Vanity Fair Magazine Articles
The Atlantic Monthly Articles
The Outlook Articles
People Today Articles
American Legion Monthly Articles
Sea Power Magazine Articles
Confederate Veteran Magazine Articles
flapper magazine Articles
La Baionnette Articles
PIC Magazine Articles
Outing Magazine Articles
Stage Magazine Articles
Life Magazine  Articles
National Park Service Histories Articles
Punch Magazine Articles
Men's Wear Articles
Current Literature Articles
The New York Times Articles
Hearst's Sunday American Articles
Click Magazine Articles
Creative Art Magazine Articles
Rob Wagner's Script Articles
The New Republic Articles
American Legion Weekly Articles
The Smart Set Articles
Photoplay Magazine Articles
Leslie's Magazine Articles
Ken Magazine Articles
PM  Articles
Saturday Review of Literature Articles
The Dial Magazine Articles
Theatre Arts Magazine Articles
The North American Review Articles
Direction Magazine Articles
'47 Magazine Articles
Film Spectator Articles
Film Daily Articles
Trench Warfare History Articles

 




Article Surfer
<— Prev    |    Next —>

The brass caps of the U.S. Navy have acknowledged many times as to how different the annals of W.W. II naval warfare would read were it not for the officers and men of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutters and the vital roll they played to win supremacy in the battle of the Atlantic.

This article recalls a twelve hour period that was lived along a highly contested patch of real estate somewhere in the North Atlantic. The protagonists driving the plot was a Coast Guard Commander named James A. Hirshfield (pictured) and the men of his command on board USCGC CAMPBELL, a cutter of the Secretary class. Due to the fact that this article was subject to wartime censorship, the journalist wrote nothing as to when exactly this event took place, but we surmised that at some point in late '42 or early '43, six crews in Admiral Doenitz' U-boat fleet came across this cutter and were never heard from again.

Click here to read another 1943 article about the battle of the Atlantic.

CLICK HERE to read about the women of the U.S. Coast Guard during the Second World War.

-two books from Amazon: U.S. Coast Guard Cutters
and Craft of World War II

     


The War On U-Boats (Coronet Magazine, 1943)

The War On U-Boats (Coronet Magazine, 1943)

The War On U-Boats (Coronet Magazine, 1943)

The War On U-Boats (Coronet Magazine, 1943)

The War On U-Boats (Coronet Magazine, 1943)

The War On U-Boats (Coronet Magazine, 1943)

The War On U-Boats (Coronet Magazine, 1943)

Article Surfer
<— Prev    |    Next —>

 

 

 

 

 

 

© Copyright 2008 Old Magazine Articles