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by Mike Hemming June 2002 |

| This is an image of one of the many
SubVetsWWII "Still on Patrol" plaques. The plaques
were provided by the Submarine Veterans following World War Two and can
be found mounted on, or near, various Submarine Memorial sites throught
the nation.
This particular plaque is mounted in the club house of SubVets Groton at 40 School Street in Groton Connecticut. The image was provided by John Wynn, a member of USSVI Lockwood Internet Base and USSVI Groton Base. The WWII STILL ON PATROL plaques: SubVets Of WWII states' assignments
of the LOST 52 BOATS memorials of World-War II |
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SUBMARINE
PIANO
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Sources & Misc (Page-1) Return to Submarine Memorials & Artifacts Listed By Boat
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SUBMARINE MEMORIALS &
CEREMONIES |
on SUBNET. A later and more complete listing can be found at his website: Old Sub's Place by Jim Christley EMCS(SS) USN(Ret) |

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American, British and Dutch Submarines Based at Fremantle 1942 to 1945 American, British and Dutch Submarines Based at Fremantle 1942 to 1945 |
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| No reference assistance is available
on Wednesday. Its collections comprising 150,000 volumes are the nation's
most highly concentrated and accessible collection of literature on the
United States Navy.
There are two entrances to the Washington Navy Yard: the main gate is at M and 9th Streets SE; a second entrance is on 11th Street SE (closed on weekends). Both are accessible from Route 295 and the 11th Street Bridge. |

| Confederate Submersible George François Mugnier c. 1890 Though the true identity of this vessel remains a mystery, it was once believed to be the Pioneer, a prototype for the Confederate submarine Hunley, which sank a Federal warship in 1864. The true Pioneer was built in New Orleans by two New Orleans machinists, James R. McClintock and Baxter Watson, and a wealthy lawyer, Horace L. Hunley. Never used in active duty against the Federal fleet, it was sunk in Lake Pontchartrain north of New Orleans by local residents in 1862 so that it could not be used by Federal troops who had captured the city. The vessel in this photograph, measuring twenty feet long, three feet wide, and six feet deep, was discovered in the lake in 1878 and brought ashore and forgotten for many years until it was ultimately put on display in front of the Louisiana State Museum's Presbytere in 1957, where it remains today. More: Copied article from Charleston Post & Courier 15 July 2001 via The Louisiana State Museum Louisiana State Museum, P.O. Box 2448, New Orleans, LA 70176, Ph 1-504-568-6968 |