 80-G-442409). |
Scott Dyben | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023665 |
510k | USS Antietam (CV-36), circa 1951–1952. |
David Buell | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023628 |
85k | USS Antietam (CV-36) alongside the stores ship USS Polaris (AF-11) and destroyer USS Hopewell (DD-681). These photos were likely taken during Antietam's only combat tour, to WestPac and Korea, Sep. 8, 1951 – May 2, 1952. Air Group was CVG-15, tail code "H." |
Robert M. Cieri | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023628a |
139k | |||
| CV-36 Antietam NS0579002 |
130k | USS Tolovana (AO-64) refueling USS Shelton (DD-790) and USS Antietam (CV-36), possibly off Korea in 1951–52. Many planes of Carrier Air Group (CVG) 15 are visible on Antietam's deck, and carrier USS Essex (CV-9) is in the background. U.S. Navy photo. |
- | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023639 |
157k | Aircraft carrier USS Antietam (CV-36) moored at Piedmont Pier in Yokosuka, Japan, during her only Korean War deployment (8 Sept 1951–2 May 1952). Seen on deck are two Douglas AD Skyraider aircraft at the ends of their rows. They are from Carrier Air Group 15 (CVG-15): an AD-4NL from Composite Squadron VC-35 Det.D "Night Hecklers" (starboard, tail code "NR"), and an AD-4W from Composite Squadron VC-11 Det.D (port, tail code "ND"). US Navy photo. |
Robert M. Cieri | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023681 |
147k | View of the flight deck of USS Antietam (CV-36) off Korea. The aircraft carrier, with assigned Carrier Air Group (CVG) 15, was deployed to Korea from 8 September 1951 to 2 May 1952. |
John Spivey | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023686 |
192k | USS Antietam (CV-36) moored at berth B-12 at the naval base at Yokosuka, Japan, during her 1951–1952 Korean War cruise. National Naval Aviation Museum photo, # 1996.489.076. |
Mike Green | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023602 |
156k | Underway off the east coast of Korea, while operating with Task Force 77. She has Air Group 15 embarked. Photo is dated 16 October 1951, soon after Antietam's arrival in the Korean War zone. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives (photo # 80-G-434525). Vought F4U-4B Corsairs, Grumman F9F Panthers, and Douglas AD Skyraiders on her flight deck. (Thanks to Robert Hurst.) |
Scott Dyben | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023673 |
407k | View of the island of USS Antietam (CV-36), during Korean War operations, circa early 1952. Smoke emerging from the stack indicates that the carrier is getting up speed for launching aircraft. The signal flag Fox (a red diamond on a white field) flying from her port halliards is flown in response to the order Launch Aircraft. The 40mm gun mount in the upper left is manned in answer to a call to Battle Stations or General Quarters. Photograph was released by the Department of Defense on 25 August 1952, several months after Antietam's return from Korea. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command, # NH 97368. |
Courtesy of Scott Koen & ussnewyork.com | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023648 |
399k | "Johns Livingston, Photographer's Mate Third Class, USN, ... inspects aerial photographs taken by the photo planes of the aircraft carrier USS Antietam. The strike for the day was against main rail lines between Sonjin and Wonsan, anti-aircraft gun emplacements and other targets that could be found." Photograph and caption were released by Commander Naval Forces, Far East, under date of 12 January 1952. The target areas named in the caption are on the eastern coast of North Korea. Official U.S. Navy photograph, from the All Hands collection at the Naval History & Heritage Command (# NH 97097). |
Courtesy of Scott Koen & ussnewyork.com | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023648a |
390k | "De-Briefing Session—After returning from strikes on enemy targets in the Wonsan area, these three Navy pilots on the aircraft carrier USS Antietam go into a de-briefing session, and check themselves on targets hit and damaged. Left to right: Ens. Robert L. Thomas, ... Lt(jg) Robert F. Baker ... and Ens. Howard E. Foabn." (last name given is unclear.) Photograph and caption were released by Commander Naval Forces, Far East, under date of 12 January 1952. Note pilots' flight suits and life vests with attached survival equipment. Official U.S. Navy photograph, from the All Hands collection at the Naval History & Heritage Command (# NH 97098). |
Courtesy of Scott Koen & ussnewyork.com | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023614 |
128k | USS Antietam (CV-36) and USS Wisconsin (BB-64) steam alongside USS Rainier (AE-5) as she pulls away after supplying ammunition to the carrier and battleship, in Korean waters. Photo is dated 8 February 1952. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives (photo # 80-G-440189). |
Scott Dyben | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023684 |
337k | USS Antietam (CV-36) arrives at Yokosuka, Japan, in January 1952. This photograph was originally released by Commander Naval Forces Far East on 27 January 1952 with the following caption: "'The Mighty A' Having completed three months of combat operations with fast carrier Task Force 77 in Korean Waters, the 27,000 ton Essex-class aircraft carrier USS Antietam arrives in Yokosuka, Japan, for a well earned rest and recreation for her crew of officers and men. Japanese shipyard workers crowd available spaces to watch the flat-top being pushed into docking position by yard tugs. Commanding the USS Antietam is Captain George J. Dufek, USN, ... a veteran of polar expeditions with Admiral Byrd." Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command, # NH 97369. |
Courtesy of Scott Koen & ussnewyork.com | |
| CV-36 Antietam + AE-5 + BB-64 NS09050521 |
132k | USS Rainier (AE-5) replenishing USS Antietam (CV-36) and USS Wisconsin (BB-64) off Korea, 8 February 1952. US Navy photo. |
Richard Miller, BMCS, USNR (Ret.) | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023623 |
40k | USS Antietam (CV-36) and USS Wisconsin (BB-64), Tokyo Bay, Japan, February 1952 |
Don Garner | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023633 |
106k | "FLIGHT DECK formation of white hats spells out amount of money collected by crew members of USS Antietam (CV 36) to help crippled persons." All Hands magazine, August 1952 issue. |
Stanley Svec | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023655 |
879k | USS Antietam (CV-36) underway circa 1952, location unknown. National Naval Aviation Museum (NNAM), Robert L. Lawson Photograph Collection, # 1996.488.061.017. |
NNAM | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023601 |
11k | (Small Image), Undated, After addition of angled flight deck. | USN | |
| CVA-59 Forrestal NS0259ds |
1.33M | "Official Navy Photo. Released by Dept. of Defense" USN Official Photo, # 484875, dated 15 Jul 1953. David comments: "[P]erhaps unknowingly, the people of Navy Public Affairs or whoever put this montage together, certainly did a great job of assembling a 'past, present and future' of carrier aviation, including the airship, first canted (angled) deck, first large carriers, first supercarrier, and a link to World War II in the form of the as-yet unmodified CVA 31." |
David Buell | |
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023624 |
114k | USS Antietam (CVA-36). From Our Navy magazine, mid-December 1954. This photo was possibly taken in December 1952, just after Antietam had been converted to the first American "canted" deck carrier at the New York Naval Shipyard. |
Stanley Svec | |
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023649 |
358k | USS Antietam (CVA-36) underway, circa 1953. Official USN photo. |
John Spivey | |
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023653 |
278k | A series of photos of USS Antietam (CVA-36) underway, possibly conducting trials, circa 1953. Photos show an AJ-1 Savage from Composite Squadron (VC) 7 "Peacemakers of the Fleet" (NS023653–023653c), TBM-3R Avengers from Transport Squadron (VR) 22 (NS023653d,by the island), plus an F2H Banshee and an AD Skyraider. |
David Buell | |
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023653a |
285k | |||
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023653b |
338k | |||
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023653c |
390k | |||
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023653d |
456k | |||
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023653e |
427k | |||
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023603 |
98k | USS Antietam (CVA-36) conducting flight operations in the Virginia Capes area on 14 January 1953, "to obtain a critical evaluation of the operational suitability of canted flight decks as a primary means of operating carrier aircraft" (quoted from the original caption). Antietam had just returned to service following installation of the then-experimental angled ("canted") flight deck. An F9F Panther jet fighter has just left the angled deck, just forward of her midships elevator. Other planes (all jet fighters) parked on deck include F9F Cougars (forward), F2H Banshees and an FJ Fury (immediately forward of the ship's island). Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval Historical Center (photo # NH 97364). |
NHC | |
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023647 |
143k | Captain Samuel G. Mitchell, Commanding Officer of USS Antietam (CVA-36), and Commander J.D. Blitch, Executive Officer, inspecting the ship's various divisions, while she was at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, 31 January 1953. Note Marine guard at left and Grumman F9F-5 Panther fighters parked at the bow. Planes are (left to right): Bureau #s 125275, 125471 and (probably) 125476. Official U.S. Navy photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives (# 80-G-K-14214). |
Robert Hurst | |
| CVA-36 Antietam NS023679 |
529k | A Royal Navy Armstrong-Whitworth Sea Hawk F1 (s/n WF172) on the flight deck of the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Antietam (CVA-36), on 23 June 1953, as the ship was operating in the English Channel. Antietam had recently been fitted with an experimental angled flight deck. The Sea Hawk WF172 was delivered to the Royal Navy on 6 May 1953 and finally retired on 4 March 1963. Here, the aircraft seems to wear the "Ace of Diamonds" markings of 806 Naval Air Squadron. Naval History & Heritage Command photo, # 80-G-625926. |
John Spivey | |
| CVA-36 Antietam NS0581719 |
110k | "USS Antietam (CVA-36) takes time out to refuel USS Corry (DD-817) during tests of 'angle' flight deck." Text from All Hands magazine, June 1953 issue. Photo from Jane's Fighting Ships, 1954–55 edition. |
Stanley Svec Robert Hurst |
|
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023615 |
148k | "USS Antietam (CVS-36) launches a red-painted F9F Cougar jet fighter, during extremely well-lighted night operations, circa 1953-55. Other planes on her flight deck include F9F Panther and F3D Skynight fighters." (Quoted from official caption). Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives (photo # 80-G-K-16839). Joseph Y. Love, ETCM, USN (Ret.), points out: "As a crew member (1952-1953) on board when the picture was taken, I do believe that I know the true circumstances of the picture. It was in full color, and is one of the best photos ever made of the ship. I was the chief in charge of the electronics division. [This picture] was a publicity stunt for one of the flash bulb makers (I seem to remember that the bulbs were Sylvania ones). There were NO real flight operations: the planes were duds set up to look like take off and landing operations. To make them show up better, they were painted with highly colored paint that could be simply washed off afterward. The flight deck was lined with wooden poles with flashbulb holders in reflectors, and the island had many of the same kind of sockets with reflectors on every surface. This was the largest night flash bulb photo ever taken. Thousands of flash bulbs were used, and the blimp off the port side had the camera aboard. A radio signal was used to set off the flash bulbs, and the camera shutter was left open. The ship's radars were shut off, so that the bulbs would not be set off with the radiation. The picture was taken in 1953 and I remember that it appeared in Parade magazine shortly afterward." William P. Jones adds: "It was one of a series of night shots lit by flash bulbs as a promotion." |
Scott Dyben William P. Jones, M.D. |
|
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023617 |
286k | As an ASW carrier, sometime in 1953-57. |
Timothy W. Todd | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023660 |
277k | USS Antietam (CVS-36) underway in 1954, with a Douglas F3D Skyknight launching off the deck and one forward of the first forward gun mount. F9F Panther jets near forward elevator. |
Yu Chu | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023654 |
94k | USS Antietam (CVS-36) operating at sea, circa 1955–57, with HSS-1 helicopters and S2F airplanes on her flight deck. Note that some of the helicopters are wearing the light grey color scheme introduced in 1955, while others are still painted midnight blue. The original print is dated 31 January 1951, several years before this view was actually taken. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command, # NH 97365. |
Courtesy of Scott Koen and ussnewyork.com | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023658 |
312k | USS Antietam (CVS-36) in the mid-1950s, with a Seabat HSS-1 helicopter, forward, and what appears to be a Tracker S2F, aft. Photos by LT(JG) George V. Vuscavage, maybe from USS Caloosahatchee (AO-98). |
LT(JG) George V. Vuscavage, USN, 1952–1955 and his daughter, MR2 Janna Ryals, USN, 1985–1992 |
|
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023658a |
287k | |||
More photos submitted by LT(JG) George V. Vuscavage, USN, 1952–1955 and his daughter, MR2 Janna Ryals, USN, 1985–1992, as above. CVS-36 Antietam
NS023658b 1.31 Mb CVS-36 Antietam NS023658c 1.28 Mb CVS-36 Antietam NS023658d 1.38 Mb CVS-36 Antietam NS023658e 1.12 Mb CVS-36 Antietam NS023658f 1.32 Mb |
||||
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023666 |
1.04M | USS Antietam (CVS-36) operating off the Virginia Capes, 10 March 1955, with a Vought F4U-4 Corsair visible launching. Other Corsairs and Grumman S2F-1 Trackers are visible on deck. National Naval Aviation Museum, photo # 1996.488.061.001. |
David Buell | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023672 |
820k | USS Antietam (CVS-36) deployed to the Mediterranean Sea, 5 January–15 March 1956, with the following squadrons embarked: Anti-Submarine Squadron (VS) 26, S2F-1 Trackers; Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron (HS) 1 "Seahorses," HSS-1 Seabats; Composite Squadron (VC) 4 Det. 50 "Nightcappers," F4U-5N Corsairs; and Helicopter Utility Squadron (HC) 2 Det. 50 "Fleet Angels," HUP-2 Retrievers. This photo also appeared on the cover of Naval Aviation News, June 1957 issue. |
Robert M. Cieri | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023682 |
46k | Skyhook balloon launch from USS Antietam (CVS-36), circa 1956–1958. |
John Spivey | |
| CVS-36 Antietam+ DD-872 NS0587257 |
121k | USS Antietam (CVS-36) arriving off Mayport, Florida, as the new training carrier, 1957. The crew is forming "Hi Jax" on deck to greet the training base Naval Air Station Jacksonville, Florida. The planes are still of her anti-submarine air group, Douglas AD-5W Skyraiders next to the island and Grumman S2F-1 Trackers aft. Destroyer USS Forrest Royal (DD-872) is steaming alongside and being refueled. Photo from Naval Aviation News, June 1957 issue. |
Robert Hurst | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023634 |
92k | Lockheed T2V-1 SeaStar makes its first carrier landing, during carrier suitability tests on board USS Antietam (CVS-36) off the U.S. east coast, circa 7 October 1957. This photograph was originally released by the Lockheed Newsbureau on 9 October 1957, with the caption: "SeaStar Flexes Sea-Legs — U.S. Navy's Lockheed T2V-1 SeaStar skims in for its first 'sea duty' landing aboard the U.S.S. Antietam. The new ship-or-shore duty trainer recently completed primary carrier suitability tests during operations held off the East Coast. Designed to combine top performance and safety in a two-place school-plane, the SeaStar is in quantity production at Lockheed's California Division." Lockheed Photograph, from the collections of the Naval History & Heritage Command (# NH 97367). |
Robert Hurst | |
| CVA-60 Saratoga + CV-36 Antietam NS0260ck |
247k | USS Saratoga (CVA-60) and USS Antietam (CVS-36) in port, circa 1958. |
James T. Helsper, Jr. for his father, a Navy surgeon |
|
| CV-36 Antietam NS023604 |
111k | Overhaul, South Boston Naval Annex, May 1958. | ©Richard Leonhardt | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023605 |
115k | Overhaul, South Boston Naval Annex, May 1958. | ©Richard Leonhardt | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023606 |
122k | Overhaul, South Boston Naval Annex, May 1958. | ©Richard Leonhardt | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023607 |
97k | Overhaul, South Boston Naval Annex, May 1958. | ©Richard Leonhardt | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023608 |
137k | Overhaul, South Boston Naval Annex, May 1958. | ©Richard Leonhardt | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023609 |
122k | Overhaul, South Boston Naval Annex, May 1958. (Ships Bell) | ©Richard Leonhardt | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023610 |
73k | Overhaul, South Boston Naval Annex, May 1958. | ©Richard Leonhardt | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023650 |
15.1M | USS Antietam (CVS-36), Booklet of General Plans, 3 January 1944; corrected to suit ship, 25 June 1958. |
Courtesy of the Historic Naval Ships Association, via Curtis Tammany | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS0410511 |
164k | Vertical aerial photograph of the Boston Naval Shipyard Annex, taken in May 1958. This print has been annotated to mark warehouses used by the U.S. Army. A large number of ships are present, among them twenty Reserve Fleet escort aircraft carriers. Identifiable ships are USS Norfolk (DL-1), at left at the end of the wharf extending from the drydock; USS Antietam (CVS-36), in lower left; and USS Dayton (CL-105), in right center, among the escort carriers. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, from the Collections of the Naval History & Heritage Command (# NH 94199). |
Naval History & Heritage Command | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023618 |
104k | As a training carrier, date and place unknown. |
Timothy W. Todd | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023674 |
677k | Four U.S. Navy Lockheed T2V-1 Seastar trainers of Basic Training Group (BTG) 9 from Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida, in formation over USS Antietam (CVS-36) at anchor in Pensacola Bay. Photo dated 14 June 1959. BTG-9 was redesignated Training Squadron (VT) 4 on 1 May 1960. National Naval Aviation Museum photo, # 1996.488.168.027. |
Robert Hurst | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023643 |
610k | Another photo of USS Antietam (CVS-36) as a training carrier, location and date unknown. |
Jim Karr | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023620 |
87k | Sometime in 1959-62. VIPs that had taken a tour of the Antietam; AB3c Shelby Todd Jr. is at the very left. |
Timothy W. Todd | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023635 |
65k | A U.S. Navy North American T2J-1 (later T-2A) Buckeye trainer aircraft (BuNo 148200) of training squadron VT-7 on the catapult of the training aircraft carrier USS Antietam (CVS-36) in the early 1960s. U.S. Navy photo. |
Robert Hurst | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023616 |
129k | USS Antietam (CVS-36) operating training aircraft, 19 April 1961. Planes on deck include T2J "Buckeyes" amidships and forward and AD "Skyraiders" parked aft. Note "dayglo" paint on the aircraft and "mothballed" 5"/38 guns in the carrier's port side sponsons. Official U.S. Navy Photograph (photo # KN-4834). |
Scott Dyben | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023619 |
55k | Another view, as above. |
Timothy W. Todd | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023663 |
288k | A 411-foot plastic balloon, manned by Commander Malcolm D. Ross, USNR, and Lieutenant Commander Victor A. Prather, MC USN, is about to be released from USS Antietam (CVS-36) during project Strato-Lab, 27 April 1961. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), photo # USN 1054266. |
Naval History & Heritage Command (NH&HC) | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023675 |
524k | USS Antietam (CVS-36) during Project Stratolab, 29 April 1961. The first manned balloon carrier landing is made. The balloon being hauled down to the flight deck, manned by Commander Malcolm D. Ross, USNR and flight surgeon Lieutenant Commander Victor A. Prather (MC) USN. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) Photo, # 1054271. |
Robert M. Cieri | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023651 |
459k | Stern view of USS Antietam (CVS-36) in drydock at Norfolk, Virginia, on 29 July 1961. National Naval Aviation Museum, Robert L. Lawson Photograph Collection, # NNAM.1996.488.061.039. |
Mike Green | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023687 |
121k | USS Antietam (CVS-36) underway on the Delaware River on 7 January 1963. The ship was en route to the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard for eventual decommissioning. National Naval Aviation Museum photo, # 1996.488.061.040. |
Mike Green | |
| In "Mothballs" |
||||
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam NS023637 |
169k | Fleet ocean tug USS Luiseno (ATF-156), right, assisted by rescue and salvage ship USS Hoist (ARS-40), towed ex-USS Antietam from Quonset Point, RI, to Philadelphia, PA. Photos come from the Photographic Laboratory aboard the repair ship USS Cadmus (AR-14) and are dated 7 February 1969 (photo # AAF-2380-11-68). |
Ron Reeves | |
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam NS023637a |
137k | As above (photo # AAF-2382-11-68). Luiseno in the foreground, left; Hoist in the foreground, right. |
||
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam NS023637b |
126k | As above (photo # AAF-2384-11-68). Luiseno is only partially visible, left; Hoist in the foreground, right. |
||
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam NS023630 |
103k | Ex-USS Antietam (CVS-36) in "mothballs" at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, November 1971. |
Photo by Ed Zajkowski | |
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam NS023683 |
694k | Ex-USS Antietam (CVS-36) at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, June 1973. |
Mark Heilenday, CAPT, USN (Ret.) | |
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam NS023683a |
702k | |||
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam NS023678 |
327k | Ex-USS Antietam (CVS-36) at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, December 1973. |
Mark Heilenday, CAPT, USN (Ret.) | |
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam et al NS023677 |
370k | NS023677: Former U.S. Navy ships awaiting scrapping by the Union Minerals and Alloys Corporation at the site of the former Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, Kearny, New Jersey (USA), June 1974. The Lincoln Highway Hackensack River Bridge is just behind that with the Pulaski Skyway and Kearny Generating Station beyond. Identifiable in the foreground are:
Note that the ship ahead of John Willis and alongside Oregon City still seems to be painted in World War II camouflage Measure 21. NS023677a–NS023677c: Scenes at the Union Alloy Metals yard on the Hackensack River of ex-USS Antietam scrapping in August 1974. The destroyer in the views is ex-USS Perry (DD-844). |
Curtis Tammany Dave Schroeder and John Chiquoine |
|
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam et al NS023677a |
290k | Dave Schroeder and John Chiquoine | ||
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam et al NS023677b |
271k | |||
| ex-CVS-36 Antietam et al NS023677c |
287k | |||
| Memorabilia |
||||
| CV-36 Antietam NS023626 |
141k | Program for the Ship's Company Dance, held on 18 & 19 November 1946, at the Green Room 150 Golden Gate Avenue, San Francisco, CA. |
Robert M. Cieri | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023626a |
116k | |||
| CV-36 Antietam NS023626b |
131k | |||
| CV-36 Antietam NS023627 |
160k | Card that was passed out to visitors aboard USS Antietam (CV-36) on Navy Day, 27 October 1947. |
Robert M. Cieri | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023646 |
482k | "'Four Horsemen' Part Ways"—Dennis Milton, Paul Fuller, Kenneth Farrell and William Peterson, known as the Four Horsemen, were assigned to USS Antietam (CV-36) in 1951 and continued to serve aboard until they were honorably discharged from the Navy in 1954. When Antietam and USS Shangri-La (CV-38) swapped crews on 5 September 1952, the Four Horsemen were the only members of Antietam's crew who remained aboard CV-36. Newspaper clipping from the Rockford Morning Star, Sunday, 22 August 1954. |
Judi Farrell-Booth | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023680 |
329k | USS Antietam (CV-36) "Merry Christmas and a happy new year" (1951?). |
Robert M. Cieri | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023662 |
66k | "Secretary of Navy Orientation Cruise, Naval Air Basic Training, NAS Anacostia, CNATECHTRA, 15–17 December 1959, Headquarters, Naval Air Training and Naval Air Basic Training Commands, U.S. Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida" USS Antietam (CVS-36). The photo was taken circa 1953 (when Antietam's hull number was CVA-36). |
Tommy Trampp | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023662a |
199k | |||
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023644 |
139k | A rare, Town & Country, hand-painted Zippo made for USS Antietam (CVS-36) in 1961. |
John A. Altfeltis, USN Retired | |
| CVS-36 Antietam NS023644a |
54k | Zippo lighter, USS Antietam (CVS-36). |
Tommy Trampp | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023661 |
96k | Cap patch, USS Antietam (CV-36). |
Tommy Trampp | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023631 |
224k | USS Antietam (CV-36/CVA-36/CVS-36) anchor, at the National Museum of Naval Aviation. |
Bill Gonyo | |
| CV-36 Antietam NS023632 |
168k | USS Antietam (CV-36/CVA-36/CVS-36) ship's bell, as seen at the Antietam National Battlefield. Photo taken on 5 July 2008. "On permanent loan from American Legion Post 236 of Sharpsburg, MD |
Photo by Greg Forstner | |
|
||||
Comments, Suggestions or Image submissions, E-mail Carrier Information
Problems and site related matters, E-mail Webmaster
This page was created by Paul Yarnall and is maintained by Fabio Peña
All pages copyright NavSource Naval History
Last update: 20 October 2025