Qualification Books: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
There is only one step left. The crew is gathered together at quarters, and the new sailor stands in front of them. The Captain will review the man's efforts, praising his hard work and dedication. He then reads the words on the printed citation, words the young man has been longing to hear, that bring him into the elite Brotherhood of Submariners. He is proclaimed to be '''''Qualified in Submarines'''''. The young sailor beams, his shipmates roar with approval, and the highly coveted Submarine Warfare Insignia, i.e. "Dolphins" badge (Gold for officers, Silver for enlisted) is pinned to his chest, leaving a figurative mark that will last to the end of his days. | There is only one step left. The crew is gathered together at quarters, and the new sailor stands in front of them. The Captain will review the man's efforts, praising his hard work and dedication. He then reads the words on the printed citation, words the young man has been longing to hear, that bring him into the elite Brotherhood of Submariners. He is proclaimed to be '''''Qualified in Submarines'''''. The young sailor beams, his shipmates roar with approval, and the highly coveted Submarine Warfare Insignia, i.e. "Dolphins" badge (Gold for officers, Silver for enlisted) is pinned to his chest, leaving a figurative mark that will last to the end of his days. | ||
Historical note: in the Pigboat days, the Silver Dolphins metal breast badge for enlisted sailors was not yet in use. Enlisted sailors wore a white embroidered version on their right sleeve. It was no less distinctive, valued, or coveted. | Historical note: in the Pigboat days, the Silver Dolphins metal breast badge for enlisted sailors was not yet in use. Enlisted sailors wore a white embroidered version on their right sleeve. It was no less distinctive, valued, or coveted. In 1947 these embroidered dolphins were moved to above to the left breast pocket and in 1950 the silver metal dolphins replaced these. | ||
<center> | <center> |
Revision as of 17:59, 29 November 2023
Submarine Qualification Notebooks
This process is called "qualifying". From the moment that a new sailors crosses the brow for the first time the clock is ticking. The time period they are given can vary, most often it is one year. During that time the sailor will spend nearly all of his off-duty time studying, learning the systems, taking notes, and studying diagrams to the point of being able to hand draw them from memory. His accumulated knowledge is collected in his Qualification Notebook. When he thinks he is ready, a board of experienced and Qualified shipmates is put together and he is put through an excruciating, hours long oral board. If he passes, he is handed off to a senior officer or the Chief of the Boat for a final walkthrough, as a double check on the sailor's aptitude. The Commanding Officer will then review everything, for the Captain is ultimately responsible for this man and the quality of his training.
There is only one step left. The crew is gathered together at quarters, and the new sailor stands in front of them. The Captain will review the man's efforts, praising his hard work and dedication. He then reads the words on the printed citation, words the young man has been longing to hear, that bring him into the elite Brotherhood of Submariners. He is proclaimed to be Qualified in Submarines. The young sailor beams, his shipmates roar with approval, and the highly coveted Submarine Warfare Insignia, i.e. "Dolphins" badge (Gold for officers, Silver for enlisted) is pinned to his chest, leaving a figurative mark that will last to the end of his days.
Historical note: in the Pigboat days, the Silver Dolphins metal breast badge for enlisted sailors was not yet in use. Enlisted sailors wore a white embroidered version on their right sleeve. It was no less distinctive, valued, or coveted. In 1947 these embroidered dolphins were moved to above to the left breast pocket and in 1950 the silver metal dolphins replaced these.
Running across these notebooks is a pretty rare thing. PigBoats is fortunate in having acquired copies of three Qualification Notebooks. Please peruse the links below to get an understanding of what needed to be learned to earn your Dolphins. We will add more as we get them.
The USS F-2 (SS-21)
The USS O-1 (SS-62)
The USS R-14 (SS-91)
Page created by:
Ric Hedman & David Johnston
1999 - 2023 - PigBoats.COM©
Mountlake Terrace, WA, Norfolk, VA
webmaster at pigboats dot com