The Sinking of USS SQUALUS (SS-192)
On 1 March 1939, USS SQUALUS (SS-192) was commissioned at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine. By May, the boat was ready to stretch her legs in the waters off the coast of New Hampshire. Her first eighteen dives, which [...]
“Our Father’s Flag”
“Dennis Landrum was one of the many prisoners of war (POW) held at the Aomori prison camp in Japan during World War II. The POWs wanted a flag to greet their rescuers when they were liberated at the end of [...]
Congratulations, NAUTILUS!
On 20 May 1982, Historic Ship NAUTILUS (SSN-571) was designated a National Historic Landmark by the Secretary of the Interior. Although there are 85,000 sites on the National Register of Historic Places, only 2,500 or so are National Historic Landmarks. [...]
ENGLAND’s Triumph
Ensign John England was four days shy of his twenty-first birthday when the sun rose over his ship, USS OKLAHOMA (BB-37), and the rest of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on 7 December 1941. The idea of an attack was probably the [...]
The Sinking of USS GUITARRO (SSN-665)
USS GUITARRO (SSN-665) was launched on 27 July 1968. Less than a year later, on 15 May 1969, the boat would have a much less positive experience with the water surrounding her: she sank at the pier. “The Guitarro should [...]
ANGLER to the Rescue!
On 15 February 1944, USS ANGLER (SS-240) left Midway Island to begin her second war patrol. Several weeks later, Major General Douglas MacArthur received word that that the Japanese were massacring the civilian population on the Philippine island of Panay; [...]
Cold War Cat and Mouse, Part III
In its Spring 2005 edition, Undersea Warfare magazine published a story called “Cold War Strategic ASW,” which dovetails nicely with the radar-picket submarines we learned about in last week’s “Tidbits.” Today’s installment is part three of three. […]
Cold War Cat and Mouse, Part II
In its Spring 2005 edition, Undersea Warfare magazine published a story called “Cold War Strategic ASW,” which dovetails nicely with the radar-picket submarines we learned about in last week’s “Tidbits.” Today’s installment is part two of three. […]