Up periscope!
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Jennifer K Mahal
A melted white “shot glass” sends chills up the spine. This is what a
regular-size Styrofoam cup looks like after being trailed behind a Navy
deep-sea exploration submersible.
“The water pressure squeezes all the air out of the Styrofoam,” said
Marcus DeChevrieux, curator of the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum.
The tremendous pressure of the ocean, the camaraderie between sailors
and the powerful design of Navy submarines are explored in the museum’s
latest exhibit, “Submarines, From Nemo to Nuclear.”
The show, which will open today and highlights the submarine’s
evolution in the Navy, is the first military exhibit for the 15-year-old
museum, said Wayne Eggleston, museum executive director.
“I think it’s going to be a terrific exhibition to get people in
here,” Eggleston said, explaining that the show has been timed to
coincide with a return visit from the Navy SEAL delivery boat Zephyr from
Aug. 24 to 27.
The exhibit is centered around a traveling collection of 28 paintings
and works on paper, titled “A View from the Periscope,” from the
Department of the Navy. Memorabilia, models and photographs on loan from
the San Diego Maritime Museum and the Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum
in Northern California are also on display.
“Looking around the room,” DeChevrieux said, “the [model of the] Perch
is the only thing we actually own.”
An interactive model of how a submarine works stands ready for
children’s curious hands in one corner. A model of the Nautilus, the
first nuclear-powered submarine, made for a 1950s World Fair takes up a
display stand.
Propped against the wall, a 240-pound, solid bronze torpedo tube from
the Pomodon vessel had DeChevrieux worried as to how he could mount it.
“None of our walls will hold it,” he said. “I’ll have to design a
special frame to put it on.”
A Whitehead torpedo never made it up to the museum’s second-floor
room, needing to remain outside because of its weight.
Then there is the submarine toilet flush, complete with 17-step
instructions on how to use the loo.
“That’s the first thing you’ve got to learn on a sub,” DeChevrieux
said.
On the walls, expertly lighted by nautical museum volunteer Dick
Cooper, are the paintings of men loading a torpedo, a submarine
surfacing, a silent runner in action and, curiously, two cartoon
characters created for the submarines Barb and Macabi.
“In World War II, everyone was in the war effort,” DeChevrieux said,
explaining that the characters were created by Walt Disney Studios as the
submarine equivalent to airplane nose art.
The first submarine depicted in art is from 332 BC -- a painting of
Alexander the Great and his “glass barrel.” Such diverse legends as
Leonardo da Vinci and Jules Verne found themselves captivated by the idea
of a ship that could brave the depths.
Submarines have a mystique, DeChevrieux said, that appeals to the
general public.
But not everyone is enthralled.
Cooper, a retired lighting designer and 10-year museum volunteer,
recently took his son and grandson to see the Portsmith, a submarine, in
San Diego.
“He said, ‘I don’t want to be in a submarine, Dad.’ ‘Why not?’ ‘See
the guys on top of the torpedoes?”’ Cooper said.
FYI
What: “Submarines, From Nemo to Nuclear”
Where: The Newport Harbor Nautical Museum on the Riverboat “Pride of
Newport,” 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach
When: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday until Oct. 28
Cost: Free
CALL: (949) 673-7863
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