Nearly 300 Seabees were killed in action, while another 500 died in construction accidents. An EA-6B from VAQ-141, NAS Whidbey Island, Washington, crashed short of the runway at NAS Fallon, Nevada. 14 January 2005. Typhoon, the Other Enemy: The Third Fleet and the Pacific Storm of December 1944. 15 killed. During a storm in the Atlantic, one officer is swept off the bridge of submarine USS Cutlass (SS-478) and drowned. [premature discharge of cartridge in 6" gun]. 10 April 1963. Ensign Mack E. Vorhees and Seaman 2 class Joseph Arthur Sheridan died of injuries after their SU-2 plane crashed near Descanso, Calif. 22 June 1933. 64 USS Rowan explosion of Dynamo Turbine Casing #2 Generator killed Carpenter's Mate Willis Martin Goodrow. A civilian employee of the Navy died when he fell 70 feet from the main mast of USS Constitution while performing maintenance on the mast and rigging. Lt. (jg) Frank E. Highley died in collision between two F3R-1 planes near Ensley, Fla. 26 April 1934. CPL Felipe C. Barbosa died from a non-hostile vehicle accident in Fallujah, Iraq. A flash fire in USS Kitty Hawk (CVA-63) No. 10 May 1996. 1 October 1863. 1 August 1910. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1840s, 1912-1940. USS Extractor (ARS-15) torpedoed and sank by USS Guardfish (SS-217) in case of mistaken identification. Destroyer USS Stewart Fireman Frank M. Heil accidentally shot during rifle practice. 4 May 1918. Pilots LCDR Jeffrey Hilliard and LT Robert Wood, Jr., and Sea Air Land Team 8 member AW1 Steven Voight were killed. Steel schooner USS Elfrida boiler explosion. Naval Air Station San Diego California, CIC [Combat Information Center] Manual (RADSIX), CIC [Combat Information Center] Operation in an AGC, CIC [Combat Information Center] Yesterday and Today, CINCPAC Glossary of Commonly Used Abbreviations and Short Titles, List of Narrative Reports - Commanding Officers, Colored Persons in the Navy of the U.S. (1842), Combined Operation Craft: Small Scale Drawings, COMINT [Communications Intelligence] Contributions [to] Submarine Warfare in WW II, Command and Control of Air Operations in the Vietnam War, Commander Task Force Seventeen Operation Plan 1-45, Commander's Handbook on the Law of Naval Operations, Comparison of Military and Civilian Equivalent Grades, Compilation of Enlisted Ratings and Apprentiships US Navy 1775-1969, Condition of the Navy and Its Expenses 1821, Conflict and Cooperation: The U.S. and Soviet Navies in the Cold War, Constitution Sailors in the Battle of Lake Erie [pdf], The Continental Navy: "I Have Not Yet Begun to Fight. While replenishing ordnance in Leyte Gulf, aircraft carrier Randolph (CV-15) was buzzed by an Army P-38 Mustang that subsequently crashed her forward flight deck. 7 May 2002. DefenseLINK website news articles. All three aviators ejected but one was killed. First outbreak in Navy occurred in January 1918 on USS Minneapolis in Philadelphia Navy Yard, subsequently spreading throughout the Navy, particularly during the outbreak of September/October 1918: 4,907 died and 146,446 sick (influenza, bronchitis and all forms of pneumonia included) 1918. 13 USS Stewart. While operating off Vietnam, a turret fire and explosion in Newport News (CA-148) kills 20 and injures another 36 sailors. 24 August 1995. 6 April 2005. F/A-18 of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 251 crashed near Cold Springs, Nevada while conducting carrier air wing training from Naval Air Station Fallon, Nevada, in preparation for deployment aboard USS America (CV-66). Hugh N. Boadwee from VB-2B was killed when plane crashed into the sea off Mexico. UH-1N "Huey" from Naval Weapons Test Squadron, China Lake, California, crashed in a mountainous area of California's Sequoia National Forest. 57-41, BUREAU OF NAVIGATION CIRCULAR LETTER NO. Motorboat USS Elizabeth wrecked on jetty near Velasco TX. He was assigned to Headquarters and Service Battalion, 2nd Force Service Support Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force. CPL. S-3B "Viking" from Sea Control Squadron 38 of Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 2 aboard USS Constellation (CV 64) veered off the flight deck after making an arrested landing. 14 April 2006. 13 March 1865. 27 November 2001. Naval Operational History 19802010, New Equation: Chinese Intervention into the Korean War, Nixon's Trident: Naval Power in Southeast Asia, 1968-1972 by John D. Sherwood, Northern Barrage and Other Mining Activities, Notes on Anti-submarine Defenses ONI Publication No. Seaplane accident south of Fire Island Lightship killed Ensign Donald C. Pero. Seabees of the 11th Naval Mobile Construction Battalion lay aluminum matting on a runway damaged by enemy mortar fire at Dong Ha, Quang Tri Province, South Vietnam, 1967. The five occupants were killed. He was assigned to Combat Logistics Regiment 2, 2d Marine Logistics Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force. Three Parris Island drill instructors might have taken training too far, leading to the collapse of a recruit. 8 March 2002. Two enlisted deep sea divers burned beyond recognition, and two others functioning as "tenders" were injured (treated for smoke inhalation) during a flash fire inside a decompression chamber during a physiological experiment simulating a pressure of 250 feet of depth for two hours at the Washington Navy Yard, DC. 6 December 1864. Frigate USS Sabine Seaman John Connelly killed in ordnance accident. The date provided at the end of each entry is the date of the accident/incident, rather than the date of death of individuals who died subsequent to the event. He was assigned to 1st Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division. 27 May 2006. 50 died. In 1930, 166 sailors died from diseases, 28 sailors killed in flight accidents, 32 from naval and military hazards, and 11 poisonings. Liberty boat capsized in Mediterranean off Les Salins d'Hyeres, drowning eight sailors. One sailor is electrocuted while working in fireroom in USS Garcia (FF-1040). 11 killed, 20 injured. 83 (1867) Proclamation Issued by President Johnson, General Order No. 29 January 1862. The bottom of the high pressure cylinder blew out killing Chief Machinist Mate Harry Frank Bock and Oilers Almo Miller and Richard Curtis Smith. Aviation Pilot 1 class Arthur Thomas Mead and Donald Theodore Surber killed in crash of Great Lakes TG-2 land plane in Coronado Roads, Calif. 25 May 1932. Lt. (j. g. ) Charles M. Tyson lost in crash of seaplane off Immingham. 1 September 1920. Two Marine Corps F/A-18C "Hornets" of Fighter Attack Squadron 251, flying from USS George Washington (CVN-73) on a patrol of the no-fly zone over southern Iraq, collided about 80 miles east of Kuwait City, Kuwait. Seven crewmen killed. Killed 6. Two personnel were injured and one killed when a TH-57B Sea Ranger of Helicopter Training Squadron 8 crashed at Spencer Outlying Field, Naval Air Station Whiting Field, Florida. During 1928, 239 sailors and marines died from disease, 97 in accidents, and 8 from poisoning. 22 August 1934. CPL Justin J. Watts assigned to assigned to 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, died at Forward Operating Base Haditha Dam in Iraq from an apparent non-hostile gunshot wound. 21 May 1944. He was assigned to 1st Marine Division. PAX River, MD. 22 January 1903. 29 April 1862. 6 September 2005. 18 March 1864. Service collier USS Herman Frasch sank off Nova Scotia after collision with tanker USS George G. Henry. Gasoline fumes, from fuel spilled in bilges, asphyxiated Orrell later that evening. PFC Christian D. Gurtner was killed by a non-combat weapons discharge when his M-249 Squad Automatic Weapon discharged, firing one round into his chest near Al Kut in southern Iraq. Chief Machinist Mate Lawrence Lenehan drowned. Electrician's Mate Fireman Apprentice Michael J. Jakes Jr., died from a head injury on USS Kitty Hawk in Northern Arabian Sea during Operation Enduring Freedom. Patrol vessel USS Eagle while making passage up Delaware River was struck by a squall and capsized. 21 drowned. 1 Austrian 6-pounder Howitzer - Plaque, No. The Marines were traveling to a pumping station while in support of civil military operations when the accident occurred. David Koontz described as "bumps and bruises. F/A-18 "Hornet" of Strike Fighter Squadron 105, Naval Air Station Cecil Field, Florida, crashed during a night approach to USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71) near Puerto Rico. During night recovery operations in the Mediterranean Sea, a VQ-2 EA-3B Skywarrior crashed through the flight deck barrier on aircraft carrier Nimitz and went over the side. Subchaser #205 gasoline explosion in the engine room killed Chief Machinist Mate Clarence Gabriel Cloffer and Machinist Mates 2 class William Hughes and Daniel B. Inman. Jeremy R. Purcell was shot in the chest and killed by a live round in a blanks-only drill. 16 October 1943. A comprehensive list of such incidents would require many years of research in archival records at numerous repositories. AV-8B "Harrier" of Marine Attack Training Squadron 203, Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina, crashed at Bogue Field, North Carolina, The pilot, CAPT Grant Fukuda, ejected and was medevaced to a local hospital for treatment of minor injuries. EA-6B Prowler crashes near Coupeville, Wash., killing three crewmen. 27 May 1998. Dunnigan, James F. and Nofi, Albert A. 93-16], Riverine Warfare: The US Navy's Operations on Inland Waters, Rocks and Shoals: Articles for the Government of the U.S. Navy, The Recruitment of African Americans in the US Navy 1839, The Role of COMINT in the Battle of Midway, The Role of the United States Navy in the Formation and Development of the Federal German Navy, 1945-1970, Royal Works USS Lexington [Crossing the Line 1936], Rules for the Regulation of the Navy - 1775, The Russian Navy Visits the United States, A Sampling of U.S. A Vietnamese helicopter surveying potential sites for full-scale excavations to recover remains of Americans missing in action from the Vietnam War crashed in Quang Binh Province, Vietnam. 26 March 2003. 244 [1934] Alcoholic Liquors, General Order No. D-8 tractor driven by CD1 Max R. Kiel, USN, was swallowed by a 100 foot-deep "V" shaped crevasse while filling a crevasse 110 miles east of Little America, Antarctica, during Operation Deep Freeze I. 20 January 1864. He was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force. He was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force 7 February 2006. LT Charles Luttrell and LT Derrick Busse were injured. All 11 crew members were treated for minor injuries after rescue by Oman Air Force helicopters. 15 August 1868. 4 February 2001. Seaman John Kane killed. Screw steamer USS Huron sank in storm off North Carolina. 14 November 1999. 13 January 1975. 24 January 1919. The umbilical lines supplying air and communications to Draughon became wrapped around the ship's anchor chain. Airman Nadia T. Alten was lost overboard from USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67). The four crewmen, who escaped serious injury, were LCdr. Brian E. Anderson was killed in a non-hostile accident west of An Nasiriyah, Iraq. 19 Feb 2010. Fireman 1 class William J. Flaherty killed. USS S-51 (SS-162) sank off Block Island, N. Y. after collision with SS City of Rome. 20 January 1865. SGT James S. Lee died in Ghazni, Afghanistan, when the Army CH-47 helicopter he was on crashed. Naval Reserve officer Spencer T. Alden killed in a seaplane collision at Bay Shore, Long Island. 4 April 1933. During combat flight operations off Vietnam, USS Ranger (CVA-61) suffered a fuel line fire in her No. Dummy training shell fired from a destroyer accidentally strikes USS Opportune (ARS-41), injuring four sailors. 8 March 2002. 8, Notes on Writing Naval (not Navy) English, The Offensive Navy Since World War II: How Big and Why, A Brief Summary, Office of Naval Records and Library 1882-1946, Officers and Key Personnel Attached to the Office of Naval Records and Library 1882-1946, Officers of the Continental Navy and Marine Corps, Officers of Navy Yards, Shore Stations, and Vessels, 1 January 1865, Officers of the Continental and U.S. Navy and Marine Corps 1775-1900, Continental Marine Corps Officers: 1775-1785, Target Ships Sunk During Test Able 1 July 1946, Target Ships Sunk During Test Baker 25 July 1946, Operation NEPTUNE - The Invasion of Normandy, Chapter 1: THE STRATEGIC BACKGROUND OF OVERLORD, Chapter 2: PLANNING AND PREPARATION FOR CROSS-CHANNEL (OVERLORD) OPERATIONS, Chapter 3: THE STRATEGIC BACKGROUND OF OVERLORD, Chapter 5: Naval Preparations for Cross-Channel Operations, Chapter 7: Defensive Measures - NEPTUNE Operation, Chapter 8: Bombardment and Other Defensive Operations Against Enemy Land Forces, Chapter 10: The Build-up for the Battle of France, Operation NEPTUNE Administrative History's Table of Contents, Operations of the Navy and Marine Corps in the Philippine Archipelago, Operations of the Seventh Amphibious Force, OPNAV [Office of the Chief of Naval Operations] Acronyms, Our Vanishing History and Traditions - Knox, Admiral Nimitz's Pacific Fleet Confidential Letter on Lessons of Damage in Typhoon, Personnel Casualties Suffered by Third Fleet, 17-18 December 1944, Compiled from Official Sources, Aircraft Losses Suffered by Third Fleet, 17-18 December 1944, Compiled From Official Sources, Extracts Relating to the Typhoon from Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet Report, Extracts from Commander Carrier Division Six Report, Extract from Report of Task Group Thirty-eight point one, Peacekeeping and Related Stability Operations: Issues of U.S. Military Involvement, The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 1941 - Overview, "Pearl Harbor Revisited: USN Communications Intelligence", USS Arizona - Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS California- Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS Maryland - Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS Oklahoma - Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS Tennessee - Report by Survivor of Pearl Harbor Attack, USS West Virginia - Reports by Survivors of Pearl Harbor Attack, Pearl Harbor: Why, How, Fleet Salvage and Final Appraisal, Personal Identification Tags or "Dog Tags", BUREAU OF NAVIGATION CIRCULAR LETTER NO. 4 (1863) Emancipation Proclamation, General Order No. Five personnel on leave were drowned: Ordinary Seaman John Finley, Coal Passer Harman Fisher, Ordinary Seaman Clyde William Knight, Ordinary Seaman Charles Uhler and Coal Passer John Sidney Widmer. [1994-2006. Flight 19, comprised of 5 TBM Avengers on a training flight from Fort Lauderdale, FL, strayed off course, ran out of fuel and crashed into heavy seas. 134 killed and 161 injured. Morison, Samuel Eliot. Various disaffected groups in the world have increasingly made use of terrorism as a weapon. 12 September 1913. 26 November 1964. This Week in Seabee History: April 28 - May 4 Battleship No. 20 November 2005. LT George M. Bache drowned, 8 September 1846. 24 March 1995. H-60 "Seahawk" of Test and Evaluation Squadron (VX) 1, Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, training at Naval Air Station Fallon, Nevada, crashed while assisting in a search and rescue effort for a missing private aircraft. William W. White of 3rd Amphibious Assault Battalion, 1st Marine Division, was killed in a vehicle accident in Iraq. During 1926, 20 sailors died from disease, 22 killed in flight accidents, 48 died from injury or drowning, and 3 from poisoning. T-34C "Turbo-Mariner" of Marine Fighter-Attack Training Squadron 101 crashed 11 miles northeast of Marine Corps Air Station El Toro, California. Schooner USS Lynx disappeared en route from St. Mary's GA to Jamaica. How many seabees died in vietnam? - vietnam - 2023 This alphanumeric hull designation system is still in use today. 30 June 1814. Information in Relation to the Naval Protection Afforded to The Commerce of the United States in the West India Islands, &c. &c. Injury and Destruction of Navy Vessels by Earthquakes, Dec. 1868, Inquiry Into Occupation and Administration of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, Instances of Use of US Armed Forces Abroad, 1798 - 2004, Instructional Material for the Fight Against Enemy Propaganda, Instructions for the examination and entry into United States Ports in time of war, Instructions on Reception, Care and Training of Homing Pigeons, Inter-Allied Naval Relations and the Birth of NATO, Interrogations of Japanese Officials - Vol. 28 May 1895. 9-29-322, Unit 296 B.S. Following manual takeoff, they were supposed to parachute out over the English Channel while the radio-controlled explosive-filled drone proceeded to attack a German V-2 missile-launching site. 11 November 1958. 12 August 1960. Ship's Corporal Philip Mullane killed. An explosion during an ordnance experiment at the Washington Navy Yard killed two workers. Accidental explosion of a bomb on a seaplane killed Ensign Edmund B. Barry. Screw sloop-of-war USS Iroquois sailor killed by accidental discharge of gun. 62, USS Quincy CA39, Astoria CA34 & Vincennes CA44 War Damage Report No. 138 killed and 60 injured. Ensign Malcolm Dulaney drowned following crash near Naval Air Station, San Diego. 23 March 2003. Gunboat No. USS New Mexico (BB-40) Seaman 1 class Michael Andrey fatally injured when a 60-lb powder bag was thrown against him by the shell rammer. Admiral William B. Caperton of the 1918 Influenza on Armored Cruiser No. Shurcliff, W.A. 17 June 1982. Lance Corporal Darin T. Settle died from a non-hostile motor vehicle accident in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. 8 April 2000. F/A-18C "Hornet" of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 232, stationed at Naval Air Station Miramar, California, crashed near Naval Air Facility El Centro, California. Destroyer No. There was another explosion on the following day in a boiler room. 5 USS Decatur ammunition explosion kills Chief Gunner's Mate William U. Hayden and Gunner's Mates 3 class Ewell Bell and Loid J. Elkins. Washington DC: Naval Historical Center, 1959-1991. Jonathan W. Lambert assigned to Headquarters Battalion, 1st Marine Division, died from injuries he suffered when his High-Mobility, Multi-purpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV) rolled over in Iraq. 152-41, Perspectives on Enhanced Interrogation Techniques, Philadelphia Experiment: ONR Information Sheet, The Pioneers - A Monograph on the First Two Black Chaplains in the Chaplains Corps of the United States Navy, Plea in Favor of Maintaining Flogging in the Navy, Pocket Guide to New Guinea and the Solomons, Posse Comitatus Act and Related Matters: A Sketch, Post Mortem CIC [Combat Information Center] Notes, Radio Intelligence Appreciations Concerning German U-Boat Activity in the Far East, Ready Seapower: A History of the US Seventh Fleet by Edward J. Marolda [pdf]. Armored cruiser USS New York Turret Captain William B. Ahearne killed during Morris tube firing practice. The pilot was killed. 10 December 1910. Pilot parachuted to safety. 32 drowned. Aviation Machinist's Mate 1 class Henry John Allen and Photographer 1 class Eugene Anthony Auger both killed in surface collision between their Martin PM-2 two-engined seaplane and the US Coast Guard Cutter Tamaroa off San Diego. A 5-inch gun mount explosion on USS Wyoming (BB-32) kills 6 marines and wounds 11 others. 29 May 2001. 5-ton truck participating in a battalion field firing exercise apparently jack-knifed while towing a M198 (155mm howitzer). 2 December 1973. 9 April 2005. 30 March 2003. 23 May 1934. Nearly 300 Seabees were killed in action, while another 500 died in construction accidents. Both crews ejected. Protected cruiser USS Boston Coxswain Vernon D. Dunnell, while serving on the Oregon Naval Militia training ship, seriously injured by premature explosion of a six-pound saluting charge. HH-60H "Seahawk" of Helicopter Antisubmarine Squadron 15 on board USS Enterprise (CVN-65) crashed in the northern Persian Gulf during a routine training mission. 31 October 1937. 25 August 1917. Iron screw steamer USS Nina, last sighted off the Capes of the Chesapeake in a gale. Midshipman 2d Class John Paul Ruggiero apparently fell from his fourth floor Bancroft Hall dormitory window and died at the Naval Academy. UH-1N "Huey" from Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 166 crashed in the Chocolate Mountains of Imperial County, California, during a routine training maneuver. He was a boatswain's mate on the USS Essex at Sasebo Naval Base, Japan. 24 April 1995. 11 February 2002. 8 July 2009. 4 July 1945. 1 million. Seven people were missing when two T-39N apparently collided midair, south of Pensacola, 1530L hrs., 2 Raytheon pilots, 1 Royal Saudi Air Force, 3 US Navy, 1 USMC. USS Truxtun (DD-229) and USS Pollux (AKS-2) ran aground during a storm in Placentia Bay, Newfoundland, and broke up in surf. Minesweeper USS Auk Boatswain's Mate 1 class Lee Afton Singleton knocked overboard and drowned after kite wire jumped out of retaining chock. Battleship No. Sweetman, Jack. 10 March 1891. 8 killed. 30 October 1990. The plane then followed into the water. 17 June 1983. 292 (1882) Establishment of the Office of Intelligence, General Order No. Gunboat USS Bennington explosion in port fire room compartment filled most of the living compartments and deck space with steam and ashes. Fleet Hospital Three treated 600 patients; 2 died. A collision between tanker SS Tom Bigbee and USS McMorris (DE-1036) about 75 miles southeast of Honolulu kills two sailors and injures seven others. 3 USS Chauncey sank in collision with British civilian merchant steamer Rose off Gibralter. 81 (1866) Requirements of Guardians for Boy to Enlist, General Order No. USS Forrestal (CVA-59) fire and explosions on flight deck during combat operations off Vietnam. 15 January 1969. Three crewmembers were killed when an S-3B "Viking" of Sea Control Squadron 22 crashed into the Caribbean Sea while operating from USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75). Pandemic of influenza. According to a Bureau of Naval Personnel Memorandum http://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/a/aviation-personnel-fatalities-in-world-war-ii.html, 3,257 naval aviation personnel were killed in an unknown number of non-combat related aircraft crashes between 7 December 1941 and 31 December 1946. Columbia Space Shuttle (Mission STS-107) broke apart during re-entry to Earth's atmosphere over Texas. Destroyers USS Hull (DD-350), USS Spence (DD-512), and USS Monaghan (DD-354) capsized and sank, at least 28 other vessels damaged. Monitor and the C.S.S. During target practice aboard USS Trevor, Seaman 2 class Orville Wray Terry fatally injured when struck in the head by a rotating shell in an ammunition hoist. 14 November 1918. A-6E "Intruder" from VA-115 crashed during a low level training route over Yoshinogawa River on the island of Shikoku, Japan. 14 July 1916. 27 August 1994. 27 May 1995. He suffered cardiac arrest en route to the hospital and pronounced dead by hospital staff later that evening. Rigid airship USS Shenandoah (ZR-1) crashed in storm near Marietta OH. 21 August 1863. 1 May 1936. 30 November 1952. 30 Marines and 1 Navy corpsman died. 12 June 1943. 24 marines drowned. USS Francis Marion (LPA-249) in a collision with Greek freighter off Virginia, two sailors injured. 7 December 1918. Four killed. 29 September 1863. 1 March 2002. F-4 **** crashes in the Chesapeake Bay, two killed. At Fresno Yosemite Intl Airport, a UH-1N helicopter crashed at 1800 hrs. 1 SAR crew injured, 1 civilian death. Seabee chief petty officer collapsed during battalion run and later died at hospital. Collier USS Cyclops lost at sea without a trace. 50 cal machine gun in Iraq. 7 November 2001. Accidental ignition of hydraulic fluid in catapult system starts a fire in Leyte (CV-32) at the Charlestown Naval Shipyard, Boston. 19 February 1916. Appendix C: Allied Participation and Contributions, Appendix F: Aircraft and Personnel Losses, US Navy instruction for the destruction of signal books, 1863, US Navy Interviewer's Classification Guide, US Navy Motor Torpedo Boat Operational Losses, US Navy Nurse Corps General Uniform Instructions, 1917, US Navy in Operation Enduring Freedom, 2001-2002, US Navy Personnel in World War II: Service and Casualty Statistics, US Navy Personnel Strength, 1775 to Present, US Navy Sailors Operating Ashore as Artillerymen Roth, US Navy Ships Lost in Selected Storm/Weather Related Incidents, US Navy Special Operations in the Korean War, US Navy Submarines Losses, Selected Accidents, and Selected Incidents of Damage Resulting from Enemy Action, Chronological, US Occupation Assistance: Iraq, Germany and Japan Compared, US Prisoners of War and Civilian American Citizens Captured, US Radar: Operational Characteristics of Radar Classified by Tactical Application, USS Constitution, Capture of Cyane and Levant, USS John S. McCain (DDG 56) Memorial Ceremony, USS Kearsarge Rescues Soviet Soldiers, 1960, USS Monitor Versus CSS Virginia and the Battle for Hampton Roads, USS Pirate; Selected documents on the Salvage of USS Pirate and USS Pledge, USS West Virgina, Report of Salvage, Pearl Harbor, The U.S. Navy Enlistment, Instruction, Pay and Advancement, Vessels Lost and Salvaged, Report of the Secretary of the Navy, 1916, Viet-Nam Free-World Challenge in Southeast Asia, Voyage of the Jamestown on Her Errand of Mercy, Destroyer Report - Gunfire, Bomb and Kamikaze Damage, Destroyer Report - Torpedo and Mine Damage and Loss in Action, Submarine Report - Vol. 19 December 1960. Commissioned in 1968, it set a record test depth of more than 3,000 feet. 28 June 1971. 21 April 1952. Lance CPL Trevor D. Aston died as a result of non-hostile vehicle incident in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. Possible causes include faulty wiring or FM signals from a nearby transmitter. 1st Light Armored Reconn (LAR) Battalion, US Marine Corps Corporal was acting as one of two required ground guides in order to assist in moving an M-813 5-ton truck off a loading ramp. Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal fell to his death from the seventh floor of the Naval Hospital at Bethesda, Md. 22 January 1863. 24 February 1996. 21 USS Milwaukee grounded and abandoned on Samoa Beach, near Eureka, Calif. No injuries. 29 July 1967. Bark USS Restless Ordinary Seaman Edward Deleman killed in ordnance accident. F/A-18C "Hornet" of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 314 crashed during a night landing on USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) in the north Pacific. 13 March 2006. Ensign William G. Sprague killed in a seaplane accident at Iletudy, Italy. 259 (1917) Executive Order and Message on Death of Admiral Dewey, General Order No. 10 April 1999. 20 April 1912. Recollections of Capture by the Germans, Imprisonment, and Escape of Lieutenant Edouard Victor Isaacs, U.S.N. Midshipman Wingate Pilsbury drowned near Vera Cruz, Mexico, 25 July 1846. 232 (1877) Working Hours at Navy Yards and Stations, General Order No. Armored cruiser No. In Iraq his unit was attached to 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward). F/A-18 of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 134 overshot the runway and crash landed at Naval Air Station Miramar, California. 19 USS Sacramento steam launch accident resulted in the drowning of Fireman 1 class Frank Elmer Wright in the Mississippi River at New Orleans. 17 April 1919. Submarine chaser USS PC-457 sank after colliding with the merchant ship SS Norluna north of San Juan, Puerto Rico. 12 August 1944. USS Housatonic Fireman 2d Class Roy Herbert Jolley crushed to death between rudder arc and top of mine tunnel. Annapolis MD: Naval Institute Press, 1990. Heavy waves wash three sailors from the deck of USS Barbel (SS-580) while operating off Kyushu, Japan. 22 December 1967. 9 July 2002. 55 USS Cushing steam accident seriously burnt Boilermaker 1 class Thomas Francis Flannery who died the following day in the Naval Hospital at New York NY. 241 Navy, 1 Marine, 5 Coast Guard and 73 civilians killed; 390 injured including 233 African-American Navy personnel. 19 April 1989. 23 March 2003. Scott Morrissey, pilot, and Mary Keiming, co-tactical coordinator; and AW1 Charles Colvin, sensor operator. 42 USS Jenkins, killing Seaman 2 class William Lusso. 5 April 1919. The driver and tractor were swallowed by the ice.
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