The USS Hopewell
USS Hopewell underway during the 1960s. Navy
photograph NH 89658-KN
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USS Hopewell (DD-681)
Fletcher Class Destroyer
Found off San Clemente Island
Dive Report
February 12, 2011
by Kendall Raine
Underwater photos by John Walker
Weather conditions were perfect today as Capt. Ray
Arntz, John Walker, Scott Brooks and I left
Huntington Beach aboard Sundiver II bound for San
Clemente Island. Our objective was to dive a
promising target which Gary Fabian's extensive
research of multibeam sonar data and Navy records
indicates is the USS Hopewell (DD 681) which was sunk
February 11, 1972 during Walleye II missile testing.
Launched May 2, 1943, Hopewell was a Fletcher Class
destroyer which saw service in the Pacific in WW II,
Korea and Vietnam until decommissioned in 1970.
Modified between the wars, she had her twin quintuple
torpedo tubes and her number three aft mounted
forward facing 5" main armament removed. Other
modifications included a more robust mast to
accommodate modern radar arrays.
Our dive plan was
to do a single circumnavigation of the wreck and
limit our time to 10-15 minutes. Scott volunteered to
serve as support diver for us.
Surface conditions
on site were flat seas, no wind, bright sunshine.
Clusters of sea lions lazed on their backs with fins
in the air as we approached the site. A few energetic
ones played with the float on the end of the down
line as we geared up.
We splashed and scootered
over to the float. There was about a half knot
current running so we performed checks quickly and
dropped. Running at full speed and pitch, we
estimated our descent time would take roughly five
minutes. Side scan images taken at the time of the
original Vammen exploration suggested our target was
lying on its side with roughly 30 feet of relief.
Kendall Raine
Photo by Capt. Ray Arntz
Side scan sonar image of USS Hopewell (DD-681)
Capt. Ray Arntz
John and I hit a thermocline at about 150' and the
water became colder, clearer and darker. At roughly
30 feet above the wreck white and brown basket
sponges came into view. We came in on the starboard
side roughly amidships. As we leveled off at main
deck level, John and I assumed our usual formation
with him flying behind me and inboard of the
starboard rail with me just outboard. I was delighted
to find the ship completely upright as this would
make for a more interesting site than if she were on
her side. As with the Burns and Vammen, Hopewell has
become a veritable garden with thousands of fish,
metridium, sponges and Corynactis covering every inch
of the hull.
I looked inboard and upward to see the
two forward main turrets with their barrels angled
up. Against the cobalt blue of the shallower depths,
this was majestic. I soon reached the bow. To my
delight I found a basket sponge perched at the bow
chock just like that on the Vammen. I rounded the bow
and headed aft down the port side. No sooner had I
made the turn than the ships massive port anchor came
into view.
Large basket sponges on the bow of Hopewell
Port anchor
Like the rest of Hopewell, this was covered in
violet and orange Corynactis. Looking inboard, I saw
a hatch between the two hawse pipes and ahead of the
capstan. Peering into this hatch I could see several
decks down as timid rockfish peered back from inside.
Bow hatch
I continued aft as John made the turn at the bow. I
admired the impressive main guns and then looked up
to see the angled bridge rising above the main deck.
Just ahead of me was the port side hedgehog and above
that was a row of intact portholes of the fighting
bridge.
Portholes
I continued aft along the port rail and came across
a large pipe bent outward by some massive force.
Photos of the ship suggest this was railing on the
second deck, now bent forward by the explosion of the
Walleye missile. I maneuvered past this grating and
found a massive hole in the main deck where the twin
stacks once stood. This was obviously a missile
impact area and the hole looked like it went at least
two decks down.
Missile impact zone
The size of the hole, perhaps 20 feet in diameter,
was mute testament to the massive power of the
Walleye. I briefly motored into this void and looked
fore and aft to see the total destruction inside.
Points of access into interior passageways were
visible, but obstructive wreckage was everywhere. I
climbed up and out of the impact hole as John joined
up. We noted the two aft main turrets appeared to
have been removed and capped prior to the ships
sinking. Together we motored aft through clouds of
small fish only to be confronted by a steel wall
where none should be. Rising at an angle perhaps 15
feet, we were seeing the fantail of the ship which
had been thrust upward by the massive power of the
ships impact on the ocean floor. I rolled over the
side and the port screw, completely covered in
metridium and sponges came into view. With its three
blades and pointed hub, it looked beautiful and
threatening at the same time.
The transom looked
strangely tapered and we rounded the stern. It was
even more richly covered with sponges. We flew just
over the starboard screw noticing the struts and
rudders and then up again to the main deck.
Propeller
As our allotted bottom time ended John and I began
our ascent. We continued up to our first stop at 250
and prepared for the series of short deep stops and
gas switches. At 150 we fired a bag and waited for
Scott to come floating down from Sundiver II with
back-up gas and a bottle of Mezcal. This he did right
on time and John and I promptly loaded him down with
used deco bottles.
The curious sea lions who had
entertained us on the surface now joined us at the
shallower stops and we finished the long deco to
emerge into a beautiful sunny day.
As we motored up
the island to meter the recently located submarine, a
pod of large Pacific Bottle Nose dolphins joined us
and leaped high in the air and riding our wake.
Joining in the fun were a half dozen sea lions who
tried gamely to keep up; jumping and twisting. It was
almost as if they were celebrating along with us. It
was one of those moments that lasted only a few
minutes but stay vivid in the mind's eye for many
years.
Johnny Walker. The man you seldom see because he's
always behind the camera.
Photo by Capt. Ray Arntz
Video by John Walker
USS Hopewell DD-681
from
John Walker
on
Vimeo.