Thursday, December 11, 2025

TheList 7382

 

The List 7382

To All

Good Thursday Morning December 11 2025 .

It is going to be clear all day again. The temps are supposed to hit 80 around 1. The next week will be clear for the most part.

Another busy day today. Last class tonight and then done until 8 January. Finishing up belts and certificates and making a Walmart run to get things for the pot luck dinner. Still a lot to do inside and outside the house.

And Christmas is only 14 days away.

.Regards

skip

.HAGD 

 

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This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)

Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/.    Go here to see the director's corner for all 94 H-Grams. 

December 11

 

This Day in Navy and Marine Corps History

December 11

1863—During the Civil War, the iron-clad river gunboat Carondelet fires upon Confederate troops that are firing upon iron-clad river gunboat Indianola, which had been stuck on a bar in the Mississippi River since earlier that year and had not yet been freed. The effective counter-fire by Carondelet drives off the Confederates.

1865—Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles writes to Secretary of State William H. Seward, complaining of the action of the British government in releasing the officers and crew of CSS Shenandoah.

1941—The Wake Island Garrison under Cmdr. Winfield Cunningham repulses the Japanese invasion force with shore battery fire that sink Japanese destroyer Hayate while Marine F4Fs sink destroyer Kisaragi.

1943—The U.S. Navy dispatches vessels to help the U.S. collier Suffolk, which is foundering and eventually sinks in a storm.

1944—USS Gar (SS 206) lands 35 tons of supplies at Darigayos Inlet on the west coast of Luzon and picks up secret intelligence documents. Also on this date, USS Sea Owl (SS 405) sinks Japanese auxiliary submarine chaser Cha 76 in the East China Sea.

1954—The first "supercarrier" USS Forrestal (CVA 59) is launched. 

 

Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/

 

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This Day in World History

December 11

1688    James II abdicates the throne because of William of Orange landing in England.

1816    Indiana is admitted to the Union as the 19th state.

1861    A raging fire sweeps the business district of Charleston, South Carolina, adding to an already depressed economic state.

1862    Union General Ambrose Burnside occupies Fredericksburg and prepares to attack the Confederates under Robert E. Lee.

1863    Union gunboats Restless, Bloomer and Caroline enter St. Andrew's Bay, Fla., and begin bombardment of both Confederate quarters and saltworks.

1882    A production of Gilbert and Sullivan's Iolanthe at Boston's Bijou Theatre becomes the first performance in a theatre lit by incandescent electric lights.

1927    Nearly 400 world leaders sign a letter to President Calvin Coolidge asking the United States to join the World Court.

1930    As the economic crisis grows, the Bank of the United States closes its doors.

1933    Reports say Paraguay has captured 11,000 Bolivians in the war over Chaco.

1936    Britain's King Edward VIII abdicates the throne to marry American Wallis Warfield Simpson.

1941    The United States declares war on Italy and Germany.

1943    U.S. Secretary of State Cordell Hull demands that Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria withdraw from the war.

1945    A Boeing B-29 Superfortress shatters all records by crossing the United States in five hours and 27 minutes.

1951    Joe DiMaggio announces his retirement from baseball.

1955    Israel raids Syrian positions on the Sea of Galilee.

1964    Frank Sinatra, Jr., is returned home to his parents after being kidnapped for the ransom amount of $240,000.

1967    The Concorde, a joint British-French venture and the world's first supersonic airliner, is unveiled in Toulouse, France.

1972    Challenger, the lunar lander for Apollo 17, touches down on the moon's surface, the last time that men visit the moon.

1978    Massive demonstrations take place in Tehran against the shah.

1981    Military forces in El Salvador kill over 800 civilians in what is known as the El Mozote massacre during the Salvadoran Civil War.

1997    The Kyoto Protocol international treaty intended to reduce emissions of greenhouse gasses, opens for signature.

2001    People's Republic of China joins the World Trade Organization.

2005    Cronulla riots begin in Cronulla, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

2006    President of Mexico Felipe Calderon launches a military-led offensive against drug cartel violence in the state of Michoacan.

2008    Bernard "Bernie" Madoff arrested and charged with securities fraud in what was called a $50-billion Ponzi scheme.

.More on King Edward's abdication

After ruling for less than one year, Edward VIII becomes the first English monarch to voluntarily abdicate the throne. He chose to abdicate after the British government, public, and the Church of England condemned his decision to marry the American divorcée Wallis Warfield Simpson. On the evening of December 11, he gave a radio address in which he explained, "I have found it impossible to carry on the heavy burden of responsibility and to discharge the duties of king, as I would wish to do, without the help and support of the woman I love." On December 12, his younger brother, the duke of York, was proclaimed King George VI.

 

What Made These Royal Marriages So Scandalous?

 

Edward, born in 1894, was the eldest son of King George V, who became the British sovereign in 1910. Still unmarried as he approached his 40th birthday, he socialized with the fashionable London society of the day. By 1934, he had fallen deeply in love with American socialite Wallis Warfield Simpson, who was married to Ernest Simpson, an English-American businessman who lived with Mrs. Simpson near London. Wallis, who was born in Pennsylvania, had previously married and divorced a U.S. Navy pilot. The royal family disapproved of Edward's married mistress, but by 1936 the prince was intent on marrying Mrs. Simpson. Before he could discuss this intention with his father, George V died, in January 1936, and Edward was proclaimed king.

 

The new king proved popular with his subjects, and his coronation was scheduled for May 1937. His affair with Mrs. Simpson was reported in American and continental European newspapers, but due to a gentlemen's agreement between the British press and the government, the affair was kept out of British newspapers. On October 27, 1936, Mrs. Simpson obtained a preliminary decree of divorce, presumably with the intent of marrying the king, which precipitated a major scandal. To the Church of England and most British politicians, an American woman twice divorced was unacceptable as a prospective British queen. Winston Churchill, then a Conservative backbencher, was the only notable politician to support Edward.

 

Despite the seemingly united front against him, Edward could not be dissuaded. He proposed a morganatic marriage, in which Wallis would be granted no rights of rank or property, but on December 2, Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin rejected the suggestion as impractical. The next day, the scandal broke on the front pages of British newspapers and was discussed openly in Parliament. With no resolution possible, the king renounced the throne on December 10. The next day, Parliament approved the abdication instrument, and Edward VIII's reign came to an end. The new king, George VI, made his older brother the duke of Windsor. On June 3, 1937, the duke of Windsor and Wallis Warfield married at the Château de Cande in France's Loire Valley.

 

For the next two years, the duke and duchess lived primarily in France but visited other European countries, including Germany, where the duke was honored by Nazi officials in October 1937 and met with Adolf Hitler. After the outbreak of World War II, the duke accepted a position as liaison officer with the French. In June 1940, France fell to the Nazis, and Edward and Wallis went to Spain. During this period, the Nazis concocted a scheme to kidnap Edward with the intention of returning him to the British throne as a puppet king. George VI, like his prime minister, Winston Churchill, was adamantly opposed to any peace with Nazi Germany. Unaware of the Nazi kidnapping plot but conscious of Edward's pre-war Nazi sympathies, Churchill hastily offered Edward the governorship of the Bahamas in the West Indies. The duke and duchess set sail from Lisbon on August 1, 1940, narrowly escaping a Nazi SS team sent to seize them.

 

In 1945, the duke resigned his post, and the couple moved back to France. They lived mainly in Paris, and Edward made a few visits to England, such as to attend the funerals of King George VI in 1952 and his mother, Queen Mary, in 1953. It was not until 1967 that the duke and duchess were invited by the royal family to attend an official public ceremony, the unveiling of a plaque dedicated to Queen Mary. Edward died in Paris in 1972 but was buried at Frogmore, on the grounds of Windsor Castle. In 1986, Wallis died and was buried at his side.

 

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From the Archives

. Thanks to John

Nearly half of Naval Academy football players become Marines

 

"… football players, including himself, tend to be drawn to the higher physical and other standards of the Marine Corps.."

 

S/F,

John

 

https://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/your-marine-corps/2023/12/08/nearly-half-of-naval-academy-football-players-become-marines/?utm_campaign=dfn-ebb&utm_medium=email&utm_source=sailthru

Nearly half of Naval Academy football players become Marines

Irene LoewensonFriday, Dec 8

Capt. Adam West already had plenty of reasons to become a Marine.

He had a family legacy of service in the Marine Corps, including an uncle and a cousin who were killed in action. He had grown up seeing the iconic images of the wars in the Middle East, with Marines bearing rifles, doing tough work.

But for the former U.S. Naval Academy football team offensive guard, there also was the yearning for a challenge. The sense that he could use his experience in a combative sport for a greater purpose.

"The Marine Corps brand is not welcoming, which is perhaps the most charming thing about it," said West, who is currently stationed at Marine Barracks Washington. "They're not interested in you. It's, 'Can you keep up?'"

Each year, a strikingly large portion of the Naval Academy's football team decides to answer that question and pursue the Marine officer route.

Since 2014, 46% of the players have become Marines, according to academy spokesman Scott Strasemeier. That's compared to only 25% to 30% of Naval Academy midshipmen overall.

In November, 10 out of the 25 football players in the Class of 2024 received Marine Corps assignments, according to Strasemeier.

West, a 2017 Naval Academy graduate, said the football players, himself included, tend to be drawn to the higher physical and other standards of the Marine Corps, though he noted has great respect for the Navy and the people who join the service.

Football's high-contact nature has something in common with the Marine ethos, West said — in particular the infantry, where several of his teammates ended up.

"I don't want to compare football to real-life combat operations, but if you're a football player who's trained to think that way and use your skills in that way, it turns out a lot of the Marine Corps' mission is hands-on, imposing your will on someone directly," West said.

The message then-Navy coach Ken Niumatalolo had for his players also aligned with Marine Corps culture, according to West: Be disciplined, be detail-oriented, and find a way to win.

In West's view, the team's legacy of Marine Corps service is another reason many of the players are inspired to trade in their cleats for eagle, globe and anchor pins.

There was 1st Lt. Ronald Winchester, who was killed in Iraq in September 2004. There was 2nd Lt. J.P. Blecksmith, killed in Iraq in November 2004.

There was Brian Stann, who earned the Silver Star Medal for the valor he showed as a second lieutenant in Iraq in May 2005.

There was retired Capt. Bryce McDonald, who returned to the team as a coach after surviving an improvised explosive device flipping his Humvee in Iraq in 2006, as the Los Angeles Times reported.

Four of the team's current staff members are Naval Academy grads who became Marines, according to Strasemeier.

The large number of future Marines on the team is sometimes obvious at a glance, West said.

On Nov. 19, 2016, days before the football team played East Carolina University, the academy's seniors received their service assignments. That meant West and other soon-to-be Marines had to get their heads shaved, as a traditional rite of passage.

When the dress-uniform-clad midshipmen arrived in North Carolina, half of them were sporting freshly razor-shorn heads.

The intimidation factor was high, West recalled.

"The ECU fans were amused to see midshipmen players arriving in uniform but became a little bit unsettled at the sight of the Marine selects with bald heads offloading the buses," West said.

The Midshipmen beat East Carolina that day, 66–31.

Irene Loewenson is a staff reporter for Marine Corps Times. She joined Military Times as an editorial fellow in August 2022. She is a graduate of Williams College, where she was the editor-in-chief of the student newspaper.

 

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. From the archives but worth your time

Thanks to Carl

(This is from an email newsletter.  Hate to quote the WHO, but this is good info we should heed!  A fall causing a broken hip is not good for longevity!)

The World Health Organization tells us that worldwide, falls are the second highest cause of accidental deaths, with those over 65 years of age being at greatest risk of experiencing a fatal fall.

Thankfully, we can reduce our risk of injury or death from an accidental fall through mindful exercise that improves and maintains our sense of balance, including our joint position sense, called proprioception. 

Here is a simple movement that is more challenging than it looks, one that is effective in improving balance, core stability, and joint position sense:

 

https://youtu.be/cunMUwgPN7A

 

The key to benefiting from this seemingly simple exercise is to stay on the balls of your feet throughout the entire movement, and to maintain core engagement. Staying on the balls of your feet is what will lead to improved balance and joint position sense.

 

If you aren't used to this type of movement, it's best to begin without any weight at all and simply get used to the feeling of bending forward with your upper body, using your hips as the primary hinge that you bend forward from while keeping your core engaged.

 

It's best to go slowly while maintaining steady breathing.

 

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Thanks to the Bear. We will always have the url for you to search items in Rolling Thunder

OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER …

. rollingthunderremembered.com .

 

Thanks to Micro

From Vietnam Air Losses site for ..December 11

11-Dec:  https://www.vietnamairlosses.com/loss.php?id=364

 

MOAA - Wall of Faces Now Includes Photos of All Service members Killed in the Vietnam War

The site works, find anyone you knew in "search" feature.

 

  https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/ )

 

https://www.moaa.org/content/publications-and-media/news-articles/2022-news-articles/wall-of-faces-now-includes-photos-of-all-servicemembers-killed-in-the-vietnam-war/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=TMNsend&utm_content=Y84UVhi4Z1MAMHJh1eJHNA==+MD+AFHRM+1+Ret+L+NC

By: Kipp Hanley

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This Day in U S Military History 

December 11

1620 – 103 Mayflower pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock.

1864 – Commander Preble, commanding the Naval Brigade fighting ashore with the forces of Major General Foster up the Broad River, South Carolina, reported to Rear Admiral Dahlgren concerning a unique "explosive ball" used by Confederate forces against his skirmishers: "It is a conical ball in shape, like an ordinary rifle bullet. The pointed end is charged with a fulminate. The base of the ball separately from the conical end, and has a leaden standard or plunger. The explosion of the charge drives the base up, so as to flatten a thin disk of metal between it and the ball, the leaden plunger is driven against the fulminate, and it explodes the ball. . . . It seems to me that use of such a missile is an unnecessary addition to the barbarities of war."

1872 – Already appearing as a well-known figure of the Wild West in popular dime novels, Buffalo Bill Cody makes his first stage appearance on this day, in a Chicago-based production of The Scouts of the Prairie. Unlike many of his imitators in Wild West shows and movies, William Frederick Cody actually played an important role in the western settlement that he later romanticized and celebrated. Born in Iowa in 1846, Cody joined the western messenger service of Majors and Russell as a rider while still in his teens. He later rode for the famous Pony Express, during which time he completed the third longest emergency ride in the brief history of that company. During the Civil War, Cody joined forces with a variety of irregular militia groups supporting the North. In 1864, he enlisted in the Union army as a private and served as a cavalry teamster until 1865. Cody began to earn his famous nickname in 1867, when he signed on to provide buffalo meat for the workers of the Eastern Division of the Union Pacific Railroad construction project. His reputation for skilled marksmanship and experience as a rapid-delivery messenger attracted the attention of U.S. Army Lieutenant General Philip Sheridan, who gave Cody an unusual four-year position as a scout-a testament to Cody's extraordinary frontier skills. Cody's work as a scout in the western Indian wars laid the foundation for his later fame. From 1868 to 1872, he fought in 16 battles with Indians, participating in a celebrated victory over the Cheyenne in 1869. One impressed general praised Cody's "extraordinarily good services as trailer and fighter . . . his marksmanship being very conspicuous." Later, Cody again gained national attention by serving as a hunting guide for famous Europeans and Americans eager to experience a bit of the "Wild West" before it disappeared. As luck would have it, one of Cody's customers was Edward Judson, a successful writer who penned popular dime novels under the name Ned Buntline. Impressed by his young guide's calm competence and stories of dramatic fights with Indians, Buntline made Cody the hero of a highly imaginative Wild West novel published in 1869. When a stage version of the novel debuted in Chicago as The Scouts of the Prairie, Buntline convinced Cody to abandon his real-life western adventures to play a highly exaggerated version of himself in the play. Once he had a taste of the performing life, Cody never looked back. Though he continued to spend time scouting or guiding hunt trips in the West, Cody remained on the Chicago stage for the next 11 years. Buffalo Bill Cody was the hero of more than 1,700 variant issues of dime novels, and his star shone even more brightly when his world-famous Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show debuted in 1883. The show was still touring when Buffalo Bill Cody died in 1917.

1930 – This day brought another ominous sign that the nation was sliding towards a prolonged and difficult economic slump, as New York's branch of Bank of the United States announced that it had gone belly-up. Up until its downfall, the Bank held the savings of some 400,000 depositors, including a number of immigrants; its subsequent demise imperiled the finances of roughly one-third of New York and stood as the nation's single worst bank failure.

1939 – Actress Marlene Dietrich records her hit song "Falling in Love Again." Dietrich also became a U.S. citizen in 1939. Born in Berlin, Dietrich came to the United States in 1930 to make movies after considerable success on the German screen. She allegedly refused several offers to return to Germany to star in Nazi films. She became a U.S. citizen in 1939 and worked tirelessly during and after World War II to sell war bonds and entertain troops. She was awarded the Medal of Freedom and named Chevalier of the French Legion of Honor.

1985 – Hugh Scrutton is killed in his computer store in Sacramento, California, by a mail package that explodes in his hands. By the time he was finally apprehended, the "Unabomber"-so named because his earliest attacks were directed at universities-had been responsible for the deaths of 3 people and the injuries of 23 others. The Unabomber detonated his first bomb on May 26, 1978, at Northwestern University. Over the next 15 years, his sporadic attacks kept his identity a mystery to FBI investigators, but in the mid-1990s, he appeared to want more publicity. He increased the frequency of his attacks and sent a letter to The New York Times claiming responsibility on behalf of "FC," which was later revealed to be the "Freedom Club." In late 1994, the Unabomber became very active; Thomas Mosser was killed in his home in New Jersey in December 1994 by a mail bomb, and four months later, another bomb killed Gilbert Murray, a lobbyist for the timber industry. During this time, the Unabomber also began to send notes to the press declaring the "principles" behind his terrorist attacks. When the Unabomber threatened to blow up an airplane flying out of Los Angeles International Airport in 1995, the FBI made his capture a top priority. A sketch of the suspect, who appeared menacing in a hood and sunglasses, was circulated in newspapers and on television. The Unabomber claimed that he would stop the bomb spree if the national press published his manifesto. Eventually, The New York Times and The Washington Post agreed to publish an excerpt, which contained mostly rants against technology and environmental destruction. When he read it, David Kaczynski realized that it bore a distinct similarity to writings by his brother, Ted, a former university professor who had dropped out of society and was living in a remote shack in Montana. David Kaczynski contacted the FBI with his suspicions on the condition-later broken-that the FBI would not seek the death penalty against his brother. After two months of surveillance, the FBI finally arrested Ted Kaczynski in 1996. Inside his cabin were bombs and writings that tied him to the crimes. In January 1998, while awaiting trial, Kaczynski tried to commit suicide in his cell. Still, he resisted his lawyer's attempts to plead insanity and instead pleaded guilty. Although prosecutors originally sought the death penalty, Kaczynski eventually accepted a life sentence with no right to appeal.

1998 – The Mars Climate Orbiter blasted off on a 9 ½ month journey to the Red Planet. The probe disappeared in September 1999, apparently destroyed because scientists had failed to convert English measures to metric values.

 

Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day

PLUNKETT, THOMAS

Rank and organization: Sergeant, Company E, 21st Massachusetts Infantry. Place and date. At Fredericksburg, Va., 11 December 1862. Entered service at: West Boylston, Mass. Birth: Ireland. Date of issue: 30 March 1866. Citation: Seized the colors of his regiment, the color bearer having been shot down, and bore them to the front where both his arms were carried off by a shell.

 

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for December 11, FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD "PHIL" MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

 

11 December

1914: For the first time, an Army plane received and transmitted radio messages at distances of four and 10 miles, respectively. Using a Burgess-Wright airplane, Lt Herbert A. Dargue, the pilot, and Lt Joseph O. Mauborgne, who designed the radio set, conducted the experiment in the Philippines. (21) (24)

1915: Four Portuguese Army Officers became the first officers to become flying students in the US when they reported to the Signal Corps Aviation School at San Diego. (24)

1941: Germany and Italy declared war on the United States; Congress responded in kind with a similar declaration against Germany and Italy.

 1945: Col Clarence S. Irvine and his crew flew his Pacusan Dreamboat B-29 to a 5-hour, 27-minute, 8-second record for a 2,464-mile flight from Burbank to New York. He averaged 450.38 MPH for the trip in setting a FAI record for multi-engined military aircraft. (9) (24)

1952: KOREAN WAR. A fully loaded B-26 of the 3d Bombardment Wing caught fire at Kunsan Airfield and exploded. The accident soon destroyed three other B-26s and caused major damage to six F-84s of the co-located 474th Fighter-Bomber Wing. (28)

1956: Operation SAFE HAVEN. After a revolt against Soviet rule in Hungary expelled Russian occupation forces, the Soviets sent in reinforcements to restore order. But before the Soviet backed Hungarian government closed the borders, some 200,000 refugees fled. MATS, Navy, and commercial aircraft flew 15,570 refugees from Germany to the US to 3 January 1957. (4)

1959: Piloting an F-105 Thunderchief, Brig Gen Joseph H. Moore set a world speed record of 1,216.48 MPH over a closed course at Edwards AFB. (24) The US and UK certified the Thor missile's operational capability. (6)

1961: First direct US aid to Vietnam came when the Army assigned two helicopter companies with 32 H-21Cs.

1962: The first two flights of Minuteman I missiles were declared operational at Malmstrom AFB. (6)

1969: The Air Force's YF-12A supersonic aircraft made its first flight from Edwards AFB under joint USAF-NASA sponsorship. This opened a program to advance American knowledge of aerial defense tactics and the future of commercial aviation.

1984: Two C-141 Starlifters flew survivors and two casualties of a Kuwaiti Airlines hijacking to either Rhein-Main AB or to the US. (16) (26)

1986: The F-15E dual-role fighter made its first flight at St. Louis. (30)

1988: Two C-141s with humanitarian relief supplies arrived in Yerevan, Armenia, after a massive earthquake on 7 December killed more than 40,000 people and left another 500,000 homeless. A C-5 also carried supplies to Incirlik AB. In the ensuing 20 missions to Soviet Armenia through December 1989, MAC delivered 572 tons of rescue equipment, blankets, tents, and medical supplies. For the first time, US aircraft flew directly to the Soviet Union without Soviet personnel on board as observers. (18) (21)

 

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Wednesday, December 10, 2025

TheList 7381

 

The List 7381

To All

Good |Wednesday Morning December 10 2025 .

It is going to be clear all day again. The temps are supposed to hit 82 around 12. The next week will be clear for the most par.Tested at the San Marcos school last night Only one more class to go. On Thursday we have a demonstration and Pot Luck dinner and hand out belts and certificates and are done until January.

I have to run to a doctor appointment so this is a bit short this morning

 

.Regards

skip

.HAGD 

 

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I do hope that this time they get it right….skip

Navy pilot who took out 4 Soviet jets in covered-up mission may get Medal of Honor

After-action inspections found 263 bullet holes in his F9F-5 Panther.    

 

photo narration:   Legendary Navy aviator Royce Williams, who shot down four Soviet MiG-15 fighters in 1952, is the inspiration for legislation that would make it easier for troops and veterans to be awarded the Medal of Honor. Photos via the U.S. Naval Institute and the Congressional Medal of Honor Society.

 

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This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)

Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/.    Go here to see the director's corner for all 94 H-Grams. 

December 10

 

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December 10

1843—The first steam ship with screw propeller, Princeton, is launched. In 1844, its guns explode during a demonstration and kill Secretary of State Abel P. Upshur, Secretary of the Navy Thomas Gilmer and several others.

1941—SBD aircraft from USS Enterprise (CV 6) attack and sink the Japanese submarine I-70 north of Hawaiian Islands. A participant in the Pearl Harbor Attack, I-70 is the first major Japanese combatant ship sunk during World War II.

1941—A PBY aircraft piloted by Lt. Harmon T. Utter is attacked by three Japanese Mitsubishi A6M2 Type 0 carrier fighters. Chief Boatswain Earl D. Payne, Utter's bow gunner shoots one down, scoring the Navy's first verifiable air-to-air "kill" of a Japanese plane in the Pacific War.

1994 – USS Mitscher (DDG 57) is commissioned at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Fla., Cmdr. Roy J. Balaconis in command.

Dec. 10, 1864:  Union Army forces under the command of Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman reach the outskirts of Savannah, Georgia, a key Confederate coastal city which Sherman will present as a Christmas gift to Pres. Abraham Lincoln on Dec. 22. Sherman's famous "March [from Atlanta] to the Sea" (infamous to many Southerners, even today) is all but over. In the new year, Sherman's army will begin its fiery march up into South Carolina, the extraordinarily proud but soon-to-be defeated state where the whole thing started.

Dec. 10, 1898:  The Spanish-American War ends with the signing of the "Treaty of Paris" (not to be confused with the 1783-1784 "Treaty of Paris" ending our War of Independence, nor the 1763 "Treaty of Paris" ending the Seven Years War, known here in the colonies as the French and Indian War). Spain gets the short end of the stick. We get Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Guam, etc.

 

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This Day in World History

December 10

1817    Mississippi is admitted as the 20th state.

1861    Kentucky is admitted to the Confederate States of America.

1862    The U.S. House of Representatives passes a bill creating the state of West Virginia.

1869    Governor John Campbell signs the bill that grants women in Wyoming Territory the right to vote as well as hold public office.

1898    The United States and Spain sign the Treaty of Paris, ceding Spanish possessions, including the Philippines, to the United States.

1917    The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded to the International Red Cross.

1918    U.S. troops are called to guard Berlin as a coup is feared.

1919    Captain Ross Smith becomes the first person to fly 11,500 miles from England to Australia.

1941    Japanese troops invade the Philippine island of Luzon.

1941    The siege of Tobruk in North Africa is raised.

1943    Franklin D. Roosevelt signs a bill that postpones a draft of pre-Pearl Harbor fathers.

1943    Allied forces bomb Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria.

1949    150,000 French troops mass at the border in Vietnam to prevent a Chinese invasion.

1950    Dr. Ralph J. Bunche becomes the first African-American to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

1977    On UN Human Rights Day, the Soviet Union places 20 prominent dissidents under house arrest, cutting off telephones and threatening to break up a planned silent demonstration in Moscow's Pushkin Square. Soviet newspapers decry human rights violations elsewhere in the world.

1978    President of Egypt Anwar Sadat and Prime Minister of Israel Menachem Begin are jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

1983    Democracy is restored to Argentina with the assumption of Raul Alfonsin.

1989    Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj announces the establishment of Mongolia's democratic movement that changes the second oldest communist country into a democracy.

1993    The Wearmouth Colliery in Sunderland, East England, closes, marking the end of the County Durham coalfield, which had been in operation since the Middle Ages

 

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1901    The first Nobel Prizes are awarded in Stockholm, Sweden, in the fields of physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and peace on December 10, 1901. The ceremony came on the fifth anniversary of the death of Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor of dynamite and other high explosives. In his will, Nobel directed that the bulk of his vast fortune be placed in a fund in which the interest would be "annually distributed in the form of prizes to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind." Although Nobel offered no public reason for his creation of the prizes, it is widely believed that he did so out of moral regret over the increasingly lethal uses of his inventions in war.

 

Alfred Bernhard Nobel was born in Stockholm in 1833, and four years later his family moved to Russia. His father ran a successful St. Petersburg factory that built explosive mines and other military equipment. Educated in Russia, Paris, and the United States, Alfred Nobel proved a brilliant chemist. When his father's business faltered after the end of the Crimean War, Nobel returned to Sweden and set up a laboratory to experiment with explosives. In 1863, he invented a way to control the detonation of nitroglycerin, a highly volatile liquid that had been recently discovered but was previously regarded as too dangerous for use. Two years later, Nobel invented the blasting cap, an improved detonator that inaugurated the modern use of high explosives. Previously, the most dependable explosive was black powder, a form of gunpowder.

 

Nitroglycerin remained dangerous, however, and in 1864 Nobel's nitroglycerin factory blew up, killing his younger brother and several other people. Searching for a safer explosive, Nobel discovered in 1867 that the combination of nitroglycerin and a porous substance called kieselguhr produced a highly explosive mixture that was much safer to handle and use. Nobel christened his invention "dynamite," for the Greek word dynamis, meaning "power." Securing patents on dynamite, Nobel acquired a fortune as humanity put his invention to use in construction and warfare.

 

 

In 1875, Nobel created a more powerful form of dynamite, blasting gelatin, and in 1887 introduced ballistite, a smokeless nitroglycerin powder. Around that time, one of Nobel's brothers died in France, and French newspapers printed obituaries in which they mistook him for Alfred. One headline read, "The merchant of death is dead." Alfred Nobel in fact had pacifist tendencies and in his later years apparently developed strong misgivings about the impact of his inventions on the world. After he died in San Remo, Italy, on December 10, 1896, the majority of his estate went toward the creation of prizes to be given annually in the fields of physics, chemistry, medicine, literature, and peace. The portion of his will establishing the Nobel Peace Prize read, "[one award shall be given] to the person who has done the most or best work for fraternity among nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies, and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses." Exactly five years after his death, the first Nobel awards were presented.

 

Today, the Nobel Prizes are regarded as the most prestigious awards in the world in their various fields. Notable winners have included Marie Curie, Theodore Roosevelt, Albert Einstein, George Bernard Shaw, Winston Churchill, Ernest Hemingway, Martin Luther King, Jr., the Dalai Lama, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nelson Mandela, Barack Obama and Malala Yousafzai. Multiple leaders and organizations sometimes receive the Nobel Peace Prize, and multiple researchers often share the scientific awards for their joint discoveries. In 1968, a Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science was established by the Swedish national bank, Sveriges Riksbank, and first awarded in 1969.

 

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences decides the prizes in physics, chemistry, and economic science; the Swedish Royal Caroline Medico-Surgical Institute determines the physiology or medicine award; the Swedish Academy chooses literature; and a committee elected by the Norwegian parliament awards the peace prize. The Nobel Prizes are still presented annually. Each Nobel carries a cash prize of nearly $1,400,000 and recipients also received a gold medal, as is the tradition.

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Thanks to the Bear. We will always have the url for you to search items in Rolling Thunder

OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER …

. rollingthunderremembered.com .

 

Thanks to Micro

From Vietnam Air Losses site for ..December 10

10-Dec:  https://www.vietnamairlosses.com/loss.php?id=2782

 

MOAA - Wall of Faces Now Includes Photos of All Service members Killed in the Vietnam War

The site works, find anyone you knew in "search" feature.

 

  https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/ )

 

https://www.moaa.org/content/publications-and-media/news-articles/2022-news-articles/wall-of-faces-now-includes-photos-of-all-servicemembers-killed-in-the-vietnam-war/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=TMNsend&utm_content=Y84UVhi4Z1MAMHJh1eJHNA==+MD+AFHRM+1+Ret+L+NC

By: Kipp Hanley

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. From the archives

 

F-14 Shoot down at Pt. Mugu

Thanks to Clyde

From: George Clark

Sent: ‎Monday‎, ‎December‎ ‎9‎, ‎2019‎ ‎11‎:‎30‎:‎19‎ ‎AM‎ ‎PST

Subject: Fwd: F-14 Shoot down at Pt. Mugu

A great story from an ex Turkey Driver:

Pete Purvis tells his test flight Sparrow/Tomcat shoot down story......CB

http://ejectionsite.com/F-14%20SHOOTDOWN.pdf?fbclid=IwAR2V2UzvGDvWT7E2kLwYn2L-nnaKM39uDpjyEaKyIqxi4LghfWj9kB1OvMA

 

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Thanks to Carl

(We recently re-watched this outstanding movie too.  Joe Galloway, the war correspondent, is a remarkable story within the movie.)  

https://www.lewrockwell.com/2023/12/jacob-hornberger/we-were-soldiers-who-supposedly-died-for-our-country/

 

We Were Soldiers … Who Supposedly Died for Our Country

By Jacob G. Hornberger

The Future of Freedom Foundation

December 7, 2023

I was watching the 2002 war movie We Were Soldiers a couple of night ago. I've seen it before but it's such a great movie that I periodically re-watch it. It stars Mel Gibson, Madeleine Stowe, Greg Kinnear, Sam Elliott, Keri Russell, and others.

The movie is based on a true story. It dramatizes the Battle of la Drang in Vietnam, which was the first major battle between U.S. military forces and North Vietnamese forces. The battle took place in November 1965, two years after President Kennedy was assassinated and a year after Lyndon Johnson was elected president in November 1964.

Gibson plays U.S. Army Lt. Col. Hal Moore, who was ordered to lead his 400-man battalion in an attack on a North Vietnamese force that had recently attacked an American military base in Vietnam. U.S. military intelligence had no idea how large the enemy force was. After Air Calvary helicopters deposited Moore's troops into the la Drang Valley, a captured enemy scout informed them that they were facing a veteran North Vietnamese division of 4,000 men.

In the movie, the final words of a U.S. soldier who was shot and dying were something to the effect of, "I'm glad I am able to die for my country."

Of course, it was a nonsensical notion, but one that was inculcated not only in U.S. soldiers but also the vast majority of the American people, who, at that time, had a mindset of extreme and loyal deference to the U.S. national-security state.

The notion was that there was an international communist conspiracy to take over the world, including the United States. The conspiracy was supposedly based in Moscow, Russia — yes, the same Russia that U.S. officials are, once again, saying is hell-bent on coming to get us.

The American people were told that the North Vietnamese attempt to unify their country under communist rule was part of this international communist conspiracy. If the U.S. did not prevent this takeover with military force, U.S. officials claimed, it would mean that America would be in greater danger of falling to the international Red conspiracy.

Perhaps one of the reasons I am attracted to this movie is that I too was a victim of this indoctrination. I was 15 years old when that battle took place. By the time I graduated high school in 1968, I was fully convinced that American soldiers who were being killed in Vietnam were dying for their country. In fact, if I had been drafted out of high school and forced to go to Vietnam to fight the Reds, my mindset would have been the same as that of that dying soldier in the movie. If I had been struck with a fatal wound, I too would have died thinking that I was dying for my country.

During my first two years at Virginia Military Institute, I maintained the same mindset. And then during my junior year, I achieved a breakthrough to the truth. I'm not sure what did it, but my hunch is that periodic announcements at dinner in the mess hall of deaths of VMI graduates in Vietnam were a big factor in causing me to question what we were being told.

I just recall coming to realization that that it was all a lie — a crock. American men, including those VMI grads, who were being killed in Vietnam weren't dying for their country. They were dying because of the ridiculous and paranoid mindset of the national-security establishment about the supposed international communist conspiracy that was supposedly based in Moscow. They were dying because U.S. officials were convinced that it was necessary for the U.S. to intervene in what was nothing more than a civil war in Vietnam to prevent the Reds from coming over here to get us.

How do we know that it was all a ridiculous and paranoid mindset? Because after killing more than 58,000 American soldiers, the North Vietnamese ended up winning the war several years later. And guess what: The Reds never made it to the United States with a successful invasion, conquest, and occupation of our country. Despite the North Vietnamese victory, the supposed international communist conspiracy that was supposedly based in Moscow had failed to achieve its purported goal of worldwide conquest.

In other words, if the U.S. government had never intervened in the Vietnam War, the result would have been the same as it ended up being — except that those 58,000 American men, many of whom were forced to serve the Pentagon, would still have been alive. Their deaths were a total waste.

Perhaps it's worth pointing out that today the U.S. government has extremely friendly relations with the Vietnamese communist regime. That, of course, could have been the case without the U.S. intervention in the Vietnam War. In fact, that was precisely what President Kennedy was striving for when he was killed in Dallas.

Despite that soldier's dying words in the movie, no American soldier who was killed in the Vietnam War died for his country. They all died for nothing. Or, to be more exact, they died for the Pentagon and the CIA and their ridiculous, paranoid, and baseless conspiratorial mindset regarding the Russians and the Reds.

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. If the URLs do not work Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/

 

80 YEARS AGO 'this month

H-015-2: Guadalcanal Campaign—Battle of Rennell Island and Operation Ke

H-Gram 015, Attachment 2

Samuel J. Cox, Director NHHC

February 2018

Most narratives of the Guadalcanal campaign tend to peter out after the Battle of Tassafaronga and jump to the final Japanese defeat and evacuation in February 1943. The reality is that the Japanese navy continued to fight with extraordinary audacity and tenacity, on several occasions inflicting serious losses to the U.S. Navy. The U.S. Navy continued to learn, albeit sometimes slowly, from its experience in night surface combat around Guadalcanal, aided by increasingly advanced technology, including airborne radar and variable-time (VT) fuzed anti-aircraft ammunition. In many cases, U.S. Sailors displayed incredible valor in the final months of the campaign, especially the U.S. PT-boats operating from Tulagi. Most of these actions have now faded into relative obscurity.

During the Battle of Tassafaronga on the night of 30 November–1 December 1942, the U.S. Navy, at great cost, had thwarted the Japanese navy's first attempt to resupply Japanese troops on Guadalcanal using the new floating supply-drum method. The Japanese tried again on 3 December, fighting off a 15-plane long-range U.S. air attack from Guadalcanal at dusk and proving that radically maneuvering high-speed destroyers were very difficult targets to hit. The ten destroyers dumped 1,500 drums of supplies just off Guadalcanal, but at dawn, strafing from U.S. aircraft sank most of the drums before Japanese troops could retrieve them.

The Japanese quickly adjusted their drum tactics and tried again with 12 destroyers on 7 Dec, under the command of Captain Sato, who had been so effective at Tassafaronga. Thirteen Marine SBD dive bombers attacked the Japanese destroyers at dusk, damaging one destroyer that had to be towed back by another, at the cost of the squadron skipper, Major Joseph Sailor, USMC. Sato pressed on with the remainder of his force and was met by eight U.S. PT-boats (including PT-109, not yet under the command of future President John F. Kennedy) off Savo Island. In the night battle that followed, which included PT-59 and the Japanese destroyer Kurushio exchanging machine-gun fire at a range of 100 yards, the U.S. PT-boats launched numerous torpedoes, which did not hit, but successfully drove off two attempts by Sato's destroyers to get close enough to Guadalcanal to deliver their drums. By driving off the Japanese, without loss, the PT-boats accomplished the same thing that had cost the U.S. Navy four heavy cruisers sunk or crippled the week before, one of the best showings by PT-boats in the entire war.

The next day, the Japanese navy announced to the Japanese army that it was terminating "Tokyo Express" supply runs effective immediately because continued losses of ships at the rate since November would preclude the Imperial Navy from being able to achieve victory in the great "decisive battle" that their Mahanian doctrine called for. The Japanese army, whose troops on the island were literally starving, was not amused, especially since they had been goaded by the navy into committing wave after wave of troops to the island in what was supposed to have been a definitive campaign. In the face of vociferous army protests, the Japanese navy agreed to one more Tokyo Express run to Guadalcanal. Relations between the Japanese army and navy, never good to begin with, only became more poisonous. Shortly after, U.S. Navy transports landed three regiments of the U.S. Army's 25th Infantry Division on Guadalcanal (bringing U.S. troops on the island to near 50,000, while the Japanese could muster well less than 10,000 fit to fight.) On 9 December, Major General Alexander M. Patch, U.S. Army, relieved Major General Alexander Vandegrift, U.S. Marine Corps, in command of U.S. Forces on Guadalcanal. Most of the Marines of the 1st Division, exhausted by months of combat with Japanese and jungle diseases, were withdrawn.

The Japanese continued resupply efforts by submarine that had begun the previous month, making three deliveries in the first week of December, before U.S. Navy radio intelligence pinpointed the schedule for the next delivery. In the pre-dawn hours of 9 December, the Japanese submarine I-3 surfaced right between PT-44 and PT-59 waiting in ambush, and was hit and sunk by a torpedo from PT-59 (Lieutenant Jack M. Searles, commanding) which actually worked. Searles was awarded the Navy Cross. The Japanese suspended further submarine supply runs.

The last Tokyo Express run, under the command of Rear Admiral Raizo Tanaka, commenced on 11 December with 11 destroyers, five of them as escorts. U.S. intelligence provided precise warning, and the Tokyo Express was met by 14 Marine dive bombers at long range at dusk. However, no hits were achieved. Once again, the U.S. PT-boats were waiting (five of them). This time, the Japanese managed to get 1,200 drums into the water just off shore, but as they were withdrawing, PT-37, PT-40, and PT-48 all launched torpedoes, one of which struck Tanaka's flagship, the destroyer Teruzuki, knocking the admiral unconscious. As PT-44 and PT-114 closed in on the flaming Japanese destroyer to finish off the kill, the destroyers Kawakaze and Suzukaze found the range on PT-44  (Lieutenant Frank Freeland, commanding), hitting her multiple times and sinking her. Only two of PT-44's crew of 11 survived. At 0315 on 12 December, the Japanese gave up trying to save Teruzuki and scuttled her. Although the mission was a "success," only 220 of 1,200 drums actually made it to shore, at the cost of a destroyer.

Beginning in mid-November, the Japanese attempted to secretly build an airfield at Munda, on the island of New Georgia about 170 nautical miles up the Solomon Islands chain to the northwest of Guadalcanal (which would considerably shorten the 500–nautical mile flight from Japanese bases at Rabaul). Despite elaborate deception efforts, U.S. aerial reconnaissance and Allied coast watchers detected the construction activity. Throughout early December, U.S. aircraft from Guadalcanal repeatedly bombed the incomplete airfield, but construction continued. The Japanese suffered a major setback when the U.S. submarine Seadragon (SS-194) torpedoed the transport Nankai Maru carrying construction troops intended to build an airfield on the island of Kolombangara, just to the northwest of New Georgia. While attempting to assist the immobilized transport, the destroyer Uzuki collided with the other ship and lost power as well. Four other destroyers took the two ships in tow, but one of the destroyers was hit by an air attack in the process and was seriously damaged. By 27 December, the Japanese gave up trying to complete the airfield on Munda, but continued to fly some planes from the airstrip. Also on that same day, the Japanese resumed submarine resupply missions to Guadalcanal.

Read the rest at

H-Gram 015

 »

H-015-2 Battle of Rennell Island

 

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. From 27 November to 13 December 1950 this is what the Marines were doing in Korea. If you are not familiar with it you can read about it here.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Chosin_Reservoir

 

 

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. Thanks to Wigs (RIP)….At the risk of a dupe

Story of Adam & Eve's Dog 

Adam and Eve said, 'Lord, when we were in the garden, you walked with us every day. Now we do not see you anymore. We are lonesome here, and it is difficult for us to remember how much you love us.

And God said, 'I will create a companion for you that will be with you and who will be a reflection of my love for you, so that you will love me even when you cannot see me. Regardless of how selfish or childish or unlovable you may be, this new companion will accept you as you are and will love you as I do, in spite of yourselves.'

And God created a new animal to be a companion for Adam and Eve. And it was a good animal and God was pleased.  

And the new animal was pleased to be with Adam and Eve, and he wagged his tail.

And Adam said, 'Lord, I have already named all the animals in the Kingdom, and I cannot think of a name for this new animal.' 

And God said, 'I have created this new animal to be a reflection of my love for you, his name will be a reflection of my own name, and you will call him DOG.'

And Dog lived with Adam and Eve and was a companion to them and loved them.  And they were comforted.  And God was pleased.  And Dog was content and wagged his tail. 

After a while, it came to pass that an angel came to the Lord and said, 'Lord, Adam and Eve have become filled with pride. They strut and preen like peacocks, and they believe they are worthy of adoration. Dog has indeed taught them that they are loved, but perhaps too well.' 

And God said, 'I will create for them a companion who will be with them and who will see them as they are.  The companion will remind them of their limitations, so they will know that they are not always worthy of adoration.'

And God created CAT to be a companion to Adam and Eve.

And Cat would not obey them. And when Adam and Eve gazed into Cat's eyes, they were reminded that they were not the Supreme Beings.

And Adam and Eve learned humility. And they were greatly improved.

And God was pleased.  And Dog was happy.

And the Cat . . .

didn't give a s#*t one way or the other...

 

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From the archives

The Pearl Harbor Niihau Incident And Origins Of Ruger's 22 Pistol

Thanks to Dick

From my friend, Tom H.

A story I'd never heard before.

Subject: Fwd: The Pearl Harbor Niihau Incident And Origins Of Ruger's 22 Pistol

I found this to be a very interesting story….SKIP.

https://www.gunsamerica.com/digest/the-pearl-harbor-niihau-incident-a-tidy-little-war/ .

 

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This Day in U S Military History

December 10

1845 – President James Polk make a bold move to radically expand the burgeoning United States. Polk gave Congressman John Slidell the go-ahead to settle a border dispute concerning Texas, as well as to purchase New Mexico and California, from Mexico. As per Polk's demand, Slidell anted up $5 million for New Mexico and $25 million for California; however, Mexico refused the offer, emboldening the president to marshal a war effort in the name of "reannexing" the territory.

1864 – Union General William T. Sherman completes his "March to the Sea" when he arrives in front of Savannah, Georgia. Since mid-November, Sherman's army had been sweeping from Atlanta across the state to the south and east towards Savannah, one of the last Confederate seaports still unoccupied by Union forces. Along the way, Sherman destroyed farms and railroads, burned storehouses, and fed his army off the land. In his own words, Sherman intended to "make Georgia howl," a plan that was approved by President Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant, general-in-chief of the Union armies. The city of Savannah was fortified and defended by 10,000 Confederates under the command of General William Hardee. The Rebels flooded the rice fields around Savannah, so only a few narrow causeways provided access to the city. Sherman's army was running low on supplies and he had not made contact with supply ships off the coast. Sherman's army had been completely cut off from the North, and only the reports of destruction provided any evidence of its whereabouts. Sherman directed General Oliver O. Howard to the coast to locate friendly ships. Howard dispatched Captain William Duncan and two comrades to contact the Union fleet, but nothing was heard of the trio for several days. Duncan located a Union gunboat that carried him to Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. Supply ships were sent to Savannah, and Duncan continued on to Washington to deliver news of the successful "March to the Sea" to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton. For ten day, Hardee held out as Sherman prepared for an attack. Realizing the futility of losing in force entirely, Hardee fled the city on December 20 and slipped northward to fight another day.

1905 – To evaluate its use in lighthouse work, radio equipment was installed experimentally on Nantucket Lightship in August of 1901. On December 10, 1905, while riding out a severe gale, Lightship No. 58 on the Nantucket Shoals Station sprang a serious leak. There being no recognized radio distress signal at that time, the operator could only repeatedly spell out the word "help". Although no reply was received Newport Navy station (radio) intercepted the call and passed it on to the proper authorities. The lightship tender Azalea was dispatched to the assistance of Lightship No. 58, and upon arrival at the scene passed a towline. The long tow to a safe harbor began, but after a few hours it was quite evident that Lightship No. 58 was sinking. Azalea took off her crew of thirteen men only minutes before she sank. This pioneer use of radio had indeed proved Its worth in rescue operations.

1941 – Japanese air attacks and troop landings on Luzon. Attack on the naval base at Caite destroys weapons stocks. At Aparri, on the north coast, 2000 troops of the Tanaka Detachment land, while troops of the Kanno Detachment land at Vigan in the northeast. Both landings are well supported by naval forces.

1941 – Admiral Goto commands a Japanese force which captures the 300 man US garrison on Guam.

1941 – Aircraft from USS Enterprise attack and sink Japanese Submarine I-70 north of Hawaiian Islands. A participant in the Pearl Harbor Attack. At the time, I-70 is thought to be the first Japanese combatant ship sunk during World War II.

1941 – PBY piloted by LT Utter of VP-101 shoots down Japanese ZERO in first Navy air-to-air kill during World War II.

1941 – The US submarine Sealion was sunk in an air attack at Manila Bay. 10 crewman were captured by the Japanese and shipped to work in a Mitsubishi copper mine in northern Japan.

1941 – With no weapon larger than the .30 caliber MG, 153 Marines defended Guam until overwhelmed.

1950 – The U.S. Air Force Combat Cargo Command completed a four-day emergency mission in which it airdropped 1,580 tons of supplies and equipment and evacuated 4,687 casualties from the Hagaru-ri and Koto-ri areas near the Chosin/Changjin Reservoir.

1981 – A Coast Guard HH-52A landed on CGC Dependable's flight deck, marking the 5,000th helicopter landing on board the ship. According to AVTRACEN records, this was the most helicopter landings ever recorded aboard a cutter. The landing occurred off Dauphin Island in the Gulf of Mexico.

 

Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day

 

*PAGE, JOHN U. D.

Rank and organization: Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army, X Corps Artillery, while attached to the 52d Transportation Truck Battalion. Place and date: Near Chosin Reservoir, Korea, 29 November to 10 December 1950. Entered service at: St. Paul, Minn. Born: 8 February 1904, Malahi Island, Luzon, Philippine Islands. G.O. No.: 21, 25 April 1957. Citation: Lt. Col. Page, a member of X Corps Artillery, distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action above and beyond the call of duty in a series of exploits. On 29 November, Lt. Col. Page left X Corps Headquarters at Hamhung with the mission of establishing traffic control on the main supply route to 1st Marine Division positions and those of some Army elements on the Chosin Reservoir plateau. Having completed his mission Lt. Col. Page was free to return to the safety of Hamhung but chose to remain on the plateau to aid an isolated signal station, thus being cut off with elements of the marine division. After rescuing his jeep driver by breaking up an ambush near a destroyed bridge Lt. Col. Page reached the lines of a surrounded marine garrison at Koto-ri. He then voluntarily developed and trained a reserve force of assorted army troops trapped with the marines. By exemplary leadership and tireless devotion he made an effective tactical unit available. In order that casualties might be evacuated, an airstrip was improvised on frozen ground partly outside of the Koto-ri defense perimeter which was continually under enemy attack. During 2 such attacks, Lt. Col. Page exposed himself on the airstrip to direct fire on the enemy, and twice mounted the rear deck of a tank, manning the machine gun on the turret to drive the enemy back into a no man's land. On 3 December while being flown low over enemy lines in a light observation plane, Lt. Col. Page dropped handgrenades on Chinese positions and sprayed foxholes with automatic fire from his carbine. After 10 days of constant fighting the marine and army units in the vicinity of the Chosin Reservoir had succeeded in gathering at the edge of the plateau and Lt. Col. Page was flown to Hamhung to arrange for artillery support of the beleaguered troops attempting to break out. Again Lt. Col. Page refused an opportunity to remain in safety and returned to give every assistance to his comrades. As the column slowly moved south Lt. Col. Page joined the rear guard. When it neared the entrance to a narrow pass it came under frequent attacks on both flanks. Mounting an abandoned tank Lt. Col. Page manned the machine gun, braved heavy return fire, and covered the passing vehicles until the danger diminished. Later when another attack threatened his section of the convoy, then in the middle of the pass, Lt. Col. Page took a machine gun to the hillside and delivered effective counterfire, remaining exposed while men and vehicles passed through the ambuscade. On the night of 10 December the convoy reached the bottom of the pass but was halted by a strong enemy force at the front and on both flanks. Deadly small-arms fire poured into the column. Realizing the danger to the column as it lay motionless, Lt. Col. Page fought his way to the head of the column and plunged forward into the heart of the hostile position. His intrepid action so surprised the enemy that their ranks became disordered and suffered heavy casualties. Heedless of his safety, as he had been throughout the preceding 10 days, Lt. Col. Page remained forward, fiercely engaging the enemy single-handed until mortally wounded. By his valiant and aggressive spirit Lt. Col. Page enabled friendly forces to stand off the enemy. His outstanding courage, unswerving devotion to duty, and supreme self-sacrifice reflect great credit upon Lt. Col. Page and are in the highest tradition of the military service.

 

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for December 10, FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD "PHIL" MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

10 December

1941: Aircraft from the USS Enterprise sank a Japanese sub north of Hawaii. It was the first Japanese combat ship sunk by the US in World War II.-----Update The USS Ward sunk the first ship. The sub with a hole through the conning tower was recently found off the coast of Pearl Harbor that was hit by the Ward on 7 December 1941---Skip

(24) Five B-17s from the 93 BMS carried out the first heavy bombardment mission of World War II. They attacked a Japanese convoy as they landed troops on the northern coast of Luzon, Philippines. (21) In its first foreign operation, the ACFC ferried four B-24 bombers to the Middle East. (2)

1947: The National Aeronautic Association awarded the Collier Trophy for 1946 to Lewis A. Rodert for developing thermal ice-prevention systems. Lt Col John P. Stapp took his first rocket propelled sled ride. (24)

1950: KOREAN WAR. FEAF Combat Cargo Command finished a two-week airlift for surrounded U.S. troops in N. Korea by delivering 1,580 tons of supplies and equipment and moving almost 5,000 sick and wounded troops. Participating airlift units conducted 350 C-119 and C-47 flights. (28)

1954: On a rocket-propelled sled run, Lt Col John P. Stapp attained 632 MPH (equal to Mach 1.7 at 35,000 feet) and decelerated to zero in 1.4 seconds. He experienced the greatest G-force ever endured by man (40 Gs) in recorded tests. The test proved that humans could survive ejection from an aircraft at supersonic speeds. (16) (21)

1955: Ryan's X-13 Vertijet flew its first flight. (3)

1958: National Airlines began the first jet domestic passenger service in the US with a Boeing 707 flight between New York and Miami. (21)

1962: The Army successfully fired its Pershing rocket, a solid-fuel replacement for the Redstone, from Cape Canaveral and guided it through a series of zigzag maneuvers designed to test its guidance system. (16) (24)

1963: SECDEF Robert S. McNamara cancelled the X-20A Dyna-Soar Program and placed the near-- earth MOL project under USAF direction. (3)

1965: SECDEF Robert S. McNamara announced the development of the FB-111, a strategic and tactical F-111 bomber to replace the retiring B-58s and B-52s. (1) (12)

1967: MSgt H. B. Whitmore, wearing a passive pressure suit developed by the School of Aviation Medicine, set a new high altitude record during tests in a chamber simulating 112,000 feet in altitude.

1980: Operation CREEK SENTRY: In response to the Polish crisis, four E-3A AWACS aircraft deployed to Ramstein AB in an expanded Creek Sentry deployment. (4)

1986: An HC-130, a UH-60 Black Hawk, a CH-3 Jolly Green Giant, and a MH-53 helicopter rescued 19 survivors from the Norwegian ship Greco Alpha, a 300-foot seismographic research vessel that caught fire 30 miles from Destin, Fla. The survivors were flown to Eglin AFB to medical treatment. (16)

2000: In its Palmdale plant, Boeing completed structural mode tests on its X-32B Joint Strike Fighter concept demonstrator. The X-32B would be used to validate Boeing's direct-lift approach to short take-off vertical landing flights. (AFNEWS Article 001827, 13 Dec 2000)

2001: Operation DEEP FREEZE. Through 20 January 2002, a 50 AS aircrew from Little Rock AFB, assigned to the 50th Air Expeditionary Squadron, flew the first wheeled C-130 mission from the Pegasus glacial runway in Antarctica to provide more airlift for the National Science Foundation. The 3 deployed wheeled C-130s flew 11 resupply missions between Antarctica and Christchurch IAP, New Zealand, in that period. (22)

2004: From Quonset State Airport, the 143 AW (Rhode Island ANG) deployed the first C-130J "Super Hercules" for Southwest Asian combat operations. Through 8 March 2005, two C-130Js and four crews from the 143d flew 625 sorties and logged 1,371 hours moving 7,031 passengers and 1,151 cargo pallets to locations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Horn of Africa. (22) (32)

 

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