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- Milligan, Benjamin H., 1978- author.
- First edition - New York : Bantam Books, [2021]
- Description
- Book — x, 626 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- part 1. Neglect: The reluctant creation and violent demise of the Navy's first commandos, the Marine Corps Raiders ; The sidelining of the Army's amphibious soldier-scouts and the call-up of the Navy's second-string sailors ; The US Army's first commandos and the raid that wasn't
- part 2. Opportunity: Draper Kauffman and the course that cracked the Atlantic wall, then laid the first bricks of the legend of naval special warfare ; The evolving contest that created the Mermen of War, World War II's only indispensable special operations unit ; The contest for the guerrilla war in China and the organization that had "no damn business" fighting in it, the US Navy's army of sailors
- part 3. Relevance: The US Navy's postwar plight, and the sailor-raiders who led her back to significance in Korea ; The resurrection of the Army's Rangersik, and the guerrilla raid that failed to forestall their second death ; Arleigh Burke, the Bay of Pigs, and the launching of the Navy's limited-war SEALs
- part 4. Exigency: Kennedy's Army of Gladiators and the counterinsurgency that blunted their swords, then cleared the way for another contender ; The first SEALs, their search for a mission, and the report that found it for them ; The dam break of conventional war in Vietnam, and the following flood of raiders that failed to beat the Navy to the Mekong Delta, all but one
- part 5. Culmination: The derailing of the first direct-action SEALs in the Rung Sat, and the detachment that restored their prospects ; The direct-action SEALs who dodged diversion, then perfected a mission that propelled the teams past the riverbanks, into history ; The Navy's skeleton key to inland combat and the final against-the-current achievements in the war's ebb tide that exposed the SEALs preeminence as the US military's go-anywhere commandos
- Online
- Weintraub, Beverly, 1961- author.
- Guilford, Connecticut : Lyons Press, an imprint of Globe Pequot, the trade division of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc., [2021]
- Description
- Book — xviii, 286 pages, 18 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
"This is the story of the first women naval aviators and their struggles and triumphs as they earned their Wings of Gold, learned to fly increasingly sophisticated jet fighters and helicopters, mastered aircraft carrier landings, served at sea, and reached heights of command that would have been unthinkable less than a generation before. It is also the story of the legacy they left behind"-- Provided by publisher
- Online
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- Johnson, Wray R., author.
- Lexington, Kentucky : University Press of Kentucky, [2019]
- Description
- Book — xii, 420 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm.
- Summary
-
- Origins of Marine Corps aviation
- Proving ground: Haiti, 1915-1934
- Advance to maturity, 1919-1935
- Marine Corps Aviation comes of age: Nicaragua, 1926-1933.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Hobbs, David, 1946- author.
- Barnsley, South Yorkshire : Seaforth Publishing, 2019.
- Description
- Book — xiv, 386 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
Among all the celebrations of the RAF's centenary, it was largely forgotten that the establishment of an independent air force came at a cost - and it was the Royal Navy that paid the price. In 1918 it had been pre-eminent in the technology and tactics of employing aircraft at sea, but once it lost control of its own air power, it struggled to make the RAF prioritise naval interests, in the process losing ground to the rival naval air forces of Japan and the United States. This book documents that struggle through the cash-strapped 1920s and '30s, culminating in the Navy regaining control of its aviation in 1937, but too late to properly prepare for the impending war. However, despite the lack of resources, British naval flying had made progress, especially in the advancement of carrier strike doctrine. These developments are neatly illustrated by the experiences of Lieutenant William Lucy, who was to become Britain's first accredited air 'ace' of the war and to lead the world's first successful dive-bombing of a major warship. Making extensive use of the family archive, this book also reproduces many previously unseen photographs from Lucy's album, showing many aspects of life in the Fleet Air Arm up to the end of the Norway campaign. Although it is beyond the scope of this book, in November 1940 the inter-war concentration on carrier strike was to be spectacularly vindicated by the air attack on the Italian fleet at Taranto - it inspired the Japanese to a far larger effort at Pearl Harbor the following year, but the Royal Navy had shown the way.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG95 .G7 H63 2019 | Available |
- Marshall, M. Ernest, 1945- author.
- Annapolis, MD : Naval Institute Press, [2019]
- Description
- Book — xii, 322 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
- Wiley: the early years
- The road to Lakehurst
- The USS Shenandoah (ZR 1)
- The USS Los Angeles (ZR 3)
- The Shenandoah Disaster
- Changes in command
- Commanding the Los Angeles
- The USS Tennessee (BB 43)
- The USS Akron (ZRS 4)
- The crash of the Akron
- Aftermath of the Akron
- The USS Macon (ZRS 5)
- The end of an era
- USS Sirius (AK 15), Hell Gate, and helium
- War and battleships
- Kamikazes and beyond
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG93 .M358 2019 | Available |
- Haslop, Dennis (Naval historian), author.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2018.
- Description
- Book — xi, 225 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
- Summary
-
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: The dawn of the era of flight and the formation of the RFC/RNAS, from its inception until the end of 1915.
- Chapter 2: The dawn of the era of flight and the formation of the imperial German Naval Air Service, from its inception until the end of 1915.
- Chapter 3: RNAS development and the challenges from within and without, leading to the formation of the RAF, 1916-1918.
- Chapter 4: IGNAS development and the challenges from within, 1916-1918.
- Chapter 5: Conclusion.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG95 .G7 H38 2018 | Available |
- Ostrom, Thomas P., author.
- Jefferson, North Carolina : McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, [2018]
- Description
- Book — ix, 230 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
- Summary
-
This book covers the history of the U.S. Coast Guard from 1790 under Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton, when the Service was called the U.S. Revenue Marine, to World War I, during which the naval agency, then called the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service, was combined with the U.S. Life-Saving Service to form the U.S. Coast Guard in 1915. The Coast Guard has historically served with or under the U.S. Navy in national defense missions. The maritime conflicts in that time frame include a war with France; War of 1812-1815; clashes with pirates, slave ships, and the Seminole Indians; War with Mexico; the Civil War of 1861-1865); Spanish-American War (1898); and World War I (1914-1918). The Great War involved the USCG and USN in domestic and maritime missions across the Atlantic to Europe, merchant ship convoy escorts, and anti-submarine warfare. The naval period surveys the evolution of wooden hulled, wind powered sailing ships to fuel powered iron hulled vessels. The historical geography of the wars is illustrated with maps created by retired IBM engineer and military historian David H. Allen.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG53 .O885 2018 | Available |
- Dunn, Robert F., 1928- author.
- Annapolis, MD : Naval Institute Press, [2017]
- Description
- Book — xi, 204 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
- Preface: A most remarkable story
- Black as midnight
- Difficult days: a soaring mishap rate
- The competition: American aviation overall
- Beginning to get it right
- Naval aviation's transition to jets
- Aircraft carriers: changes and modifications
- Beyond jets and aircraft carriers
- The catalyst for improvement: the Naval Safety Center
- Six amazing years: RAGS, NATOPS, and more
- The doc: aerospace medicine
- flight surgeons and more
- Discovering human factors
- Naval aviation maintenance and supply
- The underappreciated: aircraft, aircraft systems, and design safety
- Making believe: simulators and synthetic trainers
- On to the twenty-first century: ORM, CRM, and culture workshops
- Success: Summary and conclusions
- Afterword
- Appendix 1: Marine aviation
- Appendix 2: Naval Safety Center yearly major mishap statistics
- Appendix 3: Navy and Marine accident reporting classifications
- Appendix 4: Aviation-oriented safety center publications
- Appendix 5: Principal carrier alterations
- Appendix 6: Typical straight-deck carrier landing pattern
- Chronology
- Glossary.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG93 .A79 2017 | Available |
- Althoff, William F., author.
- 25th Anniversary Edition. - Annapolis, Maryland : Naval Institute Press, [2016]
- Description
- Book — xiv, 318 pages : illustrations, maps ; 28 cm
- Summary
-
- Establishing an air station
- The USS Shenandoah and the early years
- The USS Los Angeles: training and experimentation
- The USS Akron and USS Macon
- Lakehurst: international airport
- Preparations for war
- The war years
- Postwar progress
- End of the program
- Afterword
- Appendixes
- A. Commanding officers, NAS Lakehurst (1921-62)
- B. Performance and other data for U.S. Navy airships (1915-61)
- U.S. Navy lighter-than-air headquarters and facilities, Second World War
- Memorandum on status of lighter-than-air
- E. Postwar airship deliveries to the U.S. Navy
- F. Last airships in the U.S. Navy aircraft inventory.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG93 .A868 2016 | Available |
- United States Naval Institute author.
- Annapolis, Maryland : Naval Institute Press, [2016]
- Description
- Book — xi, 165 pages ; 21 cm.
- Summary
-
- "Smedley Butler's air corps: the first Marine aviators in China" / Gabrielle M. Neufeld and James S. Santelli
- "The genesis of air support in guerrilla operations" / General Vernon E. Megee, USMC (Ret.)
- "Ace in a day" / Lieutenant Commander Thomas J. Cutler, USN (Ret.)
- "Marine Corps aviation, an infantryman's opinion" / Major J.N. Rentz, USMCR
- "Right on the button: Marine Corps close air support in Korea" / Admiral John S. Thach, USN (Ret.)
- "Marine aviation in Vietnam, 1962-1970" / Lieutenant General Keith B. McCutcheon, USMC
- "Marine air operations in Northern Europe" / Major Robert J. O'Rourke, USMC
- "Stop quibbling and win the war" / Major John E. Valliere, USAF
- "Who really needs Marine TacAir?" / Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Linn, USMC.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG93 .U5595 2016 | Available |
- Denver, Rorke, author.
- First Howard books hardcover edition. - New York : Howard Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, Inc., [2016]
- Description
- Book — viii, 230 pages ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
- Send me a hero
- Lessons from the brotherhood
- How to be brave
- How to kill right
- Leadership secrets of the SEALs
- Why we fight
- Everyone must serve
- Bridging the military-civilian divide
- The debt we owe our warriors
- United we stand.
- Online
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VG87 .D45 2016 | Available |
- Barker, Anthony J., author.
- Crawley, Western Australia : UWAP Scholarly, 2015.
- Description
- Book — 392 pages ; 24 cm
- Online
- Adlam, Hank, author.
- Barnsley, South Yorkshire : Pen & Sword Aviation, [2014]
- Description
- Book — xii, 224 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- The Beginning
- Naval Air Combat in the First World War
- Manipulation and Muddle
- Recovery, 1930-1940
- The Operational Environment in the Second World War
- Types of Naval Aircraft and Combat Operations
- Penguinisms
- A Characteristic Penguin
- The Penguin Background
- Development of Carrier Operations
- Palembang : Meridian 1 and 2
- Operations Iceberg 1 and 2
- Assault on the Mainland of Japan
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VG95 .G7 A35 2014 | Available |
- Hawkins, Tom, author.
- Second edition. - Chicago : Pritzker Military Museum & Library, 2014.
- Description
- Book — 64 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 22 cm
- Online
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VG87 .H395 2014 | Available |
15. Navy SEALs : their untold story [2014]
- Couch, Dick, 1943- author.
- First edition. - New York, NY : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, [2014]
- Description
- Book — xxii, 310 pages, 40 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, facsimiles, portraits ; 24 cm
- Online
16. No hero : the evolution of a Navy SEAL [2014]
- Owen, Mark, 1976?- author.
- New York, New York : Dutton, [2014]
- Description
- Book — vi, 290 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), portraits ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
- Forty names
- The right to wear the shirt : purpose
- How to swim fifty meters underwater without dying : confidence
- The three-foot world : fear
- The hooded box : stress
- Safe return doubtful : mind-set
- The setup : trust
- After action review : communication
- Shoot, move, and communicate : relationships
- Follow your buddy : accountability
- Comfortable being uncomfortable : discomfort
- Watch the shoes : evolution
- Killing : compartmentalization
- Last stop on the speeding train.
- Online
- Santa Monica, Calif. : Rand Corporation, [2014]
- Description
- Book — x, 27 pages ; 26 cm
- Online
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VG53 .S49 2014 | Available |
- Desmond, Lawrence Gustave, 1935-
- [United States? : L.G. Desmond], c2012.
- Description
- Book — x, 55 p. : ill. (some col.), col. maps ; 21 x 25 cm
- Online
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VG53 .D476 2012 | Available |
- Strong, Rowan.
- Sydney, N.S.W. : UNSW Press, 2012.
- Description
- Book — x, 349 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., ports. ; 25 cm.
- Summary
-
Known in naval slang as 'sin-bosuns', chaplains have served as an integral part of the Royal Australian Navy for a century. From Keith Mathieson, who supported his shipmates in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp, to the first Australian navy chaplain to be killed in active service, George Stubbs on HMAS Sydney, this book profiles chaplains serving at sea and in naval establishments, both in war and peace. Rowan Strong examines the chaplains' role as religious ministers, counsellors, and clergy prepared to challenge naval culture from a religious standpoint. He also looks at the forces of change, including denominational rivalry and cooperation, tensions between religious and military roles, and shifts in Australian society. Royal Australian Navy chaplains have sought to serve both God and country; this book reveals the difficulties and successes of that task.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG25 .A8 S77 2012 | Available |
- Workman, Robert B.
- Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, c2012.
- Description
- Book — xx, 322 p. : ill. ; 27 cm.
- Summary
-
- Emergence of naval aviation
- Naval aviation conception and birth: 1898-1912
- Development and growth: 1913-1919
- First transatlantic flight NC flying boats--design and assembly: 1918
- First transatlantic flight NC flying boats shakedown: 1918-1919
- First transatlantic flight: 1919
- Evolving the naval aviation test organization: 1913-1926
- Marine Corps aviation and Coast Guard aviation develop to support their service missions: 1917-1938
- Catapults and aircraft carriers: 1917-1926
- Years of technical advancement and growth: 1930-1935
- A new Treasury Secretary expands aviation missions: 1934-1938
- Appendices
- A. Time line of events (1776-1938)
- B. Technology inspired by the first transatlantic flight: 1919-1938
- C. List of acronyms, abbreviations, and rank structures
- Photographs and document credits.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
- Keating, Edward G. (Edward Geoffrey), 1965-
- Santa Monica, CA : Rand Corporation, 2012.
- Description
- Book — xvii, 32 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 28 cm.
- Summary
-
- Introduction
- An Analysis of Cost Adjustment Sheets
- Differences Between Budgets and Expenditures
- Expenditures-per-Flying-Hour Growth by T/M/S
- Conclusions.
- Online
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VG93 .K43 2012 | Available |
- Owen, Mark, 1976?-
- New York, N.Y. : Dutton, 2012.
- Description
- Book — xiii, 316 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. (some col.), maps ; 24 cm.
- Summary
-
- Chalk One
- Green team
- Top five/Bottom five
- The second deck
- Delta
- Point man
- Maersk Alabama
- The long war
- Goat trails
- Something special in D.C.
- The pacer
- Killing time
- Go day
- Infil
- Khalid
- Third deck
- Geronimo
- Exfil
- Confirmation
- Touch the magic
- Epilogue.
- Online
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VG87 .O94 2012 | Unknown |
- Owen, Mark.
- New York, N.Y. : Dutton, 2012.
- Description
- Book — xiii, 316 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. (some col.), maps ; 24 cm.
- Online
24. The United States Coast Guard and national defense : a history from World War I to the present [2012]
- Ostrom, Thomas P.
- Jefferson, N.C. : McFarland & Co., c2012.
- Description
- Book — xiii, 264 p. : ill ; 23 cm.
- Summary
-
In addition to port security, ship inspection and safety, law enforcement, and search and rescue, the U.S. Coast Guard assumes an important role in national defense at home and abroad. To that end, the Coast Guard has carried out separate and coordinated missions with other armed forces from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic, Pacific, Gulf of Mexico, Mediterranean, Persian Gulf, and North Polar region. This chronicle of the Coast Guard's contributions to national defense examines participation in World War I, World War II, Korea, the Cold War, Vietnam, and the War on Terror. Among the topics explored are defense threats, drug trafficking, and border security, as well as Coast Guard personnel, training, leadership, and assets.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
- Althoff, William F.
- Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, c2011.
- Description
- Book — xviii, 264 p. : ill., maps ; 29 cm.
- Online
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VG93 .A867 2011 | Available |
26. British naval aviation : the first 100 years [2011]
- Farnham, Surrey ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate, c2011.
- Description
- Book — xii, 235 p. ; 24 cm.
- Summary
-
- Contents: Introduction: British naval aviation: the first 100 years, Tim Benbow
- Seamen or airmen? The early days of British naval flying, Eric Grove
- Air force, Fleet Air Arm - or armoured corps? The Royal Naval Air Service at war, Eric Grove
- Competing visions: the Admiralty, the Air Ministry and the role of air power, Geoffrey Till
- The Fleet Air Arm and the struggle for the Mediterranean, 1940-44, Ben Jones
- New tricks for the old sea dogs: British naval aviation in the Pacific, 1944-45, Jon Robb-Webb
- British naval aviation and the 'radical review', 1953-55, Tim Benbow
- Limited war and crisis management: naval aviation in action from the Korean War to the Falklands conflict, Ian Speller
- The battle for CVA01, Edward Hampshire
- 'More than just spare airfields': defence policy, defence reviews and the Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carriers, Lee Willett
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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VG95 .G7 B75 2011 | Available |
- Wasdin, Howard E.
- 1st ed. - New York : St. Martin's Press, c2011.
- Description
- Book — xvi, 331 p. : ill., [16] p. of plates ; 25 cm.
- Summary
-
For the first time ever, a Navy SEAL Team Six sniper chronicles how he became an elite warrior and the ferocious battle that nearly cost him his life.
- Online
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VG87 .W37 2011 | Unknown |
- Wasdin, Howard E.
- 1st ed. - New York : St. Martin's Press, c2011.
- Description
- Book — xvi, 331 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., map ; 25 cm.
- Online
- Johnson, E. R., 1948-
- Jefferson, N.C. : McFarland & Co., c2011.
- Description
- Book — v, 338 p., [8] p. of plates : ill. (some col.) ; 28 cm.
- Summary
-
Within six months of Japan's devastating attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. navy had slowed the empire's military advance in the Pacific so much that the United States could return to its original "Germany First" strategy. That the navy was able to accomplish this feat with only six fleet aircraft carriers and a little more than 1,000 combat aircraft was the culmination of more than two decades of determined preparation. This thorough study summarizes the factors critical in shaping naval aviation after World War I, including naval treaties, fleet tactics, government programs, leadership and organization, and the emergence of Marine Corps and Coast Guard aviation. Detailed technical drawings of individual aircrafts, airships, and ship development illustrate the 22-year process of trial and error that ultimately enabled U.S. naval aviation to prevail during the early months of World War II.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
- Kroll, C. Douglas.
- Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, c2010.
- Description
- Book — xii, 209 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 24 cm.
- Online
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VG53 .K76 2010 | Available |
- Canney, Donald L., 1947-
- Gainesville : University Press of Florida, c2010.
- Description
- Book — xv, 225 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
- Summary
-
- Round one : Katrina slams Florida
- Round two : Katrina flattens the Gulf Coast
- "There's thousands of them" : the afternoon of the storm
- The maritime and environmental disaster
- First responses : Mississippi and Alabama
- Wet Tuesday in New Orleans
- Wet Tuesday II : the air rescues intensify
- Wednesday, August 31 : Operation Dunkirk, Zephyr Field, and Station New Orleans
- August 31 : "The skies are orange"
- September 1 : the watershed day
- September 2 : the welcome and the unwelcome in New Orleans
- September 3 : flying boats over New Orleans
- September 4 : the tide peaks
- September 5-15 : the tide recedes
- Sector Mobile deals with the destruction
- Restoring the Gulf Coast waterways
- Hurricane Rita and a conclusion.
- Online
- Allen, B. R. (Brian R.) author.
- Barnsley, South Yorkshire : Pen & Sword Aviation, an imprint of Pen & Sword Books Ltd, 2010.
- Description
- Book — x, 176 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
Brian Allen first went to sea as a naval aviation officer cadet aboard HMS Indefatigable in 1952 , bound for Gibraltar. In 1954 he was appointed to Lossiemouth for fighter training and flew the Vampire T22. In December 1955 Brian joined 737 Squadron where he was attached to the Anti-Submarine Training Course flying the Fairey Barracuda. On completion he was destined to fly the then new Fairey Gannet twin turbo prop anti-submarine aircraft. July 1955, and now with 825 Squadron, saw his introduction of the new aircraft, a very different machine to the Barracuda.The Squadron joined HMS Albion on 10 January 1956, as she preceded down Channel in the company of her sister ship HMS Centaur, outwards bound for the Far East. After this tour was completed 825 Squadron was disbanded and Brian was transferred to 751 Squadron aboard HMS Warrior, an old WWII carrier with none of the latest facilities of his previous ship and on its final commission. However, his greatest shock was to discover that he would not be flying a Gannet, but the rather elderly Grumman Avenger, a very different aeroplane with a tail wheel and a piston engine. This would require a great change in take-off and landing technique. In February 1957 Warrior sailed west for the Panama Canal and thence into the Pacific where she and her aircraft would assist in Operation Grapple, the tests of Britain's first atomic bombs. During this operation Brian's adventures included dislodging the padre's kidney stone upon a catapult launch, denting the flight deck by a heavy landing and ditching close to the beach after an engine failure. Having converted to helicopters Brian was posted to 815 Squadron aboard HMS Albion in 1960 flying the Whirlwind Mk 7. During this posting he survived another ditching when his helicopter lost power and sunk. Having returned from a long Far Eastern voyage, Brian was now posted into The Helicopter Trials and Development Unit and it was whilst experimenting in a prototype Wasp that an accident, in which his crewman perished, was to injure him so severely that he was unable to fly again. He completed his commission as an Air Traffic Control Officer.Brian is now retired and lives in Cornwall.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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VG95 .G7 A45 2010 | Available |
33. One hundred years of U.S. Navy air power [2010]
- Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, c2010.
- Description
- Book — xv, 373 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
- Summary
-
- Introduction
- The experimental era : U.S. Navy aviation before 1916
- Eyes of the fleet : how flying boats transformed War Plan Orange
- Ships in the sky
- Big guns versus wooden decks : naval aviation officer personnel, 1911-1941
- Admiral Joseph Mason "Bull" Reeves, father of navy carrier aviation
- Aviation in the interwar fleet maneuvers, 1919-1940
- The two-ocean Navy Act of 1940 : the impact on American preparedness for World War II
- U.S. aircraft carrier evolution, 1911-1945
- Foundation for victory : U.S. Navy aircraft development, 1922-1945
- Straight up : vertical flight in the U.S. Navy
- The transition to swept-wing jets
- Naval aviation in the Korean and Vietnam wars
- By land and sea : non-carrier naval aviation
- U.S. aircraft carrier evolution : 1945-2011
- Conclusions.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
- Santa Monica, CA : RAND, 2009.
- Description
- Book — xxxiii, 105 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.
- Summary
-
C4I systems have evolved rapidly over the last few decades, and the cost of keeping these products up-to-date on new and in-service U.S. Navy ships is high due to configuration, integration, testing, and other challenges. Looking across a specific set of completed C4I upgrades, the authors found evidence of cost improvement, a high level of variability in costs, and a trend toward overestimating the installation-labor costs of certain upgrades.
- Online
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VG77 .C66 2009 | Available |
35. U.S. Marine Corps aviation since 1912 [2009]
- Mersky, Peter B., 1945-
- 4th ed. - Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, c2009.
- Description
- Book — xvi, 405 p. : ill., maps ; 29 cm.
- Online
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VG93 .M48 2009 | Available |
- Cook, G. C. (Gordon Charles)
- Oxford ; New York : Radcliffe Pub., c2007.
- Description
- Book — vi, 630 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
- Part I: Beginnings (1812-1821)
- Social conditions and disease prevention in early nineteenth century Britain
- Britain's major maritime organisations, shipyards, and London's docks
- Conditions of service in the mercantile organisations
- Diseases afflicting sailors before 1821
- The SHS's precursor: early meetings aimed at London's homeless: 'Most of the destitutes seem to be sailors'
- 'This laudable institution': the permanent society is launched in 1821
- Part II: The days of the hospital-ships (1821-1870)
- John Lydekker (1778-1832): a benefaction leading to the Act of Incorporation, and other fund-raising initiatives
- The hospital-ships
- Conditions of service on the hospital-ships
- Fundraising in the days of the ships
- Diseases on the hospital-ships
- Administrators, physicians and surgeons who served during the ship era
- Part III: The SHS in 'full swing' (1870-1939)
- Transfer of facilities to the infirmary of the Royal Hospital, Greenwich - in 1870
- Expansion of facilities - at the Dreadnought, and further afield
- The society's expanding staff - 1870-1914
- Diseases encountered by the Society 1870-1914
- Nursing and nurse-training at the Dreadnought and AHD: establishment of a school on Nightingale lines
- Genesis of the first school for tropical diseases - at the ADH
- The London School of Clinical Medicine (1906-14), and structural changes to the Dreadnought Hospital
- Part IV: (1914-2006) Two world wars, introduction of the National Health Service, and insidious decline of the society
- The Great War (1914-18)
- the inter-war years
- and several new facilities
- Staffing during the Great War and inter-war years
- The Second World War (1939-45): introduction of the National Health Service (1948)
- and decline in the Society's activities
- Disease(s) at the society's hospitals ain the latter years of the twentieth century
- The society's staff in recent times
- The society (and its tropical medicine component) in the late twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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VG157 .C66 2007 | Available |
- United States. General Accounting Office.
- Washington, D.C. (P.O. Box 37050, Washington 20013) : U.S. General Accounting Office, [2004]
- Description
- Book — iii, 59 p. ; 28 cm.
- Online
Green Library
Green Library | Status |
---|---|
Find it US Federal Documents | |
GA 1.13:GAO-04-432 | Unknown |
- United States. General Accounting Office.
- Washington, D.C. (P.O. Box 37050, Washington 20013) : U.S. General Accounting Office, [2004]
- Description
- Book — ii, 35 p. ; 28 cm.
- Online
Green Library
Green Library | Status |
---|---|
Find it US Federal Documents | |
GA 1.13:GAO-04-380 | Unknown |
- United States. Government Accountability Office.
- Washington, D.C. (441 G Street, N.W., Washington 20548) : U.S. Government Accountability Office, [2004]
- Description
- Book — ii, 28 p. : ill. ; 28 cm.
- Online
Green Library
Green Library | Status |
---|---|
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GA 1.13:GAO-04-900 | Unknown |
- Santa Monica, CA : Rand, 2004.
- Description
- Book — xxxv, 131 p. : col. ill. ; 23 cm.
- Summary
-
Explores acceleration of the pace at which the U.S. Coast Guard can acquire surface and air assets that it will operate in the deepwater environment (50 or more nautical miles from shore) and whether the original Integrated Deepwater System program to modernize its aging cutters and aircraft will provide the Coast Guard with a force structure to meet the demands of its traditional missions and emerging responsibilities. 450-character abstract: Explores whether the pace at which the U.S. Coast Guard can acquire surface and air assets that it will operate in the deepwater environment (50 or more nautical miles from shore) can be accelerated and whether the original Integrated Deepwater System program to modernize its aging ships and aircraft will provide the Coast Guard with a force structure to meet the demands of its traditional missions and emerging responsibilities as part of the new Department of Homeland Security.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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VG53 .U238 2004 | Available |
- Althoff, William F.
- 1st ed. - Washington, D.C. : Brassey's, c2004.
- Description
- Book — xxiii, 289 p. : ill. ; 29 cm.
- Summary
-
- LZ-126 : birthplace Friedrichshafen
- ZR-3 : homeport Lakehurst
- Balloons and billets : lighter-than-air training
- Rosendahl's reign
- Testbed for the new ships
- Grounded.
- Online
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VG93 .A86823 2004 | Available |
- 1st ed. - Dulles, Va. : Brassey's, Inc., c2003.
- Description
- Book — xxi, 341 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
- Online
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VG90 .F76 2003 | Available |
- Toomey, David M.
- New York : W.W. Norton, c2002.
- Description
- Book — 314 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
- Summary
-
In September 1955, Navy Lieutenant Commander Grover B. Windham and a crew of eight flew out of Guantanamo Bay into the eye of Hurricane Janet - a routine weather reconnaissance mission from which they never returned. In the wake of World War II, the Air Force and the Navy discovered new civilian arenas where pilots could test their courage and skill - weather reconnaissance was one of them. Hurricane hunters flew into raging storms to gauge their strength and predict their paths. Without the modern technology of the 21st century they relied on rudimentary radar systems to locate the hurricane's eye and estimated the drift of their aircraft by looking at the windblown waves below. Drawing from Navy documents and interviews with members of the squadron and relatives of the crew, this book reconstructs the ill-fated mission, from preflight checks to the moment of their final transmission.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG94.6 .W43 T66 2002 | Available |
44. The Fleet Air Arm handbook, 1939-1945 [2001]
- Wragg, David W.
- Stroud, Gloucestershire : Sutton Pub., 2001.
- Description
- Book — 263 p. : ill., ports. ; 27 cm.
- Online
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VG95 .G7 W73 2001 | Available |
- Miller, Jerry, 1919-2014
- Washington [D.C.] : Smithsonian Institution Press, c2001.
- Description
- Book — xiii, 296 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
- Summary
-
With the advent of the atomic bomb in 1945 and its impact on strategic thinking, the future of naval aviation looked bleak. Rapid demobilization after the war eliminated many carriers, and most policy makers believed that future wars would be fought with nuclear weapons delivered by land-based aircraft. In "Nuclear Weapons and Aircraft Carriers", Jerry Miller traces the struggle of respected naval leaders to promote a different vision and the innovations in the design and engineering of carriers and aircraft that resulted. He argues that the Navy's hard-won nuclear capability played a significant role in ending the Cold War.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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VG93 .M55 2001 | Available |
- Peattie, Mark R., 1930-
- Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, c2001.
- Description
- Book — xxi, 364 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.
- Summary
-
`A must-have for any serious scholar of the Pacific War' -Air & Space `An illuminating roadmap following the rise of Japanese naval aviation from its inception in 1909 to its devastating capability on the eve of the Pacific war' -Sea Power `Undoubtedly one of the most important books concerning World War II to appear in the last decade' -The Hook This acclaimed sequel to the Peattie/Evans prize-winning work, Kaigun, illuminates the rise of Japanese naval aviation from its genesis in 1909 to its thunderbolt capability on the eve of the Pacific War. In the process of explaining the navy's essential strengths and weaknesses, the book provides the most detailed account available in English of Japan's naval air campaign over China from 1937 to 1941. A final chapter analyzes the utter destruction of Japanese naval air power by 1944. Peattie traces the development of the Imperial Navy's land-based air power as well as the evolution of its carrier forces. He also treats the salient aspects of Japan's naval air service: training, personnel, tactics, doctrine, technology, and industrial base. In doing so, Peattie combines data found in previous handbooks with important new information derived from Japanese-language sources. Includes extensive appendices, detailed drawings and data on Japanese carriers and naval aircraft, and information on Japanese naval air bases and land-based air groups as of 7 December 1941. About the Author Mark R. Peattie is the author, co-author, and co-editor of many books, including the award-winning Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941, coauthored with the late David Evans.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
- Couch, Dick, 1943-
- 1st ed. - New York : Crown Publishers, c2001.
- Description
- Book — ix, 319 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. ; 24 cm.
- Online
- Barnsley : Leo Cooper, 2000.
- Description
- Book — xiv. 224 p. : ill., ports. ; 24 cm.
- Online
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VG95 .G7 F59 2000 | Available |
- Barker, Ralph, 1917-2011
- Stroud : Tempus, 2000.
- Description
- Book — 160 p. : ill., ports. ; 26 cm.
- Online
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VG95 .G7 B37 2000 | Available |
- Brown, Charles H., 1929-
- Annapolis, Md. : Naval Institute Press, c1999.
- Description
- Book — x, 252 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
- Online
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VG93 .B752 1999 | Available |