The “Spru-Cans”

                          20 SEPTEMBER 1975 – 21 SEPTEMBER 2005                                               THE “SPRU-CANS”  By the 1960s our aging fleet of WWII Allen M. Sumner and Gearing-class destroyers was increasingly inadequate against the growing threat of Soviet submarines.  A more capable platform for convoy escort and Read More

The Firing of Judah

                                             14 SEPTEMBER 1861                                            THE FIRING OF JUDAH Had other theaters of the early Civil War not been in the limelight, the tension at Pensacola might have been keener.  The Confederates held the Pensacola Navy Yard and Forts Barrancas and McRee guarding Read More

Stockdale Shoot-Down

                                              9 SEPTEMBER 1965                                       STOCKDALE SHOOT-DOWN The cockpit clock in his A-4 Skyhawk read 1210 as he pushed over toward a line of railroad cars at 400 knots.  Bad weather over Vinh, North Vietnam, had forced a diversion to this familiar secondary Read More

Bombship INTREPID

                                              3 SEPTEMBER 1804                                             BOMBSHIP INTREPID One of the first missions assigned to our fledgling Navy around the turn of the 19th century was the protection of US merchant shipping from the piracy of the southern Mediterranean Barbary States of Tripoli, Algeria, Read More

The Missing Husband

                                     TODAY IN NAVAL HISTORY                                                 31 AUGUST 1812                                          THE MISSING HUSBAND Not even three months had passed since war was declared against England in 1812.  Both the US Army and the US Navy were filling their ranks for the fight.  A Read More

Kellogg-Briand Pact

                                                27 AUGUST 1928                                         KELLOGG-BRIAND PACT World War I left a scar on the psyche of the Western hemisphere.  Northern France was left a moonscape of stripped forests, ghost villages, and farmland rendered permanently useless by unexploded ordnance.  The 117,000 American fighting Read More

Not Above Making a Buck!

                                                22 AUGUST 1863                                    NOT ABOVE MAKING A BUCK! Blockade running during our Civil War was a profitable enterprise for those who were successful.  The running of war materials brought a handsome price, but even higher profit margins accompanied “luxury” items, such Read More

Cruise of CSS TALLAHASSEE

                                              6-23 AUGUST 1864                                      CRUISE OF CSS TALLAHASSEE One of the more successful efforts of the Confederacy during the Civil War was their campaign against Union commercial shipping.  CSS TALLAHASSEE was one such raider, a sleek and fast cruiser built in England Read More

Opening the Arctic

                                                11 AUGUST 1958                                            OPENING THE ARCTIC The 1950s saw the United States embroiled in a “Cold War” to halt the spread of Soviet Communism.  Indeed, by the late 50s the Soviets, once thought to be technologically backward, appeared to have a Read More

CDR Tunis Craven, Hero of Mobile Bay

                                                 5 AUGUST 1864                        CDR TUNIS CRAVEN, HERO OF MOBILE BAY To a boy from Portsmouth, NH, the life of the sea seemed natural, thus, when Tunis Augustus MacDonough Craven was appointed a Midshipman on 2 February 1829, no one was surprised.  Read More