Rafael de Vega, of the U.S. Navy, looks at the USS Arizona Mall Memorial on the campus of the University of Arizona on Monday, Veterans Day. Vega and several other seamen came to Tucson to take part in a walking tour of the battleship memorial and other sites of military significance on campus. The sailors will be stationed on the USS Arizona nuclear submarine, which is under construction.

Some of the first sailors to wear the Arizona name on their shoulders since World War II paid a special visit to Tucson on Veterans Day to learn more about the legacy they have been chosen to carry on.

Nine active-duty servicemen assigned to the new USS Arizona nuclear submarine spent Monday morning touring the memorial on the University of Arizona Mall for the last Navy vessel to bear that name.

The sailors in uniform also got to go inside the tower at the U of A Student Union Memorial Center to see one of the original bells salvaged from the battleship Arizona after it was sunk at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941.

โ€œOur legacy is the battleship, and we want to have this heritage as part of our culture from the start,โ€ said Commander Tom Digan, commanding officer of the submarine and its pre-commission crew. โ€œWe want to do this right.โ€

Sailors from the new Navy submarine stopped in Tucson on Monday for "namesake visit."

Acting Secretary of the Navy Thomas Modly announced the name of the new Virginia-class, nuclear-powered, fast-attack submarine on Dec. 24, 2019. The vessel is now under construction at the General Dynamics Electric Boat shipyard in Groton, Connecticut, which is also where Digan and his crew are stationed.

He said the boat is still โ€œa couple of yearsโ€ from completion, so at least some of the sailors on Mondayโ€™s tour will never get the opportunity to serve on the submarine. Some recent estimates indicate that the Arizona might not be ready to enter active service until 2029.

The campus tour was led by a pair of Navy veterans who now work for the universityโ€™s office of Veterans Education & Transition Services, or VETS for short. Julio Luzania and Eleazar Rios both served on submarines before enrolling at the U of A to study engineering while continuing their service in the Naval Reserve.

VETS director and fellow Navy veteran Blaze Smith said sailors always feel a special connection to the ships on which they serve, but itโ€™s obviously even more meaningful to help launch a brand new boat with so much history attached to its name.

โ€œIt really does mean a lot to these guys,โ€ said Blaze, who also serves as ROTC program director for the university.

The sailorsโ€™ visit to the U of A was organized by the USS Arizona Legacy Foundation, a Tempe-based nonprofit founded in 2021 to celebrate the commissioning of the submarine, support its crew and commemorate its connection to the battleship that came before it.

U.S. Navy sailors visiting Tucson look through memorial dogtags on the USS Arizona Sculpture on the University of Arizona campus on Monday. They will be stationed on the USS Arizona submarine when it launches. โ€œOur legacy is the battleship, and we want to have this heritage as part of our culture from the start,โ€ said Commander Tom Digan, commanding officer of the submarine and its pre-commission crew.

Foundation president and CEO Nicole LaSlavic said the sailorsโ€™ stop in Tucson came as part of a five-day โ€œnamesake visitโ€ to the Phoenix area, which included talking to fourth-graders at an elementary school, volunteering at a food charity and appearing at Saturdayโ€™s ASU football game, Sundayโ€™s Arizona Cardinals game and a Veterans Day ceremony in the submarineโ€™s official hometown of Gilbert.

The servicemen also toured the USS Arizona Memorial Gardens at the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community and visited an American Legion post in Gilbert that LaSlavic said will be providing the submarine with a boatโ€™s bell made from Arizona copper and the metal grommets salvaged from old American flags.

Teri Mann is a crew support volunteer with the foundation. She traveled from her home in Seattle to help out with the long weekend of activities, which is how she ended up crying at the U of A Student Union on Monday after seeing the USS Arizonaโ€™s bell up close.

Her uncle, William Edward Mann, was a 21-year-old gunnerโ€™s mate on the battleship when he and 1,176 of his crewmates were killed in the Pearl Harbor attack.

โ€œIโ€™m basically the (foundationโ€™s) gold star connection to the original ship,โ€ Mann said, as she dabbed tears from her cheeks. โ€œThis is all very meaningful for me.โ€

In addition to the bell tower, Mondayโ€™s U of A tour included stops at the World War I memorial fountain at Old Main, the plaques for service members in the Student Union rotunda, and the sculpture in the buildingโ€™s front drive made to look like a shipโ€™s mast decorated with the replica dogtags of every USS Arizona crew member.

At the battleship memorial on the Mall, the sailors strolled across the outline of the ship and browsed through the rows of medallions, reading the names of the men who died. Then they gathered beneath the flagpole to shoot a Veterans Day video message for social media, ending it with a call they have adopted from the crew of the lost ship: โ€œArizona, up and at โ€˜em!โ€

Zechariah Wilson, left, and Ryan Ashy look at the USS Arizona Mall Memorial on the UA campus Monday in Tucson. They will be stationed on the new USS Arizona submarine thatโ€™s now being built. โ€œItโ€™s the Arizona,โ€ noted Ashy. โ€œItโ€™s not just any other boat.โ€

Submarine Nuclear Electronics Technician Nate Smythe said he was already fascinated by the history of the battleship, but this whirlwind tour has given a deeper meaning to serving on the Arizona crew.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been adopted into this whole other family,โ€ the sailor said, as he stood on the U of A Mall on Monday. โ€œIt makes this all feel like way more than just my job.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s the Arizona,โ€ added Nuclear Power Machinistโ€™s Mate Ryan Ashy. โ€œItโ€™s not just any other boat.โ€

The items came from a sailor who served on the ship before Pearl Harbor.

The USS Arizona was a Pennsylvania-class battleship commissioned in the United State Navy in 1916. She went through an extensive modernization in 1929, with new deck armor, boilers, turbines, guns and fire-control. During the surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Dec. 7, 1941, a bomb detonated a powder magazine in the Arizona and the battleship exploded violently and sank, with the loss of 1,177 officers and crewmen. The U.S. made a formal declaration of war against Japan and subsequently all Axis powers. The wreck still rests at the bottom of the harbor and is now part of the USS Arizona Memorial.


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Contact reporter Henry Brean at hbrean@tucson.com. On Twitter: @RefriedBrean