This Day in Naval History – Dec. 21

Sunday, December 20, 2009

1861 - Congress authorizes the Medal of Honor, the Nation's highest award, for Naval personnel.

1943 - USS Grayling (SS-208) sinks fourth Japanese ship since 18 December.

1951 - First helicopter landing aboard a hospital ship, USS Consolation.

1968 - Launch of Apollo 8 with Captain James A. Lovell, Jr. as Command Module Pilot. During the mission Lovell was one of the first two people to see the far side of the moon. The mission lasted 6 days and 3 hours, and included 10 moon orbits. Recovery was by HS-4 helicopters from USS Yorktown (CVS-10).

(Source: Navy News Service)

Categories: History Navy

Related Stories

Noatum Maritime, Bapco Upstream Sign Agreement for Marine Services at Bahrain LNG Terminal

Anglo-Eastern Debuts Methanol Bunkering Simulator, Courses

Suez Canal Revenues Rise as Red Sea Tensions Ease

Current News

Smart Port Challenge 2025 Attracts 288 Proposals, Winners Announced

Noatum Maritime, Bapco Upstream Sign Agreement for Marine Services at Bahrain LNG Terminal

Algoma Central Fleet Hits the 100-Vessel Mark, Records Strong Q3

Anglo-Eastern Debuts Methanol Bunkering Simulator, Courses

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News