1950s U.S. NAVY SCREEN HIGHLIGHTS OPERATION BIG DEAL, USS INDEPENDENCE 20904
The first newsreel, titled A
NEW GENERATION, shows some of the stunning accomplishments made by the
Silent Service in the late
1950's.
First, the launching of the Barbel-class
USS Blueback is shown. (00:00:30:00) USS Blueback was built by
Ingalls Shipbuilding Corporation of
Pascagoula, Mississippi, and was the last non-nuclear submarine to join the fleet. The boats that would supplant Blueback and its diesel brethren are then shown. First,
USS Skipjack (
SSN-585), (00:01:00:00) which boasted many design changes that were products of new scientific insight into submarine design: a new tear-drop hull designed for optimum performance underwater, with a mid-hull sail and diving planes designed to keep the ship stable and allow similar
function to an airplane.
Second, we have the
USS George Washington (
SSBN-598), the nation's first
Polaris nuclear missile submarine. (00:02:00:00) With this boat's launch the nation entered a new era, in which submarine-based
ICBMs would form a significant part of the
USA's nuclear defense. The film ends with a mention of the stop-gap system that was in place prior to the arrival of
Polaris, as we see the submarine
USS Barbero (SSGN-317) perform an interesting stunt. Barbero was one of the five
Regulus missile firing submarines. (00:02:30:00) In
1959, as this newsreel clearly shows, Barbero fired a drone version of the
Regulus off the
Atlantic Ocean. Twenty-two minutes later the missile, which was equipped with landing gear, arrived at
Mayport NAS in
Florida.
Inside its warhead compartment were two official
USPS mail containers containing 3,
000 pieces of mail. This "missile mail" remains the first and only time that the
Post Office has used this extremely fast delivery method. Incidentally, cancelled missile mail is still in circulation among stamp collectors, and is highly collectible.
The second newsreel, OPERATION
BIG DEAL, shows a 1959 exercise involving the
United States 2nd and
6th Fleet.
Carrier Operations are shown. (00:02:55:00)
The third newsreel,
USS INDEPENDENCE JOINS THE
FLEET, shows the launching of the fifth
USS Independence (CV/
CVA-62) (00:04:50:00), a
Forrestal-class aircraft carrier of the
United States Navy. She was the fourth and final member of the
Forrestal class of conventionally powered supercarriers. She entered service in 1959, with much of her early years spent in the
Mediterranean Fleet.
Independence made a single tour off the coast of
Vietnam in
1965 during the
Vietnam War, and also carried out airstrikes against
Syrian forces during the
Lebanese Civil War and operations over
Iraq during
Operation Southern Watch, the enforcement of the no-fly zone over southern Iraq. Independence was decommissioned in
1998 after 39 years of active service.
Currently stored at
Bremerton, Washington, the ex-Independence was towed in
2015 to
Brownsville, Texas, for scrapping, the last of the class to be scrapped.
The fourth newsreel, SKATE SURFACES AT THE
POLE. (00:06:20:00) This short film shows some of the stunning accomplishments made by the Silent Service in the late 1950's. The
USS Skate (
SSN-578) the third nuclear submarine commissioned by the
Navy, becomes only the second submarine to reach the
North Pole and the first to surface there. (00:07:00:00) The newsreel ends with the public welcoming the sub home. (00:07:50:00)
The final newsreel, EVENTS IN BRIEF (00:08:12:00) shows various subjects including the relief of
Admiral Dupek as head of the
Little America US Navy Polar Station in
Antarctica. (00:08:35:00) It also shows the launch of
TALOS missiles. (00:09:05:00) Also, we see a sort clip about Navy Frogmen. (00:10:50:00) Furthermore, the film shows the use of a Regulus
Cruise Missile to deliver mail, in a stunt known as missile mail. (00:11:55:00) The film ends with the Air
Development Center in
Lakehurst, New Jersey where a brand new type of airship is tested. (00:12:50:00)
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