OK, lads..... Now Hear This !!!
For the benefit of you land-lubbers, the Union Jack is flown from all commissioned US Naval vessels, from the bow,
while in port at a pier, at anchor in a harbor, or sitting in a drydock. When the vessel gets underway, the Union Jack
is hauled down, and the U.S. national flag is hoisted from the fantail. The Union Jack is pictured below.
The USS Recruit was decommissioned in March 1967 due to the inability to classify the ship in a computerized registry of Navy vessels, but she continued to be used as a training facility until the base was closed in 1997. Recommissioned in 1982, Recruit was refurbished to look like a Oliver Hazard Perry class frigate. The Recruit still stands, currently unused, with the hope that she will someday become a maritime museum. She is now surrounded by a retail development at the foot of Halsey Road and can be seen from North Harbor Drive in San Diego, CA.
There was also a real, seagoing ship, USS Recruit (AM-285), an Admirable-class minesweeper built for the U.S. Navy during World War II. Her keel was laid down by the
General Engineering Dry Dock Co. of Alameda, California, 24 May 1943, and she was commissioned 8 November 1944. She saw action in the Pacific and was awarded
3 battle stars. She was decommissioned and placed in reserve in 1946, and was sold to the Mexican Navy in 1963.
Charles