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===<span style="color:#000000"><big>The Submarine Tradition</big></span>=== | <!--===<span style="color:#000000"><big>The Submarine Tradition</big></span>=== | ||
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B"><i>"There is something about the submarine service. It tends to create a bond between those who have served that is born of trust. Every submariner who ever put to sea and submerged has placed in the hands of another, their very lives. The bond is not one of close friendship, even though those do grow out of the time spent aboard a boat. It is one of mutual respect - blind to color, ethnicity, religion, nationality and gender. The bond is one of personal responsibility. Not everyone has it. Some don't even know what personal responsibility is. Submariners know what it is. It is their way of life. The trust and respect and sense of personal responsibility is.... "The Submarine Tradition..."</i> -- Author and Historian Jim Christley</span><br><br> | <div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B"><i>"There is something about the submarine service. It tends to create a bond between those who have served that is born of trust. Every submariner who ever put to sea and submerged has placed in the hands of another, their very lives. The bond is not one of close friendship, even though those do grow out of the time spent aboard a boat. It is one of mutual respect - blind to color, ethnicity, religion, nationality and gender. The bond is one of personal responsibility. Not everyone has it. Some don't even know what personal responsibility is. Submariners know what it is. It is their way of life. The trust and respect and sense of personal responsibility is.... "The Submarine Tradition..."</i> -- Author and Historian Jim Christley</span><br><br> | ||
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">PigBoats.COM would like to thank our good friend and colleague Jim Christley, and our brothers at [http://SubmarineSailor.com SubmarineSailor.com] for the quotes.</span> | <div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">PigBoats.COM would like to thank our good friend and colleague Jim Christley, and our brothers at [http://SubmarineSailor.com SubmarineSailor.com] for the quotes.</span> | ||
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<!--===<span style="color:#000000"><big>New Book Release</big></span>=== | <!--===<span style="color:#000000"><big>New Book Release</big></span>=== | ||
Revision as of 19:20, 4 June 2023
Latest Update June 1, 2023
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03-May-2023
O-Boats
USS O-3 & O-2 Groton Ct. c1921 -
03-May-2023
B-Class
B-1 before launch Cavite PI 1915 -
USS O-3 & O-2 Groton Ct. c1921
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B-1 before launch Cavite PI 1915
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A Good and Favorable Wind A Book by PigBoats.COM
An important note about submarine names
About PigBoats.COM
I was struck by this statement pulled from another submarine related page called Sweet Bird Of Youth.
These sailors were the boys down the street, around the corner, out on the farms, the high school football heroes and, yes, even the geeks of their time, but they became one of the elite, one of that 1% that made the cut and became "Qualified in Submarines". They were, and still are, the best of the best of the United States Navy.
It is important to remember that the submarines were just steel and machinery. It was the men who brought them to life and made them live. It is the men that gave them the romance, the mystery and the mystique.
I have included a number of first person accounts on a some of the pages of what life was like aboard an "S" or "R" or even a "K" boat. There is also an account of what it was like being bombed on Sealion at Cavite Harbor in December, 1941. All this is most valuable since the men who sailed these boats are rapidly making their own "eternal patrols". Preservation of these verbal images is important.
Sailors, rest your oar! You stand relieved, we have the watch. ...and thank you!Acknowledgements
Special thanks go out to Mr Roland Goodbody, Manuscripts Curator, Milne Special Collections & Archives at the University of New Hampshire Library and his staff and the University of New Hampshire for all their cooperation and kindness in helping me in this endeavor.
All photos that are from the Milne Special Collections, University of New Hampshire Library, Durham, N.H. are their property and may not be reproduced without their permission.
I would also like to thank Wendy Gulley, Curator of The US Navy Submarine Force Museum Library in Groton, Ct. for her kind indulgences in letting me use their archive.
Photos credited to the people who submitted them are their property, and may not be copied or reproduced without their permission unless the original photo came from the public domain such as The National Archives or the United States Navy.
Page created by:
Ric Hedman & David Johnston
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