The course of American naval history has not been set only by the relatively few famous ships whose stories have been told and retold. This volume spotlights 50 less recognized vessels, each significant in its own way, from the Continental Navy to the first supercarriers--while touching on many others with which their stories are interwoven. Attention is given not only to the design and conceptual changes the vessels embodied, but also the crews whose toil and heroism gave them life and sometimes notoriety. One captain tried to sell his warship in the midst of the Civil War. Each ship is…mehr
The course of American naval history has not been set only by the relatively few famous ships whose stories have been told and retold. This volume spotlights 50 less recognized vessels, each significant in its own way, from the Continental Navy to the first supercarriers--while touching on many others with which their stories are interwoven. Attention is given not only to the design and conceptual changes the vessels embodied, but also the crews whose toil and heroism gave them life and sometimes notoriety. One captain tried to sell his warship in the midst of the Civil War. Each ship is detailed chronologically in chapters that often dispel timeworn misconceptions. Some were trailblazers; others were misdirected in their inspiration, design, or execution--indeed two could not float and one was dampened only by rain. Yet each helped shape America's seafaring history.
James M. Caiella is a retired journalist with more than 50 years with experience as a photographer, editor, writer, designer, and graphic artist. He retired as lead editor of scholarly publications for the Naval History and Heritage Command. Prior to that, he was writer-editor for the U.S. Marine Corps' history division, and senior editor of the U.S. Naval Institute's Proceedings and Naval History magazines. A U.S. Army veteran, he lives in Richmond, Virginia.
Inhaltsangabe
Table of Contents Acknowledgments Ship Designators and Abbreviations Foreword Preface Section I-Age of Sail 1. Forgotten Saras 2. First of the Line: Saratoga [1780] 3. The Cock Crowed: Saratoga [1814] 4. The Sad Frigate: Confederacy [1776] 5. "Le cheval de course Yankee" (The Yankee Racehorse): Constellation [1797] 6. "Commerce Raider Par Excellence": Essex [1799] 7. Two Navies, Three Names: Wasp [1807] 8. "A Perfect Slug": Oneida [1809] 9. Pioneer of Westward Expansion: Shark [1821] 10. Star-Crossed: Somers [1842] 11. Sloop of Mercy: Jamestown [1844] 12. A Horse Designed by Committee: Supply [1846] Section II-Steam and Civil 13. Five Lives in Blue and Gray: Harriet Lane [1857] 14. A Very Short Life: Adirondack [1862] 15. Gunboat for Sale: Rattler [1862] 16. "Hard-Luck Ironclad": Neuse [1862] 17. "Germ Idea" of the Battlecruiser: Wampanoag [1863] 18. "Entirely Unnecessary": Casco [1864] 19. White Elephant: Dunderberg [1865] 20. Technological Dead-End: Alarm [1873] 21. More than Nine Lives: Bear [1874] 22. Prelude: Lightning [1876] Section III-Age of Steel 23. Explosion of "Soft Power": Maine [1888] 24. Heroism in Port: Bennington [1888] 25. So That Others May Survive: San Marcos [1889] 26. The Brick Battleship: "Illinois" [1893] 27. The Segue Ship: Iowa [1896] 28. "How Perfectly Foolish...": Brooklyn [1898] 29. Last of the Line: Wyoming [1898] 30. The Little Tug That Did: Hudson [1898] 31. Presidential Intervention: Plunger [1903] 32: Manhattan's Battleship: Recruit [1917] Section IV-World War 33. Unknown Heroine: Buchanan [1918] 34. The Red American Cruiser: Murmansk [1945] 35. "Well, there was no hope ...": Erie [1934] 36. Littlest Hero: Hoga [1940] 37. Fact vs. Fiction: King Haakon VII [1941] 38. Undeserved Reputation: Porter [1942] 39. Another Very Short Life: St. Lo [1944] 40. One of the Very Few: LT-5 [1944] 41. The Other Capture: Eastwind [1944] 42. "Unwanted": Prinz Eugen [1945] Section V-Cold 43. The Right Call: United States [1949] 44. First in Defense: Forrestal [1954] 45. The Smallest Boat: X-1 [1955] 46. "Work That We Were Supposed to Do": CG 36500 [1946] 47. "Ultimately, Alone": Pueblo [1944] 48. Family Namesake: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. [1945] 49. Gone, But Not Forgotten: Iwo Jima [1960] 50. "Greatest Humanitarian Mission": Kirk [1971] Chapter Notes Bibliography Ship Name Index General Index
Table of Contents Acknowledgments Ship Designators and Abbreviations Foreword Preface Section I-Age of Sail 1. Forgotten Saras 2. First of the Line: Saratoga [1780] 3. The Cock Crowed: Saratoga [1814] 4. The Sad Frigate: Confederacy [1776] 5. "Le cheval de course Yankee" (The Yankee Racehorse): Constellation [1797] 6. "Commerce Raider Par Excellence": Essex [1799] 7. Two Navies, Three Names: Wasp [1807] 8. "A Perfect Slug": Oneida [1809] 9. Pioneer of Westward Expansion: Shark [1821] 10. Star-Crossed: Somers [1842] 11. Sloop of Mercy: Jamestown [1844] 12. A Horse Designed by Committee: Supply [1846] Section II-Steam and Civil 13. Five Lives in Blue and Gray: Harriet Lane [1857] 14. A Very Short Life: Adirondack [1862] 15. Gunboat for Sale: Rattler [1862] 16. "Hard-Luck Ironclad": Neuse [1862] 17. "Germ Idea" of the Battlecruiser: Wampanoag [1863] 18. "Entirely Unnecessary": Casco [1864] 19. White Elephant: Dunderberg [1865] 20. Technological Dead-End: Alarm [1873] 21. More than Nine Lives: Bear [1874] 22. Prelude: Lightning [1876] Section III-Age of Steel 23. Explosion of "Soft Power": Maine [1888] 24. Heroism in Port: Bennington [1888] 25. So That Others May Survive: San Marcos [1889] 26. The Brick Battleship: "Illinois" [1893] 27. The Segue Ship: Iowa [1896] 28. "How Perfectly Foolish...": Brooklyn [1898] 29. Last of the Line: Wyoming [1898] 30. The Little Tug That Did: Hudson [1898] 31. Presidential Intervention: Plunger [1903] 32: Manhattan's Battleship: Recruit [1917] Section IV-World War 33. Unknown Heroine: Buchanan [1918] 34. The Red American Cruiser: Murmansk [1945] 35. "Well, there was no hope ...": Erie [1934] 36. Littlest Hero: Hoga [1940] 37. Fact vs. Fiction: King Haakon VII [1941] 38. Undeserved Reputation: Porter [1942] 39. Another Very Short Life: St. Lo [1944] 40. One of the Very Few: LT-5 [1944] 41. The Other Capture: Eastwind [1944] 42. "Unwanted": Prinz Eugen [1945] Section V-Cold 43. The Right Call: United States [1949] 44. First in Defense: Forrestal [1954] 45. The Smallest Boat: X-1 [1955] 46. "Work That We Were Supposed to Do": CG 36500 [1946] 47. "Ultimately, Alone": Pueblo [1944] 48. Family Namesake: Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. [1945] 49. Gone, But Not Forgotten: Iwo Jima [1960] 50. "Greatest Humanitarian Mission": Kirk [1971] Chapter Notes Bibliography Ship Name Index General Index
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826