Black History Month — David Debias, 8 Year Old Sailor on Old Ironsides

David Debias, was a free black youth from the north side of Beacon Hill in Boston. In 1814, at only 8 years old, he signed aboard the USS Constitution, nicknamed “Old Ironsides.” He was rated as a ship’s boy and … Continue reading

Cruise Ship Contagions — From COVID-19 to Norovirus

Are cruise ships giant incubators for spreading viruses and other microorganisms?  While the coronavirus has dominated the news recently, two cruise ships were turned away from ports after passengers and crew were stricken by the common norovirus. We have been … Continue reading

Navy Wants to Retire First Four, Still Almost New, Littoral Combat Ships

In its recent budget proposal, the Navy announced its intention to retire the first four Littoral Combat Ships (LCS)  — the USS Freedom, USS Independence,  USS Fort Worth, and USS Coronado — which range in age from twelve to only … Continue reading

Quarantined Cruise Ship Diamond Princess — Coronavirus Cases Nearly Double

Overnight the number of passengers and crew onboard the cruise ship Diamond Princess who have tested positive for the coronavirus has nearly doubled, from 70 to 136. An additional 66 people on board the quarantined cruise ship have tested positive … Continue reading

Update: Cruise Ship Coronavirus — Diamond Princess Still Quarantined, World Dream Passegners Disembark

We recently posted about two cruises ships, the Diamond Princess and the World Dream, which were both under quarantine to attempt to limit the spread of the coronavirus. Now, the passengers and crew of the World Dream, which had been … Continue reading

Ancient Skull May Be From Roman Admiral Pliny the Elder, Killed by Vesuvius Eruption

A team of Italian researchers has concluded that the upper portion of a skull found near Pompeii 100 years ago, may indeed belong to Pliny the Elder.  In 79 AD, Roman Admiral Gaius Plinius Secundus, known as Pliny the Elder, … Continue reading

Update: US Coast Guard Officer Sentenced To 13 Years For Plotting Mass Murder

About a year ago we posted about an active-duty US Coast Guard lieutenant accused of plotting attacks “to murder innocent civilians on a scale rarely seen in this country.” Christopher Paul Hasson, 50, a self-avowed white nationalist, was arrested after … Continue reading

Remembering Jesse L. Brown, First African-American Naval Pilot

In honor of Black History Month, a post about the first African-American pilot in the US Navy, Jesse L. Brown. The story goes that when young Jesse Leroy Brown worked in the cotton fields of Mississippi beside his sharecropper father, … Continue reading

In the Absence, Academy Award Nominated Short Documentary on the MV Sewol Sinking

On the morning of April 16, 2014, the ro-ro/passenger ferry MV Sewol, traveling from Incheon to Jeju in South Korea, capsized and sank. Of the 476 passengers and crew, 304 died, including 250 students on a class trip. Questions as … Continue reading