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Naval Station Pascual Ledesma

Coordinates:14°28′54″N120°54′58″E / 14.48167°N 120.91611°E /14.48167; 120.91611
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromNaval Base Cavite)
Philippine Navy Base in Cavite City
Naval Station Pascual Ledesma
Fort San Felipe, San Roque,Cavite City in thePhilippines
A member of the Armed Forces of the Philippines Naval Special Operations Group participates in a battlefield exercise during a combat medic subject matter expert exchange at Naval Base Cavite, Philippines.
Site information
TypeNaval base
OwnerArmed Forces of the Philippines
Controlled by Philippine Navy
Open to
the public
No
ConditionActive
Location
Naval Base Cavite is located in Philippines
Naval Base Cavite
Naval Base Cavite
Location in the Philippines
Coordinates14°28′54″N120°54′58″E / 14.48167°N 120.91611°E /14.48167; 120.91611
Area9 hectares (22 acres)
Site history
Builtlate 16th century
Built bySpanish East Indies
In useSpanish shipyard: late 16th century – early 19th century
Spanish naval station: early 19th century – 1898
U.S. Naval facility: 1898–1971
Philippine Naval facility: 1971–present
Battles/warsBattle of Manila Bay
EventsCavite Mutiny of 1872
Garrison information
Current
commander
Cmdre. Romeo Santiago Nebres
GarrisonNaval Sea Systems Command
Naval Logistics Center

Naval Station Pascual Ledesma, also known asCavite Naval Base orCavite Navy Yard, is amilitary installation of thePhilippine Navy inCavite City.[1]

In the 1940s and '50s, it was called Philippine Navy Operating Base. The 9-hectare (22-acre)naval base is located at the easternmost end of Cavite Point in the San Roque district (specifically Fort San Felipe) of the city. Via traffic lane, this naval establishment is next to the famous Samonte Park. It was the former extension of U.S.Naval Station Sangley Point (transferred to the Philippines in 1971) which is now Naval Station Heracleo Alano. In 2009, it was named after Cmdre. Pascual Ledesma (b. May 17, 1843 – d. June 6, 1917), a leader of thePhilippine Revolution and the first Officer-In-Command of the Philippine Navy.

History

[edit]

Spanish period

[edit]

The port town of Cavite Nuevo was established after the Spanish colonizers found that the deep waters around the tip of Cavite Point(Cavite la Punta) are suitable for large ships and established theAstillero de Rivera (Rivera Shipyard).Cavite City became the main seaport ofManila and the staging port for theManila-Acapulco Galleon Trade. After the demise of the galleon trade, the shipyard became the Spanish Arsenal.[2]

American period

[edit]

When the sovereignty of the Philippines was ceded to the Americans after theSpanish–American War, the U.S. took over all the military stations left by the Spaniards including the Cavite Naval Yard. The Americans made several modifications and improvements, but also included the demolition of Fort Guadalupe and partially of Fort San Felipe.

It was the US Navy's only ship repair facility in the western Pacific beforeWorld War II.Sangley Point was a component of the navy yard. Sangley Point was a subordinate command of the Yard and where the naval radio transmitting facility and the naval hospital was located.

In 1941, the16th Naval District was established in the navy yard during the American colonial period. At the beginning of World War II, the Cavite Navy Yard was destroyed by Japanese bombers. It was abandoned and the Japanese used the yard for small boat repair. It is the same place the Japanese forces used as a headquarters after they conquered Cavite during the Second World War.[2]

In 1945, the yard was retaken by the combined Filipino and American forces and recommissioned, but it was turned over to the Philippine government in 1947 for the Philippine Navy.

After independence

[edit]

Early in December 1970, it was officially announced that U.S. Naval Station Sangley Point would be closed. On July 1, 1971, Sangley Point changed status from active to inactive in preparation for the turnover of the facility to the government of the Philippines. On-the-job-training sessions were conducted for Philippine naval personnel to ensure the safe and proper operation of all base industrial facilities. On September 1, 1971, the base was officially turned over to the government of the Philippines, ending 73 years as a U.S. naval facility. It is currently used as a facility of thePhilippine Navy and thePhilippine Air Force. William J. Mitzel and his wife Barbara were the last US personnel to occupy quarters on the installation. Mr. Mitzel was responsible for the final turn over and lived on the installation with his wife, when the turn over was completed.

In line withPhilippine Navy General Order number 229 dated July 7, 2009, the naval installations were renamed to honor esteemed predecessors in the military/naval service who fought for the protection of the nation's sovereignty, territorial integrity, democracy, and the maritime interests of the country. With this, the Naval Base Cavite, the naval station in Fort San Felipe, was assigned the nameNaval Station Pascual Ledesma.[3]

Naval Base Cavite provides support services to the Philippine Navy and otherArmed Forces of the Philippines tenant units in the base complex, such as refueling, re-watering, shore power connections, berthing, ferry services, tugboat assistance, sludge disposal services and housing.

Naval Sea Systems Command

[edit]

Formerly the Naval Support Command, the Naval Sea System Command operates the country's military shipyards providing repair and maintenance of all navyships andaircraft and theirweapons. They develop new technologies for the Navy and maintains theircommunications andelectronic equipment in order to sustain the navaldefense capability of the Philippine Navy. It is the biggest industrial complex of theArmed Forces of the Philippines.

The Philippine Navy's Naval Sea Systems Command shared a video on their realization to restart their naval shipbuilding capability with the reopening of the Naval Shipbuilding Center (previously called the Cavite Naval Yard) which was refurbished and retooled as part Israel Shipyard's contract to supply fast attack interdiction crafts to the Philippine Navy.

The new facility will be building/assembling some of theAcero-class FAICs (Shaldag Mk. V) that were procured by the DND under the FAICM Acquisition Project, and will likely to the same once additional orders are made.

Israel Shipyard turned over the upgraded shipyard to the Philippine Navy in 2023.[4][5]

Naval Logistics Center

[edit]

The Naval Logistics Center began as the OSP[clarification needed] supply center under the finance branch of the Philippine Army for supporting the few vessels turned over by the US Navy. In October 1947, the supply center was elevated to a regular division and paved the way to the establishment of the general supply depot named as the Naval Supply Center in 1950. It was placed under control of the Commander, Naval Shore Establishment, later called the Fleet Support Command and the Naval Support Command in 1967.

It is now called the Naval Logistics Center. The depot procures and maintains, manages supplies andraw materials, operates equipment and facilities and render related services in support of thelogistics requirement of Philippine Navy units.[6]

Hospital

[edit]

Located within the base is the Cavite Naval Hospital, a medical facility that provides hospital and out-patient services to Philippine Navy personnel and their dependents. It is located on P. Zamora Extension/Reynoso Road,(14°28′58.6″N120°54′52.5″E / 14.482944°N 120.914583°E /14.482944; 120.914583 (Cavite Naval Hospital)) adjacent to the navy chapel. The other naval hospital, Manila Navy Hospital is located inFort Bonifacio inTaguig City.[7]

Education

[edit]

Sangley Point National High School is located at Naval Station Heracleo Alano. It is situated along La Naval Rd, Naval Station Heracleo Alano,Sangley Point, San Antonio, Cavite City; not at Naval Base Pascual Ledesma regarding the above topic.

Chapel

[edit]

Naval Base Cavite is served by the Stella Maris Chapel, aRoman Catholicmilitary chaplaincy located on P. Zamora Ext. (or Reynoso Rd)(14°28′59.3″N120°54′50.4″E / 14.483139°N 120.914000°E /14.483139; 120.914000 (Stella Maris Chapel)) inside the base in Fort San Felipe, Cavite City.[8]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toCavite Naval Base.
  1. ^"Historic Cavite Navy Yard".Proceedings.56 (9): 331. September 1930. Archived fromthe original on 16 April 2025.
  2. ^ab"Fuerza de San Felipe Neri". Muog.
  3. ^Arevalo, Lt. Col. Edgardo A. (2009-08-20)."Navy Renames Bases and Stations After Predecessors". The Philippine Navy Today. Retrieved on 2014.(Article is truncated.)
  4. ^Hilotin, Jay (10 July 2024)."Philippines to scale-up building its own warships".Gulf News. Retrieved20 May 2025.
  5. ^"PH Navy gets upgraded shipyard from Israeli firm". Philippine News Agency. Retrieved20 May 2025.
  6. ^(2012-11-15).Philippine Navy (Hukbong Dagat ng Pilipinas)". Hukbong Dagat ng Pilipinas.
  7. ^Pike, John."Philippine Navy Organization". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved on 2014-10-21.
  8. ^"Stella Maris Chapel". Facebook. Retrieved on 2014-10-21.
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