At Charleston Naval Transient Center at Charleston Naval Yard when you receive your
orders you have been waiting for, sometimes you are expected to leave within
the hour. That happened to me.
From the base movie theater I was working (ahem) my leader,
the CPO, told me to report to the Transient Office. He shook my hand and told me he enjoy working
(ahem!) with me. I went to the transient
window and a yeoman told gave me my
orders to report to the ship USS J..K. TAUSSIG at Lakehurst, New Jersey. He gave me an airline ticket to Philadelphia
and a bus chit from Philadelphia to the Naval base at Lakehurst, New Jersey. He said the tickets were only good for town
to town, as far as getting a cab from the Philadelphia Airport to the bus station in downtown I would
have to make do, the travel expenses did not cover that.
I had no choice but to go,
I had to pack and be at the
Charleston Air Port in a very short time.
They had shuttles going back and forth to the Charleston Airport. I made it in time. and off I flew.
The commercial airline plane, probably Delta or Eastern
landed in Philadelphia. I got off the
plane, claimed my duffle bag and then I was on my own to get to the bus station
in downtown Philadelphia.
Here I begin to feel the crunch of just how poor I was. The cheapest way to the bus station was my a shuttle that
cost, if I remember correctly about $8
and I had about $9 and I don't think credit cards had been invented yet. By the time I got to the Philadelphia Bus
Station I only had change left.
I enjoyed looking at the New Jersey countryside on the way
- A lot of it reminded me of Norman
Rockwell art. Old Antique American!
We arrived at the base just after dark. The bus left me standing looking at the gate
with guards and the duty house next to the gate, where I was to report.
I walked in and to my left was a counter with three people:
a chief, an officer of the day, and a
duty driver. I handed the chief my
orders. He looked at them, raised his
eyebrows, like he was amused and handed the papers to the duty officer. He took a good look at me and looked at the
orders. He said, "USS J.K. TAUSSIG?"
We are fifteen miles from the
ocean."
I forgot which one, but either the officer or Chief or both
started trying to make phone calls to offices that would probably know how to
correct the error.
Did I tell you this was Friday evening? No one would in the know that would know
what was going on and how to correct it would not be until Monday morning.
They told me to spend the night in the base main barracks and be
the base's weekend guest and report to the personnel office Monday
morning. They gave me a chow pass.
The duty driver carried me and my duffle bag to the main base barracks. By now, it was pass 10:00pm
and the barracks bay was pitched black, with only a red exit sign above a door.
I found an empty unclaimed rack and stripped down to my skivvies
and crawled into bed and immediately went to sleep, I had a tiring day.
About 1:00am I was dreaming I was sleeping in the Charleston
Naval Transient Barracks and suddenly we were being bombed by the
Russians! They were bombing barracks and
flying around in machine gunning down people running around. I
started running for my life. I
was still dreaming but this time I was on my feet bent over to dodge the bombs
and bullets.
I ran out the red exit door and into a hallway... or passage
way, as they would say in the Navy.
Two men in civilian clothes were coming in from the
outside. One was a tall dark headed man
with a relaxed southern accent and the other one was a short blond headed guy with a
Brooklyn accent. I ran up to them and
asked were they still bombing outside?
They looked at me like, "What the hell?"
I explained to them the Russians were attacking us.
Both of them picked up on what my state of mind was and patiently
told me I had a bad dream and right now I was confused. I woke up and felt very embarrassed and they were
very understanding.
When I returned to the big room of racks (beds) I had no
idea how to find where I was sleeping, in the dark..... but somehow I did.
The next morning in
the chow hall I saw the two men that caught me in a frantic state of mind just
several hours earlier. They spoke and
were nice and wanted to know if I was OK.
Yep, OK for a crazy man.
I was a little embarrassed with the two men looking my way and talking. I felt my ears should be burning as they analyzed me. But, I would just have to live through my embarrassing moment, as I have many other times.
The reason I remember one was tall and dark headed and one was short and blond and their accents - about six or eight weeks later I would ride to North Carolina with them.
Yep, OK for a crazy man.
I was a little embarrassed with the two men looking my way and talking. I felt my ears should be burning as they analyzed me. But, I would just have to live through my embarrassing moment, as I have many other times.
The reason I remember one was tall and dark headed and one was short and blond and their accents - about six or eight weeks later I would ride to North Carolina with them.
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