Bainbridge Navy Base - USNTC Bainbridge - 1st Regiment Mess Hall, taken by Dorothy Montgomery during recruiting exercises in the fall of 1963. A sky photo below shows the mess hall in 2005. It seems a little odd that the cluttered hall escaped demolition. Imagine how much food there is in one hall of this mess! 5000 recruits x 3 meals x 365 days = 5,375,000 meals per year during WWII. .
The "H" shaped building at the bottom is Hunter Hall, built around 1967 to serve as a wave bar.                                                         &nbss03 ની નજીકનો ફોટો.                             
Bainbridge Navy Base
USNTC Bainbridge - Mess Hall Interior April 1943. The menu sign read "soup de jour" daily; It doesn't exist. It's not attractive to me.                         ▶
Aerial View Looking East Across The Bremerton And East Bremerton. Residential Districts. With The Warren Avenue Bridge Spanning Dyes Inlet In The Near Background. Receding From The Bridge Are Bainbridge Island, Puget
USNTC Bainbridge - Large image of the 1st Regiment Grinder taken by Dorothy Montgomery during recruiting training in the fall of 1963. The F4U-2 Corsair fighter on the Grinder is a modified aerial interceptor variant with a radar ring on the right wing. I remember the "Black Sheep Squadron" episode on TV about radar modification. As a young man in the late 1940s, he built a Corsair model. .                         ▶
USNTC Bainbridge - First Regiment Grinder and Mess Hall Building 102 circa November 1957 National Recruit Training at Bainbridge NTC ends in December 1957; Therefore, this soldier will likely be the last one to graduate.         ▼
USNTC Bainbridge - 1st Regiment Grinder Graduation Day in 1954. This photo captures the essence of what happened at Bainbridge, where the parents happily commissioned their son into the United States Navy. Life changed forever. .                             
USNTC Bainbridge - First Regiment Drill Hall Building 101; About ????, But a 1940s car parked next to the practice points to 1040. Downstairs of Drill Hall 101. At the end of this building is the swimming pool. Based on how quickly it goes down compared to a level drill hole, it's clear that the mill has a lot of slope to it. The original mill was built of gravel, perhaps a slope to aid drainage? .                             
Nsga Bainbridge Island, Wa, Disestablished, March 15, 1953
USNTC Bainbridge - An unidentified building on the base. November 1973 by Carol Weir while attending radioman's school. Carroll said, "One building was impressive. I don't remember much about it. Some of them went horseback riding in November before it got too cold. They went up to the stables. On the foundation" ▼
USNTC Bainbridge - Unknown Building. At the base is the 707th Airborne Artillery Training Facility, which serves the 1st and 2nd Regiments. Building 707 is located near Naval Service Headquarters on Bainbridge Ave by the 4th Regiment Drill. Although the 1943 photo is of poor quality, Bainbridge Ave. The black box behind Building 707 is the 4th Regiment Drill Hall building. 401. There was a further anti-aircraft building serving the 3rd Regiment and 4th Regiments located below the 3rd Regiment Drill Hall and a water purifier and reservoir (reservoir). ▼
USNTC Bainbridge - Are your little fiddles green? Fiddler's Green, happiness forever; It is the happy land that sailors look forward to, with never-ceasing flutes and tireless dancers. The origin is an old English fairy tale, often sung: It is said that an old salt, tired of going to sea, must roll it on his shoulders and walk inland. When he reaches a village deep in the country and the people ask him what brought him, he will know that he has found the Fiddler's Green. The people would sit outside the village in the hot sun and forever offer him a cup of toad and aromatic tobacco, which he would replenish himself with every last drop of smoke. From then on he had nothing to do but enjoy his glass and pipe, and watch the young ladies playing on Fiddler's Green.
USNTC Bainbridge - Amazing 1964 photo with Fiddler's Green EM Club in background. What gave Bainbridge character was the simplicity and permeability of "temporary" architecture and rolling terrain - no stone; No polished marble, Gold update A few bricks No air conditioning; no stains wood glass Asbestos-cement traffic sheet side; thatch/shingle roofs; Coal by rail for heating. Served the US Navy very well (and cheaply) for 30+ years. Check out the red Chevrolet Corvair. Ralph Nader is writing his book, "Unsafe at Any Speed," to be published next year, which will do justice to the Corvair. ▼
Great Lakes Naval Training Station Hi Res Stock Photography And Images
Another view of USNTC Bainbridge - EM Club; Date unknown. Having never been outside the yard, I was initially fascinated by the large spinning mirror ball hanging from the ceiling. The 1964 photo above shows that 3.2% beer was the most common liquid, but railings were added to the entrances and exits. ▼
USNTC Bainbridge - A view inside the EM Club, circa 1969. Is that a bottle of National Bohemian beer? "Natty Boh" brews on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay. The legend of Fiddler's Green is that the girls drank Natty Bow and got drunk and winked and had sex all night.....or so teenage 'sea' sailors never imagined. ▼
USNTC Bainbridge - 1968 Photo Rock band The Runabouts perform at Fiddler's Green. The Runabouts, a local band from Havre de Grace, Maryland, played several shows at the EM Club in 1967-1968. Amazingly, the rock group still performs today with the original members - http://www.therunabuts.com ▼ In 1930, OP-20-G's organizers were in Oregon, The 13th Naval District, including Washington and Alaska, was chosen. as possible locations for two new interim sites; Montana and Wyoming; one one A larger site to cover point-to-point traffic to Europe and China and Japan. Another was a small area in Alaska ("the But Islands") to cover Japanese shipping and shore communications in both peace and war.
Due to budget constraints, Admiral Pratt, CNO, Rear Admiral E.H. He had to wait until May 1932 before directing. Campbell, Headquarters 13th Naval District Astoria, Oregon is home to the Navy's navigational (DF) station, which provides navigational aids to merchant ships. To establish the first of these locations at Fort Stevens. Instead of building and installing a new site, OP-20-G planners at the time postponed the delivery of the new equipment and asked Admiral Campbell to accept a plan to use it to conduct communications intelligence (COMINT) missions against Japanese targets. Passive communication tools. The initial COMINT mission was Salinas, captured by a commercial band. It was to copy the Japanese diplomatic route on the commercial RCA circuit between California and Tokyo.
Mark Bainbridge Hi Res Stock Photography And Images
In 1938, the US Navy took over Fort Ward from the army. The fort was found attractive after US naval tests showed it to be an ideal location for intercepting radio communications transmitted from the Far East, mainly by Japan. In August 1939, the U.S. Navy established the COMSUPACT Astoria or Intercept Site (May, 1932 at Fort Stevens or Fort Ward. This was the beginning of Fort Ward's development as a military listening station. An extensive international radio listening station was built overnight in the antenna field. Arrived. A radio communications and code school was established that operated during the Korean War. COMSUPACT Fort Ward, Bainbridge Island WA US Naval Security Activity (NSGA) at Bainbridge Island, WA September, 1939.
In August 1940, the United States The Navy has six locations with diplomatic missions; All US Army communications circuits directly or indirectly with Washington, DC. Communicated through radio and wire communications. Twelve nets (six naval and six army) were authorized to intercept Japanese diplomatic traffic.
Rhombic antennas were installed on the Fort Ward Parade Ground and the old post office/gym building was converted into a listening post codenamed Camp S. Listen to Japanese naval communications broadcast in Japanese Morse code, men and women working 24 hours a day. The listening station's activities are so sensitive, he said, that base personnel are instructed not to look at the building it passes through. January 11th A 1941 Seattle Times article shows pictures of sailors copying Morse code and setting up a Morse code transmitter in a classroom.
In March 1941, Winter Harbor ME (Station W); Amagansett, NY (Station G); allowing direct commercial teletype service connectivity between installations at Fort Ward to improve the interception efforts of HFDF stations; Bainbridge Island; WA
Naval Training Center San Diego
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