Hard Aground

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A01=Andrew C. A. Jampoler
American Navy
Armored Cruiser
Armored Cruiser Squadron
Author_Andrew C. A. Jampoler
Battleship
Captain Benton Decker
Caribbean naval operation
Category=JWCK
Category=NHTM
Category=NHW
Civil War
Civil War to WWI
Combat vessel
cramp and sons
Cruiser
Destroyer
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
First World War
global superpower
great nations
great powers
Great War
Great White Fleet
Henry Morgenthau
maritime disasters
Maritime history
military history
Naval disaster
naval doctrine
naval strategy
navy modernization
sea power
Shipwreck
Spanish-American War
Steel-hulled ship
Union Navy
US Navy
US Navy history
Vice Admiral William Sims
Woodrow Wilson
World War I

Product details

  • ISBN 9780817361082
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 149 x 226mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Mar 2023
  • Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Three intertwined stories highlighting the many challenges the US Navy faced during strategic and material evolution

Hard Aground brings together three intertwined stories documenting the US Navy’s strategic and matÉriel evolution following the end of the Civil War through the First World War. These incidents had lasting consequences for how the navy would modernize itself throughout the rest of the twentieth century.

The first story focuses on the reconstruction of the US Navy following the swift and near-total dismantling of the Union Navy infrastructure after the Civil War. This reconstruction began with barely enough time for the navy’s campaigns in the Spanish-American War, and for its role in the First World War. Jampoler argues that the federal government discovered that the fleet requested by the navy, and paid for by Congress, was the wrong fleet. Focus was on battleships and cruisers rather than destroyers and other small combat vessels needed to hunt submarines and serve as convoy escorts.

The second story relates the short, tragic life of the USS Tennessee (later renamed Memphis), one of the steel-hulled ships of the new Armored Cruiser Squadron that was a centerpiece of the navy’s modernization effort. The USS Tennessee was ordered on two unusual missions in the early months of World War I, long before the United States formally entered the war. These little know missions and the sudden destruction of the ship by a storm surge in the Caribbean serves as the centerpiece of the story. Threaded through the narrative are biographical sketches of the principal players in the drama that unfolded following the ship’s demise, including two of Tennessee’s commanding officers: Vice Admiral Sims, who commanded the US Navy squadrons deployed to Europe in support of the Royal Navy; Rear Admiral William Caperton, who commanded the Caribbean squadron before the Memphis (formerly the Tennessee) was lost; Charles Pond, squadron commander during the wreck; and the American ambassador to the Ottoman court, President Wilson’s enthusiastic supporter, Henry Morgenthau. Jampoler concludes with an account of how the USS Tennessee’s destruction prompted fierce deliberations about the US Navy’s operations and chains of command for the remainder of the First World War and the high-level political wrangling inside the Department of the Navy immediately after the war, as civilian appointees and senior officers wrestled to reshape the department in their image.

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