Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard timeline
| A legacy of bravery, dedication |
1820s and 1830s: American warships visit Honolulu
1887: Treaty with Hawai'i gives U.S. exclusive use of Pearl Harbor for naval operations
1899: Naval coal depot constructed at Honolulu Harbor
1908: Congress authorizes construction of shops and supply houses for the Navy yard
1913: Seismic activity causes partly completed Drydock 1 to collapse
1941: 361 Japanese planes bomb and strafe O'ahu
1942: Carrier USS Yorktown limps into Pearl Harbor; repairs made within 72 hours
1945: Civilian workers at the shipyard total 24,910
1950: Matson freighter SS Hawaiian Wholesaler repaired in the shipyard
1951: During Korean War, worker numbers increase to 7,000, a number not seen since 1946
1958: First visit by a nuclear submarine, the USS Nautilus, and first home port with USS Sargo
1961: Five submarines in dry dock being overhauled at the same time
1969: Carrier USS Enterprise experiences explosion and fire, killing 28; repairs made in the shipyard
1975: Gross business totals $133 million, including $86 million for civilian payroll
1985: Shipyard reduces workforce from 6,788 to 6,150
1992: 5,036 civilian employees in the shipyard
1997: Annual pay for a GS-11, Level 10 worker rises to $56,990
1998: Merger of Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility
1999: Defueling and inactivation of submarine USS Boston, the third defueling accomplished
2000: Work completed on 18 submarines and 12 surface ships
2001: Submarine USS Greeneville enters dry dock for repairs after colliding with Japanese ship Ehime Maru
2002: New 60-ton crane arrives, one of four ordered
2004: Pearl Harbor and other three Navy shipyards ordered to reduce expenses by $600 million by 2009
2005: 270 shipyard workers fly to Guam to help repair submarine USS San Francisco after it hit an undersea mountain
2005: Shipyard escapes placement on base closure list
2006: Refueling overhauls completed on submarines Bremerton and Olympia
2007: Shipyard has nearly 4,200 civilian and 520 military employees
Source: Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard