This Day in Naval History – May 24

Sunday, May 23, 2010

1917 - First U.S. convoy to cross North Atlantic during World War I leaves Hampton Roads, VA

1918 - USS Olympia anchors at Kola Inlet, Murmansk, Russia, to protect refugees during Russian Revolution

1939 - First and only use of VADM Allan McCann's Rescue Chamber to rescue 33 men from sunken USS Squalus (SS-192)

1941 - Authorization of construction or acquisition of 550,000 tons of auxiliary shipping for Navy

1945 - Fast carrier task force aircraft attack airfields in southern Kyushu, Japan

1945 - 9 US ships damaged by concentrated kamikaze attack off Okinawa

1961 - USS Gurke notices signals from 12 men from Truk who were caught in a storm, drifted at sea for 2 months before being stranded on a island for 1 month. USS Southerland investigated, notified Truk, and provided provisions and supplies to repair their outrigger canoe. The men would be picked up on 7 June by the motor launch Kaselehlia.

1962 - Launch of Aurora 7 (Mercury 7), piloted by LCDR Malcolm Scott Carpenter, USN, who completed 3 orbits in 4 hours, 56 minutes at an altitude up to 166.8 statute miles at 17,549 mph. He was picked up by HSS-2 helicopters from USS Intrepid (CVS-11). The capsule was recovered by USS John R. Pierce (DD-753).

(Source: Navy News Service)

Categories: History Navy

Related Stories

Training Seafarers on Alt Fuels Focus of IMO

US LNG Exports Hit Record High

PhilaPort Buys Coveted Mustin Yard in Expansion Push

Current News

Hardik Gajjar Joins HDR as Maritime Planning Lead

Court Rules on DP World Djibouti Case

Liebherr Launches LiSIM ROS Simulator for Remote Operator Training

As Energy Reliability Concerns Mount, Material Handling Professionals Urged to “Prepare with Propane”

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News