This Day in Naval History - February 01

U.S. Navy
Wednesday, February 1, 2012

From the Navy News Service:

  • 1941 - The U.S. fleet is reorganized, reviving the Atlantic and Pacific Fleets.
  • 1942 - USS Enterprise (CV 6) and USS Yorktown (CV 5) make the first World War II air strike on the Japanese in the Marshall Islands.
  • 1955 - Operation Deep Freeze, a research task force, is established in Antarctica.
  • 2003 - Space shuttle Columbia broke apart during re-entry on mission STS-107. Cmdr. William C. McCool (Pilot), Capt. David M. Brown (Mission Specialist) and Cmdr. Laurel B. Clark (Mission Specialist) were killed in the incident, along with four other astronauts.

For more information about naval history, visit the Naval Historical Center Web site at www.history.navy.mil.

Categories: Eye on the Navy Government Update History Navy People & Company News

Related Stories

First Tanker Docks at Venezuela After New U.S. License

Tough Transshipment Penalties Not Expected Immediately Despite US Tariffs

Noatum Maritime Expands, Opens Shanghai Office

Current News

Port of Los Angeles Reports Busiest Month Ever

The Pasha Group Acquires Assets of MacMillan-Piper LLC, Tacoma Transload LLC

CK Hutchison: "Reasonable Chance" $22.8B Ports Sale Will Go Through

Bunker Sales Surge in Singapore

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News