Backus, Paul H Index
Backus, Paul H Index
to
The Reminiscences of
Commander Paul H. Backus
U. S. Navy (Retired)
ASROC
Antisubmarine weapon that proved superior to its
predecessor, Weapon Alfa, because it had a homing
capability, 259
Alcoholic Beverages
U.S. naval personnel went to British ships in order to
drink when at Scapa Flow in 1943, 170; Rear Admiral Olaf
Hustvedt ordered the crew of the battleship South Dakota
(BB-57) to off-load a cargo of whiskey in 1943, 171-172;
one crew member of the light cruiser Huntington (CL-107)
got in trouble in the late 1940s for pulling down a Greek
flag while drunk on liberty in Kavalla, 229-230
Algeria
Oran was the site of a visit by the destroyer Isherwood
(DD-520) in the spring of 1952, 293
Ammunition
Types carried on board the battleship South Dakota (BB-
57) in World War II, 193-194; research on ballistics by
the Bureau of Ordnance late 1940s and early 1950s, 250-
251
1
Anderson, Captain Roy G., USN (USNA, 1940)
Role in the Office of Special Projects during the Polaris
development program of the late 1950s, 381, 472, 478
Antiair Warfare
Because parts had been removed for an upcoming
inspection, the 5-inch/25-caliber antiaircraft guns in
the battleship Oklahoma (BB-37) were unable to fire
during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December
1941, 102-103; American guns at Pearl Harbor fired on
American planes the night of 7 December 1941, 109-110;
the South Dakota's outfit of antiaircraft guns was beefed
up during a visit to Pearl Harbor in the fall of 1942,
134-135; South Dakota's score of enemy planes in the
Battle of Santa Cruz Islands in October 1942, 141-142; in
the mid-1950s the British claimed, apparently
incorrectly, that they could jam U.S. proximity fuzes,
358-359
Antisubmarine Warfare
Development and testing in the late 1940s and early 1950s
of Weapon Able for use against submarines, 256-260; ASROC
proved superior because it had a homing capability, 259;
training at Key West in the early 1950s, 267; part of
refresher training for the crew of the destroyer
Isherwood (DD-520) at Guantanamo in early 1952, 277; the
crew of the Isherwood was involved in ASW team training
research in the early 1950s, 281-283; the Isherwood had a
likely contact with a Soviet submarine in the early 1950s
in the Mediterranean, 311-312; the Isherwood worked with
an Italian destroyer during NATO ASW exercises in the
Mediterranean in the early 1950s, 312-313
Army, U.S.
Work on the Jupiter ballistic missile program in the
1950s, 369-371; membership in the 1950s on the Joint
Army-Navy Ballistic Missile Committee, 378-380
2
Atomic Energy Commission, U.S.
Great concern on the part of Royal Navy officers when
Backus learned in the mid-1950s about British problems
getting nuclear warheads from the United States, 353-356
Autonetics
Defense contractor that in the 1950s produced the
inertial navigation system for Polaris submarines, 393-
304, 500-501
3
Baker, Major Milton G., Pennsylvania National Guard
Founded Valley Forge Military Academy in Pennsylvania in
1928, 3
Barabas, Al
Columbia University football player whom Backus injured
by tackling in practice in 1934, 10-11
Bari, Italy
Provided emergency medical care in the early 1950s for a
USS Isherwood (DD-520) crewman, 297-299
Barkley, F. Dorne
Lockheed employee who began applying systems analysis to
the Polaris program in the late 1950s, 463-465
Baseball
Relationship with football at the Naval Academy in the
late 1930s, 24-26; Max Bishop's methods as head coach in
the late 1930s-early 1940s, 26-27
Bendix Pacific
Company that represented the Decca navigation system in
the United States in the late 1950s, 438-439
4
Birthisel, Lieutenant Lawrence H., Jr., USN (USNA, 1934)
Actions on board the battleship Oklahoma (BB-37) when the
Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in December 1941, 99-100
Bishop, Max F.
Demonstrated a desire to win while serving as head coach
of the baseball team at the Naval Academy in the late
1930s-early 1940s, 26-27
Blacks
Naval Academy Midshipman George Trivers lasted only a few
weeks as a plebe in 1937, 21-22
Bombs/Bombing
A Japanese bomb hit a turret of battleship South Dakota
(BB-57) in October 1942, damaging the ship and wounding
the captain, 136-138
Boxing
Excellent team in the Mississippi (AG-128) in the mid-
1940s, 222-223
Bremerton, Washington
This city and the surrounding Puget Sound area were the
sites for Backus's honeymoon in 1944, 209-210
5
Brennan, Chief Boatswain's Mate Don, USN
Served as boxing coach in the Mississippi (AG-128) in the
mid-1940s, later Virginia state commissioner, 222-223
Bridges, Styles
As U.S. Senator from New Hampshire in the late 1950s,
received a briefing from Backus on the Polaris missile
system, 467-468
Budget--Navy
The challenge of funding the Polaris development program
within the fixed budget levels of the late 1950s, 385-
386, 408-410
Bureau of Aeronautics
Interested in ballistic missiles in the mid-1950s, 365
Bureau of Ordnance
Provided specifications in the mid-1940s for the
conversion of the Mississippi (AG-128) from a battleship
to ordnance test ship, 217-219; ballistics research
projects in the late 1940s and early 1950s, 248-250; role
of civil servants in the bureau, 248-254; involvement
with Harvard University in connection with computers,
250-251; testing in 1951 of underwater rockets as weapons
for submarines, 252-256, 400; development and testing in
the late 1940s and early 1950s of Weapon Able for use
against submarines, 256-260; work on torpedoes by the
Bureau of Ordnance Hydro-ballistics Committee, 260-261;
in the mid-1950s had a representative in the U.S. naval
attaché's office in London, 332, 351, 360-362; role in
connection with ballistic missile development in the mid-
1950s, 365-366, 368-369
6
Bureau of Ships
Involvement in the design of Polaris submarines in the
late 1950s, 417
Censorship
Of outgoing mail from the battleship South Dakota (BB-57)
in 1943, 180-182
Chesapeake Bay
The battleship South Dakota (BB-57) fired one of her 16-
inch guns into a farmer's field while doing shakedown
training in the bay in 1942, 120-121
7
Chilean Navy
Represented in the mid-1950s in London by Commander Jose
T. Merino, later a member of Chile's ruling junta, 347-
348
Collisions
The battleships Oklahoma (BB-37) and Arizona (BB-39)
collided the evening of 22 October 1941, 71-76; the
Oklahoma had a near-collision with the carrier Enterprise
(CV-6) in November 1941, 76-77; the destroyer minesweeper
Hobson (DMS-26) sank as a result of colliding with the
aircraft carrier Wasp (CV-18) in April 1952, 286-288
Communications
Signal lights used at night by the battleship Oklahoma
(BB-37) during maneuvers in October 1941, 72, 74-76;
clearance of radio frequencies in the late 1950s to
permit the startup of the Loran C navigation system, 442;
development in the late 1950s of communication systems
for Polaris submarines, 453-459; concern about developing
systems so that Polaris submarines in distress could
provide information, 458-460
Computers
Use of by the Harvard Computation Laboratory to support
the Navy's Bureau of Ordnance in the late 1940s and early
1950s, 250-251
Congress
Received briefings and testimony on the Polaris program
in the late 1950s, 466-470, 490-491; around 1960 the Air
Force fed classified information about Polaris to a
congressmen in the Air Force Reserve, 493-494
8
Cooke, Lieutenant (j.g.) Lemuel D., USN (USNA, 1939)
Was on the bridge of the battleship South Dakota (BB-57)
when she was hit by a Japanese bomb in October 1942, 137-
138, 141-142
Courts of Inquiry
Held in the wake of the October 1941 collision between
the battleships Oklahoma (BB-37) and Arizona (BB-39) in
1941, 73-74
Courts-Martial
In the late 1940s, a prostitute nicknamed "Fargo Annie"
worked on board the light cruiser Fargo (CL-106) at
Naples and produced disciplinary problems for crew
members, 227-229; one crew member of the light cruiser
Huntington (CL-107) got in trouble in the late 1940s for
pulling down a Greek flag while drunk on liberty in
Kavalla, 229-230
Coyle, John
Civilian official who worked in the late 1950s on the
development of the strategic concept for use of Polaris
submarines, 461-463, 476
Damage Control
In late 1941 the crew of the battleship Oklahoma (BB-37)
put little emphasis on combating shipboard fires, 79; in
September 1942 the skipper of a cruiser sunk at Savo
Island the month before visited the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) and talked about the fires that had
devastated his ship, 133-134
9
Davis, Lieutenant James J., Jr., USNR
U.S. senator's son who served in the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) in 1943, 166-167
Decca
British navigation system considered for possible use in
bottom contour surveys around 1960, 437-439, 442, 447
Defense Department
Establishment in the mid-1950s of the OSD Ballistic
Missile Committee, 376-378; the challenge of funding the
Polaris development program within the fixed budget
levels of the late 1950s, 385-386, 408-410; formation of
the Advanced Research Projects Agency in the late 1950s
as an outgrowth of efforts in the U.S. space program,
428-429
Disciplinary Matters
At the Naval Academy in the late 1930s and early 1940s,
13, 18-20, 30, 40-41; the commanding officer of the
destroyer Jarvis (DD-393) was apparently relieved for
cause in 1941, 57-60
10
Draper, Dr. Stark
Expert physicist from MIT, he had a major role in the
development of the Polaris missile guidance system, 392-
393
Duke of York
British battleship that had dirty, oily gun turrets in
1943, 175-176
Edison, Charles
In his capacity as Secretary of the Navy, Edison and his
wife attended the Naval Academy ring dance at Annapolis
in June 1940, 47-48
Education
Leonard's cram school in New York City in the 1930s
provided an intensive preparation course for Naval
Academy entrance examinations, 11-12; academic studies at
the Naval Academy in the late 1930s-early 1940s, 35-36;
the Naval Postgraduate School at Annapolis provided a
demanding course in ordnance engineering in 1945-46, 201-
206; Backus took Naval War College correspondence courses
on strategy in the early 1950s, 261-263
Engineering Plants
The reciprocating steam engines in the battleship
Oklahoma (BB-37) saved her from worse damage than she
might otherwise have suffered in colliding with the
battleship Arizona (BB-39) in 1941, 73; concern about
fuel consumption by the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520)
during a transit to the Mediterranean in the early 1950s,
318-321
11
Epperson, USS (DD-719)
Role in the testing in the early 1950s of Weapon Able for
use against submarines, 257-258
Families of Servicemen
Hardships posed on families by a service career, 502-503,
505-506
Fire Control
Because of a casualty in a turret, the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) fired one of her 16-inch guns into a
farmer's field during shakedown training in 1942, 120-
121; on board the South Dakota during night action of
Guadalcanal in November 1942, 158-159; fire control radar
in the South Dakota in 1943, 174-175; equipment in the
Mississippi (AG-128) when she was converted to an
ordnance test ship in the mid-1940s, 220-221; the German
fire control equipment was stabilized in three dimensions
in heavy gun ships built for World War II, 343;
development of in the 1950s for Polaris missiles, 395-396
Fires
In September 1942 the skipper of a cruiser sunk at Savo
Island the month before visited the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) and talked about the fires that had
devastated his ship, 133-134; the destroyer Smith (DD-
378) was set afire by a Japanese plane during the Battle
of the Santa Cruz Islands in October 1942, 142-144
Fitness Reports
In 1943 Captain Lynde McCormick of the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) gave Backus an unsatisfactory fitness
report for an incident involving information in an
outgoing letter, 180-182; Captain Allan Smith gave Backus
a favorable evaluation in 1944, 108
12
Flight Training
Brief period of indoctrination for Naval Academy
midshipmen at Annapolis in the summer of 1939, 33
Flood, Daniel J.
Pennsylvania congressman who looked like a pool shark,
469
Food
A religious executive officer dictated wardroom dietary
practices on board the battleship South Dakota (BB-57) in
World War II, 207
Football
Backus's experiences with Valley Forge Military Academy
in the early 1930s, 4-6; at Columbia University in the
mid-1930s, 6-7, 10-11, 25; at Rutgers University in the
1930s, 9-10, 25; at the Naval Academy in the late 1930s-
early 1940s, 15-16, 18, 23-26, 28-30; team in the
Mississippi (AG-128) in the mid-1940s, 223
Forrestal, James V.
As Secretary of the Navy right after World War II,
reacted to the test-firing of the high-speed 8-inch/55
turrets at Dahlgren, 214
France
Naval Academy midshipmen had eye-opening experiences when
they visited Le Havre in the summer of 1938, 27-28; Naval
Academy football practice in Le Havre, 29-30
13
Freitag, Commander Robert F., USN
OpNav officer who had an early role in the development of
Navy ballistic missiles in the mid-1950s, 365, 367, 400,
403, 433
Fuel Oil
Concern about fuel consumption during a transit to the
Mediterranean in the early 1950s by the destroyer
Isherwood (DD-520), 318-321
Gates, Thomas S.
Secretary of the Navy who in the late 1950s pushed for
submerged launching of Polaris missiles, 401; interested
in having Polaris in surface ships, 406; as Secretary of
Defense in the early 1960s, urged the Navy to develop a
streamlined command setup for Polaris, 479-480
14
chief of staff to an embarked flag officer, 232-233; in
the late 1950s he was put in charge of a space program,
though he had little background for it, 426-427
German Navy
Had fire control equipment stabilized in three dimensions
in heavy gun ships built for World War II, 343
Great Britain
Combined U.S. and British naval operations out of Scapa
Flow in the Orkneys in 1943, 170-178; Backus served as an
assistant U.S. naval attaché in Britain in the mid-1950s,
332-364; retired Royal Navy Commander Lionel Crabb was
apparently killed while making an intelligence dive on a
Soviet cruiser in 1956, 338-339; Backus and others
photographed a Sverdlov-class cruiser during her visit to
Great Britain in 1956, 339-343; reception given by the
royal family in the mid-1950s, 345-346; living conditions
encountered in the mid-1950s by U.S. naval personnel
stationed in London, 348-349; in the mid-1950s the
British claimed, apparently incorrectly, that they could
jam U.S. proximity fuzes, 358-359; relationships with the
U.S. Navy on Polaris development around 1960, 449-453
Greece
One crew member of the light cruiser Huntington (CL-107)
got in trouble in the late 1940s for pulling down a Greek
flag while drunk on liberty in Kavalla, 229-230
15
battle, 149, 153-155, 164-165; interaction between South
Dakota and Washington (BB-56) following the battle, 150-
153, 155-157; formation of American ships, 157-158;
treatment of survivors in the water after the battle, 161
Gunnery-Naval
The battleship South Dakota (BB-57) fired one of her 16-
inch guns into a farmer's field while doing shakedown
training in Chesapeake Bay in 1942, 120-121; the South
Dakota's score of enemy planes in the Battle of Santa
Cruz Islands in October 1942, 141-142; during target
practice in 1952, the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) fired
too close to the tug towing a target, 278-279; in the
mid-1950s the British claimed, apparently incorrectly,
that they could jam U.S. proximity fuzes, 358-359
Guns
Because parts had been removed for an upcoming
inspection, the 5-inch/25-caliber antiaircraft guns in
the battleship Oklahoma (BB-37) were unable to fire
during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December
1941, 102-103; distribution of small arms on Ford Island
following the Japanese attack, 110; powerful concussion
from the 16-inch guns of the battleship South Dakota (BB-
57) during shakedown in 1942, 125-126; the South Dakota's
outfit of antiaircraft guns was beefed up during a visit
to Pearl Harbor in the fall of 1942, 134-135; damage to
two of the 16-inch guns of the South Dakota's turret two
made them questionable for use in battle in November
1942, 147-148, 160-161; 40-millimeter gun mount installed
on the bow of the South Dakota in 1943, 169-170; the
battleship Alabama (BB-60) accidentally fired two of her
5-inch guns into an adjacent mount in 1944, killing and
injuring crewmen, 189
16
Harvard Computation Laboratory
Use of computers to support the Navy's Bureau of Ordnance
in the late 1940s and early 1950s, 250-251
Hazing
Done by upper classmen at the Naval Academy in the late
1930s, 15, 22-23
17
Homosexuals
Apparent homosexual in the crew of the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) in World War II, 190-191; the destroyer
Isherwood (DD-520) received a homosexual sailor in a
trade with another destroyer in the early 1950s, 316-318
Honolulu, Hawaii
Social life for junior officers from the battleship
Oklahoma (BB-37) in the last months before the attack on
Pearl Harbor in 1941, 83-87
Hypnosis
In 1948 hypnosis helped cure a chief boatswain's mate who
suffered recurring nightmares as a result of handling
body parts on board the battleship South Dakota (BB-57)
in 1942, 246-247
Iceland
Operations in Icelandic fjords by the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) in 1943, 177
Indian Ocean
Covered in Naval War College strategy courses in the late
1940s and early 1950s, 262
Intelligence
Gathered by U.S. naval attachés in Britain in the mid-
1950s, 333-334, 349-351, 360-361; gathered by Soviet
18
agents in Britain, 334-337; retired Royal Navy Commander
Lionel Crabb was apparently killed while making an
intelligence dive on a Soviet cruiser in 1956, 338-339;
Backus and others photographed a Sverdlov-class cruiser
during her visit to Great Britain in 1956, 339-343
Italian Navy
Worked with the U.S. destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in a
NATO ASW exercise in the early 1950s, 312-313
19
Italy
In the late 1940s, a prostitute nicknamed "Fargo Annie"
worked on board the light cruiser Fargo (CL-106) at
Naples, 227-229; Italian medical facilities aided crewmen
of the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in the early 1950s,
295-299; Backus had a difficult ship-handling experience
at Naples in the early 1950s, 313-315
Japanese Navy
Attack on warships in Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941,
98-99; effects of shooting at American ships during a
night battle off Guadalcanal in November 1942, 149-160;
treatment of Japanese survivors in the water after the
battle, 161
20
Jupiter Missiles
Development of by the Army in the 1950s, 369-370, 402
Kirkcudbright, Scotland
The newly commissioned destroyer John Paul Jones (DD-932)
visited the birthplace of Jones in the autumn of 1956,
352-353
Knox, Frank
As Secretary of the Navy in early 1941, made the
graduation address to that year's Naval Academy class, 49
Koppen, Henk
Dutch engineer who did impressive work in electronics for
Hollandsee Signaal Apparaten in the 1950s, 360-362
21
Korean War
A number of the crew members of the destroyer Isherwood
(DD-520) in 1952 were reservists recalled to active duty
because of the Korean War, 271-273, 277-281
Kwajalein Atoll
Bombardment of by the battleship South Dakota (BB-57) in
1944, 192-193
Little, Louis L.
Preference for "watch-charm guards" while coaching
football at Columbia University in the 1930s, 7
22
Lockheed Corporation
A Lockheed employee named F. Dorne Barkley began applying
systems analysis to the Polaris program in the late
1950s, 463-465
Loeb, William
New Hampshire newspaper publisher who in 1959 arranged
for Backus to meet U.S. Senator Styles Bridges, 466-467;
later got Backus to serve on the advisory board of his
newspaper, 468
London, England
Living conditions encountered in the mid-1950s by U.S.
naval personnel stationed in the city, 348-349
Loran
Development of the Loran C navigation system in the late
1950s, 437-444, 449-450
Mail
Censorship of outgoing letters from the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) in 1943, 180-182
Marianas Islands
Role of the battleship South Dakota (BB-57) in the
Battle of the Philippine Sea in June 1944, 194-197
23
Marine Corps, U.S.
A Marine remained calm while guarding a Japanese prisoner
at Pearl Harbor in December 1941, 111; treatment of
survivors in the water after a battle against the
Japanese near Guadalcanal in mid-November 1942, 161
Marshall Islands
Bombardment of Kwajalein Atoll by the battleship South
Dakota (BB-57) in 1944, 192-193
Martin Company
See Glenn L. Martin Company
Medical Problems
Backus had a broken jaw and later a concussion from
playing football as a Naval Academy midshipman in the
late 1930s, 16-17, 23-24; Backus had seasickness problems
while serving in the crew of the destroyer Jarvis (DD-
393) in 1941, 58-60; a member of the crew of the
24
battleship South Dakota (BB-57) was seriously injured at
the Navy yard at Philadelphia in 1942, 122-123; in 1948
hypnosis helped cure a chief boatswain's mate who
suffered recurring nightmares as a result of handling
body parts on board the battleship South Dakota (BB-57)
in 1942, 246-247; handling of various conditions--polio,
heat exhaustion, and appendix--by the crew of the
destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in the Mediterranean in the
early 1950s, 293-299; destroyer evacuation of a Marine
with an eye injury in the early 1950s, 318-319
Mediterranean Sea
The aircraft carrier Wasp (CV-18) was poorly handled by
her conning officer while in the Strait of Messina in
1953, 288-290; the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) had a
likely contact with a Soviet submarine in the early
1950s, 311-312
Merchant Ships
The Royal Navy inadvertently allowed the crew of a Soviet
merchant ship to photograph a U.S. torpedo during testing
in Britain in the mid-1950s, 336-338; brief consideration
of merchant-type ships for launching Polaris missiles,
402; in the late 1950s the Navy studied the feasibility
of arming merchant ships with Minuteman missiles, 410-413
Messina, Italy
The aircraft carrier Wasp (CV-18) was poorly handled by
her conning officer while in the Strait of Messina in
1953, 288-290; site of medical advice about a crewman of
the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in the early 1950s, 295-
297
25
Military Academy, U.S., West Point, New York
The cadets displayed an unfriendly attitude toward Backus
when he visited West Point in the early 1930s, 4-5
Mille Atoll
Bombardment of by the battleships Iowa (BB-61) and New
Jersey (BB-62) in March 1944, 199-202
Miller, Glenn
Big-band leader whose group played for the Naval Academy
ring dance in the spring of 1940, 45-49
Minuteman Missiles
In the late 1950s the Navy studied the feasibility of
arming merchant ships with the missiles, 410-413; Air
Force development of after Navy work on the Polaris, 475-
478
Missiles
See Jupiter Missiles; Minuteman Missiles; Polaris
Program; Regulus Missiles
Mothballing
See Reserve Fleet
26
Naples, Italy
In the late 1940s, a prostitute nicknamed "Fargo Annie"
worked on board the light cruiser Fargo (CL-106) at
Naples and produced disciplinary problems for crew
members, 227-229; Backus had a difficult ship-handling
experience at Naples while commanding the destroyer
Isherwood (DD-520) in the early 1950s, 313-315
Narragansett Bay
See Newport, Rhode Island
27
Naval Proving Ground, Dahlgren, Virginia
Test-fired 8-inch/55 turrets right after World War II,
214-215; early work with computers around 1950, 251
Naval Reserve
Training cruise for reservists on board the light cruiser
Huntington (CL-107) in 1949, 242-243; a number of the
crew members of the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in 1952
were reservists recalled to active duty because of the
Korean War, 271-273, 277-281
Navigation
In the 1950s, defense contractor Autonetics produced the
inertial navigation system for Polaris submarines, 393-
304, 500-501; the Navy conducted bottom surveys around
1960 to facilitate underwater navigation by Polaris
submarines, 435-448; development of the Loran C
navigation system in the late 1950s, 437-444
Netherlands
The Dutch firm Philips was suspected of collaborating
with the Germans in World War II, 359-360; work of the
firm Hollandsee Signaal Apparaten, 360-362
28
New York Navy Yard
Repair of battle damage to the battleship South Dakota
(BB-57) in 1943, 165; installation of a 40-millimeter gun
mount on the bow of the South Dakota, 169-170
Nobska Report
In the mid-1950s, this study laid the foundation for the
Navy's ballistic missile program, 364-366
Norway
Combined U.S.-Royal Navy operations in the vicinity of in
1943, 174
Nuclear Weapons
Great concern on the part of Royal Navy officers when
Backus learned in the mid-1950s about British problems
getting nuclear warheads from the United States, 353-356;
targeting of ballistic missiles, 395-396, 412-413, 435,
473; Skybolt was a U.S. airborne nuclear weapons system
that the British were interested in during the early
1960s, 451-453; development in the late 1950s of the
strategic concept for use of the submarines, 460-463
29
with the carrier Enterprise (CV-6) in November 1941, 76-
77; emphasis on station-keeping in formation, 78-81;
little emphasis on combating shipboard fires, 79-80;
social life for junior officers, 83-87; one of the ship's
propellers came loose during a voyage to California in
August 1941, 88-89; shipboard uniforms in late 1941, 91-
93; Captain Howard Bode was thoroughly disliked during
his brief tenure as commanding officer in late 1941, 93-
95; events on board during the day of the Japanese
attack, 7 December 1941, 95-109, 113
Oran, Algeria
Site of a visit by the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in
the spring of 1952, 293
PBY Catalina
Planes that woke up battleship personnel when they took
off from Pearl Harbor in late 1941, 99
PT Boats
Operating around Guadalcanal at the time of a big night
battle in November 1942, 157
30
Philadelphia Naval Hospital
In 1948 hypnosis helped cure a chief boatswain's mate who
suffered recurring nightmares as a result of handling
body parts on board the battleship South Dakota (BB-57)
in 1942, 246-247
Philips
Dutch and Swedish firms suspected of collaborating with
the Germans in World War II, 359-360; acquired the firm
Hollandsee Signaal Apparaten, 362
Photography
Backus and others photographed a Sverdlov-class cruiser
during her visit to Great Britain in 1956, 339-343
Polaris Missiles
Development work on solid propellants, 370; Dr. Stark
Draper and guidance systems, 392-393; targeting of, 395-
396, 412-413, 435, 473; decision for submerged launch of
missiles, 400-401; consideration of surface ships armed
with Polaris, 402-408; Polaris came at the expense of the
Regulus missile, 408-410, 434-435; possible competition
from a sea-based Minuteman missile, 410-413; advent of
the A-3 version, 411-412; range of, 495-496
Polaris Program
Nobska report laid the foundation in the mid-1950s, 364-
366, 389-90; support role of the Bureau of Ordnance, 365-
366, 368-369; role of the Ballistic Missiles Branch in
OpNav in the late 1950s, 367, 384-385, 414-415;
establishment and role of the Office of Special Projects,
367-369, 381-383, 391-392, 437-441, 445, 450, 454-456,
486-487, 492-493; Navy interaction with the Army and Air
Force, 369-371; establishment in the mid-1950s of the
31
Defense Department Ballistic Missile Committee, 376-378;
Joint Army-Navy Ballistic Missile Committee, 378-380;
role of the Navy Ballistic Missile Committee, 379-389,
394-400; the challenge of funding the program within the
fixed budget levels of the late 1950s, 385-386; system
concepts developed by the Navy Ballistic Missile
Committee, 387-389; development of operational
requirements for the system, 394-440, 404-405, 414-415;
role of submariners in the program in the late 1950s,
429-433; the Navy conducted bottom surveys around 1960 to
facilitate underwater navigation by Polaris submarines,
435-448; U.S. relationships with the British on Polaris
development, 449-453; negotiations for basing in
Scotland, 451-453; a Lockheed employee began applying
systems analysis to the Polaris program in the late
1950s, 463-465; Congress received briefings and testimony
on the program in the late 1950s, 466-470, 490-491;
development of operational concepts, 472-474; program
milestones, 500-502
Polaris Submarines
In the 1950s, defense contractor Autonetics produced the
inertial navigation system for Polaris submarines, 393-
304, 500-501; design considerations, including number of
screws per submarine, 415-418; concern about selecting
and training two crews per submarine, 418-419; role of
submariners in the program in the late 1950s, 429-433;
the Navy conducted bottom surveys around 1960 to
facilitate underwater navigation, 435-448; development of
systems in the late 1950s for communicating with Polaris
submarines, 453-459; concern about developing systems so
that submarines in distress could provide information,
458-460; development in the late 1950s of the strategic
concept for use of the submarines, 460-463; operational
command structure, 479-480; Operational Development Force
had a limited role in the testing of, 481-482; selection
of bases, 489-490; security of classified information,
492-495; selection of commanding officers, 496-498
Polio
Suffered by a crewman in the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520)
in the early 1950s, 293-295
32
Prisoners of War
Some of Commander William Spears's actions as skipper of
the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in the early 1950s may
have been influenced by the fact that he was a Japanese
prisoner in World War II, 270-272
Promotion of Officers
The Naval Academy class of 1941 came up for selection for
the rank of commander in the early 1950s, 263-267; Backus
was passed over for captain in 1958 and 1959, 482-484,
504-505
Prostitution
Practiced in France in the late 1930s, 28; in the late
1940s, a prostitute nicknamed "Fargo Annie" worked on
board the light cruiser Fargo (CL-106) at Naples and
produced disciplinary problems for crew members, 227-229
Proximity Fuzes
In the mid-1950s the British claimed, apparently
incorrectly, that they could jam U.S. proximity fuzes,
358-359
Racial Discrimination
Naval Academy Midshipman George Trivers lasted only a few
weeks as a plebe in 1937, 21-22
Radar
Use of by the battleship South Dakota (BB-57) after she
had been damaged off Guadalcanal in November 1942, 150-
153; upgrades to equipment in the South Dakota in 1943,
165; fire control capability in the South Dakota in 1943,
174-175; the Dutch firm Signaal Apparaten produced a
radar antenna in the 1950s that was superior to the U.S.
counterpart, 361
Radio
Clearance of radio frequencies in the late 1950s to
permit the startup of the Loran C navigation system, 442;
development in the late 1950s of systems for
communicating with Polaris submarines, 453-459
33
Rand Corporation
Analytical work done for the Air Force by this think tank
in the late 1950s, 371, 378, 468, 475-477
Regulus Missile
Was killed by CNO Arleigh Burke in the 1950s in order to
fund the Polaris program, 408-410, 434-435
Rescue
A number of survivors were pulled out of the water at
Pearl Harbor following the Japanese attack in December
1941, 106-109
34
Reserve Fleet
Inactivation and decommissioning of the light cruiser
Huntington (CL-107) at Philadelphia in 1949, 243-248
Rockets
Bureau of Ordnance test program in 1951 of using
underwater-fired rockets as weapons for submarines, 252-
256, 400; U.S. attempts to put an artificial earth
satellite into space during the International Geophysical
Year in the late 1950s, 420-428
35
Rowney, Ensign James V., USN (USNA, 1941)
Was on board the carrier Enterprise (CV-6) during the
Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands in October 1942, 142
Royal Navy
Combined U.S. and British naval operations out of Scapa
Flow in the Orkneys in 1943, 170-178; provided a warm
reception for U.S. naval attachés in Britain in the mid-
1950s, 333, 356-357; allowed the Soviets to photograph a
U.S. torpedo during testing in Britain in the mid-1950s,
336-338; retired Commander Lionel Crabb was apparently
killed while making an intelligence dive on a Soviet
cruiser in 1956, 338-339; great concern on the part of
Royal Navy officers when Backus learned in the mid-1950s
about British problems getting nuclear warheads from the
United States, 353-356; relationships with the U.S. Navy
on Polaris development around 1960, 449-453
Sailing
At the Naval Academy in the late 1930s, 13
Sanders Associates
New Hampshire defense contractor that developed--but was
unable to sell to the Navy--a system to communicate
distress situations on board Polaris submarines, 459-460
Satellites
U.S. attempts to put an artificial earth satellite into
space during the International Geophysical Year in the
36
late 1950s, 420-428; after the Soviets launched Sputnik
in 1957, OpNav had put together a report on what it had
done in the satellite field over the years and to
recommend a development program, 424-426; in the late
1950s, the Naval Institute bought an article about
satellites from Backus but never published it, 429
Scotland
Combined U.S. and British naval operations out of Scapa
Flow in 1943, 170-178; the newly commissioned destroyer
John Paul Jones (DD-932) visited Scotland, the birthplace
of Jones, in the autumn of 1956, 352-353
Seasickness
Backus had problems while serving in the crew of the
destroyer Jarvis (DD-393) in 1941, 58-60; Backus
experienced one episode when he was commanding officer of
the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in the early 1950s, 269-
270
Security
The Royal Navy inadvertently allowed the crew of a Soviet
merchant ship to photograph a U.S. torpedo during testing
in Britain in the mid-1950s, 336-338; great concern on
the part of Royal Navy officers when Backus learned in
the mid-1950s about British problems getting nuclear
warheads from the United States, 353-356; classified
information about the new Polaris submarines around 1960,
492-495; around 1960 the Air Force fed classified
information about Polaris to a congressmen in the Air
Force Reserve, 493-494
Ship Handling
Captain E. J. Foy's skill minimized damage when the
battleship Oklahoma (BB-37) collided with the battleship
Arizona (BB-39) in October 1941, 72-73; emphasis in the
pre-World War II battle line on station keeping in
formation, 78-81; Captain Arleigh Burke dominated the
ship handing when he commanded the light cruiser
Huntington (CL-107) in 1948, 239-241; Backus's initial
efforts in conning the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in
1952, 273-275; handling of the Isherwood in difficult
37
weather around Newport, Rhode Island in the early 1950s,
283-285, 326-328; the Isherwood had trouble getting under
way from anchorage at Oran, Algeria, in 1952, 292-293;
Backus had a difficult ship-handling experience at Naples
in the early 1950s, 313-315
Shore Bombardment
By the battleship South Dakota (BB-57) at the Marshalls
and New Guinea in 1944, 191-193; role of plaster models
in preparing gunners on board the South Dakota to bombard
Saipan in 1944, 196-197; of Mille Atoll by the
battleships Iowa (BB-61) and New Jersey (BB-62) in March
1944, 199-202; the light cruiser Huntington (CL-107)
practiced at Vieques in 1948, 236-237
Simulators
The crew of the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) was involved
in antisubmarine warfare team training research in the
early 1950s, 281-283
38
Skybolt
Airborne nuclear weapons system that the British were
interested in during the early 1960s, 451-453
Softball
Played by the crew of the battleship Oklahoma (BB-37) in
1941, 87-88; played by the crews of the battleships South
Dakota (BB-57) and Washington (BB-56) in World War II,
188
Sonar
Use of by Polaris submarines for navigation in the early
1960s, 436
39
officer of the deck training, 126-128; ran into a whale
off Casco Bay, 129; Rear Admiral Willis Lee embarked in
the summer of 1942 as division commander, 130; stop at
Tongatabu in September 1942 included a grounding, 131-
133; the ship's outfit of antiaircraft guns was beefed up
during a visit to Pearl Harbor in the fall of 1942, 134-
135; during the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands in
October 1942, 136-138, 141-145; damaged during night
battle between Guadalcanal and Savo Island in November
1942, 141, 149, 153-155, 158-160, 164-165; living
conditions for the ship's officers, 148-149; crewmen
killed, 149, 158-159, 164-165; interaction with the
battleship Washington (BB-56) following the battle off
Savo Island, 150-153, 155-157; maneuvering of in the
battle, 157-158; went to Brooklyn in 1943 for
modernization and repair of battle damage, 162, 165, 169-
170; reserve officers in the crew, 118-119, 136-137, 153,
162-167; off-ship training of crew members by General
Electric, 165-167; cruise to Great Britain in 1943 and
operations with the Royal Navy, 167-178; Rear Admiral
Olaf Hustvedt ordered the crew to off-load a cargo of
whiskey in 1943, 171-172; incident involving mail
censorship in 1943, 180-182; ship's force repairs to a
damaged turret, 182-188, 204-206; homosexual in the crew
in World War II, 190-191; role of the ship during the
Central Pacific campaign in 1943-44, 191-198, 203-204;
checked in the spring of 1944 as a possible flagship for
Admiral William Halsey, 197-198; religious executive
officer dictated wardroom dietary practices, 207; in 1948
hypnosis helped cure a chief boatswain's mate who
suffered recurring nightmares as a result of handling
body parts on board the South Dakota in 1942, 246-247
Soviet Navy
The destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) had a likely contact
with a Soviet submarine in the early 1950s, 311-312;
maintained a sizable naval attaché presence in London in
the mid-1950s, 334-335; retired Royal Navy Commander
Lionel Crabb was apparently killed while making an
intelligence dive on a Soviet cruiser in 1956, 338-339;
Backus and others photographed a Sverdlov-class cruiser
during her visit to Great Britain in 1956, 339-343;
copied German fire control equipment in designing the
Sverdlov-class cruisers, 343; harassment around 1960 of
U.S. ships doing bottom-contour surveys for Polaris
submarines, 447
40
Soviet Union
Individuals on board a Soviet merchant ship photographed
a U.S. torpedo being tested by the British in the mid-
1950s, 336-337; after the Soviets launched Sputnik in
1957, OpNav had put together a report on what it had done
in the satellite field over the years and to recommend a
development program, 424-426
Space
U.S. attempts to put an artificial earth satellite into
space during the International Geophysical Year in the
late 1950s, 420-428; after the Soviets launched Sputnik
in 1957, OpNav had put together a report on what it had
done in the satellite field over the years and to
recommend a development program, 424-426; in the late
1950s, the Naval Institute bought an article about
satellites from Backus but never published it, 429
Sperry Corporation
Declined to invest in the development of the Loran C
navigation system in the late 1950s, 448
41
State Department
Role in getting the Loran C navigation system accepted by
various nations in the late 1950s, 441-444; role in
negotiations for basing of Polaris submarines in
Scotland, 452-453; received Navy briefings in the late
1950s on the strategic concepts for use of the Polaris
submarines, 462-463
Strategy
Backus took Naval War College correspondence courses on
strategy in the early 1950s, 261-263; development in the
late 1950s of the strategic concept for use of the
Polaris submarines, 460-463
Submarine Squadron 14
Role in the development of the Polaris program in the
late 1950s, 430-431
Surveying
The Navy conducted bottom surveys around 1960 to
facilitate underwater navigation by Polaris submarines,
435-448
Systems Analysis
A Lockheed employee named F. Dorne Barkley began applying
systems analysis to the Polaris program in the late
1950s, 463-465
42
Taylor, Commander Edwin J., Jr., USN (USNA, 1924)
Big man who became the executive officer of the
battleship South Dakota (BB-57) in the summer of 1943,
140
Torpedoes
Firing exercises in the destroyer Jarvis (DD-393) in
1941, 61-63; effects on the battleship Oklahoma (BB-37)
at Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, 101-102, 113; as
threat to the battleship South Dakota (BB-57) in World
War II, 149-150; work on torpedoes in the late 1940s and
early 1950s by the Bureau of Ordnance Hydro-ballistics
Committee, 260-261; the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) had
a successful torpedo exercise against a Sixth Fleet
cruiser in the early 1950s, 321-322; the Royal Navy
inadvertently allowed the Soviets to photograph a U.S.
torpedo during testing in Britain in the mid-1950s, 336-
338
Training
Naval Academy summer training cruises in the late 1930s,
27-32, 34-35; brief flight training for midshipmen in the
summer of 1939, 33; torpedo-firing exercises in the
destroyer Jarvis (DD-393) in 1941, 61-63; shakedown
cruise for the battleship South Dakota (BB-57) in 1942,
120-124; officer of the deck training in the South
Dakota, 126-128; General Electric training of South
Dakota crew members in 1943, 165-167; cruise for naval
reservists on board the light cruiser Huntington (CL-107)
in 1949, 242-243; ASW training at Key West in the early
43
1950s, 267; the crew of the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520)
took refresher training at Guantanamo in early 1952, 276-
279; the crew of the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) was
involved in antisubmarine warfare team training research
in the early 1950s, 281-283; the destroyer Isherwood (DD-
520) had a successful torpedo exercise against a Sixth
Fleet cruiser in the early 1950s, 321-322
Trident Submarines
Became too large because of Admiral Hyman Rickover's
influence, 499
Turkey
A Turkish technical officer reacted poorly to a perceived
slight during a NATO tour of U.S. research and
development facilities in the mid-1950s, 373-375
Turrets
Damage to two of the 16-inch guns of turret two in the
battleship South Dakota (BB-57) made them questionable
for use in battle in November 1942, 147-148, 160-161;
General Electric equipment used in the turrets of the
South Dakota in 1943, 166; dirty turrets in the British
battleship Duke of York in 1943, 175-176; installation of
General Electric receiver-regulators in battleship
turrets in 1943, 180-182, 204-206; ship's force repairs
to a turret jammed in train on board the South Dakota,
182-188; in the mid-1940s Backus wrote a graduate thesis
on 8-inch/55 turrets, 213-214; firing of the 8-inch
turret, 214-215
Uniforms-Naval
Various uniforms used in the fleet in 1941-42, 91-93
44
Vanguard Rockets
U.S. attempts to put an artificial earth satellite into
space during the International Geophysical Year in the
late 1950s, 420-428
Venezuela
Visited by the Naval Academy training squadron in the
summer of 1940, 34
Visual Signaling
The battleship Oklahoma (BB-37) had a crackerjack signal
gang in 1941, 69-70; used at night by the Oklahoma during
maneuvers in October 1941, 72, 74-76
45
Weapon Able/Alfa
Development and testing of this antisubmarine weapon in
the late 1940s and early 1950s, 256-260
Weather
In 1938 some Naval Academy midshipmen were punished for
returning late because of a hurricane, 30; the cruiser
Augusta (CA-31) and battleship South Dakota (BB-57)
steamed to Newfoundland in heavy fog in 1943, 167-169;
handling of the destroyer Isherwood (DD-520) in difficult
weather around Newport, Rhode Island, in the early 1950s,
283-285, 326-328
Wertheimer, Albert
Skilled civilian who served as a senior technical adviser
for the Bureau of Ordnance in the late 1940s and early
1950s, 251-254
Whales
During her shakedown training in 1942, the battleship
South Dakota (BB-57) ran into a whale and sawed it in
half, 128
46