This Day in Naval History – Nov. 7

Friday, November 6, 2009

1861 - CAPT Charles Wilkes seizes two Confederate diplomats from the British steamer Trent, causing an international controversy with Great Britain (known as the Trent Affair).

1942 - Operation Torch (Allied landings in French Northwest Africa). American forces land at Casablanca. French naval forces attack U.S. Navy ships and 13 French ships are sunk without a loss to the U.S.

1956 - Navy Stratolab balloon (LCDRs Malcolm D. Ross and M. Lee Lewis) better world height record soaring to 76,000 feet over Black Hills, SD, on flight to gather meteorological, cosmic ray, and other scientific data.

1975 - Over 100 Sailors and Marines from USS Inchon (LPH-12) and USS Bagley (DE-1069) fight a fire aboard a Spanish merchant vessel at Palma.

(Source: Navy News Service)

Categories: History Navy

Related Stories

NexusWave Implemented on IEA Fishing Vessels

Awake.Al, Tidalis Collaborate for Maritime Emissions Reporting

At the Helm: How the U.S. Coast Guard is Shaping the Future of Maritime Nuclear Power

Current News

Hapag-Lloyd, CMA CGM Suspend Cuba Bookings After US Executive Order

ScioSense Launches UFC23 Ultrasonic Flow Converter for High-Precision, Ultra-Low-Power Smart Metering

Samsung Heavy Industries Receives AIP Certificate for Floating Data Center from ABS

US Import Costs Rise in April, Fuel Sees Biggest Gain in Four Years

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News