Barque Eagle Honors Crew Of Lost Coast Guard Cutter Alexander Hamilton

The US  Coast Guard Barque Eagle stopped on her way home from her cruise of European ports to honor the memory of the crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Alexander Hamilton, sunk by German submarine U-132 off Iceland in 1942.  On Friday, the … Continue reading

Great Summer Reading – Astrodene’s Historic Naval Fiction Log Book for July

A great line-up of Summer reading from Astrodene’s Nautical Log Book for July:   Newly  released  novels include Steven E. Maffeo’s, The Perfect Wreck – Old Ironsides and HMS Java: A Story of 1812, and Tom Grundner’s latest novel in the Sir … Continue reading

No Longer Three Men in a Boat – Part 1: The Pirate Stock Exchange

While an international flotilla of naval vessels continues to play “catch and release” with pirates off the Horn of Africa, the Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea, the pirates themselves have become far more sophisticated.   Where a few years ago, the typical … Continue reading

Rear Adm. Wendi B. Carpenter named President of SUNY Maritime College.

If you hear a loud cracking sound today,  it might another glass ceiling breaking.  In the beginning of June, we posted  that Rear Adm. Sandra Stosz had been named as the 40th Superintendent of the United States Coast Guard Academy in … Continue reading

Thomas Boyle, the Chasseur and the Blockade of Britain

Today in 1775 in Marblehead, Massachusetts, Thomas Boyle was born.  Going to sea at age 10, he would become one of the most successful and most famous privateering captains in the War of 1812.  After several successful cruises as captain of the sharp-built “Baltimore clipper” Comet, Boyle … Continue reading

Update: Bruce Power Puts Radioactive Waste Move through St. Lawrence on Hold

Last February we posted about the the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission approval of a plan for Bruce Power to ship 1,600 tonnes of radioactive waste,  in 16 decommissioned nuclear reactors, across the Great Lakes, though the St. Lawrence Seaway and across the Atlantic … Continue reading

Update: Deadly Distraction Led to Duck Boat Deaths

Not quite a year ago, a tourist amphibious “duck boat” was run down on the Delaware River  by barge on the hip of  the tug boat, Caribbean Sea.  Two passengers died in the collision.   The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has issued … Continue reading

Found: $500k Emerald Ring from the Nuestra Señora de Atocha

Last week, divers from Mel Fisher’s Treasures found an emerald ring, valued at $500 thousand dollars, believed to be from the wreck of the 1662 wreck of the Spanish treasure ship, Nuestra Señora de Atocha, which sank in 1662. If anyone thinks of … Continue reading