Monthly Archives: June 2015

Warship Wednesday June 10, 2015: The first Red Castle

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off 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. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday June 10, 2015: The first Red Castle

Photo colorized by irootoko_jr   http://blog.livedoor.jp/irootoko_jr/  Click image go big up

Photo colorized by irootoko_jr http://blog.livedoor.jp/irootoko_jr/ Click image goes big up

Here we see the Maya-class gunboat Akagi of the Imperial Japanese Navy in 1902 at Kure. She was the first domestically built steel-hulled warship in Japan, but she would not be the last.

Opened to the West in the 1850s, the ships of the Shogunal and Domain naval forces rapidly evolved from wooden-hulled domestic sailing ships to screw-driven steamships (Kanrin Maru, 1857) to ironclads (French-built Kōtetsu ex-CSS Stonewall in 1869) to iron-hulled ships ordered overseas and built domestically. By 1875, the Japanese were sending iron steamships to intervene in the hidden kingdom of Korea and roam as far away as the French Atlantic ports.

In 1883, the Navy ordered a class of four iron-ribbed, iron-sheathed, two-master gunboats with a horizontal double expansion reciprocating steam engine with two cylindrical boilers driving two screws. The first of these, Maya, was laid down at the Onohama Shipyards (now Hitachi) at Kobe in 1885 while a sister, Chōkai, was laid down at the Ishikawajima-Hirano Shipyards in Tokyo the next year. Then followed an experiment, the bi-metal iron and steel composite hulled sistership Atago laid down at Yokosuka Naval Arsenal.

Sistership Atago gives a good port-side profile

Sistership Atago gives a good port-side profile. Note the extensive awning use to keep the crew from dying of heatstroke

The class was rounded out with a fourth ship developed from lessons learned in the first three– the all-steel hulled Akagi— laid down at Onohama in 1886.

All four ships were named after well-known mountains in the Empire, with Akagi carrying the moniker of the famous Mount Akagi in Gunma Prefecture. The name translates to Red Castle and the 6,000-foot high summit has long been an object of worship in the area, with the cold north winds coming down the mountain termed Akagi-oroshi or Karakkaze.

While these were not impressive ships, just 600-650 tons and but 155-feet in length, you have to remember that Shogunal Japan was just opened to the West a scant quarter century before and here they are building their own steel warships to European standards locally.

Akagi, who always seems to be photographed from the starboard. Note the beefy ass Teutonic 8-incher on deck...now THATs a gunboat

Akagi, who always seems to be photographed from the starboard. Note the beefy ass Teutonic 8-incher on deck…now THATs a gunboat

Of course, they had some experts to help out though. These classy schooner-rigged gunboats were designed by the French, carried British locomotion suites, and mounted a good German Krupp-made 8-inch (210mm) gun, a 120mm Krupp rapid-fire and a pair of English Nordenfelt-made anti-torpedo boat batteries (the Russians had just sank a Turkish ship in 1877 using just such infernal small boats).

Commissioned 20 August 1890, Akagi soon saw service in Japan’s first modern war, sailing as the escort to flagship Saikyo Maru during the Sino-Japanese War of 1894. Captain Hachiro Sakamoto commanded her, from a long dynasty of samurai.

akagi 1894

Checking out Akagi’s 210mm Krupp hood ornament. Click to big up

During the pivotal Battle of the Yalu River, Sakamoto swung Akagi between the lightly protected transport carrying Admiral Kabeyama Sukenori, and the Chinese fleet (led ironically enough by American adventurers).

She soon became locked in mortal combat with the larger German-built Chinese cruiser (2,900-tons, 270 feet, 9.4-inches of armor) Laiyeun. Although more than four times the size of the Japanese gunboat, and despite the fact that the Chinese guns killed both Sakamoto and severely injured his executive officer Lt. (later Admiral and head of the Naval War College which crafted Japanese Naval theory in the 1920s) Satō Tetsutarō, the Akagi kept fighting despite being holed 8 times with 210mm German shells (small world, right?).

Great Japanese Naval Victory off Haiyang Island” by Nakamura Shûkô. Akagi in gleaming white, Chinese sailors tumbling into the dark sea

Great Japanese Naval Victory off Haiyang Island” by Nakamura Shûkô. Akagi in gleaming white, Chinese sailors tumbling into the dark sea

Akagi gave as good as she got, hammering the Laiyeun extensively, leaving her to limp off and be sunk later in the war unrepaired. Her sisters Atago and Chōkai likewise shellacked the Chinese Admiral Ding Ruchang’s flagship, the 8,000-ton German-built battleship Dingyuan (3x305mm guns, whose shells were filled with sawdust rather than powder due to corruption).

Lieutenant Commander Sakamoto of the Imperial Warship Akagi Fights Bravely by Mizuno

Lieutenant Commander Sakamoto of the Imperial Warship Akagi Fights Bravely by Mizuno

This defense of the flag by the Akagi helped carry the day and a woodblock print of the action became famous in Japan, receiving widespread duplication.

Further, a martial song was created, “Sakamoto Major, bravely of Akagi” which endured throughout the Imperial Navy through World War II and was the battle song of the Pearl Harbor carrier of the same name.

The naval review that emperor sees booty ship of the Sino-Japanese War 1895. Photo colorized by irootoko_jr   http://blog.livedoor.jp/irootoko_jr/

The naval review that emperor sees booty ship of the Sino-Japanese War 1895. Photo colorized by irootoko_jr http://blog.livedoor.jp/irootoko_jr/

Akagi came home from her first war covered with glory and was repaired.

She was soon again in Chinese waters in 1899 as part of the Boxer Rebellion expeditionary force. In 1904, she was back in combat against the Russians, helping to bottle up the Tsar’s Pacific Squadron at Port Arthur and later invade Sakhalin island (which is still at least half-Japanese today).

It was during the Port Arthur blockade that her sister Atago came too close to an uncharted bar and grounded and sank 6 November 1904. Soon after the war, Akagi and her two remaining sisters were disarmed and laid up, obsolete.

1908

1908

In 1911, Akagi was sold to Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha, repainted, and dubbed Akagi Maru, continued in service as a coastal steamer until 1921 when she was sold to Amagasaki, another steamship company that kept her in steady tramp work until World War II.

Able to float in just 9 feet of water, Akagi Maru was used extensively during that conflict to run close to the coast and away from American submarines, becoming one of the few ships still afloat in 1945– although she did settle on the bottom during the great Halsey Typhoon that year. Raised, she remained in commercial service until 1953 when she was laid up for a final time.

She was scrapped in 1963, her good steel being recycled.

Specs:

Displacement: 614 long tons (624 t)
Length: 47.0 m (154.2 ft.)
Beam: 8.2 m (26 ft. 11 in)
Draught: 2.95 m (9 ft. 8 in)
Installed power: 950 ihp (710 kW)
Propulsion: 2 × horizontally mounted reciprocating steam engine
2 boilers, 2 × screws
Sail plan: Schooner-rigged
Speed: 10.25 kn (18.98 km/h; 11.80 mph)
Capacity: 60 t (66 short tons) coal
Complement: 104
Armament: 1x 210 mm (8 in) Krupp L/22 breech-loading gun
1x Krupp 120 mm (4.7 in) L/22 breech-loading gun
2x quadruple 1-inch Nordenfelt guns

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!

Mad Max of North Africa

The Russian 30 mm/63 AK-230 system dates from the 1950s and consists of an automatic, stabilized naval mounting containing two 30 mm (1.2″) liquid-cooled revolver cannons, with the automatics working from the power of the exhaust. Rate of fire is over 1,000 rounds per minute and when you consider the projectiles are 2.36-pound shells that fire an explosive round about the size of a Red Bull can, you understand how swag these are even if they are slightly dated when it comes to close-in weapons systems.

30 mm/63 AK-230 on Yugoslavian Kotor class Frigate Picture courtesy of Yugoslavian military magazine "Novi Glasnik" via navweaps

30 mm/63 AK-230 on Yugoslavian Kotor class Frigate Picture courtesy of Yugoslavian military magazine “Novi Glasnik” via navweaps

Well the Libyans have removed some of these from ships of their former Navy that are now, courtesy of NATO airstrikes, scrap metal settled on the seabed along their piers.

And at least two are in use Mad Max style as super-technicals

From Oryx

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The single Natya-class minesweeper already sunk close to a year before due a lack of maintenance, but not before it was deprived of both of its AK-230 gun emplacements, which were subsequently installed on the Kamaz and Scania trucks.

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To allow for easier access to the guns and munition, the turret was removed. The two 30mm NN-30 cannons are belt-fed, with each belt holding five-hundred rounds. Reloading the two cannons is extremely time-consuming, even for an experienced crew.

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Mount up! Saddle ring Marlin cowboy guns

Harkening back to the good old “hell for leather” days of the U.S. cavalry, the saddle ring attachment on Marlin lever action rifles have been around for over a century and is still available (of sorts) today.

Why the saddle ring?

Close up of Marlin 1893 SRC .30-30 Win caliber saddle ring carbine via Collectors Arms http://archives.collectorsfirearms.com/?category=929&page=29&category=&product=r5187

Close up of Marlin 1893 SRC .30-30 Win caliber saddle ring carbine via Collectors Arms

European horse soldiers of the Napoleonic Wars often added a small carbine to their more traditional armament of saddle pistol, saber, heavy sword, and lance. At some point, a clever fellow figured out that the easiest way to carry these short rifles was to sling a strap across their chest from shoulder to waist and around their back with a snap on it that attached to the carbine via a ring. In short, this was the first single-point sling (and we think we are so high-speed today because we use the same concept!)

Well, the U.S. Army developed its 19th Century guidance by keeping up with the Europeans and by the 1820s, American cavalry also carried short-barreled single shot carbines attached by a sling and saddle ring arrangement. This continued for over 70 years, with the last U.S. military issued saddle ring carbine being the M1896 Krag-Jorgensens that remained in service with National Guard cavalry units until World War One.

As you can see in this picture, with the U.S. Cavalry trooper to the left with his 1873 Springfield carbine and the Union horse soldier to the right with his Hall Model 1836 breech loading percussion carbine, both are hooked up to standard cavalry slings across the user's chest-- through the saddle ring. (Library of Congress images)

As you can see in this picture, with the U.S. Cavalry trooper to the left with his 1873 Springfield carbine and the Union horse soldier to the right with his Hall Model 1836 breech loading percussion carbine, both are hooked up to standard cavalry slings across the user’s chest– through the saddle ring. (Library of Congress images)

In the 1860s, popular lever-action rifle makers such as Sharps, Spencer, Henry and Winchester produced models of their shorter barreled carbines complete with saddle rings just in case the Army or a local militia unit (before 1903 each state and county was responsible for arming their own) was looking for guns.

When John Marlin’s first lever-action repeating rifle, the Model 1881 took shape, it didn’t have one, but when the 1889 came out, just to keep the bases covered, JM made sure short-barreled models had a ring.

Rare Marlin Model 1893 Saddle Ring Trapper Carbine with 16 Inch Barrel. Click to big up

Rare Marlin Model 1893 Saddle Ring Trapper Carbine with 16 Inch Barrel. Click to big up

Read the rest in my column at Marlin Forum

Ace in a Day Death Rattler is one of the fewest of the few left

1stLt-Jeremiah-Joseph-Jerry-O-KEEFE
One of the last remaining fighter aces from the “Greatest Generation” received the Congressional Gold Medal at age 91 Friday for his actions over Okinawa in World War II.

As a 21-year-old Marine lieutenant stationed on the recently captured Japanese island of Okinawa, Jeremiah “Jerry” Joseph O’Keefe started Easter Sunday, April 22, 1945, by volunteering to assist the Chaplin with the morning’s service. By the time the sun set that fateful day, the young aviator from Mississippi would come face to face with the enemy for the first time and shoot down five Japanese dive-bombers in a row to earn the title of ace.

There were only 118 Marine WWII fighter pilots. Further, of the 1,447 total U.S. aces since 1918, just 77 are still with us.

One of the last remaining fighter aces from the “Greatest Generation” received the Congressional Gold Medal at age 91 Friday for his actions over Okinawa in World War II.

1st Lt. Jerry O’Keefe, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, late of VMF-323 (the Death Rattlers) received Congressional recognition Friday for his service in helping disrupt Japanese kamikazes. His military awards to include the Navy Cross, Distinguished Flying Cross and Air Medal are visible in the background. (Photo: Chris Eger/Guns.com)

I was on hand Friday covering the ceremony for Guns.com and 1LT O’Keefe was very gracious.

Enter the Eagle

The Coast Guard Cutter Eagle sails into Norfolk, Va., as part of Norfolk Harborfest 2015. The Eagle is a 295-foot barque sailing vessel and the only operational commissioned sailing vessel in the U.S. military.

She came into this world as a Gorch Fock-class barque, the Segelschulschiff (SSS) Horst Wessel commissioned 17 September 1936 at Blohm and Voss.

She has been in continuous service as Eagle under a much prettier flag since 15 May 1946.

4256 × 2832

4256 × 2832

2832 × 4256

2832 × 4256

4256 × 2832

4256 × 2832

(All are U.S. Coast Guard photos by Petty Officer 3rd Class David Weydert)

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Rafael DeSoto

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Rafael DeSoto

Born Rafael Maria de Soto y Hernandez on February 18, 1904 in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, the young man grew up drawing. In the early 1920s his family sent him to live with an uncle in New York’s Lower East Side and he soon found work in advertising without formal art training.

By 1930, DeSoto, eschewing a seminary appointment, was working for the pulp magazine clearing house of Street & Smith’s which he augmented by churning out pulp novel covers. Over the next two decades he produced works for dozens of pulps to include Ace, All Detective, Black Book Detective, Phantom Detective, The Spider, Ten Detective Aces, Terror Tales, Thrilling Detective, Western Aces, and Western Trails.

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Whats better than a hardhat diver and a box of gold coins? A hardhat diver with a box of gold coins and a .38-- that's what

Whats better than a hardhat diver and a box of gold coins? A hardhat diver with a box of gold coins and a .38– that’s what

GI Joe Cover by Rafael DeSoto

GI Joe Cover by Rafael DeSoto

Is that a 1911 in your hand or are you just happy to see me?

Is that a 1911 in your hand or are you just happy to see me?

Black Mask, September 1944; cover art by Rafael DeSoto

Black Mask, September 1944; cover art by Rafael DeSoto

Settling in Queens, the artist was found 4F in World War II, which left him out of uniform but he nonetheless rose to the occasion and often produced very detailed military art.

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

True Adventures cover, Dec 1963 by Rafael DeSoto

True Adventures cover, Dec 1963 by Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

Rafael DeSoto

This is my favorite work of his. The Garand is great

This is my favorite work of his. The Garand is great

Battle Cry cover by Rafael DeSoto. Click to very much big up

Battle Cry cover by Rafael DeSoto. Click to very much big up

Those cheeky guerrillas...great detail on the MP by the way

Those cheeky guerrillas…great detail on the MP by the way

Making a dive for that Browning!

Making a dive for that Browning!

Go ahead and find a more determined Navy gunner than this one...

Go ahead and find a more determined Navy gunner than this one…

By the 50s he was producing mainly book covers for Bantam, Dell, Lion, Signet, and Pocket Books and retired at age 60 to teach at State University of New York (SUNY), Farmingdale for a decade.

Book cover by Rafael DeSoto

Book cover by Rafael DeSoto

He died on Christmas Eve 1992 on Long Island at age 88.

His works will be signed invariably with as Raphael De Soto, Rafael M de Soto, and R de Soto. There is an excellent bio of him at Pulp Artists as well as a number of galleries an official website and his son’s site, who incidentally is an incredible artist in his own right.

Thank you for your work, sir.

The hardest cut

In the 225-year history of the United States Coast Guard and its forerunners the U.S.Lighthouse Service, U.S. Lifesaving Service and Revenue Cutter Service, the military branch has lost a total of 129 ships over 65 feet in length. Most of these have been lost in storms, accidents, or foundering.

Several have been lost in combat including six during the War of 1812, seven after May 1861 during the Civil War, five in the First World War and 15 in the Second.

However, perhaps the deepest and curious cut ever suffered by the branch occurred during a 111-day period from 27 December 1860 to 18 April 1861, when the tiny service lost no less than 7 cutters, 6 lighthouse tenders, 164 lighthouses and 10 lightships stationed or located in the former Southeastern United States to local enterprising secessionists (sometimes with the treasonous assistance of their commanders.)

This amounted to about a third of the force.

Only one Southern-based cutter, the USRC Dobbin, a 91 footer class schooner, managed to escape capture to the North, slipping her place at the federal dock in Savannah and making her way to Delaware. A second cutter, the 175-foot oceangoing USRC Harriet Lane, one of the first effective sidewheelers in the U.S. fleet, was not based in the South but was in Southern waters off Fort Sumter before the shooting started and likewise made it into U.S. Naval service on 30 March 1861.

Most of the cutters of the USRCS at the time were built direct for government use such as the 190-ton 91-foot schooner Washington shown here.

Most of the cutters of the USRCS at the time were built direct for government use such as the 190-ton 91-foot brig-rigged schooner Washington shown here. They were shallow draft coastal vessels meant to run about and snag smugglers, illegal slavers and the last of the Gulf pirates. Typically cutters were just armed with one or two older naval pieces and small arms. Lighthouse tenders and lightships on the other hand were typically just bought off the local shipping market then modified and were unarmed.

Of the 23 seized vessels, most were used in some form by the Confederate Navy but, as far as I can tell, by 1865 all were either destroyed or condemned and none rejoined federal service after the war.

While details through the U.S. Coast Guard Historians Office on these are sketchy, here is the run down.

  • USRC William Aiken; 82 ton (2 carronades) schooner, surrendered to the state authorities of South Carolina by her commanding officer, Revenue Captain N. L. Coste, on 27 December 1860.  She was the first Federal vessel of any service taken by the seceding states (South Carolina had moved to secede 20 December 1860)
  • USRC Alert; 74-foot (2 x 12-pounders); 18 January 1861; Seized in Mobile Bay and used as the CSS Alert
  • USLHT Jasper; 1861; Seized by North Carolina militia while under repair
  • USLHT Howell Cobb 1861; Seized in South Carolina
  • USLHT Helen; January 1861; Seized in South Carolina and used as a supply ship in Florida during the war
  • USRC McClelland; a 91′ Cushing-class (1 x 42-pound pivot gun) topsail schooner; Treasury Secretary John A. Dix ordered Lieutenant. S. B. Caldwell, the second in command of the cutter McClelland, “to arrest Capt. Breshwood [the cutter’s commanding officer and a Confederate sympathizer] assume command of cutter and if anyone attempts to haul down the flag, shoot him on the spot.” The message was not delivered by the telegraph office. 29 January 1861,  Breshwood and Caldwell hauled down the ensign and offered the cutter to the state of Louisiana who renamed her CSS Pickens. The northern papers reported the story though and the Secretary’s order became a rallying cry in support of the Union’s war effort.
  • USRC Washington; a 91′ Cushing-class (1 x 42-pound pivot gun) topsail schooner; 31 January 1861; Seized by Louisiana militia
  • USRC Lewis Cass; 80′ Phillip Allen-class (1 x 9-pdr.) topsail schooner; 31 January 1861; Seized in Mobile Bay after Revenue Captain J. J. Morrison offered her to the state of Alabama. Her 13-man crew however, left for points North.
  • USLHT William R. King; March 1861; Seized by Louisiana militia at New Orleans
  • USRC Henry Dodge; 80′ Phillip Allen-class (1 x 9-pdr.) topsail schooner; 2 March 1861; Seized by Texas militia at Galveston after her skipper, First Lieutenant William F. Rogers, USRM offered her to the state with the caveat that he remain in command.
  • USLHT Buchanan; 18 April 1861; Seized by Virginia militia
  • USLHT North Wind; 18 April 1861; Seized by Virginia militia
  • USRC Duane; a 102′ Campbell/Joe Lane-class (1 x 24-pounder) Topsail Schooner, 18 April 1861; Seized by an armed mob in Norfolk
USRC William Aiken depicted after her seizure by South Carolina. Note the Palmetto Flag

USRC William Aiken depicted after her seizure by South Carolina. Note the Palmetto Flag

The following lightships were seized in the first two weeks of April and either moved or sunk.

  • Frying Pan Shoals Lightship
  • York Spit Lightship
  • Wolf Trap Lightship
  • Windmill Point Lightship
  • Smith’s Point Lightship
  • Lower Cedar Point Lightship
  • Upper Cedar Point Lightship
  • Bowler’s Rock Lightship
  • Harbor Island Lightship
  • Rattlesnake Shoal Lightship

Speaking of lights, a staggering 164 manned lighthouses, property of the U.S. Lighthouse Board, were confiscated by either local, state or Confederate government agents by the end of April. These were referred to by the senior U.S. Naval officer on the USLHB, South Carolina native and War of 1812-veteran, Commodore William Branford Shubrick, as the work of “pirates.”

While many keepers, products of their local community and outnumbered even if they were disinclined to hand over property in their care, did so without a fight, they didn’t always go quietly.

The U. S. Gunboat "Mohawk" chases the Confederate Steamer "Spray" into the St Mark's River. Note the Confederate flag above the lighthouse. Built in 1828 the Florida lighthouse survived both Conderate and Union attacks in the coming conflict and is preserved today http://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=594 passing from the Coast Guard to the state Fish and Wildlife Service in 2013

The U. S. Gunboat “Mohawk” chases the Confederate Steamer “Spray” into the St Mark’s River. Note the Confederate flag above the lighthouse. Built in 1828 the Florida lighthouse survived both Confederate and Union attacks in the coming conflict and is preserved today passing from the Coast Guard to the state Fish and Wildlife Service in 2013 As for Mohawk, in April 1861 she defended the lighthouses and Forts Jefferson and Taylor at Key West, FL. from actions of “bands of lawless men”, enabling the Union to retain the forts and lights there as bases during the forthcoming Civil War

On March 31, keeper Manuel Moreno at the isolated Southwest Pass of the Mississippi River knew very well that something was going on 120 miles upriver at New Orleans. Hearing rumors from pilots on stem tugs, he complained to New Orleans collector Frank Hatch, “I am in this deserted place, ignorant of what is transpiring out of it.” The entire South was arming and he could not possibly be left out of the coming fray. “We ought to have about six muskets and a few pistols, and Powder and Balls, so as to be ready, at all times to resist any attack.”

By April 18, just 7 federal lighthouses, all in the Key West/Florida Keys area, remained in the custody of the USLHB and did so throughout the war.

The captured lightships and lighthouses remained (very) briefly in service of the CSA, who formed the Confederate Lighthouse Bureau under the command of CDR Raphael Semmes, CSN, formerly of the USN (and the USLHB). However, as Semmes left that post once the shooting started to pursue more properly piratical activities on the high seas, and keeping the lights lit were seen as helping the Union blockaders more than anyone else, the Confederate coasts went dark. Their lenses and clockwork in most cases removed and spirited away inland, their whale oil reserves either caved in or forwarded for naval use.

Many of the lighthouses, including the grand 200-foot tall brand new Sand Island house in Mobile Bay, were destroyed in the course of the conflict.

Sand Island lighthouse AL ca 1859

Sand Island lighthouse AL ca 1859

For more on the CSLHB, see, “The Confederate States Lighthouse Bureau” by David Cipra.

For more on the Revenue Marine in the Civil War, Truman Strobridge at the USCGHO has a great article here

Lawmaker seeks to open the floodgate of South Korean M1 imports

Universal Soldier by Tim Page  showing a ROK marine in vietnam after combat. Note the M1 Garand, the South Koreans have over 87,000 of these in arsenal storage that they have been trying to sell to a U.S. importer since 2009

Universal Soldier by Tim Page showing a ROK marine in Vietnam after combat. Note the M1 Garand, the South Koreans have over 87,000 of these in arsenal storage that they have been trying to sell to a U.S. importer since 2009

A measure introduced this week to the U.S. House of Representatives is looking to override the State Department-imposed blockade on thousands of M1 Carbines and Garands coming home from Korea.

The move comes as the latest installment in an effort by Republican lawmakers to force change in the administration’s 2009 decision to block the importation of no less than 87,000 rifles donated to South Korea that are now surplus to that country’s needs.

Previous attempts launched in past sessions to free-up the guns failed to gain traction, however with recent GOP gains in Congress and a seemingly lame duck president in the twilight of his term, one representative isn’t giving up.

The rest over in my column at Guns.com

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