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WALLY BISHOP TMC (SS)
CHIEF OF THE BOAT
The only one I knew of to be chief of the boat as a first class petty officer

 
This page is dedicated to his family and the numerous sailors who thought of him as their mentor.
The Scorpion would not have been the boat it was without him.

Of all the friends that were lost with Scorpion, I miss him most of all. I was young and fresh out of sub school and the Scorpion was my first boat. He always found the time to listen to me and to try and help with whatever it was. It never mattered to him how small or insignificant the problem was, he was always there for anyone who needed something. Not to say that he solved your problems for you, but he helped you to solve them yourself. A true leader by any terms.
I will try to remember some of the stories as close as I can that involved him, some funny and some not so funny at the time. But looking back, most were in some respect humorous now.

Not too long after I reported aboard Scorpion I was assigned as a mess cook. Yeah I know, it happens to the best of us. Anyway at the end of my 3 month tour as mess cook, he was sitting in the mess deck drinking a cup of coffee and asked me if I was glad that tomorrow would be my last day of mess cooking. I laughed and said "It's no big deal chief" He laughed and said "Thats great then, you can go another three months".
We both kind of laughed and he left. The next morning the cook woke me up and said I was late for my next tour of mess cooking. Needless to say the next time he asked me anything, I gave him a straight answer.



---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copied from THE DOLPHIN (NLON SubBase Newsletter) Thurs., Feb. 25, 1999
New barracks to be named "Bishop Hall" SUBASE's new bachelor enlisted quarters, Building 560, will be named in honor of the late TMC(SS) Walter W. Bishop, the last chief of the boat (COB) on USS Scorpion (SSN589). Bishop was lost on active duty when Scorpion sank with all hands while en route to Norfolk, Va. on May 22, 1968. The dedication and opening ceremonies for Bishop Hall have yet to be announced. Bishop was selected as chief of the boat of Scorpion in July 1962, while still a petty officer first class. This uncommon step was taken in recognition of then Petty Officer Bishop's outstanding and superb leadership characteristics, despite the presence of a number of chief petty officers in the crew. Bishop's distinguished naval career began in June 1948. Upon completion of recruit training, he graduated from submarine school here in December 1948. He reported to USS Corporal for his first duty in submarines and later served on submarines Wahoo and Sargo before reporting to Scorpion in Sept. 1959. According to CAPT H. A. Lincoln, Jr., Commanding Officer, SUBASE, Bishop's professionalism and dedication personifies today's Navy core values of honor, courage and commitment. "As one who gave the fullest measure to his nation and his shipmates, he is a shining example of personal achievement and a role model that today's Sailors should strive to emulate," Lincoln said. "The loss of USS Scorpion is one of the great catastrophes of the Cold War era. By honoring TMC(SS) Bishop, we honor an era of Sailors who dedicated, and in Chief Bishop's case, lost their lives to fighting a nameless war against a faceless enemy. The triumph of our democratic ideals over the forces of communism was brought by the sacrifice of Chief Bishop and the men he led in service to our nation," added Lincoln.

 

By ED OFFLEY
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

This is a reprint from the PI
It is a simple silver insignia depicting a submarine flanked by two dolphins.

For the sailors of the U.S. Submarine Service, the emblem symbolizes their formal certification and acceptance into the elite naval fraternity.

But one dolphin insignia worn by Sonarman Chief John Bishop means much more than that.

It was handed down from his father to a younger Scorpion sailor who, in turn, would later give it to Bishop in memory of the man who had inspired both to become submariners.

Thirty years ago, Bishop was a robust, 9-year-old boy excitedly awaiting the homecoming of his father, Torpedoman Chief Walter Bishop, "Chief of the Boat" for the USS Scorpion.

Bill Elrod was a 25-year-old Sonarman 1st Class assigned to the Norfolk-based submarine who had rushed home on emergency leave upon the death of his newborn son.

After the Scorpion failed to reach port on May 27, 1968 and was declared lost at sea a week later, the father who had lost a son and the son who had lost a father were just two of the hundreds of family members devastated by the disappearance of the nuclear submarine.

But the particular grief the two shared would bind them. Walter Bishop had been a mentor and father figure to Elrod during the younger man's four years on the Scorpion. And he was a loving father to John and his brother and sister, Mike and Mary Etta.

Walter Bishop had been a submariner for 11 years when he joined the Scorpion crew in 1959 as a Torpedoman 1st Class. Three years later he was picked to be the "Chief of the Boat," the senior enlisted man aboard who holds many responsibilities not shared by his counterparts on surface ships.

One central task for the "COB," as Bishop was known, was the tutoring and training of new submariners.

When Bill Elrod reported aboard the Scorpion in 1964 as a young Sonarman 2nd Class on his first sub, it was Bishop who took him in hand and supervised his training for formal qualification in submarines, Elrod recalled.

"He mentored me," Elrod said. "He took care of all the youngsters on the boat."

Elrod said he never forgot the ceremony in 1964 where he received his dolphin insignia for submarine qualification. Walter Bishop took a pair of his own insignia and pinned them on Elrod's uniform, he recalled. Elrod was wearing them the night he left the Scorpion on emergency leave in Rota, Spain, thus escaping the fate of the rest of his crewmen.

Nine years later, when John Bishop turned 18, he enlisted in the Navy and like his father before him, joined the submarine service.

"He has emulated from what I have heard how his dad was (as a submariner)," says Darlene Bishop, who married John in 1987. Younger sailors now "look up" to John Bishop the way an earlier generation like Bill Elrod looked up to his father, she said.

Elrod stayed in the service, achieving the rank of chief petty officer in 1971 and becoming a "COB" himself in 1980. At his retirement as Chief of the Boat of the USS Dallas in 1985, Elrod paid special tribute to the influence Walter Bishop had on his career and life, particularly in counseling younger sailors.

Meanwhile, John Bishop was continuing his own career on submarines. He got out of the Navy for two years in the mid-1980s, but rejoined the service and today is assigned to the Trident missile submarine base at Kings Bay, Ga.

In June 1993, Darlene Bishop contacted Elrod at his Connecticut home to tell him that Walter Bishop's son had himself just been promoted to the rank of chief petty officer, a major step toward becoming a Chief of the Boat.

Elrod said he walked into his den where a large plaque on the wall contained several mementos of his career, including the dolphin insignia Walter Bishop had pinned on his chest 29 years earlier. With tears in his eyes, Elrod pried the silver dolphins loose and sent them to Darlene Bishop.

"He called me and told me he was sending the dolphins but asked me to keep it a secret until the ceremony," Darlene Bishop said in a recent interview. "I thought it was just the most wonderful thing that someone could do."

Several days later she pinned Walter Bishop's submarine insignia on his son's chest and said she watched her husband cry tears of pride and joy.

 

USS Scorpion (SSN-589) This site is dedicated to 99 of my friends and their families. Hopefully all who visit will leave with a better understanding of the dangers and dedication to job and country of submarine sailors. A submarine crew is much more than a group of sailors at a duty station. It is family. Since the Scorpion has been gone it has left a void in my life and in my heart that can never be filled.
  Jerry M. Pratt 
          "Sailors rest your oars"
Send mail to ssn589sub@yahoo.com with questions or comments about this web site.

Copyright © 1996 Jerry M. Pratt. All rights reserved.