The USS Torsk, a historic submarine that's now a museum in Baltimore, was the last US Navy submarine to sink an enemy ship ...
Historic submarines are surprisingly similar to those deployed by today's Navy and can provide an unprecedented look into ...
This Michigan museum stop still catches people off guard, because a real World War II submarine is sitting right in Muskegon ...
The World War II submarine USS Lionfish was part of America's "Silent Service." Despite comprising less than 2% of all US Navy vessels during World War II, submarines like the USS Lionfish sank 55% of ...
The U-boat was not some near-mythical creature as it was almost portrayed by the Allied media, nor even was it a drone built to attack without consciousness. It was a weapon platform manned by people ...
Torsk (SS-423) departing the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, August 1965. (Navy) A United States Navy submarine sank an Iranian ship with a single torpedo this week as the frigate was transiting the Indian ...
In the midst of the Falklands War, British sailors hunting for ARA San Luis launched ordnance at the sonar and radar signals of whales, wrecks, and even flocks of seagulls — anything that might have ...
Visiting historic submarines requires a certain level of comfort with confined spaces, steep ladders, and the smell of diesel fuel. I can't recommend it highly enough. There are 15 World War II-era ...