Today in U.S. Naval History: September 4

September 4, 2013

USS Burton Island (AGB-1) (U.S. Navy photo)
USS Burton Island (AGB-1) (U.S. Navy photo)

Today in U.S. Naval History - September 4

1804 - USS Intrepid (Lt. Richard Somers) blew up in failed attack on Tripoli

1941 - German submarine, U-652, attacks USS Greer, which was tracking the submarine southeast of Iceland. Greer is not damaged, but drops depth charges, damaging U-652.

1954 - Icebreakers, USS Burton Island (AGB-1) and USCG Northwind, complete first transit of Northwest passage through McClure Strait.

1954 - P2V from VP-19 shot down by Soviet aircraft near Swatow, China

1960 - USS Bushnell and Penguin begin relief operations in Marathon, Fla., after Hurricane Donna.

For more information about naval history, visit the Naval History and Heritage Command website at history.navy.mil.

Related News

Cadeler Installs First Monopile at Ørsted’s Hornsea 3 Offshore Wind Farm Oil Edges Higher as Markets Watch US-China Summit Historic Settlement Finalized for Dali Allision with Francis Scott Key Bridge Upstream Oil, Gas Dealmaking in the US Hits Two-Year High Bezeq Telecom Deploys Subsea Internet Cable