Monthly Archives: April 2014

New book published. Woot!

In the interest of giving back, I wrote a book on small game hunting geared to readers 11 and up. I cut my teeth as a youngster on books like
this and felt like I should pass on what I have learned.

Small Game Hunting from OTTN Press/Eldorado Ink

Small Game Hunting

“Hunting for small game, such as squirrels, rabbits, wild hogs, upland birds like quail and doves, and waterfowl, is an enjoyable pastime, as
well as a popular way to introduce young people to shooting sports. This guide provides information on choosing the right firearm and
handling it safely, as well as a wealth of tips and tricks for hunting many varieties of small game.”

Hopefully it will make a young boy or girl yearn to go into the dark woods on occasion.

If so, I can count myself as having an accomplishment.

Tea gathered in Boston Harbor…kinda neat

"Tea that was gathered up on the Shore of Dorchester Neck on the morning after the destruction of the three Cargos at Boston December 17, 1773"

“Tea that was gathered up on the Shore of Dorchester Neck on the morning after the destruction of the three Cargos at Boston December 17, 1773”

Killed At The Battle of Gettysburg And May Now Be Close To Receiving The Medal Of Honor in 2014!

1861 West Point class photo of Alonzo Cushing. He was killed in action at Gettysburg and there has been a recent movement to award him a Congressional Medal of Honor. submitted

1861 West Point class photo of Alonzo Cushing. He was killed in action at Gettysburg and there has been a recent movement to award him a Congressional Medal of Honor.

He Was Killed At The Battle of Gettysburg And May Now Be Close To Receiving The Medal Of Honor in 2014! – Holding His Intestines With One Hand, Cushing Refused To Leave His Cannons And His Men

(As of March 2014, the nomination awaits review by the Defense Department before being approved by President Barack Obama)

Margaret Zerwekh thought Alonzo Cushing deserved the Medal of Honor. So she wrote a letter to her congressman to correct what she thought was an injustice. That was more than three decades ago. Zerwekh is now 93, and Cushing appears to be on the verge of receiving the nation’s highest honor for valor. Tucked deep in the defense bill passed is a provision to posthumously award the Medal of Honor to Cushing, an artillery officer from Delafield killed at the Battle of Gettysburg. Zerwekh can’t remember when she wrote her first letter on behalf of Cushing to then-Sen. William Proxmire, but it was sometime in the 1980s.

Among the many men who died in the nation’s bloodiest battle was Cushing, a first lieutenant in charge of an artillery battery of six cannons and 110 men. On July 3, 1863, the third and final day of the Battle of Gettysburg, Cushing and his soldiers in Battery A, 4th U.S. Artillery, were stationed near a small grove of trees in a spot known as “the Angle” because of a nearby stone fence.

The Angle bore the brunt of the tragic and misguided gamble known as Pickett’s Charge. Before Confederate soldiers were sent to their deaths in the charge, Confederate artillery launched a ferocious bombardment that decimated Cushing’s unit. When it stopped, Cushing had only two working cannons and a few soldiers still standing. In the cannonade, a shell fragment pierced Cushing’s shoulder and shrapnel tore through his abdomen and groin. Holding his intestines with one hand, Cushing refused to leave his cannons and his men.

Battery A moved the two remaining guns to a stone wall and blasted away at the charging Confederates. A few seconds after he yelled “I will give them one more shot,” Cushing was struck in the mouth by a bullet that killed him instantly.

He was 22.

Cushing’s body was returned to his family in Delafield, and they buried him at West Point beneath a tombstone inscribed “Faithful until death.”

Read more from Journal Sentinel:   WIKI   Facebook

Special hattip Civil War Parlor

 

Get a Grip: Angled vs. Vertical Forward AR Grips

Back in the old days, Eugene Stoner and company decided that the plastic hand guard around the barrel and gas tube of the AR was good enough for just about any grip past the magazine well. After all, as long as your support arm had something to hold on to, you were cooking
with gas. (Or at least gas impingement)

Well, about that.

magpul angeled foregrip
Read the rest in my column at University of Guns.com

Tom Polgar, last CIA Station Chief in Saigon, shuffles off this mortal coil

polgar

Mr. Thomas Polgar has passed away. He was the last CIA station chief in Saigon during the Vietnam War, and helped direct the frantic last minute airborne evacuation of U.S. citizens and Vietnamese leaders during the final days of the war in 1975. He died March 22 at his home in Winter Park, Fla. He was 91.

Here is his obituary in the Washington Post and tells the tale of how he went from a Hungarian in exile to joining the OSS during WWII and finally the CIA in 1947.

 

Saigon-hubert-van-es

His last telegram before smashing his machines read as follows:

1. WITH RECEIPT PRESIDENTIAL MESSAGE ADVISING THAT EVACUATION AMERICAN EMBASSY SAIGON MUST BE COMPLETED BEFORE 0345 LOCAL TIME 30 APRIL, WISH TO ADVISE THAT THIS WILL BE THE FINAL MESSAGE FROM SAIGON STATION.

2. IT WILL TAKE US ABOUT TWENTY MINUTES TO DESTROY EQUIPMENT. ACCOMPLISH BY APPROXIMATELY 0320 HOURS LOCAL. WE MUST TERMINATE CLASSIFIED TRANSMISSIONS

3. IT HAS BEEN A LONG FIGHT AND WE HAVE LOST. THIS EXPERIENCE UNIQUE IN THE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES DOES NOT SIGNAL NECESSARILY THE DEMISE OF THE UNITED STATES AS A WORLD POWER. THE SEVERITY OF THE DEFEAT AND THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF IT, HOWEVER, WOULD SEEM TO CALL FOR A REASSESSMENT OF THE POLICIES OF NIGGARDLY HALF MEASURES WHICH HAVE CHARACTERIZED MUCH OF OUR PARTICIPATiON HERE DESPITE THE COMMITMENT OF MANPOWER AND RESOURCES WHICH WERE CERTAINLY GENEROUS. THOSE WHO FAIL TO LEARN FROM HISTORY ARE FORCED TO REPEAT IT. LET US HOPE THAT WE WILL NOT HAVE ANOTHER VIETNAM EXPERIENCE AND THAT WE HAVE LEARNED OUR LESSON.

SAIGON SIGNING OFF.

— Seems Strangley haunting these days.

Warship Wednesday April 2, The Lost Dorado

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday April 2, The Lost Dorado

USS_Dorado_(SS-248)

Here we see the Gato-class fleet submarine USS Dorado (SS-248) fitting out just before commissioning–note the Rosie the Riveter types on deck.  Named after the mahi mahi fish, the Dorado had a very short life, but one that will live on forever in what she left behind.

A member of the famous Gato-class of fleet submarines, Dorado was but one of 77 of that extended family commissioned between 1943-44. These 311-foot long boats could make 21-knots on the surface, which meant they could chase down just about any Japanese Maru that was on the ocean. Her 11,000-mile range and 24 torpedo magazine allowed her to stay at sea, taking the war to the Japanese home islands, for upto 75 days at a time.

The Gatos were some of the most famous of US fleet boats in WWII, and they suffered for it, with 20 being lost at sea. Ships of this class included USS Wahoo who, under Mush Morton, slaughtered an entire Japanese convoy off New Guinea all by her self. USS Cavalla, assassin of the Japanese aircraft carrier (and Pearl Harbor veteran) Shokaku. USS Albacore, who took the carrier Taiho, the flagship of Vice-Admiral Jisaburo Ozawa’s fleet– was a Gato. The USS Flasher, the most successful US sub of the war, with over 100,000-tons to her credit, was also Gato.

All of these 77 Gatos, save the Dorado, would fight in the Pacific, but the ill-fated submarine would never make it that far.

Laid down 27 August 1942 at the famous General Dynamics Electric Boat yard, Groton, Connecticut, Dorado was completed just one year and one day later, and commissioned 28 August 1943.

In September, she took aboard two artists employed by the US War Department, Thomas Hart Benton  and Georges Schreiber to document the ship’s cruise and preserve the images of a fleet boat at sea during wartime operations (although safely in US waters most of the time).

Schreiber and Benton along with the Dorado's skipper, Sept 1943

Schreiber and Benton along with the Dorado’s skipper, Sept 1943

While underway  Schreiber and Benton sketched, painted and interacted with the crew. They even got some excitement when the ship encountered a derelict vessel in the sea-lanes that Dorado dispatched with her deck guns.

The art from that cruise lives on for eternity.

Going Home by Georges Schreiber

Going Home by Georges Schreiber

Up Periscope by Thomas Hart Benton,

Up Periscope by Thomas Hart Benton,

Score Another One, Thomas Hart Benton

Score Another One, Thomas Hart Benton

 

Dorado‘s sea trials proved the readiness of the crew, and she sailed from New London, Connecticut, on 6 October 1943 for the Panama Canal Zone.

She did not arrive.

It is thought that she was sent to the bottom by a friendly fire attack of the US Mariner aircraft (of VP-210 USN/P-9, pilot Lt(jg) Daniel T. Felix, Jr.) stationed on NAS Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on 12 Oct, 1943. The aircraft was patrolling around the convoy GAT-92 and dropped three depth charges and one bomb on a surfaced U-boat at 20.51 hours on 12 October.

Another theory is that she ran into a minefield set by German U-214. Between 15.51 hours on 19.02 hours on 8 Oct, 1943, U-214 had laid a mine field of 15 mines off Colon. It is possible that USS Dorado (SS 248) was lost on one of these mines when she passed the area on her way to Colon on 14 October. The mine field was detected on 16 October and ten mines swept.

Overdue at Colon, Dorado is still considered on eternal patrol.

2085352_med

A memorial to Dorado has been constructed in the Veterans Memorial Park in Wichita, Kansas while the USS Dorado Assoc still keeps watch that some day she will be found. In 2007 a remote sensing survey was conducted to try and find her resting place.

To visit a sister-ship of the lost Dorado, Six retired Gatos are on display in the United States:

USS Cavalla is at Seawolf Park near Galveston, Texas (in SSK configuration).
USS Cobia is at the Wisconsin Maritime Museum.
USS Drum is at Battleship Memorial Park in Mobile, Alabama.
USS Cod is on display in Cleveland. It does not have doors cut through its pressure hull nor stairwells added.
USS Croaker is on display in Buffalo, New York (in SSK configuration).
USS Silversides is on display in Muskegon, Michigan.

Go aboard and pay your respects.

Specs:

Click to embiggen

Click to embiggen

Displacement:     1,525 long tons (1,549 t) surfaced, 2,424 long tons (2,463 t) submerged
Length:     311 ft 9 in (95.02 m)
Beam:     27 ft 3 in (8.31 m)
Draft:     17 ft (5.2 m) maximum
Propulsion:     4 × General Motors Model 16-248 V16 diesel engines driving electrical generators
2 × 126-cell Sargo batteries
4 × high-speed General Electric electric motors with reduction gears
two propellers
5,400 shp (4.0 MW) surfaced
2,740 shp (2.0 MW) submerged
Speed:     21 kn (39 km/h) surfaced,[4] 9 kn (17 km/h) submerged
Range:     11,000 nmi (20,000 km) surfaced @ 10 kn (19 km/h)
Endurance:     48 hours @ 2 kn (3.7 km/h) submerged, 75 days on patrol
Test depth:     300 ft (91 m)
Complement:     6 officers, 54 enlisted
Armament:     10 × 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes  (six forward, four aft) with 24 torpedoes
1 × 3-inch (76 mm) / 50 caliber deck gun
Bofors 40 mm and Oerlikon 20 mm cannon

If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find http://www.warship.org/

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

Nearing their 50th Anniversary, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Remington XP100 Bolt-action Pistols: The godfather of hunting handguns?

What would you do if you are a venerated rifle and shotgun maker and your customers keep asking about hunting pistols? Simple. Take your proven bolt-action rifle, chop it down, and give the world the Remington XP100. When you look at the Remington XP100, at first you may think it’s a sawn off rifle, similar to the Russian Obrez—and in concept you wouldn’t be too far off. Remington, instead of trying to make an accurate pistol, took the action of an already accurate rifle, and set it into a dedicated handgun-sized frame.

dogleg bolt action white diamonds and zytel stock mark this xp100 as a nice early gun
Read more in my column at Guns.com

How to tell buffer tubes

Ever have a hard time figuring it out on your AR builds?

Save for future use.

Click to embiggen

Click to embiggen

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