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The Heart of the Boat: Inside the Auxiliary Division of the USS Wyoming

Deep below the surface, in the steel belly of the Ohio-class USS Wyoming submarine, there is a place where wrenches never stop turning, pipes never fully sleep and the heartbeat of the ship is kept alive by a small band of mechanics who call themselves "A-Gangers." 
 
To the untrained eye, the work might look like grease, noise and endless troubleshooting. To those who wear the "A-Gang" shirt on their backs, it's something much more: family, tradition and one of the most respected jobs on the entire boat. 
 
"[The] auxiliary division handles basically anything on the boat that isn't electrical or nuclear," said Navy Seaman Elvin Pruitt III, USS Wyoming machinist mate. "Plumbing, high-pressure hydraulics, diesel and mechanical systems, if it moves, pumps, drains, cools, floods, shifts or breaks, we own it." 
 
Their systems include air, water, hydraulics, compressors, valves and pumps. It's a job with no shortcuts. A job that doesn't stop underway or in port. A job that rarely gets the spotlight.  

And yet, every person who interviewed for this article said the same thing in different ways: It's one of the most respected jobs on board. 

That's because no matter what happens, someone eventually turns to the auxiliary division and says, "We need you." 

Pruitt described the division in one word: family. 
 
"We're kind of on the outside of every group [on the boat], which means we just bond closer with each other," he said. 

A woman wearing a tan T-shirt writes on a piece of paper attached to a clipboard while standing in the engine room of a military submarine. A man in similar attire works behind her.
Diesel Readings
Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Alexis Cornelison, auxiliary division leading petty officer, records diesel readings aboard the Ohio-class submarine USS Wyoming during routine operations, Aug. 6, 2025.
Credit: Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Travis Alston
VIRIN: 250806-N-ZO368-1001

 
Another sailor, Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Alexis Cornelison, the auxiliary division leading petty officer, who initially worked on surface ships, put it differently: "My whole little family is right there," she said. "The camaraderie is what keeps me here."  

Even in a male-dominated environment, the women aboard formed the strongest sisterhood she's ever experienced. 
 
"I don't think I'll ever have friends like this again," she explained. "We've been through everything together — good, bad, all of it." 

The division looks out for each other in ways that go beyond the job. When Cornelison's grandfather died, she said the crew didn't hesitate. They told her to go home, be with her family and they would take care of everything while she was gone. 

"No questions, no hoops, no stress; that's family," she said. "And it's why I'm glad I got to be part of this." 
 
Their paths to A-Gang are as different as their personalities. 
 
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Joseph Hillard's father was a part of an auxiliary division on an older sub. Cornelison started as a cook in the surface fleet and then fought for years to switch into engineering before volunteering for submarines once it became open to females. 

A man wearing a tan T-shirt opens a valve in the engine room of a military submarine.
Diesel Engine
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Joseph Hillard, machinist mate, operates the diesel engine aboard the Ohio-class submarine USS Wyoming while underway for routine operations, Aug. 6, 2025. Hillard is assigned to the boat's auxiliary division, which handles the air and water systems, hydraulics, compressors, valves and pumps.
Credit: Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Travis Alston
VIRIN: 250806-N-ZO368-1002

She laughed at how unexpected her journey has been.  

"I told my family I liked mechanics, and they said, 'Who are you?'" she recalled. "Everyone thought I'd be an English major or something. But here I am, loving my life on a submarine." 
 
Regardless of how they got here, they all agreed on something important: You don't really choose the auxiliary division ... you jump in, and the job chooses you. 
 
"It's not something you can sit and debate in the recruiter's office," she said. "You have to get thrown into it. Either you love it or you don't." 
 
A-Gang's tempo swings hard depending on whether the boat is submerged or tied to the pier. Underway life is steady, predictable and intense. But being in port is a whole other beast.  

"Honestly, it's busier," Hillard said.  

Contractors moving in and out.  Shipyard workers everywhere. Deadlines, repairs and upgrades.  

"It's more stressful in port," he said. "Underway, we stand our watch, and we work. In port, it feels like everything is happening at once." 
 
When asked about the best part of the job, every single one of them said it differently, but it always came back to this: Solving a problem no one else could solve and finally getting a stubborn system to run right. 
 
"That feeling of troubleshooting something over and over, and then you finally get it right, it's amazing," Cornelison said. "Nobody knew what was wrong, and then you just … figure it out." 

A man wearing a tan T-shirt works in the engine room of a military submarine.
Operating the Engine
A sailor operates the diesel engine aboard the Ohio-class submarine USS Wyoming while underway for routine operations, Aug. 6, 2025.
Credit: Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Travis Alston
VIRIN: 250806-N-ZO368-1003

For some, the job is a launching pad into a civilian career. 
 
"It's one of the best [jobs] you can have," said Pruitt and Hillard. "You can go anywhere. Any blue-collar job you want." 

For others, it's a calling, a source of pride. A tradition passed from father to son or discovered in the most unexpected way. And for all of them, it's something they'll never forget. Hard. Dirty. Respected. Full of challenges, full of laughter and full of family. 

A job that runs a submarine in the shadows; unseen, but never unvalued. On the USS Wyoming, A-Gang isn't just a division. It's the backbone of the boat. The keepers of the systems. The unspoken pulse that makes the strategic deterrence mission possible.  

And in the cramped passageways and diesel-scented spaces where they work side by side, they've built something rare: A place where tradition still matters, where leaders raise the next generation and where the hardest jobs bring the closest bonds. 

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