FOR HISTORIANS: digitized WWII US submarine patrol reports

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  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #1

    FOR HISTORIANS: digitized WWII US submarine patrol reports

    Easier accessibility of copies of report records and hopefully at a more reasonable cost.

    Haney presents WWII sub patrol reports to SFLMA
    By: MC1(SW/AW) Steven L. Myers
    12/13/2007
    www.dolphin-news.com


    Rear Adm. Cecil Haney, Submarine Group 2 commander, presented a set of digitized WWII submarine patrol reports to the Submarine Force Library and Museum Association (SFLMA) during a brief ceremony Dec. 7.
    The 29 discs contain 1,620 patrol logs of 255 submarines during WWII. The war patrol reports contain a summary of submarine daily activities and whereabouts, and include detailed information concerning sightings of enemy planes and warships, weather and sea conditions, enemy anti-submarine measures and attacks on enemy targets.
    "It was an honor for me to present these war patrol reports to the SFLMA on behalf of retired Vice Adm. Roger Bacon," said Haney. "These reports contain numerous tales of bravery and sacrifice from submarines like USS Wahoo (SS 238), USS Batfish (SS 310) and USS Albacore (SS 218)."
    Bacon advocated the movement before the microfilm and microfiche slides decayed and the information was lost to history. Bill Galvani, Naval Undersea Warfare Museum director, retired Chief Petty Officer John Clark and other volunteers worked vigorously for nearly a year moving more than 60,000 pages of patrol reports to DVDs.
    "The format was chosen to bring them back into the 21st century and make them more user-friendly," said Cmdr. Randy Tupas, officer in charge Historic Ship Nautilus and Submarine Force Library and Museum (SFLM) director.
    The SFLM became one of only a handful of institutions to have these war patrol reports in a digital format.
    "We are extremely grateful to receive these reports," said Tupas. "The public now has another great opportunity to review the history of their submarine force."
    The SFLM serves as the official repository for the records and history of the U.S. submarine force. Within its walls are more than 6,000 titles and 2.5 million archival documents and photographs relevant to submarine history.
  • PaulC
    Administrator
    • Feb 2003
    • 1542

    #2
    Based on this thread I

    Based on this thread I did some research on how these will be made available. The Sub Force Library will not be offering the reports for download due to the particulars of the new format.

    Rather than being files of transcribed text, the new media consists of individual hi-rez jpegs of each page of each patrol report. The reports were originally offered by the National Archives as rolls of microfiche with photographs of each page. Now you get a CD or DVD with images of each page. However, they've also recently converted it all to .pdf format and those files are also offered.

    The result is 250 boxes of microfiche condensed into 28 DVDs. You can purchase them for your own research, either individually or the entire set ($650 -- all the patrol report mircrofiche from the National Archives would run you $4,900). You can download an order form at
    http://www.usssealion.com/NSL/war_patrols.htm. Direct quetions through the site to John Clear of Submarine Memorabilia, the company that has put the project together.

    I'm putting my order together now.
    Warm regards,

    Paul Crozier
    <><

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    • JWLaRue
      Managing Editor, SubCommittee Report
      • Aug 1994
      • 4281

      #3
      Some of the patrol reports

      Some of the patrol reports are available through Amazon.com (and other places). There are the transcribed ones and include some historical notes to set the background.

      I've purchased a few of them, for example the USS Wahoo patrol report can be found at]http://www.amazon.com/U-S-S-Wahoo-SS-23 ... 080&sr=8-4[/url]

      -Jeff
      Rohr 1.....Los!

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