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April 2002 Volume 1
Issue 1
The objective of the International Journal of Naval History is
to provide a pre-eminent forum for works of naval history
researched and written to demonstrable academic standards. Our
hope is to stimulate and promote research into naval history and
foster communication among naval historians at an international
level.
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ARTICLES
Editorial, The First Issue
Dr. Robert Browning, for the Editors
The Program of the Fifteenth
Naval History Symposium at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis,
Maryland USA.
A Naval Depot and Dockyard on
the Western Waters: The Rise and Fall of the Memphis Naval Yard,
1844–1854
Stanley J. Adamiak,
University of Central Oklahoma
The
United States Navy’s Early Atomic Energy Research, 1939–1946
Joseph-James
Ahern, American Philosophical Society Library
In
the Shadow of Briggs: A New Perspective on British Naval Administration and W.
T. Stead’s 1884 “Truth about the Navy” Campaign
John Beeler, University of
Alabama
British
Imperial Defence Strategy and Russia: The Role of the Royal Navy
in the Far East, 1878–1898
John
Berryman, Birkbeck
College, University of London
Learning
the Enemy’s Language: U.S. Navy Officer Language Students in
Japan, 1920 – 1941
Richard
Bradford, West Virginia University Institute of Technology
German
vs. Allied Codebreakers in the Battle of the Atlantic Stephen Budiansky
Dangerous
Crossings: The First Modern Polar Expedition, 1925
Harold Cones, Christopher
Newport University
John Bryant, Oklahoma
State University
The Lasting Influence of
Theodore Roosevelt’s
Naval War of 1812
Michael J. Crawford,
U.S. Naval Historical Center
Officer
Education in the Twentieth Century U.S. Navy , Panel Commentary
Hal
M. Friedman,
Henry
Ford Community College
‘The
fiery focus’: An Analysis of the Union Ironclad Repulse at
Charleston, 7 April 1863
Howard J.
Fuller, King’s College, London
“Revolutionary
Change at Evolutionary Speed”:
Women and the United States Naval Academy H.
Michael Gelfand, University of Arizona
Officer
Training in the Prussian Navy: The Professionalization of the
Naval Officer Corps in the 1860s
Terrell
Gottschall,
Walla Walla College
Building a Republican Navy in
Turkey: 1924-1939
Serhat Guvenc, Istanbul Bilgi University
The
Naval Policies of the Harding Administration: Time for a
Reassessment?
Manley
R. Irwin, University of New Hampshire
Anglo-American
Naval Inventors, 1890–1919: Last of a Breed
Hubert
C. Johnson, University of Saskatchewan
“They
called us bluejackets”:
The Transformation of Self-emancipated Slaves from
Contrabands of War to Fighting Sailors in the
South Atlantic Blocking Squadron during the Civil War
Dr. Lisa
Y. King, Morgan State University
The
Civil War Gulf Blockade: The Unpublished Journal of a U.S. Navy Warrant Officer Aboard
the USS Vincennes, 1861–1864
Robert
M. Oxley,
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
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The
Great Landing1917
C. L.
W.
Page, Naval
History Office, MOD, London
Creation of a Web–Enabled
Naval Operations Database.
Jon
Parshall, is.com.
Forerunners to the West German
Bundesmarine: The Klose Fast Patrol Group, the Naval
Historical Team Bremerhaven, and the U.S. Navy’s Labor Service
Unit (B)
Douglas Peifer, U.S. Air Command and Staff College
Martha
Coston: A Woman, a War,
and a Signal to the World
Denise E. Pilato, Eastern Michigan University
Losing the Initiative in
Mercantile Warfare: Great Britain's Surprising Failure to
Anticipate Maritime Challenges to Her Global Trading Network in
the First World War
Angus Ross, US Naval War College
The Case of Oskar Kusch and the
Limits of U-boat Camaraderie in World War II: Reflections on
a German Tragedy.
Eric C. Rust, Baylor University
The
Genesis of the Minority Recruiting Program
at the U.S. Naval Academy, 1965–1976
Robert J. Schneller, Jr.,
U.S. Naval Historical Center
Preparing for War: Naval
Education Between the World Wars
Professor Douglas V. Smith,
U. S. Naval War College
Amphibious
Renaissance
The Royal Navy and
the Royal Marines, 1956-1966
Ian
Speller, King’s College London and the
UK Joint Services Command and Staff College
Naval Presence: The Cruiser
Esmerelda in Panama
Carlos Tromben, Chilean Navy
Calculating
Scenarios in the Loss of CV Shōkaku
Anthony P. Tully,
Technical Careers
“There
should be No Bungling About this Blockade:” The Blockade Board
of 1861 and the Making of Union Naval Strategy
Kevin J.
Weddle
, US Army War
College
Without a Hangman, Without a
Rope: Navy War Crimes Trials After World War II.
Jeanie
M. Welch, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Computer Methods for
Investigating Naval History
Panel Overview and Summary Linton Wells II,
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense
, Panel Chairman
Uncle Sam’s
Webfeet: The
Union Navy in the Civil War
Glenn F. Williams, U.S. Army (Ret.)
Computer
Methods for Investigating CV Taihō
Richard
Wolff, U.S. Department of Energy
WORKS IN PROGRESS
This portion of the site will open in October 2002. If you have a
project in progress and you would like to share information about
your work to inform others and contact those who might help,
please submit the information for publication. The submissions
page can provide guidelines.
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BOOK REVIEWS
This portion of the site will open in October 2002.
The
IJNH Book Review Management Group
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COMMUNITY
NEWS
U.S.
Naval Historical Center
Fellowship
Awards
Laughton
Professorship of Naval History,
King's
College, London,
Announcement
of the Inaugural Lecture
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