Pictures submitted by Duane Baumgartner

Duane Baumgartner

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CWO Bill Wade
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From: Duane Baumgartner
Sent: Tuesday, September 03, 2002 9:46 AM
Subject: Fw: Re: USS Vance Reunion......

Joe:
This message is from a Shipmate friend of mine, BILL WADE CWO4 USN-RET, He is in Florida now. We were both stationed on the USS Durant (DER-389). It includes a bit of VANCE History Trivia that I thought you might like to read.........
Duane

Duane...
Have a good time in Albany! I did some recruiting duty there back lots of years ago...and I grew up about 4 hours west of there (between Syracuse and Rochester). In fact I was stationed in Syracuse for about 2 1/2 years in the 60's too. The "state building" is pretty impressive if I remember correctly. That's the house that "Rocky" (Rockefeller) built. The weather is probably about what you are used to out by the "left coast."

I drove down by the old mothball fleet area in Green Cove Springs the other day. I go past it several times a week on the way over to my son's and back. The Vance was there before she was hauled out and refitted as a DER. I stopped at the VFW last week and got most of the "dope" on the mothball fleet from one of the old-timers that I sat and had a beer with. He told me that the crew lived across the road that cuts through the property and that it bears little to no similarity to what it was back in the 40's.

Enjoy Albany and the Vance reunion!
Bill



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Green Cove Navy Base, Florida
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To: Duane Baumgartner
Date: Thu, 5 Sep 2002 14:12:06 -0400
Subject: Green Cove Springs History

Duane, this has some information and a photo of the docking facilities at Green Cove Springs...from which the USS VANCE was reborn. My eyes are not sufficiently trained to pick out the Vance in the photo which is provided; however, I will continue to search...just in case.

viva-la reunion!
Bill

http://www.greencovesprings.com/history.htm

Green Cove Springs History
High ground along the river and a flowing mineral spring drew the first inhabitants to this area some 7000 years ago, but historic development dates from 1816 when George I. F. Clarke erected a sawmill in this vicinity under a Spanish Land Grant. The first settlement, called White Sulfur Springs, was established in 1854, with a wharf, a store, and several houses clustered around a Public Square. During the Civil War, Federal Troops frequently skirmished with Confederate Forces in the vicinity, and finally occupied the town in 1864. Renamed in 1866, Green Cove Springs became the seat of Clay County Government in 1871. Tourism flourished, surpassing citrus culture and lumbering as the area’s economic base. River steamers brought visitors to the "Saratoga of the South", noted for the healthful qualities of its famous Spring and for hotels and boarding houses said to rival the finest to be found in northern resorts. By the 1890’s, the population reached more than 1500. But an expanding railroad system carried tourists southward and a great freeze in 1895 destroyed the surrounding citrus groves.

The City’s tourist industry declined sharply. The advent of the automobile age and the creation of state highway system provided the basis for economic recovery in the 1920’s, when the City shared in the general prosperity of the Florida Land Boom. But the collapse of the Boom and the Depression of the 1930’s marked the end of the early development of the City. Between 1940 and 1945 the City experienced renewed development. The population increased from 1752 to 3026 as a result of the war-time construction of Benjamin Lee Field, a 1500 acre air-auxiliary complex, by the U.S. Navy.

With the end of World War II, thirteen piers were constructed by the Navy and the Green Cove Base became home port to a moth-ball fleet of some 600 ships. With it’s share of returning War Veterans, the community’s population grew through the 1950’s to a total of 4233 in 1960. In 1961, the Navy decommissioned it’s base and the reserve fleet was transferred to another facility. In 1984, the City annexed the former Naval Base into it’s corporate limits, tying this part of it’s heritage to it’s future growth and development.


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