Leroy Ingles TMCM(SS) USN(Ret)
The first COB of the first
nuclear submarine dies 12 April 2001
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Remembering
Ron "Warshot" Smith TMM2/c SS
USS SEAL SS-183
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A silent warrior's final day
By Chris Barron - October 20, 2004
Decommissioning of USS PARCHE
SSN-683
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A commentary by Jim Christley
on the subject of counting lost boats in a "Tolling the Bell/Boats" ceremony.
Which submarines to include -- which to exclude -- under what circumstances
-- and the historical rationale for the decision. |
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George Arnold's
TRIBUTE
TO THE GUPPYS
Excellent history of United Staes GUPPY type
submarines. w/photos
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A
GUPPY? What's a GUPPY?
via Paul Roggemann's USS Sea Robin SS-407 page
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Submarine
FAQs - Maintained by Andrew Toppan (Haze Gray)
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Submarine
Accidents (Books-Amazon)
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US
SUBMARINE PEACETIME ACCIDENTS
by Greg Stitz (Contains the following sections)
Early
Submarine Accidents
The
Pre-War Expansion
World
War II Also includes:
U.S.
Subs Lost to Enemy Action
Post-War
Accidents
The
Early Nuclear Era
The
Cold War
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SUBMARINE
LOGS, HISTORY ? MUSEUMS
via Submarine World Network
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A
Brief History of SUB BASE New London .... SUB
BASE NLON Website
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A
Brief History of SUB BASE Pearl Harbor .... PH
BASE Website
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SUBRON-14
(Holy Loch, Scotland during the cold war)
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History
of the TANG Class Boats
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RADM
Richard Hawes via USS
Hawes Homepage
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Submarine
History via the website of Jim
Christley
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FleetSubmarine.com
- World War II American submarines
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Building The First
FBMs - by Jim Christley
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21 January 1954
NAUTILUS LAUNCHED
The Launch
of the Nuclear Navy
Two excellent aticles
Posted 21 Jan 2004
Return
to top of page
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AMERICAN U-BOATS - From DANFS
Online: Submarines
Former German submarines acquired by the US Navy
U-111
U-117
U-140
U-2513
U-3008
UB-148
UB-88
UC-97
- 7 June 1921 Sunk in Lake Michigan during gunnery drills by US Naval Reserve.
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From the PBS/NOVA TV series
titled "Hitler's Lost Sub, a very good hiatory of submarines
that spans 400 years 400
YEARS OF SUBMARINES |
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Rudolph
Diesel
"He threw himself over the rail of an English
Channel steamer in 1913..."
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Ten short pieces that discuss submarine history
via THE
ENGINES OF OUR INGENUITY
Bushnell's
Submarine
Sunken
Treasure
Bush-Bushnell
The
Gentleman's Magazine
Cornelius
Drebbel
Civil
War Submarine
Fulton's
Submarine
Momsen's
Lung
Submarine
Submarine
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Charles
A . Lockwood CSP 1943-1946
Vice Admiral Charles A. Lockwood will forever
be known in submarine history as the
legendary COMSUBPAC who led the silent
service to victory during World War II in the Pacific.
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AN UNSINKABLE FRIENDSHIP
Two shipmates from USS GROWLER SS-215 (News article
27 July 2000)
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WWII Commanding Officer of USS
ARCHERFISH SS-311
Captain Enright dies - 20 July 2000
(Copy of)
Washington Post
Obit
(Copy of)
New York Times
Obit
The importance of sinking
the SHINANO
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SUBMARINES
- Preserved as museum ships or in museums
via the Maritime History Virtual Archives
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The
History of the ARCTIC SUBMARINE LABORATORY (.mil)
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USS
HOLLAND SS-1 to USS SEAWOLF SS-21
Comparison via Myron Howard
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USS
PROTEUS AS-19 in Tokyo Bay 1945
Many documents and photos
See their website FACTUAL
HISTORY
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Japan Surrenders -
Boats in Tokyo Bay - 1945
Commemorative photo - Has name of each boat and
CO present
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PERISCOPE
SHOTS - A collection of images by Jim Mandelblatt
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Don Oke's
SUBMARINE
SQUADRON 12 - Key West (A History)
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USS
ARCHERFISH AGSS-311
"Playboys of the Pacific" - The all single-guys
boat
In early 1960, ARCHERFISH was chosen to participate
in Operation "Sea Scan," a scientific study of marine weather conditions,
water composition, ocean depths, and temperature ranges. She entered the
Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in January to be specially equipped for this
new mission. During this time, the vessel was redesignated an auxiliary
submarine, AGSS-311. Embarking a team of civilian scientists, she commenced
the first phase of operation "Sea Scan" on 18 May.
(Copied from ARCHERFISH page) |
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An INTERVIEW
with Tom Parks published in MILITARY HISTORY MAGAZINE April of 1992. Written
by John F. Wukovits, this article does a very nice job of recounting one
man's World War 2 submarine service. |
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PEARL
HARBOR DAY: 7 December 1941
From Neal Stevens' Cavalla website:
"On December 7, 1941, the Japanese aircraft carrier
Shokaku, along with five other carriers and Admiral Yamamoto’s task force,
launched planes on the American naval base in Pearl Harbor. Those planes
crippled and sank seven US battleships, clearing the way for a series of
successful Japanese aggressions in the Pacific.
On the afternoon of June
19, 1944, the USS Cavalla stalked and sank Shokaku, avenging the attack
at Pearl Harbor. Of all the warships on display in Texas, Cavalla is by
far the most successful."
Also see AN
ANALYSIS of The SINKING By Anthony Tully, Jon Parshall and Richard
Wolff |
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More Pearl Harbor history:
Online
School - Pearl Harbor Remembered
[ Link contributed by a teacher:
Ms. Sarah Hanson // Ms.Hanson202@yahoo.com
] |
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Rear
Admiral Richard H. O'Kane
via the homepage of the newly commisoned USS
O'KANE DDG-77
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Submarines
Rescuing Aviators
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CSP
HISTORY: Pacific Submarine Force
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CSL
HISTORY: Atlantic Submarine Force
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What
They Did via The Submarine Veterans of WW-II
From the Rutgers University
WW-II Oral History Project.
An interview with a WW-II Submarine Officer
WILLIAM
GODFREY INTERVIEW
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Submarine
Ops During the Cold War: "The Wet Cold War"
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Before the Boomers...
there was REGULUS
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Some
WW-II Submarine Battle Flags (.mil)
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History
of the USS SPERRY (AS-12)
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