Thursday, December 4, 2014

4 December. This Day in Naval History—USS Flasher (SS 249) Sinks 100,000 Tons of Enemy Ships


4 December.  This Day in Naval History—USS Flasher (SS 249) Sinks 100,000 Tons of Enemy Ships

No author. “This Day in Naval History-Dec 04.”  This Day in Naval History. 10 Dec 2001. http://www.navy.mil/search/display_history.asp.  Accessed 4 Dec 2014.

This Day in Naval History - Dec. 04




From Naval History and Heritage Command, Communication and Outreach Division

1918 - President Woodrow Wilson sails on board the transport George Washington for the Paris Peace Conference.

1943 - TBF aircraft from USS Lexington (CV 16), USS Independence (CVL 22), and USS Yorktown (CV 10) attack Kwajalein Atoll and sink the Japanese vessels Asakaze Maru, Tateyama Maru, Takunan Maru, and Mikuni Maru.

1944 - USS Flasher (SS 249) sinks Japanese destroyer Kishinami and damages a merchant ship in the South China Sea. Flasher is the only U.S. submarine to sink more than 100,000 tons of enemy shipping in World War II.

1950 - While serving with VF-32 from USS Leyte (CV 32) during the Korean War, Lt. j.g. Thomas J. Hudner crash-lands his plane near the Chosin reservoir in an effort to rescue Ensign Jesse L. Brown, another VF-32 pilot whose plane had been shot down. Hudner is awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions.

1965 - Gemini 7 is launched. The mission's command pilot is Air Force Maj. Frank F. Borman and the pilot is Lt. Cmdr. James A. Lovell. This flight consists of 206 orbits at an altitude of 327 km and lasts 13 days and 18 hours.

No comments:

Post a Comment