Annual Report of the Secretary of the NavyU.S. Government Printing Office, 1915 |
From inside the book
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Page 8
... Months ago that able English officer declared that the submarine was the most effective ship of the navy of the future and advised a cessation in the rapid construction of dreadnaughts and the utilization of the money thus spent in ...
... Months ago that able English officer declared that the submarine was the most effective ship of the navy of the future and advised a cessation in the rapid construction of dreadnaughts and the utilization of the money thus spent in ...
Page 15
... months , not only for the purpose of being able to render to Congress accurate annual statements , but also to the end that true out - of - pocket Government costs may be ascertainable for comparison with offers from outside establish ...
... months , not only for the purpose of being able to render to Congress accurate annual statements , but also to the end that true out - of - pocket Government costs may be ascertainable for comparison with offers from outside establish ...
Page 25
... , will be advertised this month . The rapid comple- tion of the Panama Canal made it necessary to proceed with the canal station independently . Delay has been encountered there also REPORT OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY . 25.
... , will be advertised this month . The rapid comple- tion of the Panama Canal made it necessary to proceed with the canal station independently . Delay has been encountered there also REPORT OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY . 25.
Page 27
... months ' constructional period set by the department . Although the keel of the New York was laid 41 months after the keel of a sister vessel building by contract , she left the navy yard ready for active service , several weeks earlier ...
... months ' constructional period set by the department . Although the keel of the New York was laid 41 months after the keel of a sister vessel building by contract , she left the navy yard ready for active service , several weeks earlier ...
Page 36
... months , and in a short time the course at the training stations will be ex- tended from four to six months , so that when the recruits are trans- ferred to the fleet the emphasis in the educational work may be laid more upon the ...
... months , and in a short time the course at the training stations will be ex- tended from four to six months , so that when the recruits are trans- ferred to the fleet the emphasis in the educational work may be laid more upon the ...
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Common terms and phrases
acute Class appropriation armor authorized battleships Boston building Bureau Bureau of Navigation cent charts chronic Class Class III Class VII Class XIV Class XX Commander commission completed Congress construction contract cost Cruz D.
C. Dsd destroyers detentioners discharge disease and injury duty efficiency Engineering enlisted equipment estimates expenditures fiscal fleet Fore River Shipbuilding Fracture Government guns hospital Hydrographic Office increase instruction Inter July June 30 Labor Lake Torpedo Boat Lieut machinery Maintenance manufacture Mare Island Marine Corps material Naval Academy Naval Militia naval prison Naval station Navy Department Navy yard Newport Norfolk Olongapo personnel Philadelphia Portsmouth Public vouchers Puget Sound radio stations Received recommended repairs seaman Sent Sept Shipbuilding ships statement of disease steel submarine supply TABLE 1.-Detailed statement tion torpedo boats Total number United States Navy Vera Cruz vessels Washington Wound York
Popular passages
Page 6 - For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see, Saw the Vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be; Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails, Pilots of the purple twilight, dropping down with costly bales ; Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rain'da ghastly dew From the nations...
Page 250 - That no part of any sum herein appropriated shall be expended for the purchase of structural steel, ship plates, armor, armament, or machinery...
Page 245 - Provided, That the sum to be paid out of this appropriation, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, for clerical, drafting, inspection, and messenger service in navy yards, naval stations, and offices of United States inspectors of machinery and engineering 'material for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1928, shall not exceed $1,575,000.
Page 22 - Senate and chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs of the House of Representatives shall be ex officio members of said Board.
Page 247 - That no part of this sum shall be applied to the repairs of any wooden ship when the estimated cost of such repairs, to be appraised by a competent board of naval officers, shall exceed twenty per centum of the estimated cost, appraised in like manner, of a new ship of the same size and like material...
Page 247 - ... wear, tear, and repair of vessels afloat ; general care, increase, and protection of the Navy in the line of construction and repair ; incidental expenses for vessels and navy yards, inspectors...
Page 251 - ... class, to have the highest practicable speed and greatest desirable radius of action, and to cost, exclusive of armor ana armament, not to exceed seven million four hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars.
Page 50 - I have been in almost daily communication with Admiral Fletcher, and I have tested his temper. I have tested his discretion. I know that he is a man with a touch of statesmanship about him, and he has grown bigger in my eye each day as I have read his dispatches, for he has sought always to serve the thing he was trying to do in the temper that we all recognize and love to believe is typically American.
Page 79 - The Government has recognized heroism upon the water, and bestows medals of honor upon those persons who by extreme and heroic daring have endangered their lives in saving, or endeavoring to save, lives from the perils of the sea in the waters over which the United States has jurisdiction, or upon an American vessel. This recognition should be extended to cover cases of conspicuous bravery and selfsacrifice in the saving of life in private employments under the jurisdiction of the United States,...
Page 247 - ... lanterns, and lamps and their appendages for general use on board ship for illuminating purposes, and oil and candles used in connection therewith ; bunting and other materials for making and repairing flags of all kinds; for all permanent galley fittings and equipage ; rugs, carpets, curtains, and hangings on board naval vessels...