Event class: command, naval, served, fleet, commander, hms, navy, uss, squadron, aboard

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Events with high posterior probability

James Van AllenHe was an assistant staff gunnery officer on the battleship USS Washington when the ship successfully defended itself against a Japanese kamikaze attack during the Battle of the Philippine Sea, (June 19 -- 20, 1944).
Oswald A. PowersAfter a Japan ese submarine torpedo ed Saratoga on 11 January 1942 and her subsequent departure for repairs at Puget Sound Navy Yard in Bremerton, Washington, VT-3 was based ashore, first at Naval Air Station Pearl Harbor on Ford Island in Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii, standing alert duty for island defense, then at Naval Air Station Kaneohe Bay at Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, whence the squadron trained and continued to stand alerts.
Donald M. CarpenterReleased the following spring, he served at NAS San Diego from April 11 to September 3, 1935 before he became Inspector of Naval Aircraft, San Diego, on the latter date.
Louis A. KaiserIn 1900, he was transferred to the USS'' Solace'', then again to a post in Newport, Virginia.
Pavel NakhimovIn February 1818 he passed examinations to become a midshipman and was immediately assigned to the second Fleet Crew (Flotskiy Ekipazh) of the Russian Imperial Navy's Baltic Fleet.
Otto KretschmerKlaus Bargsten served aboard U-99 under Kretschmer, before being promoted to captain himself and becoming the sole survivor of on 2 June 1942.
Cecil BurneyIn December 1914 he was given command of the 1st Battle Squadron, in which capacity he also served as second-in-command of the Grand Fleet under Sir John Jellicoe.
Clark Daniel StearnsAfter petitions from various Admirals of the United States Atlantic Fleet, Secretary of the Navy Edwin Denby stripped Stearns of command, and transferred him to the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility, After the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, Stearns lead the emergency relief efforts, and received a medal from the Japanese Red Cross ; he sent this medal back to Japan following the Attack on Pearl Harbor.
W. N. T. BeckettIn July 1917, Beckett was ordered to Portsmouth, to form an anti-submarine CMB base there, and command the Portsmouth CMB Flotilla on anti-submarine and convoy duties.
John T. HaywardHayward turned it down, accepting a demotion to rear admiral on 9 March 1962 to take command of Carrier Division 2, which included the nuclear-powered Enterprise, and.
Edward D. TaussigWatson returned home on his flagship in April 1900, the same month that Commander Taussig's duty as lighthouse inspector ended.
Richard J. NaughtonOn 5 January 1991, Rear Admiral Naughton assumed command of USS'' New Orleans''.
George Tryon On 22 June 1893, the fleet was on exercises when Tryon's flagship, HMS'' Victoria'', sank following a bizarre order from him which brought it in collision with the flagship of his second in command, Rear Admiral Sir Albert Markham.
Karl-Heinz MoehleOn 1 April 1939 he was promoted to Kapitänleutnant and on the outbreak of the Second World War, took U-20 on his first war cruise.
Nikolai Ivanovich SmirnovIn 1943 -- 44 he commanded a Pacific Fleet submarine.
George Washington GiftFollowing his graduation he was assigned as a midshipman to the Pacific Squadron, in 1848.
William Pakenham (Royal Navy officer)As part of the Mediterranean Squadron, he served on and he was promoted to midshipman in 1876.
James CallaghanDuring 1945 he was assigned to the East Indies Fleet and served on in the Indian Ocean.
Louis A. KaiserIn 1910, he was transferred to the Bureau of Steam Engineering.
J?rgen WattenbergHis second patrol lasted from 7 April until 8 June 1942, during which time U-162 preyed on shipping in the Caribbean and off the South American coast.
Armistead RustOn 26 October 1911, Comdr. Rust assumed command of (Cruiser No. 3) with additional duty as captain of the yard at the Charleston Navy Yard.
Alfred Walton HindsHis early naval service included serving as Assistant Engineer aboard the USS'' Texas'', the United States Navy's first battleship, where he was reprimanded for an accident aboard in 1896.
Ralph Waldo ChristieIn January 1943, Christie returned to Australia as commander of submarine operations in Fremantle.
Liu BuchanIn 1885 got back to China aboard the Dingyuan, upon which he was given command of the Dingyuan, with Commodore rank.
Frederick GreyHe initially joined the fifth-rate HMS'' Naiad'' in the Mediterranean Fleet as a midshipman and saw action against pirates off Cap Bon in Tunisia in 1824.
Benjamin F. SandsAfter the war, Sands, appointed Commodore in July 1866, served at the Boston Navy Yard until returning to Washington, D. C. as Superintendent of the Naval Observatory.
Oliver S. GlissonReturning to the United States for land assignment, Glisson spent 1857 -- 60 based at the Philadelphia Naval Asylum.
George Truman MorrellHe was paid off from the navy in 1869, and then served for a short period with the coast guard in Sligo, Ireland, as a division lieutenant.
Richard Vesey HamiltonLater in his career he became Commander-in-Chief, China Station and took his fleet into Vladivostok harbour in 1886 and gave the Russians a surprise.
Arthur S. CarpenderA 1908 graduate of the United States Naval Academy, Carpender sailed around the world with the Great White Fleet.
Richard George VogeIn August 1942, upon the completion of his fifth war patrol in Sailfish, Voge received orders to join the staff of Commander, Submarine Force, Pacific Fleet, as operations and combat intelligence officer.
Arthur Wilson (Royal Navy officer)he was given command of the experimental torpedo squadron, hoisting his flag in the cruiser HMS'' Hermione'' before becoming Second-in-Command of the Reserve Fleet in 1896.
Robert William RankinRankin was promoted lieutenant commander in August 1937 and sent to Britain on exchange duty, he was posted to HMS'' Gleaner'', a minesweeper and following courses at HMS'' Dryad'', he was posted to the repair ship HMS'' Resource'' as first lieutenant.
John T. HaywardAdmiral Arleigh Burke, now Chief of naval Operations, arranged for Hayward to be given command of the aircraft carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt in February 1956.
George Tryon Malta, home of the -LSB- -LSB- British Mediterranean Fleet -RSB- -RSB- In August 1891 Tryon was appointed to command the Mediterranean station, the most powerful force within the Royal Navy at that time.
Frank E. BeattyTwo commands followed in succession : first, the nautical school ship'' Saratoga'' and then'' Gloucester'', before he became Commander, Naval Base, Culebra, Puerto Rico, in February 1904, with additional duty commanding Gloucester.
George L. Street IIIIn 1951, after attending the Fleet Sonar School at Key West, Florida, he assumed command of the, a destroyer modified for anti-submarine purposes.
Stepan Vasiliyevich VoyevodskyIn 1841 he sailed from the Pacific to Saint Petersburg, and returned to the Baltic Fleet.
Guy GauntGaunt served as a lieutenant on several vessels in the Pacific Ocean, and was promoted to the rank of Commander in 1901.
Jay A. DeLoachOn February 25, 2003, then Captain DeLoach was nominated for appointment to the rank of rear admiral (lower half) while serving as commanding officer, Naval Reserve, commander, Seventh Fleet Detachment 111, Fort Worth, Texas.
Augustus AgarThen, from 15 January 1937 he commanded his favourite ship, the 7,300 ton light cruiser HMS'' Emerald'', at 35 knots, with her sister, HMS'' Enterprise'', the fastest ships in the Royal Navy.
Alexander VandegriftIn 1912, he went to foreign shore duty in the Caribbean, first to Cuba and then to Nicaragua.
Theodorus Bailey (officer)Promoted to commodore on 16 July 1862, Bailey commanded the station at Sackett's Harbor, New York, through the summer of 1862.
Leslie FiedlerAfter subsequent assignments in Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and China -- the latter involving the repatriation of Japanese citizens following the resolution of the war -- Fiedler was discharged from the Navy at his commissioned rank in early 1946 ; his certificate of discharge stated that he was'' employed in a position of special trust and no further information regarding his service in the Navy can be disclosed.''
Francis HarveyIn 1903 he was posted aboard, the first of a string of big ship appointments teaching gunnery to the heavy units of the Channel Fleet.
George Hyde (admiral)Vice Admiral Bayly reported back to the Admiralty on 30 April 1916, when commenting about the incident, that Hyde'' performed his duties with great tact and ability''.
Frederick RodgersAfter leaving the North Pacific Squadron, Rodgers performed ordnance duty at the Washington Navy Yard in Washington, D. C., in 1872.
Uriel SebreeAfter his return from the expedition Sebree taught at the Naval Academy for a year before being transferred as the lighthouse inspector for Oregon and Washington Territory, where he remained until 1887.
Jack William WintleOn 7 August 1936, Wintle reported to the Puget Sound Navy Yard to help supervise the fitting out of ; and he remained in the destroyer after she went into commission on 18 September 1936.
J. Paul ReasonOn completion of his nuclear power training, Reason was assigned to USS Truxtun (CGN-35) and participated in the ship's first deployment to Southeast Asia in 1968 during the Vietnam War.
William Halsey, Jr.Upon his return to the U. S. in 1927, he served one year as Executive Officer of the battleship USS'' Wyoming'', and then for three years in command of USS'' Reina Mercedes'', the station ship at the Naval Academy.
Arthur Japy HepburnThereafter, Hepburn assisted in surveys of the Pacific and performed a variety of other duties, until the First World War, where he commanded the seized German liner Kaiser Wilhelm II and as a submarine commander, until he was ordered to Europe in July 1918 to command the naval base at Queenstown, Ireland.
Jos? L. SantiagoOn August 21, 1982, he reported to Marine Detachment USS'' Holland'' at Charleston, South Carolina.
Harry W. HillHe served three months from June 1925 as Aide to the Commander in Chief, U. S. Fleet, after which he had duty afloat as Gunnery Officer of the light cruiser.
Harry Schmidt (USMC)Leaving USS Montana in September 1918, he spent most of the next two years at the Marine Barracks, Norfolk, Virginia.
Aubrey FitchAfter serving on the staff of the Commander in Chief, Atlantic Fleet, Fitch assumed command of the yacht in January 1915, with additional duty as aide to the Commander in Chief.
James O. EllisAdmiral Ellis was the first Commanding Officer of Strike/Fighter Squadron 131, deploying in 1985 with new F/A -18 Hornets aboard USS Coral Sea (CV-43).
Masatomi KimuraAfter his promotion to Lieutenant in 1920, he commanded numerous torpedo boat s and minesweeper s.
Carl OsburnOsburn took command of USS Schenck (DD-159), a recently commissioned vessel of wartime construction, and conducted patrols in the Caribbean until September 1921, when he was assigned to USS Relief (AH-1).
William Houston StewartIn 1844, he was appointed lieutenant in the 16-gun brig-sloop'' Ringdove'', serving on the west coast of Africa station.
Leroy J. AlexandersonHe was appointed Commodore of the United States Lines Fleet in 1966, meaning he was in overall command of the line's 52 ships.
Horace HoodDuring the Second Boer War, Hood was given command of transport ships taking supplies to South Africa before being transferred to Admiral Lord Charles Beresford's flagship in the Mediterranean from 9 September 1901.
William MatsonWhen Matson died in 1917 at 67, the Matson fleet comprised 14 of the largest, fastest and most modern ships in the Pacific passenger-freight service.
Heinrich Lehmann-Willenbrock | - | Tuesday, 25 February 1941 | | | | The boat Captain Lieutenant Lehmann-Willenbrock has prominently contributed 55 600 GRT to the success of the submarine arm.
John Luce (Royal Navy officer)In September 1912, Luce took command of HMS'' Glasgow'', a light cruiser.
George H. Cooper Cooper entered U. S. Navy service as an acting midshipman in January 1836 and was assigned to the sloop-of-war, which was fitting out at the Portsmouth Navy Yard in Kittery, Maine.
John Fisher, 1st Baron FisherIn May 1870, he transferred, again as second in command, to, flagship of the China Station.
Daniel E. BarbeyHis first assignment was aboard the armored cruiser, which participated in the 1912 United States occupation of Nicaragua.
Kirpal Singh (Indian Navy officer) Singh served as a midshipman during World War II on board the battleship, HMS'' Anson'' from January 1944 to June 1944, escorting Allied convoys from the Atlantic across the Arctic Ocean to Murmansk, Russia.
Edward L. FeightnerFrom July 23 to August 14, 1951, he performed carrier suitability tests of the Cutlass on board the USS'' Midway''.
George TreverIn the spring of 1917, Trever reported to the Puget Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, Washington, to supervise the building of'' N-1'' (Submarine No. 53), then on the ways at the Seattle Construction and Drydock Company, Seattle, Washington.
Robley Dunglison EvansAdmiral Evans in flagship, Maine sailed on 7 November 1905 from Annapolis to New York.
Miguel Grau SeminarioIn 1864, he was sent to Europe to oversee the construction of ships for the Peruvian fleet.
William Harrison StandleyStandley then reported to the armored cruiser on 3 November 1910 and was navigator of that ship until becoming aide to the Commandant of the Mare Island Navy Yard at Vallejo, California.
Edwin T. WoodwardUnder his command, Yantic s crew took part in celebrations attending the unveiling of the statue of Admiral David G. Farragut in Washington, D. C., on April 25, 1881, before sailing later that spring to Mexican waters.
Miles BrowningIn June 1918, he joined the French cruiser Lutetia, and was senior American Naval Officer aboard while she operated with Cruiser Force, Atlantic Fleet, through the end of the war.
George M. BacheAfter that, he went ashore to ordnance duty at the Washington Navy Yard until his retirement on 5 April 1875, receiving promotion to commander the same day.
Napoleon CollinsOn 7 October 1864, while in command of the screw sloop, Collins took his ship into a neutral harbor and captured the Confederate cruiser, sparking a minor diplomatic crisis between the United States and the Empire of Brazil.
Nikolaos PappasHe then went to London as defence attaché until 1979, and returned to assumed command of the Fast Attack Craft Flotilla (1979 -- 80).
Uriel Sebree Sebree was promoted to Rear Admiral in 1907 and was given command of a squadron of two ships : his flagship, the, and the.
Nikolay Karlovich KrabbeHe returned to the Black Sea Fleet in 1853, being in command of a squadron under viceadmiral Lazar Markovich Serebryakov.
Richard A. Stratton Stratton was assigned as Commanding Officer, Navy Recruiting District New York, East Meadow LI, New York, in 1975.
Keiz? KomuraOn 16 November 1944, the light cruiser was assigned as the flagship of Rear Admiral Komura's new DesRon 2.
Eugene P. WilkinsonIn February 1952 Wilkinson had temporary duty for one month as commanding officer of the submarine USS Sea Robin (SS-407).
Robley Dunglison Evans Theodore Roosevelt aboard Roosevelt's yacht, The Mayflower 31 March 1905, a 13 gun salute was fired by battleship, USS Maine (BB-10) at Pensacola, Florida as the flag of Rear Admiral Robley D. Evans, Commander-in-Chief of the North Atlantic Fleet was broken at the main mast.
John M. Whitall In 1824, Whitall was contracted by Whitton Evans to oversee the construction of a new sailing ship, New Jersey, the largest'' Indiaman'' yet constructed in Philadelphia, and was given command as captain.
Joel Thompson BooneIn late 1940, Captain Boone became the senior medical officer at Naval Air Station San Diego and later transferred to the Naval Hospital in Seattle, as medical officer-in-command.
Francis Bridgeman (Royal Navy officer)He became Captain of the battleship HMS'' Ramillies'' and Flag Captain of the Mediterranean Fleet in October 1893.
Oscar C. BadgerIn 1868, he came ashore for equipment duty at the Portsmouth Navy Yard in New Hampshire.
Edward Fitzmaurice Inglefield Lieutenant Inglefield was sent to Malta in 1889 to become the first lieutenant of the newly launched HMS'' Melita''.
Kenneth WhitingEllyson was accepted and went on to become Naval Aviator No. 1 in 1911, but Whiting was not and continued his submarine duties.
Christopher CradockIn 1913, he was given command of the North America and West Indies Station.
Louis M. GoldsboroughGoldsborough would finish the war performing administrative duties in Washington, D. C. In June 1865, Goldsborough became the first commander of the European Squadron, formerly the Mediterranean Squadron.
Richard H. JacksonIn 1919, as senior officer for the U. S. Naval Forces in Bermuda, he commanded the Azores detachment of the Atlantic Fleet that stood guard for the Navy flying boat NC-4 on its historic first trans-Atlantic crossing by an aircraft.
Spencer S. WoodHe remained aboard Oklahoma until 1 February 1918, involved primarily in the training of her crew and a refit of the ship, and received the Navy Cross for'' exceptionally meritorious service'' while in command of her.
George Tryon On 1 October 1878, Tryon was appointed to HMS'' Monarch'' of the Mediterranean fleet under Admiral Geoffrey Hornby, joining her at Artaki in the Sea of Marmora on 18 November.
Paul von Hintze In 1903, the navy dispatched their thirty-nine-year-old and experienced naval captain Hintze to the German embassy in Saint Petersburg.''
Wat Tyler Cluverius, Jr.After returning to the ship he became its executive officer until July 1915, when he became commander of the.
Mahlon TisdaleAfter return to the United States in January 1919, Tisdale served as executive officer on USS Hart.
William W. Ashurst Ashurst returned back to the United States in April 1920 and was assigned to Marine Barracks Portsmouth, New Hampshire.