The Sailor's Homer. Dennis L. Noble

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      Titles in the Series

       With Commodore Perry to Japan: The Journal of William Speiden Jr., 1852–1855

       Whips to Walls: Naval Discipline from Flogging to Progressive-Era Reform at Portsmouth Prison

       Crisis in the Mediterranean: Naval Competition and Great Power Politics, 1904–1914

       Home Squadron: The U.S. Navy on the North Atlantic Station

      New Perspectives on Maritime History and Nautical Archaeology

      James C. Bradford and Gene A. Smith, editors

      Rivers, seas, oceans, and lakes have provided food and transportation for man since the beginning of time. As avenues of communication they link the peoples of the world, continuing to the present to transport more commodities and trade goods than all other methods of conveyance combined. The New Perspectives on Maritime History and Nautical Archaeology series is devoted to exploring the significance of the earth’s waterways while providing lively and important books that cover the spectrum of maritime history and nautical archaeology broadly defined. The series includes works that focus on the role of canals, rivers, lakes, and oceans in history; on the economic, military, and political use of those waters; on the exploration of waters and their secrets by seafarers, archaeologists, oceanographers, and other scientists; and on the people, communities, and industries that support maritime endeavors. Limited by neither geography nor time, volumes in the series contribute to the overall understanding of maritime history and can be read with profit by both general readers and specialists alike.

       This book has been brought to publication with the generous assistance of Marguerite and Gerry Lenfest.

      Naval Institute Press

      291 Wood Road

      Annapolis, MD 21402

      © 2015 by Dennis L. Noble

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

      ISBN: 978-1-61251-896-1 (eBook)

      

Print editions meet the requirements of ANSI/NISO z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper).

      23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      First printing

      “Gilgamesh, in Fossil Relief,” reprinted with permission from Brian Turner, Here, Bullet (Farmington: Alice James Books, 2005), 53.

      Hour of Panic story © SEPS licensed by Curtis Licensing Indianapolis, IN.

      All rights reserved.

       For José Madarieta—this book could not have been written without his knowledge and assistance.

       And

       Dr. Vincent Patton III, EdD, MCPOCG, U.S. Coast Guard (Ret.), who has given me help, encouragement, and friendship over the years.

       History is a cloudy mirror made of dirt

       and bone and ruin. And love? Loss?

       These are questions we must answer

       by war and famine and pestilence, and again

       by touch and kiss, because each age must learn

       This is the path of the sun’s journey by night.

       BRIAN TURNER, “Gilgamesh, in Fossil Relief,” in Here, Bullet

      CONTENTS

      4. Asian Liberties and Stories

      5. USS Tulsa and USS Asheville

      6. USS Edsall and USS Luzon

      7. USS Mount Vernon

      8. “Swallowing the Anchor”

      9. A New Life

      Epilogue

      Appendix: “Hour of Panic,” a Short Story by Richard McKenna

      Notes

      Selected Bibliography

      Index

       PREFACE

      In 1962 a first-time author burst upon the literary scene. Richard McKenna’s novel The Sand Pebbles took place in a U.S. Navy gunboat operating on China’s mighty Yangtze River during the turmoil of the 1920s. The novel resonated so well with the reading public that in 1964 it was made into a movie. McKenna’s novel is arguably not only the best fictional account of the upheaval taking place in China but also one of the best depictions of enlisted life on the old China Station. McKenna brought unusual qualifications to his writing: he served as a career enlisted man in the Navy for twenty-two years, ten of which were in Asia, including serving in a Yangtze River gunboat. Upon retirement, McKenna earned a degree at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and then turned to writing, using some of his life experiences in his fiction. Even at a cursory glance, the life of Richard McKenna was as interesting as his novel.

      My interest in McKenna began early in the 1970s while I browsed the shelves of a public library. It took only a few minutes of perusing The Sand Pebbles for me to decide to read the 597-page volume. At that time I had served seventeen years in the enlisted force of the U.S. Coast Guard and recognized that McKenna not only knew about enlisted naval service but also seemed to have captured the lives of sailors serving in an unusual ship and location in China. Like most people in the United States, I knew little about the U.S. military in China before World War II. Curious, I searched for nonfiction books on the subject and turned up only two volumes: Kemp Tolley’s classic Yangtze Patrol: The U.S. Navy in China (1971) and Charles G. Finney’s The Old China Hands (1961), which examined Finney’s time with the U.S. Army’s 15th Infantry at Tientsin (Tianjin), China, in the 1920s. The search did yield a few articles published in the U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, but there appeared almost nothing readily available in English.

      The

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