Tuesday, August 27, 2024

TheList 6931


The List 6931     TGB

To All,

Good Tuesday Morning August 27..Well the Geek Squad came in and saved the computer once again. I am up and running and glad it is working. As soon as I tell them it is a 12 year old lap top with Windows 7 there is the long pause and they talk about what I should do. But no problems this morning and they installed all sorts of anti virus and pop up blockers.

Another day here with 86 expected and clear skies. I am testing our San Marcos school tonight and that is always fun. I think we have close to 90 students there.

Busy week this week

Warm Regards to All,

skip

Make it a Good Day

 

Shadow's latest Rant is attached. A lot to unpack and much to think about as the truth reveals a lot.

 

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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 83 H-Grams 

Today in Naval and Marine Corps History

Today in Naval and Marine Corps History

 

August. 27

 

1942 USS Iowa (BB 61) is launched at the New York Navy Yard. Commissioned in Feb. 1943, Iowa serves in both the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean during World War II and now serves as a museum battleship at Los Angeles, Calif.

 

1944 USS Stingray (SS 186), after being depth charged and lightly worked over while reconnoitering the designated spot lands a party of one Filipino officer, 14 men and 60 percent of the supplies earmarked for delivery to guerilla forces at Saddle Rock, Mayaira Point, on northwest shore of Luzon. Heavy Japanese shipping in the vicinity compels Stingrays departure before all stores land.

 

1944 PV Ventura aircraft sink Japanese vessel, Tensho Maru, between Odomari, southwest of Sakhalin and Onnekotan Island, Kuril Islands.

 

1945 Units of the Pacific Fleet enter Japanese waters for the first time during World War II, to prepare for the formal Japanese surrender on Sept. 2, 1945.

 

1959 While off Cape Canaveral, Fla., USS Observation Island (EAG 154) makes the first shipboard launch of a Polaris missile.

 

2007 Vice Adm. Adam M. Robinson, Jr., becomes the first African-American to be appointed as Surgeon General of the US Navy.

 

 

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This Day In World History August 27

Today in History August 27

1626                     The Danes are crushed by the Catholic League in Germany, marking the end of Danish intervention in European wars.

1776                     The Americans are defeated by the British at the Battle of Long Island, New York.

1793                     Maximilien Robespierre is elected to the Committee of Public Safety in Paris, France.

1813                     The Allies defeat Napoleon at the Battle of Dresden.

1861                     Union troops make an amphibious landing at Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.

1862                     As the Second Battle of Bull Run rages, Confederate soldiers attack Loudoun County, Virginia.

1881                     New York state's Pure Food Law goes into effect to prevent "the adulteration of food or drugs."

1894                     The United States congress passes an income tax law as part of a general tariff act, but it is found unconstitutional.

1910                     Thomas Edison demonstrates the first "talking" pictures--using a phonograph--in his New Jersey laboratory.

1912                     Edgar Rice Burrough's Tarzan of the Apes first appears in a magazine.

From Skip   I read every book he ever wrote and enjoyed them all. When I was young I could never find a book of his in the Library and believe me I knew my way around a Library. Right after I got to USC I took the trolly to down town Los Angeles and there was a book store right there and I went in and found a paper back book By Edgar rice Burroughs calld Tarzen of the apes. I was astounded. There was also one about John Carter of Mars. I bought them both and asked the book store owner about them. He told me that they were printing all his books and they would be coming out over the next few years. There were over 60 of them. He also told me that finding a book was very rare. All his stories were printed in a magazine that came out monthly and so each chapter had a cliff hanger at the end so you would buy the next magazine to find out what happened. I ended up many years later finding all of them and still have them. Very entertaining.

1916                     Italy declares war on Germany.

1928                     Fifteen nations sign the Kellogg-Briand Peace Pact, outlawing war and calling for the settlement of disputes through arbitration. Forty-seven other countries eventually sign the pact.

1941                     The Prime Minister of Japan, Fumimaro Konoye, issues an invitation for a meeting with President Franklin Roosevelt.

1945                     B-29 Superfortress bombers begin to drop supplies into Allied prisoner of war camps in China.

1963                     Cambodia severs ties with South Vietnam.

1975                     Veronica & Colin Scargill of England complete tandem bicycle ride around the world, a record 18,020 miles (29,000.4 km).

1979                     Lord Mountbatten is killed by an Irish terrorist bomb in his sail boat in Sligo, Ireland.

1984                     President Ronald Reagan announces NASA Teacher in Space project, intended to inspire students and honor teachers and spur interest in the fields of science, mathematics and space exploration.

1989                     Chuck Berry performs his tune Johnny B. Goode for NASA staff in celebration of Voyager II's encounter with the planet Neptune.

1991                     Moldavia declares independence from USSR.

1993                     The Rainbow Bridge, a 1,870-foot suspension bridge over Tokyo Bay, completed.

2003                     Mars makes its closest approach to Earth in nearly 60,000 years, passing within 34,646,418 miles (55,758,005 km).

2008                     Democrats nominate Barack Obama for president, first African American nominated by a major political party for the office of President of the United States.

2012                     First interplanetary human voice recording is broadcast from the Mars Rover Curiosity.

 

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Thanks to This Day in History

1883

One of the most powerful volcanic eruptions in recorded history occurs on Krakatoa (also called Krakatau), a small, uninhabited volcanic island east of Sumatra and west of Java, on August 27, 1883. Heard 3,000 miles away—and believed to have produced the loudest sounds in human history—the explosions threw five cubic miles of earth 50 miles into the air, created 120-foot tsunamis and killed 36,000 people.

 

Krakatoa exhibited its first stirrings in more than 200 years on May 20, 1883. A German warship passing by reported a seven-mile high cloud of ash and dust over Krakatoa. For the next two months, similar explosions would be witnessed by commercial liners and natives on nearby Java and Sumatra. With little to no idea of the impending catastrophe, the local inhabitants greeted the volcanic activity with festive excitement.

 

On August 26 and August 27, excitement turned to horror as Krakatoa literally blew itself apart, setting off a chain of natural disasters that would be felt around the world for years to come. An enormous blast on the afternoon of August 26 destroyed the northern two-thirds of the island; as it plunged into the Sunda Strait, between the Java Sea and Indian Ocean, the gushing mountain generated a series of pyroclastic flows (fast-moving fluid bodies of molten gas, ash and rock) and monstrous tsunamis that swept over nearby coastlines.

 

Four more eruptions beginning at 5:30 a.m. the following day proved cataclysmic. The explosions could be heard as far as 3,000 miles away, and ash was propelled to a height of 50 miles. Fine dust from the explosion drifted around the earth, causing spectacular sunsets and forming an atmospheric veil that lowered temperatures worldwide by several degrees.

 

Of the estimated 36,000 deaths resulting from the eruption, at least 31,000 were caused by the tsunamis created when much of the island fell into the water. The greatest of these waves measured 120 feet high, and washed over nearby islands, stripping away vegetation and carrying people out to sea. Another 4,500 people were scorched to death from the pyroclastic flows that rolled over the sea, stretching as far as 40 miles, according to some sources.

 

In addition to Krakatoa, which is still active, Indonesia has another 130 active volcanoes, the most of any country in the world.

 

Probably not on the top of my vacation spots in the world today…Skip

 

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OPERATION COMMANDO HUNT Thanks to the Bear  

Skip… For The List for the week beginning Monday, 26 August 2024 continuing through Sunday, 1 September 2024… Bear🇺🇸⚓️🐻

 

OPERATION COMMANDO HUNT (1968-1972)…

From the archives of rollingthunderremembered.com post for 25 August 1969… Includes two great stories: The saga of "Balky Company A" and the 40 year search for her missing Marine by a wife who never gave up…

 

https://www.rollingthunderremembered.com/commando-hunt-and-rolling-thunder-remembered-week-forty-two-of-the-hunt-25-31-august-1969/

 

(Please note the eye-watering ongoing revamp of the RTR website by Webmaster/Author Dan Heller, who has inherited the site from originators RADM Bear Taylor, USN, Retired, and Angie Morse, "Mighty Thunder")…

To remind folks that these are from the Vietnam Air Losses site that Micro put together. You click on the url below and can read what happened each day to the aircraft and its crew. .Micro is the one also that goes into the archives and finds these inputs and sends them to me for incorporation in the List. It is a lot of work and our thanks goes out to him for his effort.

From Vietnam Air Losses site for "for 27August    It was great that Ted and Dick came home at the end of the war in 1973 they were escorting one of our RF-8Gs on a photo mission….

Skip     Dick was on a panel of four former POWS at last year's Tailhook and I was able to post it on The List last year thanks to Tailhook. I knew all four….

27-Aug:  https://www.vietnamairlosses.com/loss.php?id=2989

 

Vietnam Air Losses Access Chris Hobson and Dave Lovelady's work at:  https://www.VietnamAirLosses.com.

 

This is a list of all Helicopter Pilots Who Died in the Vietnam War . Listed by last name and has other info 

https://www.vhpa.org/KIA/KIAINDEX.HTM

 

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Thanks to History Facts

The New York Philharmonic had to ask the audience not to knit during concerts.

 

There are few hobbies more perfectly aligned than knitting and listening to classical music. But in 1915, Americans took their zeal for needlework a bit too far, forcing the New York Philharmonic to request that its audience refrain from knitting during live musical performances.

 

At the time, knitting was promoted as a patriotic act to support soldiers fighting in World War I. Even though the United States didn't officially join the war until 1917, organizations such as the American Red Cross encouraged U.S. citizens to knit warm clothing to aid in the Allied war effort. People knitted everywhere, from buses to courtrooms and even while attending shows at Carnegie Hall. However, the clacking of needles proved distracting to performers and audience members alike, prompting the New York Philharmonic to take action. A program dated February 7, 1915, stated, "the Directors respectfully request that [knitting], which interferes with the artistic enjoyment of the music, be omitted."

 

Knitting was one of many ways that Americans back home supported the war effort. In 1917, future President Herbert Hoover, who was then head of the U.S. Food Administration, pondered ways to supply soldiers with heartier meals. Hoover asked Americans to participate in "Meatless Tuesdays" and "Wheatless Wednesdays," leading to more than 10 million households pledging to use potato flour and chicken instead of wheat flour and beef. The Hoover administration later published a cookbook titled Victory Recipes of the Great War, featuring dishes such as a "camouflage roast" made of peanuts, and a lima bean "mock sausage" for "Porkless Saturday."

 

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Thanks to John

My wife often comments on the "air" about me when I meet some people and not others. She says that it is an air of superiority but it isn't. It is just a different kind of "bond" that we have. I alsoJoh have deep admiration and respect for the grunts that had such hard conditions and were at the "tip of the spear."

 

I still have that deep admiration and respect for all of you and that's why I am sending this email.

 

John

A good summation:

 

This sums up many of my thoughts. It isn't that I look down or degrade those that didn't. It is very much like the end of the quote from the St. Crispin Day speech "we happy few, we band of brothers." The experience of landing that jet on a carrier and then the crisp salute on the catapult in the tradition of leaving the ship also makes a special bond. So this article does a good job of summing it up why I have a different "air" when meeting some men. No arrogance or conceit is intended for the other men.

 

Because We Flew—Author unknown

     Once the wings go on, they never come off whether they can be seen or not. They fuse to the soul through adversity, fear and adrenaline, and no one who has ever worn them with pride, integrity and guts can ever sleep through the 'call of the wild' that wafts through the bedroom windows in the deep of the night.

     When a good flyer leaves the 'job' and retires, many are jealous, some are pleased and yet others, who may have already retired, wonder. We wonder if he knows what he is leaving behind, because we already know. We know, for example, that after a lifetime of precious camaraderie that few experience, it will remain as a longing for those past times.

     We know in the world of flying, there is a fellowship which lasts long after the flight suits are hung up in the back of the closet. We know even if he throws them away, they will be on him with every step and breath that remains in his life. We also know how the very bearing of the man speaks of what he was and in his heart still is.

     Because we flew, we envy no man on earth.

 

 AND,

On the Experience of War--Author unknown

     "I now know why men who have been to war yearn to reunite. Not to tell stories or look at old pictures. Not to laugh or weep. Comrades gather because they long to be with the men who once acted at their best; men who suffered and sacrificed together, who were stripped of their humanity. I did not pick these men. They were delivered by fate and the military. But I know them in a way I know no other men.

     I have never given anyone such trust.  They were willing to guard something more precious than my life.  They would have carried my reputation, the memory of me. It was part of the bargain we all made, the reason we were so willing to die for one another.  As long as I have memory, I will think of them all, every day.  I am sure that when I leave this world, my last thought will be of my family and my comrades...Such good men."

 

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Thanks to interesting Facts

 

15 Acronyms You See Every Day and Their Meanings

 

Some words and letters are such a familiar part of everyday life that they almost fade into the background. From markings on your electronics, food packaging, and clothes to the words you see on water bottles and inside elevators, here are the meanings behind some mysterious letters you might see every day.

 

UL

The letters "UL" can be found on many things, including electric plugs, heaters, smoke alarms, and personal flotation devices. UL stands for "Underwriters Laboratories," a company that's been conducting product safety testing for more than a century. If an item meets UL's safety standards, it earns the right to bear a "UL" mark.

 

The man who founded what became UL, William Henry Merrill Jr., got the idea to set up an electrical testing laboratory after being dispatched to check fire risks at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. The Underwriters Electrical Bureau was founded in 1894, and Underwriters Laboratories was incorporated in 1901. UL began offering its label service to certify products it had tested in 1906.

 

CE

You may have spotted a "CE" on eyeglass frames, mobile phones (or their packaging), appliances, electronics, and more. CE stands for the French phrase "Conformité Européenne," which means "European compliance." The CE designation indicates an item has met the standards to be sold in the European Economic Area. The certification process ensures that products in specific categories adhere to safety, health, and environmental standards. Placing CE on things isn't required outside of Europe, but plenty of manufacturers leave the CE mark on items that are sold both in Europe and elsewhere.

 

FCC

Mobile phones, earbuds, television stations, and other communication devices operate on radio frequencies. In the United States, the Federal Communications Commission checks to make sure these devices can function with no harmful interference. The FCC also ensures a device won't overexpose users to radiofrequency (RF) energy, which is a type of electromagnetic radiation.

 

After obtaining FCC approval, manufacturers will place an FCC logo on the device and/or its packaging. At first glance, this logo can appear as if it contains just an F and a C next to each other, but a closer look will reveal there's a second C hidden inside the first one.

 

OTIS

Maybe you study the insides of elevators to have something to do during your ascent or descent, or perhaps you get nervous and read every bit of elevator signage in search of reassurance it's working properly. If so, you've likely seen "OTIS" emblazoned on an elevator's floor, control panel, or elsewhere. This isn't an acronym or abbreviation — OTIS refers to the Otis Elevator Company.

 

In the 1830s and '40s, passengers regularly died in elevators when lifting cables broke. Inventor Elisha Graves Otis created an elevator safety brake, and in 1853, showed off his invention at New York City's Crystal Palace Convention by ascending on an open platform, cutting the hoisting rope with an ax, and not falling thanks to the safety brake. Four years later, E.V. Haughwout and Company's department store in Manhattan became the first business to use elevators equipped with this special brake.

 

After the Otis Elevator Company was founded in 1853 and Otis patented his invention in 1861, Otis elevators helped transform cities. Today, the company continues to make elevators with the name "Otis" displayed inside. The safety mechanisms in present-day elevators even stick to the same basic engineering principles that Otis originally used.

 

OU

People who don't keep kosher may have seen the letter "U" inside a circle on some food items and not have known this indicated the item was processed according to Jewish dietary laws. This letter "U" is actually inside an "O," not a circle; "OU" stands for "Orthodox Union Kosher." Some products may be marked with "OU-D" to indicate that they contain dairy or were made on equipment that handled dairy. "OU-P" tells people an item is kosher for Passover.

 

"OU" isn't the only way to signal that a food item is Kosher. A "K" inside a circle or a star are other well-known marks for kosher foods.

 

PET

You can find the letters "PET" on many plastic bottles, including most of the ones that hold beverages. PET is an acronym for the plastic "polyethylene terephthalate," which is part of the polyester family of polymers.

 

Above the word "PET" on these bottles, you'll also usually see a 1 in a triangle made up of arrows. This is a recycling code. PET bottles can successfully be recycled, so make sure to do this instead of throwing yours away.

 

USB

USB is such a familiar term that you may not be aware it's an acronym for "universal serial bus." USB really did live up to the "universal" part of its name. Before USB, serial ports, parallel ports, and more were used to connect external devices like keyboards, mice, and printers. USB made it possible for these different devices to hook up to computers via the same connection.

 

USB technology was developed by a group of American businesses, notably Intel, and first became available in 1996. When Apple's iMac came out in 1998, it was a USB-only computer. USB is still popular today, as are USB-C ports on phones, tablets, and certain computers.

 

YKK

Zippers are part of our daily lives, whether on our jeans, coats, or bags, and as long as they work, they usually don't receive intense scrutiny. However, a closer look at various zippers will likely reveal that many of them are inscribed with the letters "YKK."

 

YKK stands for "Yoshida Kogyo Kabushikikaisha," which roughly translates to "Yoshida Manufacturing Shareholding Company." This company, founded in 1934, uses its own brass, polyester, threads, and even zipper machines. By controlling so much of the process, YKK can deliver high-quality zippers. The company also sells these zippers at reasonable prices. The combination has made YKK a go-to in the garment industry — and explains why half of the world's zippers have YKK zippers.

 

QR

QR codes are those pixelated-looking black-and-white squares that you can scan with your phone for more information about something, whether it's an advertisement or a piece of art. They've become ubiquitous, especially after the COVID-19 pandemic popularized contactless menus and payment. However, they're very rarely called by their full name.

 

"QR" actually stands for "quick response," and the codes can be used to share far more than a link. If you wanted to, you could share an entire book with one code. The technology was first developed by a Toyota subsidiary in the mid-'90s as a way to track auto parts, but QR codes found new life as a way to direct smartphone users from a physical space to a digital one. They used to require a special reader, but nowadays, most smartphone camera apps will read QR codes on their own.

 

UPC

You've probably noticed a UPC while out shopping, especially if you use self-checkout. It stands for "universal product code." UPCs have two parts, both of which communicate information to a computer: a barcode, and a 12-digit product code called a Global Trade Item Number, or GTIN.

 

A product's GTIN includes a company code for the manufacturer and a product code for the item itself. Manufacturers have to buy each individual code from GS1, a nonprofit industry group that tracks everything. Because all GTIN numbers are 12 digits, companies with a lot of products need shorter company codes to accommodate larger product numbers.

 

SKU

You'll most commonly see "SKU" in online shopping carts, but occasionally someone will use it as a synonym for "product." It stands for "stock keeping unit," and like UPCs, it keeps track of products for sale. Unlike UPCs, which are universal across different companies, a SKU refers to an inventory item internally within one company. Because it's for internal tracking and not outside purchases, it can be whatever the company wants, but unique SKUs help sellers be more precise about what products they're stocking, selling, and shipping. In your shopping cart, a SKU identifies the exact color, size, and model of what you're buying.

 

PVC

If you're a crafter or handyperson, you've probably come across PVC pipe. Typically, it's used in water systems from home plumbing to city utilities, but clever DIYers have used it for everything from storage to cosplay, because it's waterproof, sturdy, durable, and cheap. PVC stands for "polyvinyl chloride." One of the most-used plastics in the world, it's also found in insulation, clothing, hoses, toys, and pretty much anywhere that plastic is found.

 

VR and AR

You've probably seen the terms "VR" and "AR" in arcades, science fiction, and buzzy new technology products. VR stands for "virtual reality," and refers to an environment that's entirely simulated. Some gamers use VR headsets to immerse themselves fully in a video game with a full, 360-degree view of a digital world. The tech can also be used to view specially made videos and photography.

 

AR, or "augmented reality," adds simulated digital elements to the actual world around you. If you've played Pokemon Go — which superimposes Pokemon characters and other game elements on top of your surroundings using a smartphone camera — you've experienced an augmented reality application. Live translation apps, which use a smartphone camera to translate text in real time, are another example of AR.

 

GIF

GIF images — that's Graphics Interchange Format — have been used for more than three decades, although these days they're mostly used for brief animations. The format was invented in 1987 by the CompuServe internet service provider, and once upon a time it was often used for still images. Because it uses limited colors, it kept file sizes low, which was especially critical when internet speeds were much slower, and it allowed images to have transparent elements, which helped with web design. Most computers and connections can handle bigger file sizes now, and higher-quality formats allow transparency without being prohibitively large — but even today, nothing handles a short clip quite like a GIF.

 

PU

You may have seen "PU" a lot recently to describe PU leather, a material used to create clothing, accessories, and upholstery. PU stands for polyurethane, a kind of artificial material commonly used in spandex. You also might have seen this acronym in PU foam, which has wide applications from crafting to home repair.

 

PU leather is a more specific kind of "pleather" or faux leather, which can also be made out of PVC — although PU leather is generally considered to be higher quality and more eco-friendly. It can be vegan, but sometimes includes elements of real leather, too.

 

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Thanks to Dr.Rich      this brings up a lot of questions like where and when..skip

AI me thinks … or with Su-27's at Dryden…

Sent from Rich's iPhone - Please pardon any  iSpell errors!

On Aug 26, 2024, at 8:55 PM, Ed Rathje wrote:

who's taking the video ?????

or is this fake AI ?? still very cool!

I don't think SR-71 ever flew this slow or this close to enemy aircraft.

 

Russian Su-27 fighter jets attempt to intimidate a USAF SR-71 Blackbird.

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/skLu7ZwlRa8

 

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This Day in U S Military History

August 27

1859 – Edwin Drake struck oil at 69 feet near Titusville, Pennsylvania–the world's first successful oil well. This source of crude oil, or petroleum, opened up a new inexpensive source of power and quickly replaced whale oil in lamps. Within a few decades of Drake's discovery, oil drilling was widespread in the U.S., Europe, the Middle East, and the East Indies. However, it was the development of the automobile that catapulted petroleum into a position of paramount importance, for petroleum is the primary source of gasoline. Asphalt, also derived from petroleum, is used to surface roads and highways.

1861 – Union ships sail into North Carolina's Hatteras Inlet, beginning a two-day operation that secures the area for the Federals and denies the Confederates an important outlet to the Atlantic. The Outer Banks is a series of long, narrow islands that separate Pamlico Sound from the Atlantic, with Hatteras Inlet as the only deep-water passage connecting the two. In the first few months of the war, the Outer Banks were a haven for Confederate blockade runners and raiders. During the summer of 1861, one Rebel ship, the Winslow, wreaked havoc on Union shipping off North Carolina, and Federal naval and army officials mounted a combined operation to neutralize the area. To protect the passage, the Confederates erected two fortresses of sand and wood, garrisoned by 350 soldiers. Eight Union warships and 800 troops under the command of Commodore Silas Stringham and General Benjamin Butler anchored off Cape Hatteras on August 27. Butler's men slogged ashore the next day with wet powder, hardly in shape to attack a fortified position. Fortunately for the Yankee infantry, the squadron off shore began a devastating bombardment that forced the Confederates to abandon one of the strongholds, Fort Clark. The Confederates gathered inside of the larger Fort Hatteras, but the shelling from the Union ships was more than the garrison could stand. The force surrendered on August 29. The capture of Cape Hatteras was an important victory for the Union, especially after the disaster at Bull Run one month earlier. It also gave the Union a toehold on the North Carolina coast, and it sealed an important outlet to the Atlantic.

1901 – In Havana, Cuba, U.S. Army physician James Carroll allowed an infected mosquito to feed on him in an attempt to isolate the means of transmission of yellow fever. Days later, Carroll developed a severe case of yellow fever, helping his colleague, Army Walter Reed, prove that mosquitoes can transmit the sometimes deadly disease

1918 – The Battle of Ambos Nogales (lit. "The Battle of Both Nogales"), or as it is known in Mexico La batalla del 27 de agosto (lit. "The Battle of 27 August"), was an engagement fought between Mexican forces and elements of United States Army soldiers of the 35th Infantry Regiment, who were reinforced by the Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th Cavalry Regiment, and commanded by Lt. Col. Frederick J. Herman. The American soldiers and militia forces were stationed in Nogales, Arizona and the Mexican soldiers and armed Mexican militia were in Nogales, Sonora. This battle was notable for being a significant confrontation between U.S. and Mexican forces during the Border War which took place in the context of the Mexican Revolution and the First World War. This occurred after the Zimmermann Telegram during World War I when the international border between the two Nogales was a wide open boulevard named International Street. There had been several previous fatal incidents in this area which helped increase international tensions and leading to armed conflict. This included the claim of German military advisors as agitators with Mexican Villa rebels, claims of racism and border politics. As a result of this battle, the U.S. and Mexico agreed to divide the two border communities with a chain-link border fence, the first of many permanent incarnations of the U.S.–Mexico border wall between the two countries.

1945 – The Allied fleets anchor in Sagami (Tokyo) Bay within sight of Mount Fujiyama. Admiral Halsey, commander of the US 3rd Fleet, is present for what is probably the greatest display of naval might in history. The armada includes 23 aircraft carriers, 12 battleships, 26 cruisers, 116 destroyers and escorts, 12 submarines and 185 other vessels. In addition to the American and British ships, there are ships from Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the Netherlands represented.

1972 – In the heaviest bombing in four years, U.S. aircraft flatten North Vietnamese barracks near Hanoi and Haiphong as part of ongoing Operation Linebacker I, part of President Nixon's response to the NVA Easter Offensive. Planes also hit bridges on the northeast railroad line to China. In an associated action, four U.S. ships raided the Haiphong port area after dark, shelling to within two miles of the city limits. As the U.S. ships withdrew from the area, the cruiser USS Newport News sank one of two North Vietnamese patrol boats in pursuit, and destroyer USS Rowan set the other on fire.

 

Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day

 

BROWN, JAMES

Rank and organization: Sergeant, Company F, 5th U.S. Cavalry. Place and date: At Davidson Canyon near Camp Crittenden, Ariz., 27 August 1872. Entered service at:——. Birth: Wexford, Ireland. Date of issue: 4 December 1874. Citation: In command of a detachment of 4 men defeated a superior force.

 

GREGG, STEPHEN R.

Rank and organization: Second Lieutenant, U.S. Army, 143d Infantry, 36th Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Montelimar, France, 27 August 1944. Entered service at: Bayonne, N.J. Birth: New York, N.Y. G.O. No.: 31, 17 April 1945. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of life above and beyond the call of duty on 27 August 1944, in the vicinity of Montelimar, France. As his platoon advanced upon the enemy positions; the leading scout was fired upon and 2d Lt. Gregg (then a Tech. Sgt.) immediately put his machineguns into action to cover the advance of the riflemen. The Germans, who were at close range, threw hand grenades at the riflemen, killing some and wounding 7. Each time a medical aid man attempted to reach the wounded, the Germans fired at him. Realizing the seriousness of the situation, 2d Lt. Gregg took 1 of the light .30-caliber machineguns, and firing from the hip, started boldly up the hill with the medical aid man following him. Although the enemy was throwing hand grenades at him, 2d Lt. Gregg remained and fired into the enemy positions while the medical aid man removed the 7 wounded men to safety. When 2d Lt. Gregg had expended all his ammunition, he was covered by 4 Germans who ordered him to surrender. Since the attention of most of the Germans had been diverted by watching this action, friendly riflemen were able to maneuver into firing positions. One, seeing 2d Lt. Gregg's situation, opened fire on his captors. The 4 Germans hit the ground and thereupon 2d Lt. Gregg recovered a machine pistol from one of the Germans and managed to escape to his other machinegun positions. He manned a gun, firing at his captors, killed 1 of them and wounded the other. This action so discouraged the Germans that the platoon was able to continue its advance up the hill to achieve its objective. The following morning, just prior to daybreak, the Germans launched a strong attack, supported by tanks, in an attempt to drive Company L from the hill. As these tanks moved along the valley and their foot troops advanced up the hill, 2d Lt. Gregg immediately ordered his mortars into action. During the day by careful observation, he was able to direct effective fire on the enemy, inflicting heavy casualties. By late afternoon he had directed 600 rounds when his communication to the mortars was knocked out. Without hesitation he started checking his wires, although the area was under heavy enemy small arms and artillery fire. When he was within 100 yards of his mortar position, 1 of his men informed him that the section had been captured and the Germans were using the mortars to fire on the company. 2d Lt. Gregg with this man and another nearby rifleman started for the gun position where he could see 5 Germans firing his mortars. He ordered the 2 men to cover him, crawled up, threw a hand grenade into the position, and then charged it. The hand grenade killed 1, injured 2, 2d Lt. Gregg took the other 2 prisoners, and put his mortars back into action.

 

*HARTELL, LEE R.

Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army, Battery A, 15th Field Artillery Battalion, 2d Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Kobangsan-ni, Korea, 27 August 1951. Entered service at: Danbury, Conn. Birth: Philadelphia, Pa. G.O. No.: 16, 1 February 1952. Citation: 1st. Lt. Hartell, a member of Battery A, distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty in action against an armed enemy of the United Nations. During the darkness of early morning, the enemy launched a ruthless attack against friendly positions on a rugged mountainous ridge. 1st Lt. Hartell, attached to Company B, 9th Infantry Regiment, as forward observer, quickly moved his radio to an exposed vantage on the ridge line to adjust defensive fires. Realizing the tactical advantage of illuminating the area of approach, he called for flares and then directed crippling fire into the onrushing assailants. At this juncture a large force of hostile troops swarmed up the slope in banzai charge and came within 10 yards of 1st Lt. Hartell's position. 1st Lt. Hartell sustained a severe hand wound in the ensuing encounter but grasped the microphone with his other hand and maintained his magnificent stand until the front and left flank of the company were protected by a close-in wall of withering fire, causing the fanatical foe to disperse and fall back momentarily. After the numerically superior enemy overran an outpost and was closing on his position, 1st Lt. Hartell, in a final radio call, urged the friendly elements to fire both batteries continuously. Although mortally wounded, 1st Lt. Hartell's intrepid actions contributed significantly to stemming the onslaught and enabled his company to maintain the strategic strongpoint. His consummate valor and unwavering devotion to duty reflect lasting glory on himself and uphold the noble traditions of the military service.

 

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for August 27,  FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD "PHIL" MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

 

27 August

1923: At Rockwell Field, San Diego, Lts Lowell H. Smith and John P. Richter used a DH-4B Liberty 400 to set FAI refueled duration and distance records of 37 hours 15 minutes 14.8 seconds and 3,293.26 miles, respectively. They also set FAI speed records of 88 plus MPH for all distances from 2,500 through 5,000 kilometers during their two-day flight.

1926: Cmdr John Rodgers, Naval Aviator No. 2, died of injuries received in a airplane crash. (9)

1929: Through 4 September 1929, the Army Air Corps and Boeing Airplane Company, collaborated on the first air-to-air refueling experiment, using the Boeing Hornet Shuttle for a transcontinental flight. It was a Model 95 mail with additional fuel tanks and other alterations. The airplane flew between Oakland and New York, following what was then the longest mail route in the world. Capt Ira C. Eaker proposed this experiment as a means to investigate the potential of cross-country air refueling for military operations and flew the aircraft with Lt Bernard Thompson. Two modified Boeing 40B-4s, piloted by Boeing personnel, and two modified Army Air Corps Douglas C-1s, piloted by Capt St Clair Streett and Lt Newton Longfellow, provided the air refueling. The flight east to New York took 28 hours and 25 minutes. On the return leg, a five-gallon oil can fell from the refueling aircraft onto the Boeing Hornet Shuttle. The resulting damage forced the airplane to land at Cleveland, Ohio, and return to New York City for repairs. Airborne once more, the Boeing Hornet Shuttle flew back to Oakland. The aircraft attempted another flight east, but problems with the fuel line led to a forced landing near Salt Lake City, Utah, that damaged the aircraft and ended the experiment. (18)

1941: William R. Dunn, 71 Squadron (RAF), shot down his fifth enemy plane to become the first American "Ace" in Europe. He served in Europe, Burma, and China, and ended the war with 15 aerial victories and credit for 12 destroyed on the ground. (4)

1943: Ten SB-24's ("Snoopers"), with special radar sighting devices to make accurate bombing possible, irrespective of visual sightings, began operations from Carney Field, Guadalcanal. (24)

1945: B-29s completed their first supply drop operation to Allied POWs in the Weihsien camp near Peiping (now Beijing), China. In all, 154 camps with 63,500 prisoners in Japan, China, and Korea, got food, medical supplies, and clothing. (24)

1950: KOREAN WAR. Two F-51 Mustang pilots accidentally strayed into China and strafed an airstrip near Antung, mistaking it for a N. Korean airstrip at Sinuiju on the border with China. The Chinese used the incident for propaganda and diplomatic purposes. The 92th BG sent 24 B-29s to Kyomipo to bomb the largest iron and steel plant in Korea. FEAF experimented with delayed action bombs to discourage enemy repairs on bridges. (28)

1953: The Snark subsonic intercontinental missile first flew.

1956: Douglas Airplane Company fired the Thor missile in a captive test at the Edwards AFB Rocket Engine Test Laboratory. (3)

1958: PROJECT ARGUS. On 27 and 30 August and 6 September, the US Navy launched three multistage rockets from the USS Norton Sound in the South Atlantic. Each rocket carried a low-yield atomic device that detonated at an altitude of 300 miles. (16) (24)

1959: The USS Observation Island launched a Polaris missile in its first successful launching at sea. (16) (24)

1960: A test of mobile Minuteman missiles deployed on trains ended at Hill AFB satisfactorily. (6)

1962: NASA launched an Atlas-Agena booster, carrying the Mariner II satellite, from Cape Canaveral on a journey to orbit the sun. (16) (21)

1964: SAC conducted its last Atlas E test launch from Vandenberg AFB. The launch supported the Army's Nike-Zeus program. (6)

1966: A C–133 carried the shaft and propeller of the USS Coral Sea from Travis AFB to Atsugi NAS, Japan, in 24 hours. The 63-foot-long shaft weighed 75,400 pounds and was to date the largest single load ever lifted. (18)

1970: The Air Force canceled the AIM-82A Short Range Missile for the F-15. (30)

1986: Through 29 August, a C-130 Hercules from the 50 TAS flew 250 tents to help 2,000 villagers in North Western Cameroon after a carbon dioxide cloud bubbled out of Lake Nyos. (16) (26)

1987: Morton Thiokol first the Space Shuttle's redesigned solid rocket motor at the Wasatch facility. The motor underwent a two-minute, full-duration horizontal firing test. The USAF and NASA selected Pratt and Whitney and Rockwell International to design supersonic ramjet engines for the proposed National Aerospace Plane. (12)

1990: Northrop pilot Paul Metz flew the YF-23 for the first time above Edwards AFB. (20)

2003: A NASA Dryden Flight Research Center team flew several Navy F-5E sorties to support the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration (SSBD) program. The DARPA project tried to determine if modifying an aircraft's shape could change the sonic boom to reduce loudness. (3)

 

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