Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Photos from the Byrd Expedition III....and a Penguin


"Few men during their lifetime comes anywhere near exhausting the resources dwelling within them.  There are deep wells of strength that are never used." - Richard E. Byrd


Part of the Nusbaum collection
includes this stuffed Gentoo Penguin
that scientists captured during
Byrd Expedition III. 

The museum recently received a number of photographs from the family of Chief Mess Specialist Charles Nusbaum. Chief Nusbaum lived in Portsmouth, Virginia and served most of his naval service on ships operating out of Naval Operating Base Norfolk in the 1930s and 1940s. Nusbaum had the added distinction of being a member of two expeditions to the polar regions with the famed U.S. Navy explorer Admiral Richard Byrd. Nusbaum participated in Byrd's third expedition to Antarctica in 1939 and in Byrd's expedition to Greenland in 1941.
Nusbaum (sitting) and his fellow Navy
cook prepare their cleaving tools.

The third expedition to Antarctica was the first of Byrd's expeditions under U.S. Government sponsorship. The Government officially labelled the expedition the "U.S. Antarctic Service." The U.S. Government took an interest in establishing a more permanent presence in Antarctica. President Franklin Roosevelt ordered Byrd to explore the region in more detail and set up two additional stations near "Little America," the United States's lone outpost in the region. Byrd's long serving wooden hulled steam-powered bark USS Bear (AG-29) served as the expedition's flagship. The one time whaling ship had a reinforced hull for polar duty and had served in several expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctic regions.

She sailed from Norfolk loaded with supplies and a twin-engine Barkely-Grow T8P1 airplane on board. Byrd flew the plane along the Antartic coastline to produce better maps of the region. The Seattle-based USMS North Star joined the expedition soon after Bear's arrival.

Here are some of the Antarctica expedition photos from the collection.

USS Bear in Antarctica, greeted by the locals. 
Sailors offload the Barkely-Grow T8P1 plane.  Byrd used the plane to
 map out several hundred miles of Antarctica coastline.
The 50-ton "Antarctica Snow Cruiser" off loads from the USMS North Star. With twin 150-hp engines and a 3,000 mile cruising range, the vehicle was a technical marvel. But it was practical bust. It sank in the snow shortly after off loading. It was discovered in the snow in 1958, only to be lost again. It is thought to be floating somewhere in the Southern Ocean.

"Little America," buried beneath the Antarctica snow, 1940.  Technically called Little America III (Byrd started
Little America I in 1929 six miles away),
the facility served as the main base for the expedition's missions. 

Friday, August 23, 2013

2013 CPO Heritage Days at HRNM

Day one (August 19) group of chief selectees

On August 19 and 20, the Hampton Roads Naval Museum, in cooperation with Nauticus and the Battleship Wisconsin, sponsored its thirteenth annual Chief Petty Officers Heritage Day for newly selected chief petty officers. Six hundred and seventy selectees from thirty-seven different commands participated in this annual ritual.

Day two (August 20) group of chief selectees
This year, several retired and veteran chief petty officers shared their wit and wisdom with selectees inside the battleship. Fleet Master Chief Charles Clarke,Force Master Chief Steven S. Giordano of Navy Cyber Forces, and Command Master Chief Dominick Torchia of Commander, Navy Region, Mid-Atlantic were also on hand to give their pep talks on leadership and the meaning of being a chief petty officer.

In addition to learning about the history of the U.S. Navy and the role of the chief petty officer, there was a day long competition that pitted each command's selectees against each other. The competition included an old fashion close order drill skill contest held at Town Point Park, the best turned out guidepost, and a series of forty-five questions on Naval and chief petty officer history and heritage. Active duty chiefs served as judges and awarded points based on each command's selectees performance.

Vanguard,inc. donated two trophies (one awarded each day) for the command with the highest score. Each trophy had the words "Where Chiefs Go, Only Eagles Fly" engraved on it.

Thank you to all who volunteered their time to make this event a success and congratulations to all the selectees on your accomplishment!

Thursday, August 8, 2013

1913 Live Fire Exercises in the Chesapeake Bay: Chicken Farmers Not Pleased...Again

Atlantic Fleet battleships steaming from Hampton Roads towards the
"Southern Drill Grounds" in the Chesapeake Bay, 1913
We have previously posted about Maryland poultry farmers accusing the Navy of killing over 70,000 chickens during live fire exercise off Tangier Island in 1911. The farmers claimed that the big battleship guns caused such a concussion shock on shore that the poor chickens keeled over and died. The Navy denied having anything to do with the alleged chicken massacre. Two years later, the Navy was back with more ships and bigger guns.
The Atlantic Fleet at the Southern Drill Grounds as seen
from the cage mast of USS Kansas (BB-21)

The operation was one of the largest Naval exercises to date.  Navy planners plotted out a series of static target gun shoots and war games between ships in an area they designated as the "Southern Drill Grounds" in the Chesapeake Bay.  Planners preferred the Chesapeake Bay due to the fact that it provided favorable weather conditions. They wanted the water to be somewhat rough to give gunners the chance to practice in choppy water, but not so rough as to cancel the exercise.   

USS Kansas unloads her 12-inch guns at a stationary target
In late March 1913, the Atlantic Fleet arrived near Tangier Island in full force. Rear Admiral Charles Johnson Badger led a force that consisted of the new dreadnought-type battleships USS Wyoming (BB-32), Utah (BB-31), Delaware (BB-28), and South Carolina (BB-26), along with the pre-dreadnought-type battleships USS Kansas (BB-21), Minnesota(BB-22), Georgia (BB-15), New Jersey (BB-16), and Nebraska (BB-12). In addition to the battleships, two divisions of torpedo boat and torpedo boat destroyers joined the battle force, along with several support ships such as coal tenders and store ships. 
12-inch shell explosions during live fire drills

The fleet conducted several rounds of live fire shoots with their main guns in late March and early April. The torpedo boat divisions practiced torpedo attack runs on the battleships during the middle of the night. Several senior naval officers served as observers and kept score of hits and misses of the stationary targets and determined the success of the torpedo boats against the battleships. Witnessed by several U.S. Senators and Secretary of the Josephus Daniels, the exercises were by all accounts a success.

With their round of shooting done, officers on board Kansas
observe other battleships' firings. 
That is not how local Marylanders saw it. Like the 1911 operation, Maryland civilians who lived near Tangier Island claimed the battleship gun shoots were having a devastating affect on their town and their agribusiness. One newspaper reported that buildings in Chrisfield, Maryland had their shattered windows and cracked foundations. The newspaper even claimed some of their chimneys were knocked off. In addition, Chrisfield watermen claimed the concussion waves killed thousands of fish.  They were also afraid of getting hit by stray shells. Local poultry farmers claimed that eggs cracked and were hatching prematurely. The Navy had no comment on these allegations.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

German Warships and President Taft in Hampton Roads, 1912

USS Idaho (BB-24) waiting for the German squadron east of Hampton Roads
Those who hold public office know that one must be careful when making a comment within earshot of the media.  In 1910, the battleship USS Minnesota (BB-22) made a port call in England. During an official reception, the mayor of London asked Minnesota's commanding officer, the always outspoken Captain William Simms, what the United States would do if England were attacked by a foreign power. Simms responded, "It is my opinion that you may count on every man, every dollar, every drop of blood of kindred from across the sea."

The German dreadnought SMS Molkte near Fort Monore
This statement infuriated Kaiser Wilhelm who naturally believed he was speaking of the German Empire. Relations between Germany and the United States were lukewarm at best in the early 20th century, particularly with Germany's increased involvement in the Western Hemisphere. Thus, President Howard Taft had to publicly reprimand Simms and apologize to the Kaiser in person.  But that was not good enough for German diplomats. The diplomats also noted in their official protest that the American Navy frequently visited France and Great Britain, but never Germany. 
The German Squadron from left to right-The cruisers SMS
Stettin and Bremen and the battleship Molkte.

The Germans demanded a public showing of goodwill between the United States and the Germans.  Taft agreed. In the Summer 1911, the Navy's Second Division of the Atlantic Fleet travelled to Kiel, Germany where the Kaiser and the entire German fleet greeted them.

In the Summer 1912, the German Navy reciprocated the visit with three ships, the cruisers SMS Stettin and Bremen and the brand new dreadnought-type battleship SMS Moltke. Realizing that Taft was in the middle of a reelection, the Kaiser wanted to send the ships as not to cause distraction to the American election season. Thus he sent them to Hampton Roads from Kiel in May 1912. The three ship squadron arrived off the Virginia Capes in late May, and were saluted by USS Idaho (BB-24) upon arrival. Two divisions of U.S. Battleships lined Hampton Roads to greet the Germans, including Utah (BB-31), Michigan (BB-27), Delaware (BB-28), and South Carolina (BB-26).
The Presidential yacth Mayflower entering Hampton Roads
and approaching the line of U.S. battleships on the left and
the German squadron on  the right.


Taft arrived in the Presidential yacht Mayflower and boarded Molkte. There, Vice Admiral Hubert von Rebeur-Paschwitz greeted the President and his entourage and personally gave him a tour of the ship. Taft remarked "Admiral, I'm glad to welcome you and to have an opportunity of visiting the Moltke, of the finest ships I have ever seen." Upon leaving the ship, Moltke's band struck up the "Star Spangled Banner." Once the Hampton Roads' festivities were over, the senior staff of the German ships proceed to Washington and New York City where they were wined and dined by America's leading politicians and business leaders.

The Washington, D.C. photo studio of Harris and Ewing followed the President to Hampton Roads and took these very vivid shots of the President, the U.S. Navy and the German squadron. Many more of the studio's collection can be found at the Library of Congress' website.
President Taft being given a tour of Moltke by German Vice Admiral Hubert von Rebuer-Pachswitch