A vehicle has been found parked in the hangar of the USS Yorktown, which was sunk in the Pacific by a Japanese submarine during World War II. One possibility: It’s Rear Adm. Frank Fletcher’s flag car. (USS Yorktown was his flagship.) (NOAA Ocean Exploration)
Defying all logic, a vehicle has been found parked in the hangar of the USS Yorktown, which was famously sunk in the Pacific by a Japanese submarine during World War II.
The baffling discovery was made Saturday when NOAA Ocean Exploration sent a remotely operated camera inside the massive wreck, about 1,000 miles northwest of Honolulu.
Yorktown was an 809-foot-long aircraft carrier, known to host about 2,200 personnel, 90 aircraft ... and apparently, one car.
“It’s a car. That’s a car,” one surprised researcher was heard saying when tires sporting shiny hubcaps came into view. “That is a full car.”
“Why is there a car on this boat?” another is heard asking.
The vehicle was found upright near the carrier’s elevator 3, and immediately had historians scrambling for explanations.
The USS Yorktown anchored in Hampton Roads, Va., in 1937, (Naval History and Heritage Command)
One possibility: It’s Rear Adm. Frank Fletcher’s flag car, they guessed. (USS Yorktown was his flagship.)
Closer inspection by the camera revealed flared fenders, hints of a rag top, chrome trim and and a spare tire, researchers said.
However, make and model could not be determined, despite the team visiting the vehicle a second time on Sunday.
“Here’s an open request to all your automobile vehicle folks out there,” one researcher said in the livefeed. “I’m sure you are being attentive to this and you understand what you are looking at. Please post on this. It really helps.”
NOAA Ocean Exploration marine archaeologist Phil Hartmeyer told McClatchy News the car was “an exciting find.”
“Yorktown’s salvage crew worked tirelessly to jettison anti-aircraft guns and aircraft to reduce its list (after the torpedo strike), but did they leave the car, something they could roll off the side?” Hartmeyer said.
“Perhaps the car belonged to someone important on the ship or to the fleet: the captain or admiral.”
The vehicle may have been brought aboard at Pearl Harbor during a very brief visit for repairs “sustained during the Battle of Coral Sea,” officials said.
A Reddit debate about the vehicle quickly appeared online, with commenters noting “none of the literature ... mentioned a car being onboard for the battle.”
“Wonder if the car was intended to be offloaded on Midway following the anticipated engagement with the Japanese (if the US was victorious),” one Reddit commenter wrote. “Hangar space on carriers was (and still is) extremely valuable. Having a car occupying space would be remarkable.”
Yorktown was serving at the Battle of Midway in 1942 when Japanese carrier bombers successfully struck it with three bombs, NOAA says.
The ship was being towed back to Pearl Harbor for repairs when additional torpedoes from a Japanese submarine hit the starboard side, “causing the carrier to capsize and sink on the morning of June 7, 1942.”
NOAA Ocean Exploration visited the wreck twice as part of a 28-day expedition to explore and map deep water regions of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, “the largest contiguous fully protected conservation area under the U.S. flag” at 582,578 square miles.
The expedition marks the first time cameras have been sent inside the wreck, which was first discovered in 1998, officials said. It sits more than 3 miles deep, experts say.
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