Speech of Senator Harry S. Truman at the Launching of the USS Missouri at the Brooklyn Naval Yard, New York
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OCR Page 1 of 2SPETCH OF SENATOR HARRY S. TRUMAN
TO BF AT THE LAUNCHING
OF THE batileSHIP "MISSOTRI" ON
TERELEASE ON DELIVERY1
SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1944, at 1 PM.
BROOKLYN NAVY YARD, NTW YORK
The launching of the battleship MISSOURI is an event of great
national significance. I am deeply conscious of the high honor conferred
upon the state I serve in the United States Sunate in naming this mighty
arm of American naval strength, the MISSOURI.
The MISSOURI and her three sister ships, the IOWA, NEW JERSEY,
and VISCO'SIN, will be the largest and finest warships in the world, and
the armament to be installed in the MISSOURI will make her the most formid-
able craft afloat.
The christening and launching of this greatest warship of all time
illustrates the decisive answer which the democracies of the world are
making to the challenge of the aggressor nations.
The MISSOURI will be commissioned nine months ahead of schedule.
It is such records as this which enabled the Novy to commission 3,500 new
vessels in 1943 a total greater than all the ships possesred by the
Navy at the beginning of that year. This not only replaces all our losses,
but vastly increases the fighting strength of our Navy and makes it beyond
question master of the seas.
At the same time our enemies have suffered disastrous losses in
sea power. Germany's vaunted submarine warfare has met its match. Our
convoys are getting through -- our ships are delivering the goods. Our
own submarines and surface craft are striking ever increaring blows at the
Japanese. A third of the Japanese merchant fleet is now on the bottom of
the Pacific. So are many of Japan's finest war craft. Japan is straining
every effort to replace her losses, but we know, and Jupan knows, that
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