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US Navy Iowa Class Battleship - USS Missouri (BB-63), Signing of the Japanese Surrender, Tokyo Bay, 1945 (1:700 Scale)
US Navy Iowa Class Battleship - USS Missouri (BB-63), Signing of the Japanese Surrender, Tokyo Bay, 1945

Unimax Forces of Valor US Navy Iowa Class Battleship - USS Missouri (BB-63), Signing of the Japanese Surrender, Tokyo Bay, 1945




 
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Forces of Valor 86010 US Navy Iowa Class Battleship - USS Missouri (BB-63), Signing of the Japanese Surrender, Tokyo Bay, 1945 (1:700 Scale) "Our final day has arrived. Today the final chapter in battleship Missouri's history will be written. It's often said that the crew makes the command. There is no truer statement ... for it's the crew of this great ship that made this a great command. You are a special breed of sailors and Marines and I am proud to have served with each and every one of you. To you who have made the painful journey of putting this great lady to sleep, I thank you. For you have had the toughest job. To put away a ship that has become as much a part of you as you are to her is a sad ending to a great tour. But take solace in thisyou have lived up to the history of the ship and those who sailed her before us. We took her to war, performed magnificently and added another chapter in her history, standing side by side our forerunners in true naval tradition. God bless you all."
- Captain Albert L. Kaiss, presiding over the decommissioning ceremony of the USS Missouri, at Long Beach, California, March 31st, 1992

USS Missouri (BB-63) ("Mighty Mo" or "Big Mo") is a United States Navy Iowa-class battleship, and was the fourth ship of the U.S. Navy to be named in honor of the U.S. state of Missouri. Missouri was the last battleship built by the United States, and was the site of the surrender of the Empire of Japan which ended World War II.

Missouri was ordered in 1940 and commissioned in June 1944. In the Pacific Theater of World War II she fought in the battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa and shelled the Japanese home islands, and she fought in the Korean War from 1950 to 1953. She was decommissioned in 1955 into the United States Navy reserve fleets (the "Mothball Fleet"), but reactivated and modernized in 1984 as part of the 600-ship Navy plan, and provided fire support during Operation Desert Storm in January/February 1991.

Missouri received a total of 11 battle stars for service in World War II, Korea, and the Persian Gulf, and was finally decommissioned on 31 March 1992, but remained on the Naval Vessel Register until her name was struck in January 1995. In 1998, she was donated to the USS Missouri Memorial Association and became a museum ship at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.

Pictured here is a 1:700 scale replica of US Navy Iowa Class Battleship USS Missouri (BB-63). Sold Out!

Diorama Dimensions:
Length: 18-inches

Release Date: July 2013

Historical Account: "Museum Ship" - Missouri remained part of the reserve fleet at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Washington, until January 12th, 1995, when she was struck from the Naval Vessel Register. On May 4th, 1998, Secretary of the Navy John H. Dalton signed the donation contract that transferred her to the nonprofit USS Missouri Memorial Association (MMA) of Honolulu, Hawaii. She was towed from Bremerton on May 23rd to Astoria, Oregon, where she sat in fresh water at the mouth of the Columbia River to kill and drop the saltwater barnacles and sea grasses that had grown on her hull in Bremerton, then towed across the eastern Pacific, and docked at Ford Island, Pearl Harbor on June 22nd, just 500 yd (460 m) from the Arizona Memorial. Less than a year later, on January 29th, 1999, Missouri was opened as a museum operated by the MMA.

Originally, the decision to move Missouri to Pearl Harbor was met with some resistance. Many people feared that the battleship, whose name has become synonymous with the end of World War II, would overshadow the battleship Arizona, whose dramatic explosion and subsequent sinking on December 7th, 1941, has since become synonymous with the attack on Pearl Harbor. To help guard against this perception Missouri was placed well back from and facing the Arizona Memorial, so that those participating in military ceremonies on Missouri's aft decks would not have sight of the Arizona Memorial. The decision to have Missouri's bow face the Arizona Memorial was intended to convey that Missouri now watches over the remains of Arizona so that those interred within Arizona's hull may rest in peace.

Missouri is not eligible for designation as a National Historic Landmark although she was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 14th, 1971, for hosting the signing of the instrument of Japanese surrender that ended World War II. This is because she was extensively modernized in the years following the surrender.

On October 14th, 2009, Missouri was moved from its berthing station on Battleship Row to a drydock at the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, where the warship would undergo a three month overhaul. The work will include installing a new anti-corrosion system, repainting the hull, and upgrading the internal mechanisms. Drydock workers reported that the ship was leaking at some points on the starboard side.

Features
  • Plastic and diecast metal construction
  • Can be displayed as a waterline or full draught replica
  • Turrets rotate
  • Guns elevate
  • Comes with a display stand

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