Articles written by Paul Crozier
Showing 10 Articles
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Seawolf Park and Hurricane Ike
On September 13, 2008, Seawolf Park in Galveston, Texas received significant damage from Hurricane Ike, a category 2 storm.
Dec 2, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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Commander Howard W. Gilmore, MOH
The most famous act of self sacrifice known to the U.S. submarine service was performed by Commander Howard W. Gilmore, and earned him the Medal of Honor.
Sep 12, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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Dick O'Kane and USS Tang
A skilled mentor and fearless determination forged Dick O'Kane and Tang into the most successful U.S. submarine command of WWII.
Sep 11, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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USS Batfish (SS-310)
When it came to anti-submarine warfare, no American submarine was more successful than the USS Batfish.
Sep 10, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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IJN Shokaku
Following her participation in the attack on Pearl Harbor, IJN Shokaku survived several near fatal air attacks before finally being sunk by submarine.
Sep 9, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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USS Texas (BB-35)
The U.S. battleship Texas, a first generation Dreadnought, is the only surviving US warship to have served in both world wars.
Sep 8, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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Submarines That Sank Themselves
When operating correctly, submarine torpedoes are effective offensive weapons; when malfunctioning they can be just as deadly to the firing submarine.
Sep 5, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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Mush Morton and USS Wahoo
USS Wahoo (SS-238), under the command of Dudley W. "Mush" Morton, revolutionized American submarine warfare in the Pacific during World War II.
Sep 5, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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IJN Yamato and Operation Ten-Go
In 1945, the largest, most powerful warship afloat was the Imperial Japanese Navy's super-battleship Yamato.
Sep 4, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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USS Permit (SSN-594) Class
First launched in 1960, the SSN-594 Permit class were the world's first modern, quiet, deep-diving fast attack submarines.
Jun 18, 2008
- Paul Crozier
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