Warship International

Feature Article Index, 1964-1995

USERS GUIDE

Compiled by Dr. F. J. Peryea, Member, INRO

Prepared 2 May 1996

INTRODUCTION

This index covers the feature articles that appeared in Warship International during the period January 1964 through WI No. 4, 1995, and includes the reprints for 1964 and No. 1, 1966, in addition to the regular monthly issues. It incorporates much of the information found in the 1964-1987 Feature Article Index compiled by John W. Klar and includes more recent material.

This index is not intended to be a comprehensive index of Warship International, therefore it does not include the regular features or questions and answers to WIS/INFOSER. The index does reference most comments about the feature articles that were published after the articles. The index is arranged so that a reader with basic knowledge about a particular ship (e.g.; country, ship type, historical era, etc.) can find the location for information about that ship if it was a subject of any WI feature article. A ship name index is not included in this document because of space considerations.

Most of the feature articles in the 1964 and 1965 issues of WI were very short and were intermixed with current naval news, correspondence requests, questions, answers to those questions, and miscellaneous comments. Some items were not unambiguously identifiable as feature articles and are included in this index for completeness.

Several articles appearing in the 1964 original monthly issues were not present in the 1964 reprint issue, and three short filler articles appear in that reprint that were not in the original issues. All of these articles have been included in the index with only the one appropriate location listed.

DESCRIPTION

This index consists of six separate sections:

            1. Index of Titles
            2. Index of Authors
            3. Index of Countries
            4. Index of Naval Actions and Wars
            5. Index of Ship Types
            6. Index by Topics Other than Ships

Every feature article is listed in the Titles Index and in the Authors Index, but many do not appear in all of the other indices. A few articles appear in only one other index, and some articles appear in more than 15 other categories. All of the indices, except for Naval Actions and Wars, are in alphabetical order as used in Webster’s Dictionary. The Naval Actions and Wars Index is in chronological order with the article titles in alphabetical order under each heading.

The location where each feature article can be found is indicated by a citation coding which is listed for each article after the author’s name(s).

Quarterly issues of WI are cited as month/year:page, prefaced by the letter N. For example, N3/82:215 translates to WI No. 3, 1982, with the article starting on page 215. N1 is the Winter, or March 31 issue as some earlier issues were designated; N2 is the Spring, or June 30 issue; N3 is the Summer, or September 30 issue; and N4 is the Fall, or December 31 issue.

The monthly issues of 1964, 1965 and 1966 are cited as month/year:page with the month indicated numerically. The N prefix is absent. For example, 1/64:3 refers to January 1964, page 3, and 12/64:266 for December 1964, page 266. The combined reprint issue of 1964 is designated by (R/64:page) and is in parentheses to indicate that this is the same article that appeared in the original issue. To avoid possible confusion, all of the articles for 1966 are listed with the quarterly issues first and the monthly issue in parentheses because the change in publishing frequency was made mid-year.

Comments on feature articles are cited as §month/year:page (number of comments). For example, §N3/83:233(2) indicates two comments appearing in WI No. 3, 1983, starting on page 233. The symbol “§” signifies that the citation is for comments. The number in parentheses indicates the total number of relevant comments appearing on a single page or on succeeding consecutive pages.

Although some comments were actually made on previous comment letters rather than to the original article, all comments are included in the index to maintain continuity. Comments that were either only compliments or complaints and that failed to provide information were not included in the index. The names of the authors of the comments are not listed in the index.

TITLES INDEX       

The titles of some feature articles were slightly altered to conform to a standardized style. Changes were limited to citing all warship names in italics and to minor changes in punctuation. In some cases a descriptive phrase has been added in parentheses after the title to clarify the topic of the article. All titles are written in lowercase letters except for proper nouns and the first word of each title and subtitle. Leading definite and indefinite articles are ignored in alphabetizing the titles. Titles starting with numbers retain the numerals but are alphabetized according to the way the numbers would be spelled out.

AUTHORS INDEX

All senior and junior authors are indexed by their full names. Titles and ranks of authors are not included. All authors are in alphabetical order by last name. Anonymous articles written by NRC or INRO staff members are cited under “Staff”. Names starting with prefixes “de”, “del”, “le”, “van”, and “von” are alphabetized by the prefix.

COUNTRIES INDEX

All articles that make significant reference to a particular country are listed under that country. Countries are listed in alphabetical order and, where reasonable, may be indexed under a general heading; e.g., the general heading “Germany” includes Prussia, Germany, West Germany, and East Germany; “Russia” includes the USSR; and “China” includes PRC and ROC.

NAVAL ACTIONS AND WARS

The chronological time categories established for this index are based on logical division of history into periods of technological similarity or unique events. A feature article may appear under more than one category if it provides information that is substantially relevant to those periods of time. Articles that describe ships built before a particular naval action or war will be listed under that naval action or war if the ship had a substantial role in or is commonly associated with the naval action or war.

SHIP TYPES 

This index is divided into types of ships based on well-defined classes or by ship usage. Most ship type categories are self-explanatory. The category “Escort Vessels” refers to ocean-going ships used principally to escort non-combatant vessels, and includes destroyer escorts, patrol frigates, corvettes, and escort sloops. “Patrol Vessels” refers to smaller vessels used for patrolling coastal areas, and includes submarine chasers, motor torpedoboats, motor gunboats, and motor launches. “Small Vessels” includes riverine craft and vessels not designed for sustained independent activities.

The accessory symbols (D), (H) and (DH) indicate that the article contains a significant amount of information about ship design and construction (D), ship history and operations (H), or both design and history (DH).

TOPICS OTHER THAN SHIPS

This index is divided into topics that may be of particular research interest. Most topics are self-explanatory. The topic “Ship Names” refers specifically to articles about ships with the same names. The topic “Ship Lists” refers to compilations of ship names and attributes.
 

Index of Titles

 

Admiral Graf Spee. John S. Rowe. N4/67:280. §N1/68:7.

Air vs. sea in World War I. Richard D. Layman. N3/82:215. §N1/83:6; §N3/83:223(2).

Albany (CG-10) and Chicago (CG-11) leave the active fleet. Christopher C. Wright. N1/83:75.

The Allied assault on Aquila – Operation Toast. Mark Grossman. N2/90:166. §N4/90:324; §N2/91:109.

American battleship main battery armament – The final generation. Emanuel R. Lewis. N4/76:276. §N1/78:8; §N1/79:8.

American naval detachment – Turkey, 1919-1924. Henry P. Beers. N3/76:209.

America's first navy yard. Staff. N4/66:298.

America's super battleships – The Montana class. Robert S. Egan. N2/71:149.

Amerigo Vespucci – A pictorial review. Luciano Grazioli. N2/83:188.

Anthony E. Sokol, 1897-1982. Christopher C. Wright. N1/83:43.

The anti-aircraft armament augmentation of U.S. Navy destroyers – Porter-Sims classes in 1945. Anthony D. Baker III. N1/78:51.

AO-24 USS Platte. Mark J. de Angelis. N3/73:299.

Arabic warship names. Ivan Hrbek. N12/64:258. (R/64:10).

The Argentine Navy's recent past in photographs. Jean Claudio Caso. N1/88:84. §N3/88:225.

The Arleigh Burke (DDG-51). Christopher P. Cavas. N3/91:217.

Armed merchant cruisers of the Royal Swedish Navy, 1939 to 1945. Stellan Bojerud. N1/83:59.

Armed trawlers of the Royal Swedish Navy during 1939 to 1945. Stellan Bojerud. N3/82:231. §N4/82:315.

Armor and its application to warships. Part 1. Nathan Okun. N2/76:115.

Armor and its application to warships. Part 2. Nathan Okun. N2/77:98.

Armor and its application to warships. Part 3: Conclusion. Nathan Okun. N4/78:284. §N2/79:101.

The armored cruiser Averof. Luciano Grazioli. N4/88:370.

Armstrong battleships built for Japan. Peter Brook. N3/85:268.

Armstrong torpedo gunboats. Peter Brook. N2/78:134. §N1/79:6.

The Army Mine Planter Service. K. L. Waters. N4/85:400. §N2/86:113(4); §N4/86:426(2); §N4/86:331; §N2/87:119; §N4/87:337(2); §N3/89:216(2).

Artistic impressions (Drawings of U.S. ships at Hong Kong). Edwin S. Chan. N3/70:227.

An assessment of the Espana class battleships. Alan Vanterpool. N3/65:65.

Attacking the Indianapolis – A re-examination. Carl Boyd. N1/76:15.

The attack on the USS Stark (FFG-31). Staff. N3/87:264. §N2/88:116.

The Australian cruiser Hobart. Staff. N3/67:184. §N4/67:252.

Australian defence boost. Staff. N2/90:192.

Austria-Hungary's last naval visit to the USA. Erwin F. Sieche. N2/90:142. §N3/90:218; §N4/90:326.

Austria-Hungary's naval building projects, 1914-1918. Part 1: Cruisers. Anthony Sokol. N3/78:184. §N1/79:14; §N2/79:98; §N2/79:101.

Austria-Hungary's naval building projects, 1914-1918. Part 2: Destroyers and MTBs. Anthony Sokol. N4/82:324. §N2/83:118.

Austrian dreadnoughts in WWI – Their data and final fate. Rene Greger. N1/65:9.

Austrian river gunboat. Stefan Prohaska. N2/73:182.

Austrian submarines. Rene Greger. N5/65:95. §10/65:230.

Austro-Hungarian battleships. R. F. Scheltema de Heere. N1/73:11. §N3/73:231(2): §N4/73:351; §N1/74:12; §N2/74:172; §N4/74:381; §N4/80:307.

The Austro-Hungarian Navy and the Spanish-American War of 1898. Rene Greger. N1/80:61. §N3/80:210(2).

Auxiliary building program of 1938 – The U.S. Navy's efforts to modernize the train in the prewar era. Thomas Wildenberg. N4/94:333.

Aviazone della Regia Marina – The story of the Italian Naval Air Arm. Tullio Marcon. N2/67:112. §N3/67:172; §N1/68:9; §N3/68:170(2).

The ballistics of the 24-pound long cannon of the USS Constitution. Robert C. Wyckoff. N2/91:148. §N2/92:117; §N3/94:230.

Batfish beats the boneyard. Bruce Brotherton. N4/73:400. §N2/74:177; §N3/74:280.

The battlecruiser Australia. Staff. N1/68:39. §N2/68:86.

Battlecruiser design studies for the Royal Netherlands Navy, 1939-40. Jurrien S. Noot. N3/80:242.

Battlecruisers in the United States Navy. Charles E. Scurrell. N4/64:110. (R/64:42); §9/64:177; §(R/64:5(2)).

Battlefleets and diplomacy – Naval disarmament between the two world wars. A. D. Baker III. N3/89:217.

The battleship Arizona (BB-39) at Pearl Harbor. John M. Neighbor. N12/64:266. §5/65:114.

Battleship designs for the Royal Netherlands Navy. R. F. Scheltema de Heere. N3/70:242.

The battleship Dvenadtsat Apostolov. V. V. Arbuzov. N4/92:368.

Battleship sales during the Russo-Japanese War. Philip Towle. N4/86:402.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 1. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N3/68:180. §N2/69:177.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 2. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N4/68:270.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 3. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N1/69:26. §N3/69:177.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 4. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N2/69:98. §N3/73:238; §N2/74:285.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 5: Conclusion. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N3/69:205. §N2/72:107; §N1/73:5; §N1/74:10.

Battleships – Vulnerable anachronism? Strafford Morss. N2/84:211.

The battleship USS Massachusetts. Christopher C. Wright. N4/86:346. §N4/88:335.

The big guns roar again – USS New Jersey. Staff. N4/68:268.

Biggest gun in the East. Staff. R/64:30.

The Bismarck's final battle. William H. Garzke and Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N2/94:159. §N3/94:232(2); §N4/94:329; §N5/95:329(2).

Boris V. Drashpil, 1902-1987. Christopher C. Wright. N4/87:329.

The Brazilian dreadnoughts, 1904-1914. David Topliss. N3/88:240. §N3/94:221.

Bringing back the battleship. Staff. N1/83:66.

Britain's CMBs in World War I. Joseph Caruana. N3/69:222. §N1/70:8.

British Lend-Leased escort carriers. Donald L. Kindell. N3/65:66. §7/65:156.

British Ministry of Defence orders hovercraft prototypes. Staff. N3/66:220.

British naval guns. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N4/66:310.

British naval operations in the Black Sea, 1918-1920, Part 1. David Snook. N1/89:36.

British naval operations in the Black Sea, 1918-1920. Part 2. David Snook. N4/89:331. §N2/90:110.

British warship design methods, 1860-1905. David K. Brown. N1/95:59.

The Brownwater Navy. Charles Waterhouse. N4/70:389.

Build the limit – The American "maximum battleship" designs of 1916-17. Alan D. Zimm. N1/75:31. §N1/76:5(2); §N1/76:7.

The Bulgarian Nadezda. Rene Greger. N2/73:183.

Canaris, adios. Willard C. Frank, Jr. N2/79:108. §N4/79:304(3); §N1/80:10(2); §N3/80:212.

Cerberus – The world's oldest "battleship" will sail again. Graeme K. Andrews. N3/72:270. §N3/73:236.

The chase – Goeben in the Mediterranean, 1914. Richard Hough. N4/69:269. §N3/71:224; §N4/71:327; §N3/72:228; §N3/73:132; §N3/73:236; §N2/74:171; §N3/73:284; §N4/74:382; §N4/76:247; §N3/77:185.

China today – The People's Navy. Staff. N4/90:350.

The Chinese light cruisers Ning Hai and Ping Hai, 1930-1936. Part 1. Toshio Tamura. N2/85:118. §N3/85:303.

The Chinese light cruisers Ning Hai and Ping Hai, 1930-1936. Part 2: Documentary annex. Christopher C. Wright. N3/85:228.

Chronology summary of Arab-Israeli fighting, Oct.-Nov. 1973. Staff. N4/73:359.

The classification of British and French screw cruising ships, 1840-1900. Stephen S. Roberts. N2/77:144.

The Commandanti class destroyers of the Italian Navy, 1942-1943. Erminio Bagnasco and Mark Grossman. N3/90:258. §4/90, 356.

Comparative notes on U.S. treaty cruiser design. Christopher C. Wright. N4/80:311. §N3/81:211.

The complex development of the French light cruiser, 1910-1926. Part 1. Henri Le Masson. N4/85:374.

The complex development of the French light cruiser, 1910-1926. Part 2. Henri Le Masson. N2/86:142.

Congressional action on the FY 1983 budget request. Christopher C. Wright. N1/83:85.

Congressional action on the FY 1984 budget request. Christopher C. Wright. N1/84:92.

Controversial cruisers – The Atlanta and Boston, America's first steel cruisers. Part 1. Gene T. Zimmerman. N4/74:332. §N3/75:230(2).

Controversial cruisers – The Atlanta and Boston, America's first steel cruisers. Part 2: Conclusion. Gene T. Zimmerman. N1/75:15.

Crewboats go to war. John S. Rowe. N3/67:204.

Cruisers for Argentina. Georg von Rauch. N4/78:297. §N2/79:98(2); §N2/79:103; §N3/79:199; §N4/79:303(2).

Cruisers of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 1. Christopher C. Wright. N1/72:28. §N3/72:227.

Cruisers of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 2. Christopher C. Wright. N3/75:205. §N1/77:5.

Cruisers of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 3. Christopher C. Wright. N2/76:123.

Cruisers of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 4. Christopher C. Wright. N1/77:53. §N4/79:300; §N2/80:108.

CV-2 "Lex" and CV-3 "Sara". Richard M. Anderson and Arthur D. Baker III. N4/77:291. §N2/78:91(2); §N§/78:178(2); §N1/79:10; §N3/79:199; §N2/80:108.

CVA-41 – The conversion of the USS Midway. Stefan Terzibachitsch. N2/72:171. §N4/72:336.

CVA-67 – A look at the John F. Kennedy. Stefan Terzibachitsch. N2/73:170.

CVAs in the United States Navy. James E. Rosenberg. N10/64:194. (R/64:63).

Czechoslovakia's river navy. Rene Greger. N2/68:128.

D-7 and D-9 – Modernizing Iran's guided missile DDs. Staff. N3/73:296.

Daniel Dobbins and the U.S. victory on Lake Erie in the War of 1812. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N10/64:204. (R/64:46); §12/64:267; §2/65:43; §5/65:112; §(R/64:8).

Data on Japanese aircraft carriers. Part 1. Donald L. Kindell. N10/64:209. (R/64:64).

Data on Japanese aircraft carriers. Part 2. Donald L. Kindell. N11/64:224. (R/64:64).

A day at the New York Navy Yard – May 1, 1914. Christopher C. Wright. N3/87:242. §N1/88:8.

DD-373 class destroyers. Robert S. Egan. N7/65:167.

Decima Flotilla decimated. J. Caruana. N2/91:178. §N4/92:329.

Derisley Trimingham – An appreciation. Thomas H. Maskell. N6/65:124.

The design and construction of USS Monitor. Steven C. Thompson. N3/90:222. §4/90, 356.

The design of HMS Arethusa, 1912. David K. Brown. N1/83:35.

Destroyer conversions. Antony Preston. N5/65:117.

Destroyers of the Bundsmarine. Staff. N3/70:217. §N2/71:127.

Details of Japanese battlecruisers B-65 design. Hajime Fukaya. N1/69:48.

Deter through strength – USS Edward McDonnell, DE-1043. Staff. N4/68:298. §N3/69:175; §N2/70:99.

Development of America's large bore mobile guns. Robert D. Fritz. N2/73:188. §N4/73:350; §N1/74:5(2); §N1/75:12.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 1. Eric Lacroix. N4/77:337. §N2/78:90.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 2. Eric Lacroix. N1/79:41. §N1/84:13(2).

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 3. Eric Lacroix. N4/79:329.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 4. Eric Lacroix. N1/81:41.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 5. Eric Lacroix. N4/81:323.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 6. Eric Lacroix. N3/83:232. §N1/84:13(4).

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 7. Eric Lacroix. N3/84:246.

Developments in the Soviet Navy – Mishaps at sea in 1986. Staff. N2/87:181.

DLs of the U.S. Navy. Edward C. Fisher, Jr., and Samuel L. Morison. N4/70:325. §N2/71:127.

Dmitri D. Selesneff, c. 1898-1980. Boris V. Drashpil and Christopher C. Wright. N1/81:11. §N3/81:211.

The drawingboard battleships for the Royal Netherlands Navy, Part 1. Anthonie van Dijk. N4/88:353.

The drawingboard battleships for the Royal Netherlands Navy. Part 2. Anthonie van Dijk. N1/89:30.

The drawingboard battleships for the Royal Netherlands Navy. Part 3. Anthonie van Dijk. N4/89:395. §N4/89:327.

Drydocking ex-USS Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. (DD-850) – Stabilizing and restoring a museum ship. Strafford Morss. N1/90:9.

The Dukes and the Warriors. Keith McBride. N4/90:362.

The Dutch naval shipbuilding program of 1939. John D. Spek. N1/88:68. §N3/88:225; §N2/89:107(2).

Early Spanish steam warships (1834-70). Part 1. Christian de Saint Hubert. N4/83:338. §N3/84:244.

Early Spanish steam warships (1834-70). Part 2. Christian de Saint Hubert. N1/84:21. §N3/84:243(2); §N4/84:347(2).

East European museum ships. Tadeusz Klimczyk. N4/89:379.

Elisabeta and her armament. Rene Greger. N2/84:189.

Elisabeta (Romanian Cruiser). Mihai Georgescu. N2/84:158.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 1: The early types. Peter Brook. N2/70:154. §N4/70:308(2); §N1/71:8; §N3/78:178; §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 2: The later protected types. Peter Brook. N3/71:246. §N1/72:5(2); §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 3: The armoured cruisers. Peter Brook. N3/72:236. §N2/73:133; §N3/73:234; §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 4. Peter Brook. N3/73:270. §N3/74:284; §N3/75:225; §N3/79:201.

The end of the Great Lakes navy. Staff. N4/70:377.

Erich Groner (Memorial). Staff. N9/65:196.

Erie class gunboats. Robert S. Egan. N2/69:115.

The evolution of battleship gunnery in the U.S. Navy, 1920-1945. W. J. Jurens. N3/91:240. §N4/91:321.

Exterior ballistics with microcomputers. William J. Jurens. N1/84:49. §N3/84:240; §N4/84:346.

Face hardened armor. Nathan F. Okun. N3/89:262. §N1/90:5; §N2/90:111(2); §N3/90:215(2); §N1/91:6.

The Falklands campaign – A chronology. Samuel L. Morison. N4/83:376. §N2/84:130(2).

Fantastic was the word! Part 1. Henri Le Masson and Jean Guiglini. N4/74:349. §N4/75:292.

Fantastic was the word! Part 2: Conclusion. Jean Meirat. N3/78:225.

The fate of Stalin's naval program. Evan Mawdsley. N4/90:400. §N4/91:321; §N3/92:222(2); §N4/92:329.

The fate of the Chinese gunboats Yung Chien and Yung Chi. Toshio Tamura. N2/78:145.

The fate of the Chinese torpedo gunboat Fei Ting. Toshio Tamura. N2/87:190.

The fate of the four Chinese torpedo boat destroyers. Boris V. Drashpil, Toshio Tamura and Christopher C. Wright. N2/87:193.

The fate of the Tashkent. Christopher C. Wright. N4/94:348.

50 years in one port – The Victorian monitor Cerebus. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N2/64:28. (R/64:77).

50 years of army dredge boats. Stewart A. Carpenter. N3/87:256. §N1/88:5; §N1/88:8; §N2/88:116; §N4/88:336.

50 years of service – The story of Peru's Coronel Bolognesi and Almirante Grau. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N4/75:319. §N4/76:249.

Fighting flat-tops – The Shokakus. W. David Dickson. N1/77:15. §N3/77:182: §N1/78:7; §N3/78:181(2); §N2/83:121.

The Fighting "I" (USS Intrepid, CVS-11). Staff. N2/79:157.

The Fighting "T" – USS Texas. Robert S. Egan. N4/69:300. §N2/70:98(2); §N4/70:307; §N4/71:326; §N2/72:106(2); §N4/72:334(2).

The Fijenoord-built submarines for Turkey. Anthonie van Dijk. N4/86:335.

First-generation SEAL support craft. Stephen L. Thomas. N2/74:135.

The first light cruisers of the 1922 program – The minelaying cruiser Pluton. Part 2. Jean Guiglini and Albert Moreau. N3/92:225.

The first light cruisers of the 1922 program – The minelaying cruiser Pluton. Part 1. Jean Guiglini and Albert Moreau. N2/92:152. §N4/92:329.

Five broken down B boats – Bitish submarine operations in the northern Adriatic, 1915-1917. Paul Kemp and Peter Jung. N1/89:10.

Fleet rehabilitation and moderization. Stefan Terzibachitsch. N3/75:238.

The flotilla leaders Chateaurenault and Guichen. Thierry Hondemarck. N1/83:12. §N2/83:114.

The 4th Gunboat Division of the Royal Swedish Navy in 1939. Stellan Bojerud. N4/84:430.

France's first real minelayers – Cerbere and Pluton. Lloyd P. Simpson. N3/69:228.

French battleship Marceau. Staff. N1/85:68.

The French building program of 1915. Christopher C. Wright. N1/80:14. §N2/81:106.

The French coast defence ship Rochambeau. Stephen S. Roberts. N4/93:333.

The French Fantasque class destroyers. Jean Meirat. N4/66:287. §N1/67:10; §2/67:88(2).

French Navy Force Frappe. Staff. N1/68:18.

French ship names in history. Jean Meirat. N3/64:55. (R/64:81).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 1. Jean Meirat. N5/64:82. (R/64:47); §7/64:138; §9/64:180; §(R/64:6(2)).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 2. Jean Meirat. N8/64:142. (R/64:50); §10/64:217; §(R/64:6).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 3. Jean Meirat. N10/64:211. (R/64:54).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 4. Jean Meirat. N1/65:21.

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 5. Jean Meirat. N3/65:83. §10/65:231; §2/66:39.

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 6. Jean Meirat. N9/65:203.

French warship names. Part 7: Conclusion. Jean Meirat. N1/66:4. (4/66:95).

Furious and the Tondern raid. Richard D. Layman. N4/73:374. §N2/74:169.

Fu-So (Japan's first steam warship). Charles H. Bogart. N3/72:276.

A future naval war. James E. Rosenberg. N7/65:153.

The Garrett-Nordenfelt submarines. Robert W. Jones. N1/68:26. §N3/68:69; §N1/69:5.

Genesis of a navy. Peter S. Marshall. N1/66:28. 1/66:3.

German destroyer losses in World War II. William C. Ray. N3/65:69. §7/65:156.

The German-Haitian naval clash of 1902. Lloyd P. Simpson. N3/66:216.

The German heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen – A career under two flags. Part 2. Erwin F. Sieche. N3/90:278. §N1/91:5(4); §N2/92:114.

German naval guns. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N1/67:38.

The German Navy during D-Day landings. William C. Ray. N10/64:206. (R/64:60).

The German Navy KM/KS boats. Rene Podhorsky. N2/66:140.

German Navy large bore guns operational ashore during World War I. Paul Schmalenbach. N2/83:123. §N4/83:331.

German seaplane and aricraft carriers in both wars. Rene Greger. N6/64:102. (R/64:87).

Ghost ship of Roosevelt Roads. Don Grantham. N2/71:183.

Giuseppe Garibaldi – Italy's new V/STOL aircraft carrier. Luciano Grazioli. N2/86:160.

The Goeben – Yesterday and today in photos. Staff. N4/69:283. §N2/71:122(2).

Gotland – The three faces of Gotland. Edward C. Fisher, Jr., and Bertil Gard. N3/76:193.

Great Britain tour, October 6-14, 1990. Allan Harris. N4/90:407.

The guided missile frigates Tromp and de Ruyter. Staff. N3/76:184.

Guided missile patrol boats for Israel. Karl Lautenschlager. N3/71:277.

Gunboat diplomacy, 1882 – The U.S. Navy and the bombardment of Alexandria. Robert L. Robinson. N1/82:47. §N3/82:211.

Gun calibers and battle zones. Jr Muir Malcolm. N1/80:24.

Gunfire at Quallah Battoo – 1832. William H. Davis. N3/65:77.

The guns of the General Alekseev. C. B. Robbins and Ove T. Enqvist. N2/95:185.

The Hawaiian Navy and the hula skirt. Geroge E. Boulter. N2/67:138. §N1/68:7.

The Herreshoff spar torpedo boats of 1878-1880. I. A. Grant. N3/77:253. §N1/80:8; §N1/81:8; §N4/81:312.

Historic ship exhibits in the United States. Staff. N2/69:137.

History of the U.S. Navy's minelayer Terror. Staff. N3/69:190. §N1/70:7.

History of USS Stewart (DD-224), 1920-1941. John W. Klar. N4/88:384.

HMAS Rushcutter prepares to enter service. Graeme K. Andrews. N4/87:374.

HMAS Sydney. Lloyd P. Simpson. N4/70:397.

HMCS Bras d'Or – Ten years in retrospective. Thomas G. Lynch. N2/82:117. §N4/82:315; §N4/83:333.

HMNZS Tui. Staff. N1/87:73.

H.M. paddle minesweepers of World War One. George Ransome. N2/69:124.

HMS Amethyst. George Pulham. N2/64:36. (R/64:38); §5/64:95; §(R/64:6).

HMS Ark Royal-Pegasus (1914-1950). Richard D. Layman. N2/76:90. §N4/76:249.

HMS Blake. Staff. N1/70:45.

HMS Bulwark. Stuart Ball. N4/84:352. §N2/85:114.

HMS Coventry. Michael A. Houghton. N4/79:306. §N2/80:108.

HMS Fujiyama – The most beautiful ship in the Royal Swedish Navy? Stellan Bojerud. N1/85:79.

HMS Hermes – The story of the ships of that name. Staff. N1/64:3. (R/64:44); §2/64:34; §3/64:42; §(R/64:7(3)).

H.M. ships and their forebears. Part 1. George Ransome. N12/64:261.

HMS Hood. D. G. Weldon. N2/72:114. §N4/72:337: §N2/73:131; §N1/74:11; §N1/77:5.

HMS Invincible CAH-01. I. A. Sturton. N3/79:246. §N4/79:305; §N1/80:5; §N1/80:8; §N3/80:210; §N2/81:106; §N1/82:13; §N2/83:121.

HMS Lyme Regis – the story of a minesweeper. John Lello. N2/88:196. §N1/89:8.

HMS Malta – Research into a projected warship. I. A. Sturton. N3/71:285.

HMS Queen. George Pulham. N5/64:87. (R/64:83).

HMS Surrey and Northumberland. I. A. Sturton. N3/77:244. §N3/78:180.

HNMS de Zeven Provincien. L. L. von Munching. N10/65:225.

HNMS de Zeven Provincien C-802. L. L. von Munching. N4/76:251. §N1/78:5.

How the Royal Navy could invade Rhodesia. Peter K. Simpson. N12/65:253.

Hr. Ms. Dolfin. John D. Spek. N3/68:214.

Hr. Ms. O-21. John D. Spek. N4/66:302.

The Hunley museum. Richard P. Smyers. N1/72:23.

An I.N.R.O. library. Richard M. Anderson. N1/84:10.

IJN Yamato. W. David Dickson. N4/75:294. §N2/76:87; §N3/76:165(4).

The Imperial Chinese steam navy, 1862-1895. Stephen S. Roberts. N1/74:19. §N3/74:279(2); §N1/75:5; §N2/75:157; §N4/75:292; §N1/76:8; §N1/76:11; §N2/76:89; §N1/77:5(2); §N1/81:9; §N4/82:319.

Impressions from a week in the Baltiisk/Kaliningrad area. Hartmut Ehlers. N4/94:361. §N95/3:221.

Impressions of a dinosaur (USS Missouri, BB-63). Graeme K. Andrews. N3/87:270.

Impressive ships – The story of Her Majesty's cruisers Blake and Blenheim. Christopher C. Wright. N1/70:40. §N4/70:109.

The indestructible Allen. John D. Alden. N3/68:207.

In memoriam – William H. Davis. Henry Sirotin and Christopher C. Wright. N4/86:392.

Iowa vs. Yamato – Another view. Strafford Morss. N2/86:118. §N4/86:334; §N1/87:9.

An ironclad forgery. Jerry Harlowe. N1/90:88. §N3/90:218.

Italy's Enrico Toti class submarines. Staff. N2/68:112.

Japanese DDs – Japanese wartime destroyer construction. R. Peter Koch. N1/67:19. §N4/68:258; §N4/69:261.

Japanese naval construction, 1915-1945 – An introductory essay. Arthur D. Baker III. N1/87:45.

Japanese naval guns. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N2/67:140.

Japanese submarine losses in World War II. John D. Alden. N1/85:12. §N1/85:222.

Japan's hybrid battleships and carriers – Fact and fancy. W. David Dickson. N4/70:356. §N2/71:122; §N3/71:225; §N4/71:327; §N2/72:109.

Japan's Myoko class cruisers. Donald L. Kindell. N2/66:153. §N2/67:87; §N2/73:131; §N1/74:13(2).

Japan's torpedo cruisers. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N2/72:165.

Japan's undersea suicide troops. Staff. N2/73:266.

The Kara class. Staff. N3/74:266.

Kikuzuki – New addition to the J.M.S.D.F. Staff. N3/68:200.

The Kronshtadt class battle cruisers. V. I. Usov and Evan Mawdsley. N4/91:380. §N2/92:114; §N4/92:331.

La Galissonniere, the French flagship at Alexandria in 1882. Christopher C. Wright. N1/82:58.

The last corvette. Thomas G. Lynch. N2/80:171.

The last of a type (Bulgarian torpedoboat Derzki). Lloyd P. Simpson. N2/73:165. §N1/74:13; §N2/74:169; §N3/74:279; §N1/75:13.

The last strange cruise of UB-88. Harvey M. Beigel. N3/86:287. §N3/87:288.

Laurenti type submarines in the world's navies. Alessandro Turrini. N2/95:126. §N5/95:329,331.

The Lend-Lease Captains. Peter Elliott. N3/72:255. §N1/73:5.

Lexington and Saratoga revisited. Richard M. Anderson and Arthur D. Baker III. N3/78:218.

The Lexington class battlecruisers. Robert S. Egan. N1/66:13. 1/66:4.

Libya's new maintenance repair ship. Staff. N3/67:188.

A look at HMS Euryalus. Staff. N3/73:259.

A look at Sweden's new T-121 type MTBs. Staff. N3/66:219.

The loss of HMS Exeter. George F. Dale. N6/64:105. (R/64:73).

The loss of HMS Glorious – An analysis of the action. Vernon W. Howland. N1/94:47.

The loss of HMS Hood – A re-examination. William J. Jurens. N2/87:122. §N4/87:335(4); §N4/89:323; §N2/90:115(2); §N4/90:323; §N1/94:7.

The loss of Repulse and Prince of Wales, December 10, 1941. A. E. Jacobs. N1/86:12.

The loss of the Australian destroyer Voyager. Charles E. Scurrell. N4/64:73. (R/64:22).

The loss of the Project 61 class large antisubmarine warfare ship Otvazhnyi. Staff. N3/92:256. §N2/94:113.

Losses of the Royal Italian Navy, 1915-1918. Halyard. N1/66:21. 3/66:75.

The Lyon class battleships. Henri Le Masson. N1/85:52.

Made sail; up screw. Part 1. Staff. N4/73:386.

Made sail; up screw. Part 2. Staff. N2/74:141. §N2/80:107.

Main shipyards, enginebuilders and manufacturers of guns and armor plates in Saint Petersburg. Christian de Saint Hubert and Boris V. Drashpil. N4/85:333. §N2/86:115; §N4/86:333.

Making miniature warships. P. M. Baggaley. N2/92:174.

Malaysia's new frigate. Staff. N3/67:209.

A Mediterranean cruise in 1937. Christopher C. Wright. N4/82:395. §N2/83:117(5).

A merchant ship at war. Michael A. Houghton. N4/86:395. §N3/87:224(2).

The Midway class carriers. Richard M. Anderson. N2/75:166.

Mimi and Toutou (British patrol boats on Lake Tanganika in WWI). Walter C. Hadley. N2/83:194.

Miscellaneous notes on the war in Vietnam. Staff. N7/65:169.

The miscellaneous ships Yamasemi and Kawasemi (ex-Chinese Chein Kang and Hu E). Toshio Tamura. N1/86:86.

Model shipyard. Harry C. Armstrong. N4/84:427.

Modern Danish minelayers. H. Haar. N3/69:199.

Modern guns of the Royal Navy. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N9/64:170. R/64:30.

Modern propeller design. D. K. Brown. N4/89:361.

A mongrel fleet – America buys a navy to fight Spain, 1898. Jeffery M. Dorwart. N2/80:128. §N4/80:306; §N1/81:7.

Monitors and armored gunboats of the Royal Swedish Navy. Part 1. Stellan Bojerud. N2/86:167.

A much talked about mutiny. Dmitri D. Selesneff. N1/81:13.

The mysterious floating batteries of the Royal Netherlands Navy. Anthonie van Dijk. N3/88:229. §N3/89:215; §N4/89:327.

The mystery of the Austro-Hungarian submarine U-30 – Some facts, observations, and speculation. Rene Greger. N1/87:81. §N4/87:337(2).

Naval affairs in Latvia and Lithuania. Hartmut Ehlers. N3/95:253.

The Naval Air Arm of the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Navy. Rene Podhorsky. N3/65:74.

The naval aspects of the Portuguese-Indian Goa War. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N1/67:33.

The naval facilities at Penemunde after the German unification. Hartmut Ehlers. N3/91:227.

Naval guns, various countries. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N3/67:197.

The Naval Museum of Greece. I. A. Sturton. N1/66:20. (2/66:44); §N4/66:276.

Naval news international report. Charles E. Scurrell. N9/64:187.

Naval tactics – An introduction. W. David Dickson. N3/76:168. §N2/77:94(2); §N4/77:277; §N3/78:180.

A needless tragedy – The loss of H.M. destroyers. Peter C. Smith. N2/71:154. §N4/71:326.

The neglected ironclad – A design and constructional analysis of the USS New Ironsides. William H. Roberts. N2/89:109. §N4/89:323; §N2/90:116.

Nevada, BB-36. John S. Rowe. N1/67:26.

New addition to the fleet – Pegasus (PHM-1). Staff. N4/75:361.

New armored LCM(6)s resemble civil war monitor. Staff. N2/68:124. §N4/68:258.

New developments in the Indian Navy. Maurizio del Prete, Hartmut Ehlers, L. van Ginderen and William H. Rau. N1/88:40.

New developments in the Soviet Navy, 1983. Staff. N4/83:410.

New developments in the Soviet Navy, 1984. Staff. N2/84:178.

New developments in the Soviet Navy, 1985. Christopher C. Wright. N2/85:157.

New historic information on the Soviet Navy. Staff. N3/91:283.

The New London Naval Station – The first years, 1862-1885. Christopher C. Wright. N2/93:112. §N3/93:259; §N1/94:5.

The new look of the Italian Navy. Staff. N1/68:19.

The new Peruvian Navy, 1885-1976. Robert L. Scheina. N3/78:204.

New ships for new navies. Charles E. Scurrell. N4/64:68.

New Soviet warship types. Siegfried Breyer. N4/71:387.

New types of Soviet amphibious craft. Siegfried Breyer. N1/67:31. §N3/67:171.

The Normandie class battleships with quadruple turrets. Henri Le Masson. N4/84:409.

NRC/INRO – The first twenty years. George F. Dale. N1/84:7.

Nuclear submarine historic firsts. Staff. NR/64:41.

The Oahu turrets. E. R. Lewis and D. P. Kirchner. N3/92:273. §N1/93:9.

Obituary of Christian de Saint Hubert. Christopher C. Wright. N2/94:140.

Obituary of Fukui Shizuo. Linton Wells II. N3/94:259. §4/95:334.

Obituary of Martin E. Holbrook. Paul H. Silverstone. N3/92:253.

Ohio must get through. J. Caruana. N4/92:334. §N2/93:109; §N4/93:329(2).

Oklahoma, BB-37. John S. Rowe. N1/67:27.

"Old Hoodoo", the story of the USS Texas. Francis J. Allen. N3/93:226. §N1/94:7; §N3/94:226.

Onderzeebootajers – A look at Holland's post war DDs. Staff. N2/70:122. §N4/70:304.

Operations of the Hipper class cruisers in World War II. R. Peter Koch and Linton Wells II. N3/68:218. §N2/69:92.

The original plans. D. J. Lyon. N1/75:78.

Origins of the Bird class minesweeper design. Christopher C. Wright. N2/88:163.

Painting systems of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1904-1945. Linton Wells II. N1/82:20. §N1/83:5.

The Panay incident. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N5/64:86. (R/64:29).

Past to present – United States Coast Guard ships named Hamilton. Staff. N4/67:274.

Pearl Harbor, fifty years later – Notes on five photographs. Christopher C. Wright. N3/93:292.

The People's Republic of China (PRC) Navy today. Ross Gillett and Christopher C. Wright. N1/86:68.

Phantom fleet – The Confederacy's unclaimed European-built warships. David M. Sullivan. N1/87:12. §N3/87:224; §N3/88:2225(2); §N2/90:115.

A photographic memoir of the Imperial Russian Navy. Christopher C. Wright and Boris V. Drashpil. N4/87:359. §N3/88:225.

A pictorial look at Italy's new submarines. Staff. N3/69:204.

Pierre Warneck, 1902-1980 – Notes on his life and works. Boris V. Drashpil and Christopher C. Wright. N3/80:204.

Polish river monitors, 1919-1939. Ignacy Sienicki and Piotr Jderysik. N1/88:13.

The Popoffkas (Russian coast defense vessels). Robert L. Robinson. N3/74:218.

Powering of warships. David K. Brown. N3/94:234. §N95/1:6.

Preliminary checklist of major Soviet Warships, 1946-1991. Part 1: Major surface combatants. Staff. N1/93:10. §N3/93:220(2); §N4/93:330; §N2/95:117.

Preliminary checklist of major Soviet warships, 1946-1991. Part 2: Submarines. Staff. N3/93:274. §N2/95:117.

Presenting the U.S. Navy's DD-963. Staff. N4/70:351.

Princes Three (converted Canadian liners in WWII). Fraser M. McKee. N1/70:18.

The problems with Ne Tron Menja. Rene Greger. N2/86:155. §N4/86:332; §N4/89:329.

A queen of the sea lives on (USS Alabama, BB-60). Allan C. Harris. N1/67:41.

The raising of the Italian battleship Leonardo da Vinci. Part 1. M. J. Allen. N4/64:78. (R/64:23).

The raising of the Italian battleship Leonardo da Vinci. Part 2. M. J. Allen. N6/64:119. (R/64:23).

Re: The fate of Stalin's naval program. Staff. N2/92:143. §N4/92:329.

The real story of the sinking of the Columbus. Henri Le Masson. N1/78:47.

Recent developments in the Polish Navy. Hartmut Ehlers. N2/93:137.

Recent naval activities in the Leningrad area. Achim Kampmeier. N4/90:328.

The Redoubtable. Part 1. Marc Saibene. N1/94:15. §N3/94:227.

The Redoubtable. Part 2. Marc Saibene. N2/94:117.

The Redoubtable. Part 3. Marc Saibene. N1/95:10.

The Re Italia (ironclad steam frigate). Jack Greene. N4/76:308. §N3/77:183(2); §N2/78:90: §N1/79:10; §N3/79:199.

Remember Alexandria (Italian midget submarines attack on British battleships in WWII). James E. Rosenberg. N7/64:122. (R/64:92).

The removal of the North Sea mine barrage. Harry C. Armstrong. N2/88:134. §N4/88:333; §N1/89:8.

The Rendel gunboats – Flatirons. Richard M. Anderson. N1/76:49. §N1/77:7(4); §N2/77:95; §N4/77:282; §N3/78:178.

Report on the annual meeting of the Italian INRO members, 1994. Maurizio Brescia. N3/94:233.

Report on the reunion of the Italian members of INRO, 1991. Maurizio Brescia. N3/91:281.

Report on the reunion of the Italian members of INRO, 1992. Maurizio Brescia. N4/92:406.

Report on the reunion of the Italian members of INRO, 1993. Maurizio Brescia. N2/94:155.

A report on the U.S. Coast Guard operations in Vietnam. Staff. N1/68:21.

Results of U.S. submarine minelaying activities during World War II as reported in the strategic bombing survey. John D. Alden. N1/93:46.

A resume of the battle of Koh-Chang, 17 January 1941. Jean Guiglini and K. R. Macpherson. N2/90:135. §N2/90, 187.

RFA Engadine. Joseph D. Fama. N1/79:64.

The Riachuelo (Brazilian battleship). Alan Vanterpool. N2/69:140. §N3/70:205.

Riga round-up. Charles E. Scurrell. N1/66:26.

The river war in New Zealand. Staff. N2/68:120.

Robert W. Thew – His life and work. Christopher C. Wright. N1/91:9.

The Romanian Navy during the War of Independence, 1877-1878. Mihai Georgescu. N4/86:359. §N4/87:338.

The Romanian Navy's torpedo boat Rinduncia. Mihai Georgescu. N4/87:350.

The Royal Navy and the question of Imperial defense east of Suez, 1902-1914. Charles R. Shiflett. N4/95:353.

Royal Navy camouflage of WW2. Alan Raven. N1/72:54.

The Royal Navy of Oman. Hartmut Ehlers. N1/93:59.

The Royal Navy post-Falklands. I. A. Sturton. N1/85:83.

The Royal Navy Scout class of 1904-05. K. D. McBride. N3/94:260. §N95/3:223.

The Rurik – Progenitor of the armored cruisers. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N4/67:263. §N1/68:8; §N1/68:10(2); §N3/68:117.

The Russian Rendels. Boris V. Drashpil. N2/80:157.

The saga of Transport Division No. 12. Edward C. Fisher, Jr., and Robert S. Egan. N2/70:139. §N4/70:305; §N4/70:310.

Salute to INS Delhi – or Achilles of the River Plate! Edward C. Fisher, Jr., and Arthur D. Baker III. N2/78:95. §N1/79:14.

Save the USS Cod (SS-224). Lee Ann Hamilton. N1/76:37.

S Boats – Genealogy of the Schnellboat. Paul Schmalenbach. N1/69:10. §N3/69:175; §N1/70:10.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 1: Sweden. Bertil Gard. N2/66:130. §N3/67:172.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 2: Denmark. Bertil Gard. N3/66:208. §N4/66:270; §N4/70:305; §N1/71:8; §N4/72:336; §N3/73:237.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 3: Norway. Bertil Gard. N2/67:107.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 4: Finland. S. Enkio. N3/67:193. §N2/68:173; §N2/69:91.

Scenes from the Falklands – A pictorial look. Staff. N1/83:48.

Seakeeping, Easter, 1916 style. K. D. McBride. N1/90:50.

Seaworthy by design. David K. Brown. N4/88:341.

75th anniversary of the Naval Service of Canada, 1910-1985. Fred Gaffen. N2/85:188.

She's still the Showboat (USS North Carolina, BB-55). Richard R. Sartore. N2/88:118.

The shipboard catapult – Its history and evolution. Richard D. Layman. N3/70:249. §N1/71:7(2).

Ships for crews. Jacques Cornic. N3/85:251. §N1/87:7; §N3/87:221.

Ships in profile. George Pulham. N1/64:10. §2/64:26; §3/64:48; §3/64:60; §4/64:62; §4/64:65; §4/64:66(2); §5/64:99; §8/64:152; §9/64:181.

Ships in profile – USS Dunderberg. Richard M. Anderson. N10/64:196. (R/64:85).

The ships of the Croat Navy. Rene Podhorsky. N2/65:44. §5/65:116; §10/65:230.

Shore museums. Staff. N3/71:318.

Siam's coast defense ships. Staff. N1/64:5. (R/64:27).

Silent propulsion. David K. Brown. N1/90:72.

The singular Sangay. Arthur D. Baker III and Christopher C. Wright. N4/80:338. §N4/81:313(2).

The sinking of the Italian aircraft carrier Aquila – A controversial question. Achille Rastelli and Erminio Bagnasco. N1/90:55.

The small Balkan navies. Rene Podhorsky. N3/64:49. (R/64:4); §8/64:155; §(R/64:5).

SMS Blucher. Paul Schmalenbach. N2/71:171. §M4/71:326; §N2/73:134; §N3/74:283.

SMS Goeben/TNS Yavuz. Martin H. Brice. N4/69:272. §N4/71:327; §N3/73:235; §N2/74:171; §N3/74:282; §N4/74/382.

SMS Ostfriesland. Robert S. Egan and Richard A. Anderson. N2/75:113. §N1/76:11(3); §N2/76:88.

SMS Szent Istvan – Hungary's only and ill-fated dreadnought. Erwin F. Sieche. N2/91:112. §N2/92:114.

Some French fast battleships...that might have been. Henri Le Masson. N2/85:149.

Some notes on new types of Soviet warships. Siegfried Breyer. N4/66:299.

Sources and the author. Gene T. Zimmerman. N4/75:333.

Sous la Croix de Lorraine (Under the Cross of Lorraine) – The FNFL, 1940-1943. Jacques Cornic. N1/87:34. §N4/87:336; §N2/88:116.

The Sovetskii Soiuz class battleships. V. I. Gribovskii and Evan Mawdsley. N2/93:150. §N4/93:330(2).

Soviet battleships. Part 1. Rolf Erikson. N4/72:393. §N2/73:132; §N3/73:234(2); §N1/74:13; §N1/74:18.

Soviet battleships. Part 2. Rolf Erikson. N2/74:115. §N2/75:159; §N3/75:225; §N3/90:216; §N1/91:6.

Soviet cruisers. Part 1. Christopher C. Wright. N1/78:10. §N3/78:177; §N4/78:273(6); §N1/79:6l §N2/79:97: §N2/79:104; §N3/79:199(3); §N1/80:9; §N2/80:105; §N3/81:211.

Soviet gunboats visit Vienna. Staff. N4/71:407.

Soviet Kresta class missile cruisers. Staff. N4/69:267.

The Soviet Navy in World War II. Part 1: Surface fleet. Mr. X. N2/66:162. §N1/67:7(2); §N2/67:86.

The Soviet Navy in World War II. Part 2: Underseas fleet. Mr. X. N3/66:225. §N1/67:7(2); §N2/67:86.

The Soviet Skoryi class. Anton Novik. N1/70:56.

The Soviet Sverdlov and Stalingrad class programs. Staff. N4/82:369.

Soviet W class submarines. Staff. N4/68:306. §N2/69:92.

The Sowinski model collection. Lawrence Sowinski. N3/75:276.

Spain's new DEG Baleares F-71. A. Campanera. N2/74:183.

Spanish dreadnoughts Espana, Jaime I, Alfonso XIII. Richard M. Anderson. N8/64:151. (R/64:72); §N9/64:170.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 1: Forces in Cuban waters. Christian de Saint Hubert and Carlos A. Zaforteza. N1/80:39. §N4/80:307; §N4/81:313.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 2: Admiral Camara's squadron. Christian de Saint Hubert and Carlos A. Zaforteza. N2/80:110. §N4/80:305.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 2: Errata. Christian de Saint Hubert and Carlos A. Zaforteza. N2/84:196.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 3: Spanish warships in Philippine waters. Christian de Saint Hubert and Carlos A. Zaforteza. N3/81:262.

Sparrows among the hawks – Shipboard aviation of the smaller navies, 1919-1939. Richard D. Layman. N2/84:138. §N1/85:6(2); §N2/85:114.

Special exhibits, 1985 – American maritime museums. Staff. N2/85:143.

Stability of nitrocellulose-based powder. George F. Dale. N4/80:349. §N2/81:106(2); §N4/81:313(3); §N1/82:17: §N2/82:111; §N3/82:210(2); §N4/82:317; §N2/83:121; $N3/83:225(3); §N1/84:12; §N2/84:130.

The story of the cruisers Bremse and Brummer. Anton Novik. N3/69:185.

The story of the Spanish dreadnought battleships. Miguel D. Sotelo. N1/64:17. (R/64:68); §2/64:26; §(R/64:6).

A strange one – Catapult lighter AVC-1. Robert S. Egan. N1/70:52.

Submarine 1081 Type, Sauro class. Staff. N2/78:130.

Submarine losses in the eastern Baltic in World War II. Gene C. Stevenson. N4/86:371. §N2/88:117; §N1/90:7.

Submarine pressure hull design and diving depths between the wars. David K. Brown. N3/87:279.

Submarines of the Finnish Navy. Gene C. Stevenson. N1/86:31.

The subterfuge submarines. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N3/77:200. §N2/78:92(2); §N2/79:98(2); §N4/79:302.

Surface torpedo craft of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 1. Boris V. Drashpil. N3/82:236. §N3/83:223; §N4/86:330.

Surface torpedo craft of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 2. Boris V. Drashpil. N1/85:90.

Sweden's ship-to-ship missile – The Rb-08. Staff. N4/68:266.

Swedish torpedo boats and destroyers. Part 1: Torpedo boats. C. Palmstierna. N4/71:367.

Swedish torpedo boats and destroyers. Part 2: Destroyers. C. Palmstierna. N1/72:59.

The Tacoma-class frigates of World War II. Robert E. Johnson. N2/92:120. §N4/92:332; §N1/94:11; §N3/94:231.

The Tall Ladies – Columbus, Albany, and Chicago. Christopher C. Wright. N2/77:104. §N4/77:283; §N1/78:6; §N1/79:7; §N3/79:199.

Technical description and evaluation of SMS Goeben. Robert S. Egan. N4/69:280. §N4/70:312.

Technical decription of HMS Blake and HMS Blenheim. Staff. N1/70:47. §N3/70:207.

The Thai Navy. Stephen S. Roberts. N3/86:217. §N1/87:5; §N2/87:114(2); §N3/87:224: §N4/87:338; §N2/88:113; §N3/88:226; §N4/89:327.

Those MFVs. Staff. N2/77:136.

Thrasher/G4 (SS-26) – The U.S. Navy's Laurenti boat, Part 1. Christopher C. Wright. N3/95:228.

Thrasher/G4 (SS-26) – The U.S. Navy's Laurenti boat, Part 2. Christopher C. Wright. N4/95:335.

"Thunder Mountain", the ironclad ram Dunderberg. Willaim H. Roberts. N4/93:363.

Torpedo boats – Secret weapons of the South. Peter Pry and Richard Zeitlin. N4/84:384. §N3/85:223.

Torpedo gunboats of the Royal Swedish Navy. Stellan Bojerud. N2/85:195.

The torpedo vessels of the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Navy, 1875 to 1918. Wolf H. Bille. N1/71:53. §N3/71:223; §N3/71:229; §N2/72:107.

Tragic end to HMS Orpheus. Staff. N1/69:44.

The transcription of Russian warship names. Rene Greger. N10/64:205. §N3/72:226.

The transparent enemy. Hartmut Ehlers. N1/91:30.

The Treaty cruisers. Part 1. Robert J. Keith. N8/65:179.

The Turkish scouts of 1914. Andrew Smith. N4/87:390.

Turncoat carriers. Kenneth R. Macpherson. N4/68:285.

20 years of radar screens as recognition elements of U.S. warships. Stefan Terzibachitsch. N2/73:156. §N4/73:351.

The 2400-tonners of the French Navy. Jean Guiglini. N2/81:111. §N4/81:311(2).

27 Knotters. Derisley Trimingham. N2/67:96. §N1/68:8; §N3/68:170.

The Type IX U-Boat. Robert W. Thew. N1/91:14.

U-Boats of the U.S. Navy – The YFU. Staff. N3/68:201.

U-Boats that survived. Derek M. Waller. N2/70:110. §N4/70:305.

The ultimate fate of the ORP Orzel. Rene Greger. N12/65:255.

Ultra intercepts offer clues to unrecorded Japanese ship casualties in World War II. John D. Alden. N3/95:242.

Under two flags (British cruiser HMS Doris). George F. Dale. N10/65:223. §N1/66:20; §N2/66:122; §(2/66:45).

Underwater protection in capital ships – A technical approach. William J. Jurens. N4/85:412. §N2/86:116.

Unfounded hopes: a design analysis of the Confederate ironclad steamer CSS Atlanta. William C. Emerson. N4/95:367.

United States submarine losses from all causes, 1915-1963. Vernon J. Miller. N9/64:162. (R/64:31); §9/64:170; §(R/64:7).

An unknown fact about the Russian refugee fleet of 1920. Rene Podhorsky. N1/66:29. (2/66:45).

"Unsinkable ship" constructed in Japan. Staff. R/64:67.

USCGC Reliance (WMEC-615). Staff. N2/67:122.

The U.S. fleet at the New York World's Fair, 1939. Christopher C. Wright. N3/86:273. §N1/87:5; §N3/87:288.

U.S.N. 20-mm anti-aircraft gun. Staff. N4/67:302.

U.S.N. 40-mm twin mount, Type MK-2. Staff. N1/68:55. §N4/68:258.

U.S.N. in W.W.II – A pictorial of selected views. Arthur D. Baker III. N4/78:330. §N2/79:98.

The U.S.N.'s flight deck cruiser. Alan D. Zimm. N3/79:216. §N1/80:9; §N1/80:12.

U.S. naval guns. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N2/66:150.

U.S. Navy 3"/50 anti-aircraft gun. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N2/68:114.

U.S. Navy building programs during World War II. Stephen S. Roberts. N3/81:219. §N4/81:311; §N1/82:11; §N3/82:211.

The U.S. Navy Fiscal Year 1983 shipbuilding budget. Christopher C. Wright. N2/82:155.

The U.S. Navy Fiscal Year 1984 shipbuilding budget. Christopher C. Wright. N2/83:159.

The U.S. Navy Fiscal Year 1985 shipbuilding budget. Christopher C. Wright. N2/84:203.

The U.S. Navy FY 1981/82 shipbuilding budget – 1981 revisions. Christopher C. Wright. N2/81:160.

The U.S. Navy in World War II – A basic bibliography. John W. Klar. N3/87:226. §N1/88:8(2); §N3/88:227.

U.S. Navy mystery ships. Edward F. Beyer and Kenneth M. Beyer. N4/91:322. §N2/92:113(5); §N3/92:221.

The U.S. Navy's aircraft carriers – A pictorial report. Stefan Terzibachitsch. N1/85:32.

The U.S. Navy's battlecruisers. Christopher C. Wright, Samuel L. Morison and Robert S. Egan. N1/71:28. §N/71:326.

The U.S. Navy's new hydrofoil gunboats. Staff. N1/68:20.

U.S. Navy's shipbuilding budgets, 1980-81. Christopher C. Wright. N1/81:17.

U.S. Navy's shipbuilding budgets, 1981. Christopher C. Wright. N1/82:65.

The U.S. Navy's Spruance class destroyers. Staff. N3/74:252.

USS Albany and New Orleans – The American Elswick-built units. Christopher C. Wright and Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N4/71:343. §N1/73:5; §N1/83:7.

USS Banning, Memorial PCE. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N1/66:25. 3/66:67.

The USS Connecticut. William A. Becker. N6/65:133. §10/65:230.

USS DD-224 (ex-Stewart) – The voyage home. John W. Klar. N1/90:74.

The USS England (DE-635). William A. Becker. N3/65:91.

USS Iowa (fold-out plan). Arthur D. Baker III. N1/76:39. §N4/77:277.

USS Kidd. Staff. N4/88:365. §N2/89:108.

USS Narkeeta. William H. Davis. N2/66:161.

USS New England (AD-32). Robert S. Egan and Stephen S. Roberts. N3/77:229. §N1/79:14.

USS Newport (LST-1179). Staff. N4/71:393.

USS Newport News (CA-148). Antony Preston. N2/65:41.

USS Newport News – Fastest guns in the west. Edward C. Fisher, Jr., and Robert S. Egan. N4/72:350.

The USS Pensacola. Edward A. Mueller. N2/68:96. §N4/68:258.

The USS Pueblo (AGER-2). Jr Wilterding John. N1/68:25.

USS Stewart (DD-224) – Design and construction. John W. Klar. N4/88:376.

The USS Texas at Vera Cruz. Ernest E. Pache. N3/65:58.

The USS Wasp (CV-7) in retrospective. Robert S. Egan. N2/66:142.

USS Worcester (CL-144) – The Navy's first. Robert S. Egan. N1/74:58. §N2/74:168; §N3/74:280.

Vesikko (Finnish submarine memorial). Walter Corwin. N4/85:392.

Views from the modern Polish Navy. Staff. N4/92:350. §N3/93:219.

The visit to Australia by three naval vessels of the ALRI, Jan. 74. Graeme K. Andrews. N2/75:196.

Volksmarine der DDR – The other German Navy. Hartmut Ehlers. N1/92:5. §N4/92:331.

A voyage into oblivion? (USS Cyclops, AC-4). Patrick J. O'Brien. N4/73:410. §N3/74:283; §N4/74:385.

Warships built by Armstrong – HMS Glatton and Gorgon (ex-Bjoergvin & Niaros). Peter Brook. N2/85:132.

The warship that sank before being launched – USS Camanche. Charles H. Bogart. N1/69:50. §N3/69:175.

What happened on the Iowa – The ring of truth (?). W. J. Jurens. N2/90:118.

World War II operational history of USS Stewart (DD-224). John W. Klar. N2/89:139.

The world's first guided missile ship? Evan Mawdsley. N1/92:48. §N3/92:221.

WWII Japanese landing craft. Staff. N3/74:240.

Yet another "mystery ship" – USS Pelican (AVP-6). Christopher C. Wright. N1/92:54.

Yugoslav naval guns and the birth of the Yugoslav Navy, 1918-1941. Rene Greger. N4/87:343.

The Yugoslav Navy, 1918-1941. Milan Vego. N4/82:342.

Index of Authors

 

Alden, John D.

The indestructible Allen. N3/68:207.

Japanese submarine losses in World War II. N1/85:12.

The new look of the Italian Navy. N1/68:19. §N1/85:222.

Results of U.S. submarine minelaying activities during World War II as reported in the strategic bombing survey. N1/93:46.

Ultra intercepts offer clues to unrecorded Japanese ship casualties in World War II. N3/95:242.

Allen, Francis J.

The new look of the Italian Navy. N1/68:19. §N1/94:7; §N3/94:226.

"Old Hoodoo", the story of the USS Texas. N3/93:226.

Allen, M. J.

The raising of the Italian battleship Leonardo da Vinci. Part 1. 4/64:78. (R/64:23).

The raising of the Italian battleship Leonardo da Vinci. Part 2. 6/64:119. (R/64:23).

Anderson, Richard M.

CV-2 "Lex" and CV-3 "Sara". N4/77:291. §N2/78:91(2); §N3/78:178(2); §N1/79:10; §N3/79:199; §N2/80:108.

An I.N.R.O. library. N1/84:10.

The Midway class carriers. N2/75:166.

The Rendel gunboats – Flatirons. N1/76:49. §N1/77:7(4); §N2/77:95; §N4/77:282; §N3/78:178.

Lexington and Saratoga revisited. N3/78:218.

Ships in profile – USS Dunderberg. 10/64:196. (R/64:85).

SMS Ostfriesland. N2/75:113. §N1/76:11(3); §N2/76:88.

Spanish dreadnoughts Espana, Jaime I, Alfonso XIII. 8/64:151. (R/64:72); §N9/64:170.

Andrews, Graeme K.

Cerberus – The world's oldest "battleship" will sail again. N3/72:270. §N3/73:236.

HMAS Rushcutter prepares to enter service. N4/87:374.

Impressions of a dinosaur (USS Missouri, BB-63). N3/87:270.

The visit to Australia by three naval vessels of the ALRI, Jan. 74. N2/75:196.

Arbuzov, V. V.

The battleship Dvenadtsat Apostolov. N4/92:368.

Armstrong, Harry C.

Model shipyard. N4/84:427.

The removal of the North Sea mine barrage. N2/88:134. §N4/88:333; §N1/89:8.

Baggaley, P. M.

Making miniature warships. N2/92:174.

Bagnasco, Erminio

The Commandanti class destroyers of the Italian Navy, 1942-1943. N3/90:258. §4/90, 356.

The sinking of the Italian aircraft carrier Aquila – A controversial question. N1/90:55.

Baker III, Arthur D.

The anti-aircraft armament augmentation of U.S. Navy destroyers – Porter-Sims classes in 1945. N1/78:51.

Battlefleets and diplomacy – Naval disarmament between the two world wars. N3/89:217.

CV-2 "Lex" and CV-3 "Sara". N4/77:291. §N2/78:91(2); §N§/78:178(2); §N1/79:10; §N3/79:199; §N2/80:108.

Japanese naval construction, 1915-1945 – An introductory essay. N1/87:45.

Lexington and Saratoga revisited. N3/78:218.

Salute to INS Delhi – or Achilles of the River Plate! N2/78:95. §N1/79:14.

The singular Sangay. N4/80:338. §N4/81:313(2).

U.S.N. in W.W.II – A pictorial of selected views. N4/78:330. §N2/79:98.

USS Iowa (fold-out plan). N1/76:39. §N4/77:277.

Ball, Stuart

HMS Bulwark. N4/84:352. §N2/85:114.

Becker, William A.

The USS Connecticut. 6/65:133. §10/65:230.

The USS England (DE-635). 3/65:91.

Beers, Henry P.

American naval detachment – Turkey, 1919-1924. N3/76:209.

Beigel, Harvey M.

The last strange cruise of UB-88. N3/86:287. §N3/87:288.

Beyer, Edward F.

U.S. Navy mystery ships. N4/91:322. §N2/92:113(5); §N3/92:221.

Beyer, Kenneth M.

U.S. Navy mystery ships. N4/91:322. §N2/92:113(5); §N3/92:221.

Bille, Wolf H.

The torpedo vessels of the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Navy, 1875 to 1918. N1/71:53. §N3/71:223; §N3/71:229; §N2/72:107.

Bogart, Charles H.

Fu-So (Japan's first steam warship). N3/72:276.

The warship that sank before being launched – USS Camanche. N1/69:50. §N3/69:175.

Bojerud, Stellan

Armed merchant cruisers of the Royal Swedish Navy, 1939 to 1945. N1/83:59.

Armed trawlers of the Royal Swedish Navy during 1939 to 1945. N3/82:231. §N4/82:315.

The 4th Gunboat Division of the Royal Swedish Navy in 1939. N4/84:430.

HMS Fujiyama – The most beautiful ship in the Royal Swedish Navy? N1/85:79.

Monitors and armored gunboats of the Royal Swedish Navy. Part 1. N2/86:167.

Torpedo gunboats of the Royal Swedish Navy. N2/85:195.

Boulter, Geroge E.

The Hawaiian Navy and the hula skirt. N2/67:138. §N1/68:7.

Boyd, Carl

Attacking the Indianapolis – A re-examination. N1/76:15.

Brescia, Maurizio

Report on the reunion of the Italian members of INRO, 1991. N3/91:281.

Report on the reunion of the Italian members of INRO, 1992. N4/92:406.

Report on the reunion of the Italian members of INRO, 1993. N2/94:155.

Report on the annual meeting of the Italian INRO members, 1994. N3/94:233.

Breyer, Siegfried

New Soviet warship types. N4/71:387.

New types of Soviet amphibious craft. N1/67:31. §N3/67:171.

Some notes on new types of Soviet warships. N4/66:299.

Brice, Martin H.

SMS Goeben/TNS Yavuz. N4/69:272. §N4/71:327; §N3/73:235; §N2/74:171; §N3/74:282; §N4/74/382.

Brook, Peter

Armstrong torpedo gunboats. N2/78:134. §N1/79:6.

Armstrong battleships built for Japan. N3/85:268.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 1: The early types. N2/70:154. §N4/70:308(2); §N1/71:8; §N3/78:178; §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 2: The later protected types. N3/71:246. §N1/72:5(2); §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 3: The armoured cruisers. N3/72:236. §N2/73:133; §N3/73:234; §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 4. N3/73:270. §N3/74:284; §N3/75:225; §N3/79:201.

Warships built by Armstrong – HMS Glatton and Gorgon (ex-Bjoergvin & Niaros). N2/85:132.

Brotherton, Bruce

Batfish beats the boneyard. N4/73:400. §N2/74:177; §N3/74:280.

Brown, David K.

British warship design methods, 1860-1905. N1/95:59.

The design of HMS Arethusa, 1912. N1/83:35.

Modern propeller design. N4/89:361.

Powering of warships. N3/94:234. §N95/1:6.

Seaworthy by design. N4/88:341.

Silent propulsion. N1/90:72.

Submarine pressure hull design and diving depths between the wars. N3/87:279.

Campanera, A.

Spain's new DEG Baleares F-71. N2/74:183.

Carpenter, Stewart A.

50 years of army dredge boats. N3/87:256. §N1/88:5; §N1/88:8; §N2/88:116; §N4/88:336.

Caruana, Joseph

Britain's CMBs in World War I. N3/69:222. §N1/70:8.

Decima Flotilla decimated. N2/91:178. §N4/92:329.

Ohio must get through. N4/92:334. §N2/93:109; §N4/93:329(2).

Caso, Jean Claudio

The Argentine Navy's recent past in photographs. N1/88:84. §N3/88:225.

Cavas, Christopher P.

The Arleigh Burke (DDG-51). N3/91:217.

Chan, Edwin S.

Artistic impressions (Drawings of U.S. ships at Hong Kong). N3/70:227.

Cornic, Jacques

Ships for crews. N3/85:251. §N1/87:7; §N3/87:221.

Sous la Croix de Lorraine (Under the Cross of Lorraine) – The FNFL, 1940-1943. N1/87:34. §N4/87:336; §N2/88:116.

Corwin, Walter

Vesikko (Finnish submarine memorial). N4/85:392.

Dale, George F.

The loss of HMS Exeter. 6/64:105. (R/64:73).

NRC/INRO – The first twenty years. N1/84:7.

Stability of nitrocellulose-based powder. N4/80:349. §N2/81:106(2); §N4/81:313(3); §N1/82:17: §N2/82:111; §N3/82:210(2); §N4/82:317; §N2/83:121; $N3/83:225(3); §N1/84:12; §N2/84:130.

Under two flags (British cruiser HMS Doris). 10/65:223. §N1/66:20; §N2/66:122; §(2/66:45).

Davis, William H.

Gunfire at Quallah Battoo – 1832. 3/65:77.

USS Narkeeta. N2/66:161.

de Angelis, Mark J.

AO-24 USS Platte. N3/73:299.

de Heere, R. F. Scheltema

Austro-Hungarian battleships. N1/73:11. §N3/73:231(2): §N4/73:351; §N1/74:12; §N2/74:172; §N4/74:381; §N4/80:307.

Battleship designs for the Royal Netherlands Navy. N3/70:242.

del Prete, Maurizio

New developments in the Indian Navy. N1/88:40.

de Saint Hubert, Christian

Early Spanish steam warships (1834-70). Part 1. N4/83:338. §N3/84:244.

Early Spanish steam warships (1834-70). Part 2. N1/84:21. §N3/84:243(2); §N4/84:347(2).

Main shipyards, enginebuilders and manufacturers of guns and armor plates in Saint Petersburg. N4/85:333. §N2/86:115; §N4/86:333.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 1: Forces in Cuban waters. N1/80:39. §N4/80:307; §N4/81:313.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 2: Admiral Camara's squadron. N2/80:110. §N4/80:305.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 2: Errata. N2/84:196.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 3: Spanish warships in Philippine waters. N3/81:262.

Dickson, W. David

Fighting flat-tops – The Shokakus. N1/77:15. §N3/77:182: §N1/78:7; §N3/78:181(2); §N2/83:121.

IJN Yamato. N4/75:294. §N2/76:87; §N3/76:165(4).

Japan's hybrid battleships and carriers – Fact and fancy. N4/70:356. §N2/71:122; §N3/71:225; §N4/71:327; §N2/72:109.

Naval tactics – An introduction. N3/76:168. §N2/77:94(2); §N4/77:277; §N3/78:180.

Dorwart, Jeffery M.

A mongrel fleet – America buys a navy to fight Spain, 1898. N2/80:128. §N4/80:306; §N1/81:7.

Drashpil, Boris V.

Dmitri D. Selesneff, c. 1898-1980. N1/81:11. §N3/81:211.

The fate of the four Chinese torpedo boat destroyers. N2/87:193.

Main shipyards, enginebuilders and manufacturers of guns and armor plates in Saint Petersburg. N4/85:333. §N2/86:115; §N4/86:333.

A photographic memoir of the Imperial Russian Navy. N4/87:359. §N3/88:225.

Pierre Warneck, 1902-1980 – Notes on his life and works. N3/80:204.

The Russian Rendels. N2/80:157.

Surface torpedo craft of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 1. N3/82:236. §N3/83:223; §N4/86:330.

Surface torpedo craft of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 2. N1/85:90.

Dulin, Jr., Robert O.

The Bismarck's final battle. N2/94:159. §N3/94:232(2); §N4/94:329; §N5/95:329(2).

British naval guns. N4/66:310.

German naval guns. N1/67:38.

Japanese naval guns. N2/67:140.

Modern guns of the Royal Navy. N9/64:170. R/64:30.

Naval guns, various countries. N3/67:197.

U.S. naval guns. N2/66:150.

U.S. Navy 3"/50 anti-aircraft gun. N2/68:114.

Egan, Robert S.

America's super battleships – The Montana class. N2/71:149.

DD-373 class destroyers. 7/65:167.

Erie class gunboats. N2/69:115.

The Fighting "T" – USS Texas. N4/69:300. §N2/70:98(2); §N4/70:307; §N4/71:326; §N2/72:106(2); §N4/72:334(2).

The Lexington class battlecruisers. N1/66:13. (1/66:4).

The saga of Transport Division No. 12. N2/70:139. §N4/70:305; §N4/70:310.

SMS Ostfriesland. N2/75:113. §N1/76:11(3); §N2/76:88.

A strange one – Catapult lighter AVC-1. N1/70:52.

Technical description and evaluation of SMS Goeben. N4/69:280. §N4/70:312.

The U.S. Navy's battlecruisers. N1/71:28. §N/71:326.

The USS Wasp (CV-7) in retrospective. N2/66:142.

USS New England (AD-32). N3/77:229. §N1/79:14.

USS Newport News – Fastest guns in the west. N4/72:350.

USS Worcester (CL-144) – The Navy's first. N1/74:58. §N2/74:168; §N3/74:280.

Ehlers, Hartmut

Impressions from a week in the Baltiisk/Kaliningrad area. N4/94:361. §N95/3:221.

Naval affairs in Latvia and Lithuania. N3/95:253.

The naval facilities at Penemunde after the German unification. N3/91:227.

New developments in the Indian Navy. N1/88:40.

Recent developments in the Polish Navy. N2/93:137.

The Royal Navy of Oman. N1/93:59.

The transparent enemy. N1/91:30.

Volksmarine der DDR – The other German Navy. N1/92:5. §N4/92:331.

Elliott, Peter

The Lend-Lease Captains. N3/72:255. §N1/73:5.

Emerson, William C.

Unfounded hopes: a design analysis of the Confederate ironclad steamer CSS Atlanta. N4/95:367.

Enkio, S.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 4: Finland. N3/67:193. §N2/68:173; §N2/69:91.

Enqvist, Ove T.

The guns of the General Alekseev. N2/95:185.

Erikson, Rolf

Soviet battleships. Part 1. N4/72:393. §N2/73:132; §N3/73:234(2); §N1/74:13; §N1/74:18.

Soviet battleships. Part 2. N2/74:115. §N2/75:159; §N3/75:225; §N3/90:216; §N1/91:6.

Fama, Joseph D.

RFA Engadine. N1/79:64.

Fisher, Jr., Edward C.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 1. N3/68:180. §N2/69:177.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 2. N4/68:270.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 3. N1/69:26. §N3/69:177.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 4. N2/69:98. §N3/73:238; §N2/74:285.

Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 5: Conclusion. N3/69:205. §N2/72:107; §N1/73:5; §N1/74:10.

Daniel Dobbins and the U.S. victory on Lake Erie in the War of 1812. 10/64:204. (R/64:46); §12/64:267; §2/65:43; §5/65:112; §(R/64:8).

DLs of the U.S. Navy. N4/70:325. §N2/71:127.

50 years in one port – The Victorian monitor Cerebus. 2/64:28. (R/64:77).

50 years of service – The story of Peru's Coronel Bolognesi and Almirante Grau. N4/75:319. §N4/76:249.

Gotland – The three faces of Gotland. N3/76:193.

Japan's torpedo cruisers. N2/72:165.

The naval aspects of the Portuguese-Indian Goa War. N1/67:33.

The Panay incident. 5/64:86. (R/64:29).

The Rurik – Progenitor of the armored cruisers. N4/67:263. §N1/68:8; §N1/68:10(2); §N3/68:117.

The saga of Transport Division No. 12. N2/70:139. §N4/70:305; §N4/70:310.

Salute to INS Delhi – or Achilles of the River Plate! N2/78:95. §N1/79:14.

The subterfuge submarines. N3/77:200. §N2/78:92(2); §N2/79:98(2); §N4/79:302.

USS Albany and New Orleans – The American Elswick-built units. N4/71:343. §N1/73:5; §N1/83:7.

USS Banning, Memorial PCE. N1/66:25. (3/66:67).

USS Newport News – Fastest guns in the west. N4/72:350.

Frank, Jr, Willard C.

Canaris, adios. N2/79:108. §N4/79:304(3); §N1/80:10(2); §N3/80:212.

Fritz, Robert D.

Development of America's large bore mobile guns. N2/73:188. §N4/73:350; §N1/74:5(2); §N1/75:12.

Fukaya, Hajime

Details of Japanese battlecruisers B-65 design. N1/69:48.

Gaffen, Fred

75th anniversary of the Naval Service of Canada, 1910-1985. N2/85:188.

Gard, Bertil

Gotland – The three faces of Gotland. N3/76:193.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 1: Sweden. N2/66:130. §N3/67:172.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 2: Denmark. N3/66:208. §N4/66:270; §N4/70:305; §N1/71:8; §N4/72:336; §N3/73:237.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 3: Norway. N2/67:107.

Garzke, William H.

The Bismarck's final battle. N2/94:159. §N3/94:232(2); §N4/94:329; §N5/95:329(2).

Georgescu, Mihai

Elisabeta (Romanian Cruiser). N2/84:158.

The Romanian Navy during the War of Independence, 1877-1878. N4/86:359. §N4/87:338.

The Romanian Navy's torpedo boat Rinduncia. N4/87:350.

Gillett, Ross

The People's Republic of China (PRC) Navy today. N1/86:68.

Grant, I. A.

The Herreshoff spar torpedo boats of 1878-1880. N3/77:253. §N1/80:8; §N1/81:8; §N4/81:312.

Grantham, Don

Ghost ship of Roosevelt Roads. N2/71:183.

Grazioli, Luciano

Amerigo Vespucci – A pictorial review. N2/83:188.

The armored cruiser Averof. N4/88:370.

Giuseppe Garibaldi – Italy's new V/STOL aircraft carrier. N2/86:160.

Greene, Jack

The Re Italia (ironclad steam frigate). N4/76:308. §N3/77:183(2); §N2/78:90: §N1/79:10; §N3/79:199.

Greger, Rene

Austrian dreadnoughts in WWI – Their data and final fate. 1/65:9.

Austrian submarines. 5/65:95. §10/65:230.

The Austro-Hungarian Navy and the Spanish-American War of 1898. N1/80:61. §N3/80:210(2).

The Bulgarian Nadezda. N2/73:183.

Czechoslovakia's river navy. N2/68:128.

Elisabeta and her armament. N2/84:189.

German seaplane and aricraft carriers in both wars. 6/64:102. (R/64:87).

The mystery of the Austro-Hungarian submarine U-30 – Some facts, observations, and speculation. N1/87:81. §N4/87:337(2).

The problems with Ne Tron Menja. N2/86:155. §N4/86:332; §N4/89:329.

The transcription of Russian warship names. 10/64:205. §N3/72:226.

The ultimate fate of the ORP Orzel. 12/65:255.

Yugoslav naval guns and the birth of the Yugoslav Navy, 1918-1941. N4/87:343.

Gribovskii, V. I.

The Sovetskii Soiuz class battleships. N2/93:150. §N4/93:330(2).

Grossman, Mark

The Allied assault on Aquila – Operation Toast. N2/90:166. §N4/90:324; §N2/91:109.

The Commandanti class destroyers of the Italian Navy, 1942-1943. N3/90:258. §4/90, 356.

Guiglini, Jean

Fantastic was the word! Part 1. N4/74:349. §N4/75:292.

The first light cruisers of the 1992 program – The minelaying cruiser Pluton. Part 1. N2/92:152. §N4/92:329.

The first light cruisers of the 1922 program – The minelaying cruiser Pluton. Part 2. N3/92:225.

A resume of the battle of Koh-Chang, 17 January 1941. N2/90:135. §N2/90, 187.

The 2400-tonners of the French Navy. N2/81:111. §N4/81:311(2).

Haar, H.

Modern Danish minelayers. N3/69:199.

Hadley, Walter C.

Mimi and Toutou (British patrol boats on Lake Tanganika in WWI). N2/83:194.

Halyard

Losses of the Royal Italian Navy, 1915-1918. N1/66:21. (3/66:75).

Hamilton, Lee Ann

Save the USS Cod (SS-224). N1/76:37.

Harlowe, Jerry

An ironclad forgery. N1/90:88. §N3/90:218.

Harris, Allan C.

Great Britain tour, October 6-14, 1990. N4/90:407.

A queen of the sea lives on (USS Alabama, BB-60). N1/67:41.

Hondemarck, Thierry

The flotilla leaders Chateaurenault and Guichen. N1/83:12. §N2/83:114.

Hough, Richard

The chase – Goeben in the Mediterranean, 1914. N4/69:269. §N3/71:224; §N4/71:327; §N3/72:228; §N3/73:132; §N3/73:236; §N2/74:171; §N3/73:284; §N4/74:382; §N4/76:247; §N3/77:185.

Houghton, Michael A.

HMS Coventry. N4/79:306. §N2/80:108.

A merchant ship at war. N4/86:395. §N3/87:224(2).

Howland, Vernon W.

The loss of HMS Glorious – An analysis of the action. N1/94:47.

Hrbek, Ivan

Arabic warship names. 12/64:258. (R/64:10).

Jacobs, A. E.

The loss of Repulse and Prince of Wales, December 10, 1941. N1/86:12.

Jderysik, Piotr

Polish river monitors, 1919-1939. N1/88:13.

Johnson, Robert E.

The Tacoma-class frigates of World War II. N2/92:120. §N4/92:332; §N1/94:11; §N3/94:231.

Jones, Robert W.

The Garrett-Nordenfelt submarines. N1/68:26. §N3/68:69; §N1/69:5.

Jung, Peter

Five broken down B boats – British submarine operations in the northern Adriatic, 1915-1917. N1/89:10.

Jurens, William J.

The evolution of battleship gunnery in the U.S. Navy, 1920-1945. N3/91:240. §N4/91:321.

Exterior ballistics with microcomputers. N1/84:49. §N3/84:240; §N4/84:346.

The loss of HMS Hood – A re-examination. N2/87:122. §N4/87:335(4); §N4/89:323; §N2/90:115(2); §N4/90:323; §N1/94:7.

Underwater protection in capital ships – A technical approach. N4/85:412. §N2/86:116.

What happened on the Iowa – The ring of truth (?). N2/90:118.

Kampmeier, Achim

Recent naval activities in the Leningrad area. N4/90:328.

Keith, Robert J.

The Treaty cruisers. Part 1. 8/65:179.

Kemp, Paul

Five broken down B boats – Bitish submarine operations in the northern Adriatic, 1915-1917. N1/89:10.

Kindell, Donald L.

British Lend-Leased escort carriers. 3/65:66. §7/65:156.

Data on Japanese aircraft carriers. Part 1. 10/64:209. (R/64:64).

Data on Japanese aircraft carriers. Part 2. 11/64:224. (R/64:64).

Japan's Myoko class cruisers. N2/66:153. §N2/67:87; §N2/73:131; §N1/74:13(2).

Kirchner, D. P.

The Oahu turrets. N3/92:273. §N1/93:9.

Klar, John W.

History of USS Stewart (DD-224), 1920-1941. N4/88:384.

The U.S. Navy in World War II – A basic bibliography. N3/87:226. §N1/88:8(2); §N3/88:227.

USS DD-224 (ex-Stewart) – The voyage home. N1/90:74.

USS Stewart (DD-224) – Design and construction. N4/88:376.

World War II operational history of USS Stewart (DD-224). N2/89:139.

Klimczyk, Tadeusz

East European museum ships. N4/89:379.

Koch, R. Peter

Japanese DDs – Japanese wartime destroyer construction. N1/67:19. §N4/68:258; §N4/69:261.

Operations of the Hipper class cruisers in World War II. N3/68:218. §N2/69:92.

Lacroix, Eric

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 1. N4/77:337. §N2/78:90.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 2. N1/79:41. §N1/84:13(2).

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 3. N4/79:329.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 4. N1/81:41.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 5. N4/81:323.

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 6. N3/83:232. §N1/84:13(4).

The development of the "A Class" cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Part 7. N3/84:246.

Lautenschlager, Karl

Guided missile patrol boats for Israel. N3/71:277.

Layman, Richard D.

Air vs. sea in World War I. N3/82:215. §N1/83:6; §N3/83:223(2).

Furious and the Tondern raid. N4/73:374. §N2/74:169.

HMS Ark Royal-Pegasus (1914-1950). N2/76:90. §N4/76:249.

The shipboard catapult – Its history and evolution. N3/70:249. §N1/71:7(2).

Sparrows among the hawks – Shipboard aviation of the smaller navies, 1919-1939. N2/84:138. §N1/85:6(2); §N2/85:114.

Lello, John

HMS Lyme Regis – the story of a minesweeper. N2/88:196. §N1/89:8.

Le Masson, Henri

The complex development of the French light cruiser, 1910-1926. Part 1. N4/85:374.

The complex development of the French light cruiser, 1910-1926. Part 2. N2/86:142.

Fantastic was the word! Part 1. N4/74:349. §N4/75:292.

The Lyon class battleships. N1/85:52.

The Normandie class battleships with quadruple turrets. N4/84:409.

The real story of the sinking of the Columbus. N1/78:47.

Some French fast battleships...that might have been. N2/85:149.

Lewis, Emanuel R.

American battleship main battery armament – The final generation. N4/76:276. §N1/78:8; §N1/79:8.

Lynch, Thomas G.

The last corvette. N2/80:171.

HMCS Bras d'Or – Ten years in retrospective. N2/82:117. §N4/82:315; §N4/83:333.

Lyon, D. J.

The original plans. N1/75:78.

Macpherson, Kenneth R.

A resume of the battle of Koh-Chang, 17 January 1941. N2/90:135. §N2/90, 187.

Turncoat carriers. N4/68:285.

Marcon, Tullio

Aviazone della Regia Marina – The story of the Italian Naval Air Arm. N2/67:112. §N3/67:172; §N1/68:9; §N3/68:170(2).

Marshall, Peter S.

Genesis of a navy. N1/66:28. (1/66:3).

Maskell, Thomas H.

Derisley Trimingham – An appreciation. 6/65:124.

Mawdsley, Evan

The fate of Stalin's naval program. N4/90:400. §N4/91:321; §N3/92:222(2); §N4/92:329.

The Kronshtadt class battle cruisers. N4/91:380. §N2/92:114; §N4/92:331.

The Sovetskii Soiuz class battleships. N2/93:150. §N4/93:330(2).

The world's first guided missile ship? N1/92:48. §N3/92:221.

McBride, Keith D.

The Dukes and the Warriors. N4/90:362.

The Royal Navy Scout class of 1904-05. N3/94:260. §N95/3:223.

Seakeeping, Easter, 1916 style. N1/90:50.

McKee, Fraser M.

Princes Three (converted Canadian liners in WWII). N1/70:18.

Meirat, Jean

Fantastic was the word! Part 2: Conclusion. N3/78:225.

The French Fantasque class destroyers. N4/66:287. §N1/67:10; §2/67:88(2).

French ship names in history. 3/64:55. (R/64:81).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 1. 5/64:82. (R/64:47); §7/64:138; §9/64:180; §(R/64:6(2)).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 2. 8/64:142. (R/64:50); §10/64:217; §(R/64:6).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 3. 10/64:211. (R/64:54).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 4. 1/65:21.

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 5. 3/65:83. §10/65:231; §2/66:39.

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 6. 9/65:203.

French warship names. Part 7: Conclusion. N1/66:4. (4/66:95).

Miller, Vernon J.

United States submarine losses from all causes, 1915-1963. 9/64:162. (R/64:31); §9/64:170; §(R/64:7).

Moreau, Albert

The first light cruisers of the 1922 program – The minelaying cruiser Pluton. Part 1. N2/92:152. §N4/92:329.

The first light cruisers of the 1922 program – The minelaying cruiser Pluton. Part 2. N3/92:225.

Morison, Samuel L.

DLs of the U.S. Navy. N4/70:325. §N2/71:127.

The Falklands campaign – A chronology. N4/83:376. §N2/84:130(2).

The U.S. Navy's battlecruisers. N1/71:28. §N/71:326.

Morss, Strafford

Battleships – Vulnerable anachronism? N2/84:211.

Drydocking ex-USS Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. (DD-850) – Stabilizing and restoring a museum ship. N1/90:9.

Iowa vs. Yamato – Another view. N2/86:118. §N4/86:334; §N1/87:9.

Mueller, Edward A.

The USS Pensacola. N2/68:96. §N4/68:258.

Muir, Jr., Malcolm

Gun calibers and battle zones. N1/80:24.

Neighbor, John M.

The battleship Arizona (BB-39) at Pearl Harbor. 12/64:266. §5/65:114.

Noot, Jurrien S.

Battlecruiser design studies for the Royal Netherlands Navy, 1939-40. N3/80:242.

Novik, Anton

The Soviet Skoryi class. N1/70:56.

The story of the cruisers Bremse and Brummer. N3/69:185.

O'Brien, Patrick J.

A voyage into oblivion? (USS Cyclops, AC-4). N4/73:410. §N3/74:283; §N4/74:385.

Okun, Nathan F.

Armor and its application to warships. Part 1. N2/76:115.

Armor and its application to warships. Part 2. N2/77:98.

Armor and its application to warships. Part 3: Conclusion. N4/78:284. §N2/79:101.

Face hardened armor. N3/89:262. §N1/90:5; §N2/90:111(2); §N3/90:215(2); §N1/91:6.

Pache, Ernest E.

The USS Texas at Vera Cruz. 3/65:58.

Palmstierna, C.

Swedish torpedo boats and destroyers. Part 1: Torpedo boats. N4/71:367.

Swedish torpedo boats and destroyers. Part 2: Destroyers. N1/72:59.

Podhorsky, Rene

The German Navy KM/KS boats. N2/66:140.

The Naval Air Arm of the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Navy. 3/65:74.

The ships of the Croat Navy. 2/65:44. §5/65:116; §10/65:230.

The small Balkan navies. 3/64:49. (R/64:4); §8/64:155; §(R/64:5).

An unknown fact about the Russian refugee fleet of 1920. N1/66:29. (2/66:45).

Preston, Antony

Destroyer conversions. 5/65:117.

USS Newport News (CA-148). 2/65:41.

Prohaska, Stefan

Austrian river gunboat. N2/73:182.

Pry, Peter

Torpedo boats – Secret weapons of the South. N4/84:384. §N3/85:223.

Pulham, George

HMS Amethyst. 2/64:36. (R/64:38); §5/64:95; §(R/64:6).

HMS Queen. 5/64:87. (R/64:83).

Ships in profile. 1/64:10. §2/64:26; §3/64:48; §3/64:60; §4/64:62; §4/64:65; §4/64:66(2); §5/64:99; §8/64:152; §9/64:181.

Ransome, George

H.M. paddle minesweepers of World War One. N2/69:124.

H.M. ships and their forebears. Part 1. 12/64:261.

Rastelli, Achille

The sinking of the Italian aircraft carrier Aquila – A controversial question. N1/90:55.

Rau, William H.

New developments in the Indian Navy. N1/88:40.

Raven, Alan

Royal Navy camouflage of WW2. N1/72:54.

Ray, William C.

German destroyer losses in World War II. 3/65:69. §7/65:156.

The German Navy during D-Day landings. 10/64:206. (R/64:60).

Robbins, C. B.

The guns of the General Alekseev. N2/95:185.

Roberts, Stephen S.

The classification of British and French screw cruising ships, 1840-1900. N2/77:144.

The French coast defence ship Rochambeau. N4/93:333.

The Imperial Chinese steam navy, 1862-1895. N1/74:19. §N3/74:279(2); §N1/75:5; §N2/75:157; §N4/75:292; §N1/76:8; §N1/76:11; §N2/76:89; §N1/77:5(2); §N1/81:9; §N4/82:319.

The Thai Navy. N3/86:217. §N1/87:5; §N2/87:114(2); §N3/87:224: §N4/87:338; §N2/88:113; §N3/88:226; §N4/89:327.

U.S. Navy building programs during World War II. N3/81:219. §N4/81:311; §N1/82:11; §N3/82:211.

USS New England (AD-32). N3/77:229. §N1/79:14.

Roberts, William H.

The neglected ironclad – A design and constructional analysis of the USS New Ironsides. N2/89:109. §N4/89:323; §N2/90:116.

"Thunder Mountain", the ironclad ram Dunderberg. N4/93:363.

Robinson, Robert L.

Gunboat diplomacy, 1882 – The U.S. Navy and the bombardment of Alexandria. N1/82:47. §N3/82:211.

The Popoffkas (Russian coast defense vessels). N3/74:218.

Rosenberg, James E.

CVAs in the United States Navy. 10/64:194. (R/64:63).

A future naval war. 7/65:153.

Remember Alexandria (Italian midget submarines attack on British battleships in WWII). 7/64:122. (R/64:92).

Rowe, John S.

Admiral Graf Spee. N4/67:280. §N1/68:7.

Crewboats go to war. N3/67:204.

Nevada, BB-36. N1/67:26.

Oklahoma, BB-37. N1/67:27.

Saibene, Marc

The Redoubtable. Part 1. N1/94:15. §N3/94:227.

The Redoubtable. Part 2. N2/94:117.

The Redoubtable. Part 3. N1/95:10.

Sartore, Richard R.

She's still the Showboat (USS North Carolina, BB-55). N2/88:118.

Scheina, Robert L.

The new Peruvian Navy, 1885-1976. N3/78:204.

Schmalenbach, Paul

German Navy large bore guns operational ashore during World War I. N2/83:123. §N4/83:331.

S Boats – Genealogy of the Schnellboat. N1/69:10. §N3/69:175; §N1/70:10.

SMS Blucher. N2/71:171. §M4/71:326; §N2/73:134; §N3/74:283.

Scurrell, Charles E.

Battlecruisers in the United States Navy. 4/64:110. (R/64:42); §9/64:177; §(R/64:5(2)).

The loss of the Australian destroyer Voyager. 4/64:73. (R/64:22).

Naval news international report. 9/64:187.

New ships for new navies. 4/64:68.

Riga round-up. N1/66:26. (3/66:71).

Selesneff, Dmitri D.

A much talked about mutiny. N1/81:13.

Shiflett, Charles R.

The Royal Navy and the question of Imperial defense east of Suez, 1902-1914. N4/95:353.

Sieche, Erwin F.

Austria-Hungary's last naval visit to the USA. N2/90:142. §N3/90:218; §N4/90:326.

The German heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen – A career under two flags. Part 2. N3/90:278. §N1/91:5(4); §N2/92:114.

SMS Szent Istvan – Hungary's only and ill-fated dreadnought. N2/91:112. §N2/92:114.

Sienicki, Ignacy

Polish river monitors, 1919-1939. N1/88:13.

Silverstone, Paul H.

Obituary of Martin E. Holbrook. N3/92:253.

Simpson, Lloyd P.

France's first real minelayers – Cerbere and Pluton. N3/69:228.

The German-Haitian naval clash of 1902. N3/66:216.

HMAS Sydney. N4/70:397.

The last of a type (Bulgarian torpedoboat Derzki). N2/73:165. §N1/74:13; §N2/74:169; §N3/74:279; §N1/75:13.

Simpson, Peter K.

How the Royal Navy could invade Rhodesia. 12/65:253.

Sirotin, Henry

In memoriam – William H. Davis. N4/86:392.

Smith, Andrew

The Turkish scouts of 1914. N4/87:390.

Smith, Peter C.

A needless tragedy – The loss of H.M. destroyers. N2/71:154. §N4/71:326.

Smyers, Richard P.

The Hunley museum. N1/72:23.

Snook, David

British naval operations in the Black Sea, 1918-1920. Part 1. N1/89:36.

British naval operations in the Black Sea, 1918-1920. Part 2. N4/89:331. §N2/90:110.

Sokol, Anthony

Austria-Hungary's naval building projects, 1914-1918. Part 1: Cruisers. N3/78:184. §N1/79:14; §N2/79:98; §N2/79:101.

Austria-Hungary's naval building projects, 1914-1918. Part 2: Destroyers and MTBs. N4/82:324. §N2/83:118.

Sotelo, Miguel D.

The story of the Spanish dreadnought battleships. 1/64:17. (R/64:68); §2/64:26; §(R/64:6).

Sowinski, Lawrence

The Sowinski model collection. N3/75:276.

Spek, John D.

The Dutch naval shipbuilding program of 1939. N1/88:68. §N3/88:225; §N2/89:107(2).

Hr. Ms. Dolfin. N3/68:214.

Hr. Ms. O-21. N4/66:302.

Staff

America's first navy yard. N4/66:298.

The attack on the USS Stark (FFG-31). N3/87:264. §N2/88:116.

The Australian cruiser Hobart. N3/67:184. §N4/67:252.

Australian defence boost. N2/90:192.

The battlecruiser Australia. N1/68:39. §N2/68:86.

The big guns roar again – USS New Jersey. N4/68:268.

Biggest gun in the East. NR/64:30.

Bringing back the battleship. N1/83:66.

British Ministry of Defence orders hovercraft prototypes. N3/66:220.

China today – The People's Navy. N4/90:350.

Chronology summary of Arab-Israeli fighting, Oct.-Nov. 1973. N4/73:359.

D-7 and D-9 – Modernizing Iran's guided missile DDs. N3/73:296.

Destroyers of the Bundsmarine. N3/70:217. §N2/71:127.

Deter through strength – USS Edward McDonnell, DE-1043. N4/68:298. §N3/69:175; §N2/70:99.

Developments in the Soviet Navy – Mishaps at sea in 1986. N2/87:181.

The end of the Great Lakes navy. N4/70:377.

Erich Groner (Memorial). 9/65:196.

The Fighting "I" (USS Intrepid, CVS-11). N2/79:157.

French battleship Marceau. N1/85:68.

French Navy Force Frappe. N1/68:18.

The Goeben – Yesterday and today in photos. N4/69:283. §N2/71:122(2).

The guided missile frigates Tromp and de Ruyter. N3/76:184.

Historic ship exhibits in the United States. N2/69:137.

History of the U.S. Navy's minelayer Terror. N3/69:190. §N1/70:7.

HMNZS Tui. N1/87:73.

HMS Blake. N1/70:45.

HMS Hermes – The story of the ships of that name. 1/64:3. (R/64:44); §2/64:34; §3/64:42; §(R/64:7(3)).

Italy's Enrico Toti class submarines. N2/68:112.

Japan's undersea suicide troops. N2/73:266.

The Kara class. N3/74:266.

Kikuzuki – New addition to the J.M.S.D.F. N3/68:200.

Libya's new maintenance repair ship. N3/67:188.

A look at HMS Euryalus. N3/73:259.

A look at Sweden's new T-121 type MTBs. N3/66:219.

The loss of the Project 61 class large antisubmarine warfare ship Otvazhnyi. N3/92:256. §N2/94:113.

Made sail; up screw. Part 1. N4/73:386.

Made sail; up screw. Part 2. N2/74:141. §N2/80:107.

Malaysia's new frigate. N3/67:209.

Miscellaneous notes on the war in Vietnam. 7/65:169.

New addition to the fleet – Pegasus (PHM-1). N4/75:361.

New armored LCM(6)s resemble civil war monitor. N2/68:124. §N4/68:258.

New developments in the Soviet Navy, 1983. N4/83:410.

New developments in the Soviet Navy, 1984. N2/84:178.

New historic information on the Soviet Navy. N3/91:283.

The new look of the Italian Navy. N1/68:19.

Nuclear submarine historic firsts. NR/64:41.

Onderzeebootajers – A look at Holland's post war DDs. N2/70:122. §N4/70:304.

Past to present – United States Coast Guard ships named Hamilton. N4/67:274.

A pictorial look at Italy's new submarines. N3/69:204.

Preliminary checklist of major Soviet Warships, 1946-1991. Part 1: Major surface combatants. N1/93:10. §N3/93:220(2); §N4/93:330; §N2/95:117.

Preliminary checklist of major Soviet warships, 1946-1991. Part 2: Submarines. N3/93:274. §N2/95:117.

Presenting the U.S. Navy's DD-963. N4/70:351.

Re: The fate of Stalin's naval program. N2/92:143. §N4/92:329.

A report on the U.S. Coast Guard operations in Vietnam. N1/68:21.

The river war in New Zealand. N2/68:120.

Scenes from the Falklands – A pictorial look. N1/83:48.

Shore museums. N3/71:318.

Siam's coast defense ships. 1/64:5. (R/64:27).

Soviet gunboats visit Vienna. N4/71:407.

Soviet Kresta class missile cruisers. N4/69:267.

The Soviet Sverdlov and Stalingrad class programs. N4/82:369.

Soviet W class submarines. N4/68:306. §N2/69:92.

Special exhibits, 1985 – American maritime museums. N2/85:143.

Submarine 1081 Type, Sauro class. N2/78:130.

Sweden's ship-to-ship missile – The Rb-08. N4/68:266.

Technical decription of HMS Blake and HMS Blenheim. N1/70:47. §N3/70:207.

Those MFVs. N2/77:136.

Tragic end to HMS Orpheus. N1/69:44.

U-Boats of the U.S. Navy – The YFU. N3/68:201.

"Unsinkable ship" constructed in Japan. NR/64:67.

USCGC Reliance (WMEC-615). N2/67:122.

U.S.N. 20-mm anti-aircraft gun. N4/67:302.

U.S.N. 40-mm twin mount, Type MK-2. N1/68:55. §N4/68:258.

The U.S. Navy's new hydrofoil gunboats. N1/68:20.

The U.S. Navy's Spruance class destroyers. N3/74:252.

USS Kidd. N4/88:365. §N2/89:108.

USS Newport (LST-1179). N4/71:393.

Views from the modern Polish Navy. N4/92:350. §N3/93:219.

WWII Japanese landing craft. N3/74:240.

Stevenson, Gene C.

Submarine losses in the eastern Baltic in World War II. N4/86:371. §N2/88:117; §N1/90:7.

Submarines of the Finnish Navy. N1/86:31.

Sturton, Ian A.

HMS Invincible CAH-01. N3/79:246. §N4/79:305; §N1/80:5; §N1/80:8; §N3/80:210; §N2/81:106; §N1/82:13; §N2/83:121.

HMS Malta – Research into a projected warship. N3/71:285.

HMS Surrey and Northumberland. N3/77:244. §N3/78:180.

The Naval Museum of Greece. N1/66:20. (2/66:44); §N4/66:276.

The Royal Navy post-Falklands. N1/85:83.

Sullivan, David M.

Phantom fleet – The Confederacy's unclaimed European-built warships. N1/87:12. §N3/87:224; §N3/88:225(2); §N2/90:115.

Tamura, Toshio

The Chinese light cruisers Ning Hai and Ping Hai, 1930-1936. Part 1. N2/85:118. §N3/85:303.

The fate of the Chinese gunboats Yung Chien and Yung Chi. N2/78:145.

The fate of the Chinese torpedo gunboat Fei Ting. N2/87:190.

The fate of the four Chinese torpedo boat destroyers. N2/87:193.

The miscellaneous ships Yamasemi and Kawasemi (ex-Chinese Chein Kang and Hu E). N1/86:86.

Terzibachitsch, Stefan

CVA-41 – The conversion of the USS Midway. N2/72:171. §N4/72:336.

CVA-67 – A look at the John F. Kennedy. N2/73:170.

Fleet rehabilitation and moderization. N3/75:238.

20 years of radar screens as recognition elements of U.S. warships. N2/73:156. §N4/73:351.

The U.S. Navy's aircraft carriers – A pictorial report. N1/85:32.

Thew, Robert W.

The Type IX U-Boat. N1/91:14.

Thomas, Stephen L.

First-generation SEAL support craft. N2/74:135.

Thompson, Steven C.

The design and construction of USS Monitor. N3/90:222. §4/90, 356.

Topliss, David

The Brazilian dreadnoughts, 1904-1914. N3/88:240. §N3/94:221.

Towle, Philip

Battleship sales during the Russo-Japanese War. N4/86:402.

Trimingham, Derisley

27 Knotters. N2/67:96. §N1/68:8; §N3/68:170.

Turrini, Alessandro

Laurenti type submarines in the world's navies. N2/95:126. §N5/95:329,331.

Usov, V. I.

The Kronshtadt class battle cruisers. N4/91:380. §N2/92:114; §N4/92:331.

van Dijk, Anthonie

The drawingboard battleships for the Royal Netherlands Navy. Part 1. N4/88:353.

The drawingboard battleships for the Royal Netherlands Navy. Part 2. N1/89:30.

The drawingboard battleships for the Royal Netherlands Navy. Part 3. N4/89:395. §N4/89:327.

The Fijenoord-built submarines for Turkey. N4/86:335.

The mysterious floating batteries of the Royal Netherlands Navy. N3/88:229. §N3/89:215; §N4/89:327.

van Ginderen, L.

New developments in the Indian Navy. N1/88:40.

Vanterpool, Alan

An assessment of the Espana class battleships. 3/65:65.

The Riachuelo (Brazilian battleship). N2/69:140. §N3/70:205.

Vego, Milan

The Yugoslav Navy, 1918-1941. N4/82:342.

von Munching, L. L.

HNMS de Zeven Provincien. 10/65:225.

HNMS de Zeven Provincien C-802. N4/76:251. §N1/78:5.

von Rauch, Georg

Cruisers for Argentina. N4/78:297. §N2/79:98(2); §N2/79:103; §N3/79:199; §N4/79:303(2).

Waller, Derek M.

U-Boats that survived. N2/70:110. §N4/70:305.

Waterhouse, Charles

The Brownwater Navy. N4/70:389.

Waters, K. L.

The Army Mine Planter Service. N4/85:400. §N2/86:113(4); §N4/86:426(2); §N4/86:331; §N2/87:119; §N4/87:337(2); §N3/89:216(2).

Weldon, D. G.

HMS Hood. N2/72:114. §N4/72:337: §N2/73:131; §N1/74:11; §N1/77:5.

Wells II, Linton

Obituary of Fukui Shizuo. N3/94:259. §4/95:334.

Operations of the Hipper class cruisers in World War II. N3/68:218. §N2/69:92.

Painting systems of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1904-1945. N1/82:20. §N1/83:5.

Wildenberg, Thomas

Auxiliary building program of 1938 – The U.S. Navy's efforts to modernize the train in the prewar era. N4/94:333.

Wilterding, Jr., John

The USS Pueblo (AGER-2). N1/68:25.

Wright, Christopher C.

Albany (CG-10) and Chicago (CG-11) leave the active fleet. N1/83:75.

Anthony E. Sokol, 1897-1982. N1/83:43.

The battleship USS Massachusetts. N4/86:346. §N4/88:335.

Boris V. Drashpil, 1902-1987. N4/87:329.

The Chinese light cruisers Ning Hai and Ping Hai, 1930-1936. Part 2: Documentary annex. N3/85:228.

Comparative notes on U.S. treaty cruiser design. N4/80:311. §N3/81:211.

Congressional action on the FY 1983 budget request. N1/83:85.

Congressional action on the FY 1984 budget request. N1/84:92.

Cruisers of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 1. N1/72:28. §N3/72:227.

Cruisers of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 2. N3/75:205. §N1/77:5.

Cruisers of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 3. N2/76:123.

Cruisers of the Imperial Russian Navy. Part 4. N1/77:53. §N4/79:300; §N2/80:108.

A day at the New York Navy Yard – May 1, 1914. N3/87:242. §N1/88:8.

Dmitri D. Selesneff, c. 1898-1980. N1/81:11. §N3/81:211.

The fate of the four Chinese torpedo boat destroyers. N2/87:193.

The fate of the Tashkent. N4/94:348.

The French building program of 1915. N1/80:14. §N2/81:106.

Impressive ships – The story of Her Majesty's cruisers Blake and Blenheim. N1/70:40. §N4/70:109.

In memoriam – William H. Davis. N4/86:392.

La Galissonniere, the French flagship at Alexandria in 1882. N1/82:58.

A Mediterranean cruise in 1937. N4/82:395. §N2/83:117(5).

New developments in the Soviet Navy, 1985. N2/85:157.

The New London Naval Station – The first years, 1862-1885. N2/93:112. §N3/93:259; §N1/94:5.

Obituary of Christian de Saint Hubert. N2/94:140.

Origins of the Bird class minesweeper design. N2/88:163.

Pearl Harbor, fifty years later – Notes on five photographs. N3/93:292.

The People's Republic of China (PRC) Navy today. N1/86:68.

A photographic memoir of the Imperial Russian Navy. N4/87:359. §N3/88:225.

Pierre Warneck, 1902-1980 – Notes on his life and works. N3/80:204.

Robert W. Thew – His life and work. N1/91:9.

The singular Sangay. N4/80:338. §N4/81:313(2).

Soviet cruisers. Part 1. N1/78:10. §N3/78:177; §N4/78:273(6); §N1/79:6l §N2/79:97: §N2/79:104; §N3/79:199(3); §N1/80:9; §N2/80:105; §N3/81:211.

The Tall Ladies – Columbus, Albany, and Chicago. N2/77:104. §N4/77:283; §N1/78:6; §N1/79:7; §N3/79:199.

Thrasher/G4 (SS-26) – The U.S. Navy's Laurenti boat, Part 1. N3/95:228.

Thrasher/G4 (SS-26) – The U.S. Navy's Laurenti boat, Part 2. N4/95:335.

The U.S. fleet at the New York World's Fair, 1939. N3/86:273. §N1/87:5; §N3/87:288.

The U.S. Navy Fiscal Year 1981/82 shipbuilding budget – 1981 revisions. N2/81:160.

The U.S. Navy Fiscal Year 1983 shipbuilding budget. N2/82:155.

The U.S. Navy Fiscal Year 1984 shipbuilding budget. N2/83:159.

The U.S. Navy Fiscal Year 1985 shipbuilding budget. N2/84:203.

The U.S. Navy's battlecruisers. N1/71:28. §N/71:326.

U.S. Navy's shipbuilding budgets, 1980-81. N1/81:17.

U.S. Navy's shipbuilding budgets, 1981. N1/82:65.

USS Albany and New Orleans – The American Elswick-built units. N4/71:343. §N1/73:5; §N1/83:7.

Yet another "mystery ship" – USS Pelican (AVP-6). N1/92:54.

Wyckoff, Robert C.

The ballistics of the 24-pound long cannon of the USS Constitution. N2/91:148. §N2/92:117; §N3/94:230.

X, Mr.

The Soviet Navy in World War II. Part 1: Surface fleet. N2/66:162. §N1/67:7(2); §N2/67:86.

The Soviet Navy in World War II. Part 2: Underseas fleet. N3/66:225. §N1/67:7(2); §N2/67:86.

Zaforteza, Carlos A.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 1: Forces in Cuban waters. N1/80:39. §N4/80:307; §N4/81:313.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 2: Admiral Camara's squadron. N2/80:110. §N4/80:305.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 3: Spanish warships in Philippine waters. N3/81:262.

The Spanish Navy of 1898. Part 2: Errata. N2/84:196.

Zeitlin, Richard

Torpedo boats – Secret weapons of the South. N4/84:384. §N3/85:223.

Zimm, Alan D.

Build the limit – The American "maximum battleship" designs of 1916-17. N1/75:31. §N1/76:5(2); §N1/76:7.

The U.S.N.'s flight deck cruiser. N3/79:216. §N1/80:9; §N1/80:12.

Zimmerman, Gene T.

Controversial cruisers – The Atlanta and Boston, America's first steel cruisers. Part 1. N4/74:332. §N3/75:230(2).

Controversial cruisers – The Atlanta and Boston, America's first steel cruisers. Part 2: Conclusion. N1/75:15.

Sources and the author. N4/75:333.

Index by Countries

    ALGERIA

Arabic warship names. Ivan Hrbek. N12/64:258. (R/64:10).

ARGENTINA

The Argentine Navy's recent past in photographs. Jean Claudio Caso. N1/88:84. §N3/88:225.

Cruisers for Argentina. Georg von Rauch. N4/78:297. §N2/79:98(2); §N2/79:103; §N3/79:199; §N4/79:303(2).

The Elswick cruisers. Part 2: The later protected types. Peter Brook. N3/71:246. §N1/72:5(2); §N3/79:201.

The Falklands campaign – A chronology. Samuel L. Morison. N4/83:376. §N2/84:130(2).

The Rendel gunboats – Flatirons. Richard M. Anderson. N1/76:49. §N1/77:7(4); §N2/77:95; §N4/77:282; §N3/78:178.

Report on the reunion of the Italian members of INRO, 1991. Maurizio Brescia. N3/91:281.

Scenes from the Falklands – A pictorial look. Staff. N1/83:48.

Sparrows among the hawks – Shipboard aviation of the smaller navies, 1919-1939. Richard D. Layman. N2/84:138. §N1/85:6(2); §N2/85:114.

AUSTRALIA

The Australian cruiser Hobart. Staff. N3/67:184. §N4/67:252.

Australian defence boost. Staff. N2/90:192.

The battlecruiser Australia. Staff. N1/68:39. §N2/68:86.

Cerberus – The world's oldest "battleship" will sail again. Graeme K. Andrews. N3/72:270. §N3/73:236.

50 years in one port – The Victorian monitor Cerebus. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N2/64:28. (R/64:77).

Genesis of a navy. Peter S. Marshall. N1/66:28. (1/66:3).

HMAS Rushcutter prepares to enter service. Graeme K. Andrews. N4/87:374.

HMAS Sydney. Lloyd P. Simpson. N4/70:397.

The loss of the Australian destroyer Voyager. Charles E. Scurrell. N4/64:73. (R/64:22).

Sparrows among the hawks – Shipboard aviation of the smaller navies, 1919-1939. Richard D. Layman. N2/84:138. §N1/85:6(2); §N2/85:114.

The visit to Australia by three naval vessels of the ALRI, Jan. 74. Graeme K. Andrews. N2/75:196.

AUSTRIA

Austrian river gunboat. Stefan Prohaska. N2/73:182.

Soviet gunboats visit Vienna. Staff. N4/71:407.

AUSTRIA-HUNGARY

Air vs. sea in World War I. Richard D. Layman. N3/82:215. §N1/83:6; §N3/83:223(2).

Austria-Hungary's last naval visit to the USA. Erwin F. Sieche. N2/90:142. §N3/90:218; §N4/90:326.

Austria-Hungary's naval building projects, 1914-1918. Part 1: Cruisers. Anthony Sokol. N3/78:184. §N1/79:14; §N2/79:98; §N2/79:101.

Austria-Hungary's naval building projects, 1914-1918. Part 2: Destroyers and MTBs. Anthony Sokol. N4/82:324. §N2/83:118.

Austrian dreadnoughts in WWI – Their data and final fate. Rene Greger. 1/65:9.

Austrian submarines. Rene Greger. 5/65:95. §10/65:230.

Austro-Hungarian battleships. R. F. Scheltema de Heere. N1/73:11. §N3/73:231(2): §N4/73:351; §N1/74:12; §N2/74:172; §N4/74:381; §N4/80:307.

The Austro-Hungarian Navy and the Spanish-American War of 1898. Rene Greger. N1/80:61. §N3/80:210(2).

Aviazone della Regia Marina – The story of the Italian Naval Air Arm. Tullio Marcon. N2/67:112. §N3/67:172; §N1/68:9; §N3/68:170(2).

The Elswick cruisers. Part 4. Peter Brook. N3/73:270. §N3/74:284; §N3/75:225; §N3/79:201.

The mystery of the Austro-Hungarian submarine U-30 – Some facts, observations, and speculation. Rene Greger. N1/87:81. §N4/87:337(2).

The Naval Air Arm of the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Navy. Rene Podhorsky. 3/65:74.

Ships in profile. George Pulham. N1/64:10. §2/64:26; §3/64:48; §3/64:60; §4/64:62; §4/64:65; §4/64:66(2); §5/64:99; §8/64:152; §9/64:181.

The small Balkan navies. Rene Podhorsky. N3/64:49. (R/64:4); §8/64:155; §(R/64:5).

SMS Szent Istvan – Hungary's only and ill-fated dreadnought. Erwin F. Sieche. N2/91:112. §N2/92:114.

The torpedo vessels of the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Navy, 1875 to 1918. Wolf H. Bille. N1/71:53. §N3/71:223; §N3/71:229; §N2/72:107.

The Yugoslav Navy, 1918-1941. Milan Vego. N4/82:342.

BRAZIL

Armstrong torpedo gunboats. Peter Brook. N2/78:134. §N1/79:6.

The Brazilian dreadnoughts, 1904-1914. David Topliss. N3/88:240. §N3/94:221.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 2: The later protected types. Peter Brook. N3/71:246. §N1/72:5(2); §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 4. Peter Brook. N3/73:270. §N3/74:284; §N3/75:225; §N3/79:201.

Laurenti type submarines in the world's navies. Alessandro Turrini. N2/95:126. §N4/95:329,331.

The Riachuelo (Brazilian battleship). Alan Vanterpool. N2/69:140. §N3/70:205.

BULGARIA

The Bulgarian Nadezda. Rene Greger. N2/73:183.

East European museum ships. Tadeusz Klimczyk. N4/89:379.

The last of a type (Bulgarian torpedoboat Derzki). Lloyd P. Simpson. N2/73:165. §N1/74:13; §N2/74:169; §N3/74:279; §N1/75:13.

Riga round-up. Charles E. Scurrell. N1/66:26. (3/66:71).

CANADA

HMCS Bras d'Or – Ten years in retrospective. Thomas G. Lynch. N2/82:117. §N4/82:315; §N4/83:333.

The last corvette. Thomas G. Lynch. N2/80:171.

Princes Three (converted Canadian liners in WWII). Fraser M. McKee. N1/70:18.

75th anniversary of the Naval Service of Canada, 1910-1985. Fred Gaffen. N2/85:188.

Sparrows among the hawks – Shipboard aviation of the smaller navies, 1919-1939. Richard D. Layman. N2/84:138. §N1/85:6(2); §N2/85:114.

The subterfuge submarines. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N3/77:200. §N2/78:92(2); §N2/79:98(2); §N4/79:302.

CHILE

Armstrong torpedo gunboats. Peter Brook. N2/78:134. §N1/79:6.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 1: The early types. Peter Brook. N2/70:154. §N4/70:308(2); §N1/71:8; §N3/78:178; §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 2: The later protected types. Peter Brook. N3/71:246. §N1/72:5(2); §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 3: The armoured cruisers. Peter Brook. N3/72:236. §N2/73:133; §N3/73:234; §N3/79:201.

Sparrows among the hawks – Shipboard aviation of the smaller navies, 1919-1939. Richard D. Layman. N2/84:138. §N1/85:6(2); §N2/85:114.

The subterfuge submarines. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N3/77:200. §N2/78:92(2); §N2/79:98(2); §N4/79:302.

CHINA (includes PRC and ROC)

Armstrong torpedo gunboats. Peter Brook. N2/78:134. §N1/79:6.

Artistic impressions (Drawings of U.S. ships at Hong Kong). Edwin S. Chan. N3/70:227.

China today – The People's Navy. Staff. N4/90:350.

The Chinese light cruisers Ning Hai and Ping Hai, 1930-1936. Part 1. Toshio Tamura. N2/85:118. §N3/85:303.

The Chinese light cruisers Ning Hai and Ping Hai, 1930-1936. Part 2: Documentary annex. Christopher C. Wright. N3/85:228.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 1: The early types. Peter Brook. N2/70:154. §N4/70:308(2); §N1/71:8; §N3/78:178; §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 2: The later protected types. Peter Brook. N3/71:246. §N1/72:5(2); §N3/79:201.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 4. Peter Brook. N3/73:270. §N3/74:284; §N3/75:225; §N3/79:201.

The fate of the Chinese gunboats Yung Chien and Yung Chi. Toshio Tamura. N2/78:145.

The fate of the Chinese torpedo gunboat Fei Ting. Toshio Tamura. N2/87:190.

The fate of the four Chinese torpedo boat destroyers. Boris V. Drashpil, Toshio Tamura and Christopher C. Wright. N2/87:193.

The Imperial Chinese steam navy, 1862-1895. Stephen S. Roberts. N1/74:19. §N3/74:279(2); §N1/75:5; §N2/75:157; §N4/75:292; §N1/76:8; §N1/76:11; §N2/76:89; §N1/77:5(2); §N1/81:9; §N4/82:319.

The miscellaneous ships Yamasemi and Kawasemi (ex-Chinese Chein Kang and Hu E). Toshio Tamura. N1/86:86.

The Panay incident. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N5/64:86. (R/64:29).

The People's Republic of China (PRC) Navy today. Ross Gillett and Christopher C. Wright. N1/86:68.

The Rendel gunboats – Flatirons. Richard M. Anderson. N1/76:49. §N1/77:7(4); §N2/77:95; §N4/77:282; §N3/78:178.

Riga round-up. Charles E. Scurrell. N1/66:26. (1/66:71).

Ships in profile. George Pulham. N1/64:10. §2/64:26; §3/64:48; §3/64:60; §4/64:62; §4/64:65; §4/64:66(2); §5/64:99; §8/64:152; §9/64:181.

Sparrows among the hawks – Shipboard aviation of the smaller navies, 1919-1939. Richard D. Layman. N2/84:138. §N1/85:6(2); §N2/85:114.

CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA

The Hunley museum. Richard P. Smyers. N1/72:23.

Phantom fleet – The Confederacy's unclaimed European-built warships. David M. Sullivan. N1/87:12. §N3/87:224; §N3/88:225(2); §N2/90:115.

Torpedo boats – Secret weapons of the South. Peter Pry and Richard Zeitlin. N4/84:384. §N3/85:223.

Unfounded hopes: a design analysis of the Confederate ironclad steamer CSS Atlanta. William C. Emerson. N4/95:367.

CROATIA

The ships of the Croat Navy. Rene Podhorsky. 2/65:44. §5/65:116; §10/65:230.

CZECHOSLOVAKIA

Czechoslovakia's river navy. Rene Greger. N2/68:128.

DENMARK

Laurenti type submarines in the world's navies. Alessandro Turrini. N2/95:126. §N4/95:329,331.

Modern Danish minelayers. H. Haar. N3/69:199.

The Rendel gunboats – Flatirons. Richard M. Anderson. N1/76:49. §N1/77:7(4); §N2/77:95; §N4/77:282; §N3/78:178.

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 2: Denmark. Bertil Gard. N3/66:208. §4/66:270; §N4/70:305; §N1/71:8; §N4/72:336; §N3/73:237.

Sparrows among the hawks – Shipboard aviation of the smaller navies, 1919-1939. Richard D. Layman. N2/84:138. §N1/85:6(2); §N2/85:114.

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

The last corvette. Thomas G. Lynch. N2/80:171.

EGYPT

Arabic warship names. Ivan Hrbek. N12/64:258. (R/64:10).

Chronology summary of Arab-Israeli fighting, Oct.-Nov. 1973. Staff. N4/73:359.

Gunboat diplomacy, 1882 – The U.S. Navy and the bombardment of Alexandria. Robert L. Robinson. N1/82:47. §N3/82:211.

La Galissonniere, the French flagship at Alexandria in 1882. Christopher C. Wright. N1/82:58.

FINLAND

Scandinavian coast defense ships. Part 4: Finland. S. Enkio. N3/67:193. §N2/68:173; §N2/69:91.

Submarine losses in the eastern Baltic in World War II. Gene C. Stevenson. N4/86:371. §N2/88:117; §N1/90:7.

Submarines of the Finnish Navy. Gene C. Stevenson. N1/86:31.

The subterfuge submarines. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N3/77:200. §N2/78:92(2); §N2/79:98(2); §N4/79:302.

Vesikko (Finnish submarine memorial). Walter Corwin. N4/85:392.

FRANCE

Air vs. sea in World War I. Richard D. Layman. N3/82:215. §N1/83:6; §N3/83:223(2).

The classification of British and French screw cruising ships, 1840-1900. Stephen S. Roberts. N2/77:144.

The complex development of the French light cruiser, 1910-1926. Part 1. Henri Le Masson. N4/85:374.

The complex development of the French light cruiser, 1910-1926. Part 2. Henri Le Masson. N2/86:142.

Fantastic was the word! Part 1. Henri Le Masson and Jean Guiglini. N4/74:349. §N4/75:292.

Fantastic was the word! Part 2: Conclusion. Jean Meirat. N3/78:225.

The fate of the four Chinese torpedo boat destroyers. Boris V. Drashpil, Toshio Tamura and Christopher C. Wright. N2/87:193.

The first light cruisers of the 1922 program – The minelaying cruiser Pluton. Part 1. Jean Guiglini and Albert Moreau. N2/92:152. §N4/92:329.

The first light cruisers of the 1922 program – The minelaying cruiser Pluton. Part 2. Jean Guiglini and Albert Moreau. N3/92:225.

The flotilla leaders Chateaurenault and Guichen. Thierry Hondemarck. N1/83:12. §N2/83:114.

France's first real minelayers – Cerbere and Pluton. Lloyd P. Simpson. N3/69:228.

French battleship Marceau. Staff. N1/85:68.

The French building program of 1915. Christopher C. Wright. N1/80:14. §N2/81:106.

The French coast defence ship Rochambeau. Stephen S. Roberts. N4/93:333.

The French Fantasque class destroyers. Jean Meirat. 4/66:287. §N1/67:10; §N2/67:88(2).

French Navy Force Frappe. Staff. N1/68:18.

French ship names in history. Jean Meirat. N3/64:55. (R/64:81).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 1. Jean Meirat. N5/64:82. (R/64:47); §7/64:138; §9/64:180; §(R/64:6(2)).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 2. Jean Meirat. N8/64:142. (R/64:50); §10/64:217; §(R/64:6).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 3. Jean Meirat. N10/64:211. (R/64:54).

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 4. Jean Meirat. 1/65:21.

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 5. Jean Meirat. 3/65:83. §10/65:231; §2/66:39.

French warship names – Jean Bart. Part 6. Jean Meirat. 9/65:203.

French warship names. Part 7: Conclusion. Jean Meirat. N1/66:4. (4/66:95).

La Galissonniere, the French flagship at Alexandria in 1882. Christopher C. Wright. N1/82:58.

The Lyon class battleships. Henri Le Masson. N1/85:52.

A Mediterranean cruise in 1937. Christopher C. Wright. N4/82:395. §N2/83:117(5).

Naval guns, various countries. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N3/67:197.

The Normandie class battleships with quadruple turrets. Henri Le Masson. N4/84:409.

The Redoubtable. Part 1. Marc Saibene. N1/94:15. §N3/94:227.

The Redoubtable. Part 2. Marc Saibene. N2/94:117.

The Redoubtable. Part 3. Marc Saibene. N1/95:10.

A resume of the battle of Koh-Chang, 17 January 1941. Jean Guiglini and K. R. Macpherson. N2/90:135. §N2/90, 187.

The shipboard catapult – Its history and evolution. Richard D. Layman. N3/70:249. §N1/71:7(2).

Ships for crews. Jacques Cornic. N3/85:251. §N1/87:7; §N3/87:221.

Siam's coast defense ships. Staff. N1/64:5. (R/64:27).

Some French fast battleships...that might have been. Henri Le Masson. N2/85:149.

Sous la Croix de Lorraine (Under the Cross of Lorraine) – The FNFL, 1940-1943. Jacques Cornic. N1/87:34. §N4/87:336; §N2/88:116.

Stability of nitrocellulose-based powder. George F. Dale. N4/80:349. §N2/81:106(2); §N4/81:313(3); §N1/82:17: §N2/82:111; §N3/82:210(2); §N4/82:317; §N2/83:121; $N3/83:225(3); §N1/84:12; §N2/84:130.

The Treaty cruisers. Part 1. Robert J. Keith. 8/65:179.

The 2400-tonners of the French Navy. Jean Guiglini. N2/81:111. §N4/81:311(2).

U-Boats that survived. Derek M. Waller. N2/70:110. §N4/70:305.

GERMANY (Includes EAST and WEST GERMANY)

Admiral Graf Spee. John S. Rowe. N4/67:280. §N1/68:7.

Air vs. sea in World War I. Richard D. Layman. N3/82:215. §N1/83:6; §N3/83:223(2).

The Bismarck's final battle. William H. Garzke and Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N2/94:159. §N3/94:232(2); §N4/94:329; §N4/95:329(2).

The chase – Goeben in the Mediterranean, 1914. Richard Hough. N4/69:269. §N3/71:224; §N4/71:327; §N3/72:228; §N3/73:132; §N3/73:236; §N2/74:171; §N3/73:284; §N4/74:382; §N4/76:247; §N3/77:185.

Czechoslovakia's river navy. Rene Greger. N2/68:128.

Destroyers of the Bundsmarine. Staff. N3/70:217. §N2/71:127.

The fate of the four Chinese torpedo boat destroyers. Boris V. Drashpil, Toshio Tamura and Christopher C. Wright. N2/87:193.

Furious and the Tondern raid. Richard D. Layman. N4/73:374.

The Garrett-Nordenfelt submarines. Robert W. Jones. N1/68:26. §N3/68:69; §N1/69:5.§N2/74:169.

German destroyer losses in World War II. William C. Ray. 3/65:69. §7/65:156.

The German-Haitian naval clash of 1902. Lloyd P. Simpson. N3/66:216.

The German heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen – A career under two flags. Part 2. Erwin F. Sieche. N3/90:278. §N1/91:5(4); §N2/92:114.

German naval guns. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N1/67:38.

The German Navy during D-Day landings. William C. Ray. N10/64:206. (R/64:60).

The German Navy KM/KS boats. Rene Podhorsky. N2/66:140.

German Navy large bore guns operational ashore during World War I. Paul Schmalenbach. N2/83:123. §N4/83:331.

German seaplane and aricraft carriers in both wars. Rene Greger. N6/64:102. (R/64:87).

The Goeben – Yesterday and today in photos. Staff. N4/69:283. §N2/71:122(2).

The last strange cruise of UB-88. Harvey M. Beigel. N3/86:287. §N3/87:288.

Laurenti type submarines in the world's navies. Alessandro Turrini. N2/95:126. §N4/95:329,331.

The naval facilities at Penemunde after the German unification. Hartmut Ehlers. N3/91:227.

A needless tragedy – The loss of H.M. destroyers. Peter C. Smith. N2/71:154. §N4/71:326.

Operations of the Hipper class cruisers in World War II. R. Peter Koch and Linton Wells II. N3/68:218. §N2/69:92.

The real story of the sinking of the Columbus. Henri Le Masson. N1/78:47.

The Rendel gunboats – Flatirons. Richard M. Anderson. N1/76:49. §N1/77:7(4); §N2/77:95; §N4/77:282; §N3/78:178.

Riga round-up. Charles E. Scurrell. N1/66:26. (3/66:71:).

S Boats – Genealogy of the Schnellboat. Paul Schmalenbach. N1/69:10. §N3/69:175; §N1/70:10.

SMS Blucher. Paul Schmalenbach. N2/71:171. §M4/71:326; §N2/73:134; §N3/74:283.

SMS Goeben/TNS Yavuz. Martin H. Brice. N4/69:272. §N4/71:327; §N3/73:235; §N2/74:171; §N3/74:282; §N4/74/382.

SMS Ostfriesland. Robert S. Egan and Richard A. Anderson. N2/75:113. §N1/76:11(3); §N2/76:88.

Stability of nitrocellulose-based powder. George F. Dale. N4/80:349. §N2/81:106(2); §N4/81:313(3); §N1/82:17: §N2/82:111; §N3/82:210(2); §N4/82:317; §N2/83:121; $N3/83:225(3); §N1/84:12; §N2/84:130.

The story of the cruisers Bremse and Brummer. Anton Novik. N3/69:185.

Submarine losses in the eastern Baltic in World War II. Gene C. Stevenson. N4/86:371. §N2/88:117; §N1/90:7.

Technical description and evaluation of SMS Goeben. Robert S. Egan. N4/69:280. §N4/70:312.

The transparent enemy. Hartmut Ehlers. N1/91:30.

The Type IX U-Boat. Robert W. Thew. N1/91:14.

U-Boats that survived. Derek M. Waller. N2/70:110. §N4/70:305.

Volksmarine der DDR – The other German Navy. Hartmut Ehlers. N1/92:5. §N4/92:331.

GHANA

New ships for new navies. Charles E. Scurrell. N4/64:68.

GREAT BRITAIN

Air vs. sea in World War I. Richard D. Layman. N3/82:215. §N1/83:6; §N3/83:223(2).

Battleship sales during the Russo-Japanese War. Philip Towle. N4/86:402.

Britain's CMBs in World War I. Joseph Caruana. N3/69:222. §N1/70:8.

British Lend-Leased escort carriers. Donald L. Kindell. 3/65:66. §7/65:156.

British Ministry of Defence orders hovercraft prototypes. Staff. N3/66:220.

British naval guns. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. 4/66:310.

British naval operations in the Black Sea, 1918-1920. Part 1. David Snook. N1/89:36.

British naval operations in the Black Sea, 1918-1920. Part 2. David Snook. N4/89:331. §N2/90:110.

British warship design methods, 1860-1905. David K. Brown. N1/95:59.

Cerberus – The world's oldest "battleship" will sail again. Graeme K. Andrews. N3/72:270. §N3/73:236.

The chase – Goeben in the Mediterranean, 1914. Richard Hough. N4/69:269. §N3/71:224; §N4/71:327; §N3/72:228; §N3/73:132; §N3/73:236; §N2/74:171; §N3/73:284; §N4/74:382; §N4/76:247; §N3/77:185.

The classification of British and French screw cruising ships, 1840-1900. Stephen S. Roberts. N2/77:144.

The design of HMS Arethusa, 1912. David K. Brown. N1/83:35.

Destroyer conversions. Antony Preston. 5/65:117.

The Dukes and the Warriors. Keith McBride. N4/90:362.

The Elswick cruisers. Part 4. Peter Brook. N3/73:270. §N3/74:284; §N3/75:225; §N3/79:201.

The Falklands campaign – A chronology. Samuel L. Morison. N4/83:376. §N2/84:130(2).

50 years in one port – The Victorian monitor Cerebus. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N2/64:28. (R/64:77).

Five broken down B boats – Bitish submarine operations in the northern Adriatic, 1915-1917. Paul Kemp and Peter Jung. N1/89:10.

Furious and the Tondern raid. Richard D. Layman. N4/73:374. §N2/74:169.

The Garrett-Nordenfelt submarines. Robert W. Jones. N1/68:26. §N3/68:69; §N1/69:5.

Great Britain tour, October 6-14, 1990. Allan Harris. N4/90:407.

H.M. paddle minesweepers of World War One. George Ransome. N2/69:124.

HMS Amethyst. George Pulham. N2/64:36. (R/64:38); §5/64:95; §(R/64:6).

HMS Ark Royal-Pegasus (1914-1950). Richard D. Layman. N2/76:90. §N4/76:249.

HMS Blake. Staff. N1/70:45.

HMS Bulwark. Stuart Ball. N4/84:352. §N2/85:114.

HMS Coventry. Michael A. Houghton. N4/79:306. §N2/80:108.

HMS Hermes – The story of the ships of that name. Staff. N1/64:3. (R/64:44); §2/64:34; §3/64:42; §(R/64:7(3)).

H.M. ships and their forebears. Part 1. George Ransome. N12/64:261.

HMS Hood. D. G. Weldon. N2/72:114. §N4/72:337: §N2/73:131; §N1/74:11; §N1/77:5.

HMS Invincible CAH-01. I. A. Sturton. N3/79:246. §N4/79:305; §N1/80:5; §N1/80:8; §N3/80:210; §N2/81:106; §N1/82:13; §N2/83:121.

HMS Lyme Regis – the story of a minesweeper. John Lello. N2/88:196. §N1/89:8.

HMS Malta – Research into a projected warship. I. A. Sturton. N3/71:285.

HMS Queen. George Pulham. N5/64:87. (R/64:83).

HMS Surrey and Northumberland. I. A. Sturton. N3/77:244. §N3/78:180.

How the Royal Navy could invade Rhodesia. Peter K. Simpson. 12/65:253.

Impressive ships – The story of Her Majesty's cruisers Blake and Blenheim. Christopher C. Wright. N1/70:40. §N4/70:109.

Laurenti type submarines in the world's navies. Alessandro Turrini. N2/95:126. §N4/95:329,331.

The Lend-Lease Captains. Peter Elliott. N3/72:255. §N1/73:5.

A look at HMS Euryalus. Staff. N3/73:259.

The loss of HMS Exeter. George F. Dale. N6/64:105. (R/64:73).

The loss of HMS Glorious – An analysis of the action. Vernon W. Howland. N1/94:47.

The loss of HMS Hood – A re-examination. William J. Jurens. N2/87:122. §N4/87:335(4); §N4/89:323; §N2/90:115(2); §N4/90:323; §N1/94:7.

The loss of Repulse and Prince of Wales, December 10, 1941. A. E. Jacobs. N1/86:12.

Made sail; up screw. Part 1. Staff. N4/73:386.

Made sail; up screw. Part 2. Staff. N2/74:141. §N2/80:107.

A Mediterranean cruise in 1937. Christopher C. Wright. N4/82:395. §N2/83:117(5).

A merchant ship at war. Michael A. Houghton. N4/86:395. §N3/87:224(2).

Mimi and Toutou (British patrol boats on Lake Tanganika in WWI). Walter C. Hadley. N2/83:194.

Modern guns of the Royal Navy. Robert O. Dulin, Jr. N9/64:170. R/64:30.

Naval tactics – An introduction. W. David Dickson. N3/76:168. §N2/77:94(2); §N4/77:277; §N3/78:180.

A needless tragedy – The loss of H.M. destroyers. Peter C. Smith. N2/71:154. §N4/71:326.

Ohio must get through. J. Caruana. N4/92:334. §N2/93:109; §N4/93:329(2).

The original plans. D. J. Lyon. N1/75:78.

Remember Alexandria (Italian midget submarines attack on British battleships in WWII). James E. Rosenberg. N7/64:122. (R/64:92).

The Rendel gunboats – Flatirons. Richard M. Anderson. N1/76:49. §N1/77:7(4); §N2/77:95; §N4/77:282; §N3/78:178.

RFA Engadine. Joseph D. Fama. N1/79:64.

The Royal Navy and the question of Imperial defense east of Suez, 1902-1914. Charles R. Shiflett. N4/95:353.

Royal Navy camouflage of WW2. Alan Raven. N1/72:54.

The Royal Navy post-Falklands. I. A. Sturton. N1/85:83.

The Royal Navy Scout class of 1904-05. K. D. McBride. N3/94:260. §N95/3:223.

Salute to INS Delhi – or Achilles of the River Plate! Edward C. Fisher, Jr., and Arthur D. Baker III. N2/78:95. §N1/79:14.

Scenes from the Falklands – A pictorial look. Staff. N1/83:48.

Seakeeping, Easter, 1916 style. K. D. McBride. N1/90:50.

The shipboard catapult – Its history and evolution. Richard D. Layman. N3/70:249. §N1/71:7(2).

Silent propulsion. David K. Brown. N1/90:72.

Stability of nitrocellulose-based powder. George F. Dale. N4/80:349. §N2/81:106(2); §N4/81:313(3); §N1/82:17: §N2/82:111; §N3/82:210(2); §N4/82:317; §N2/83:121; $N3/83:225(3); §N1/84:12; §N2/84:130.

Submarine pressure hull design and diving depths between the wars. David K. Brown. N3/87:279.

The subterfuge submarines. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N3/77:200. §N2/78:92(2); §N2/79:98(2); §N4/79:302.

Technical decription of HMS Blake and HMS Blenheim. Staff. N1/70:47. §N3/70:207.

Tragic end to HMS Orpheus. Staff. N1/69:44.

The Treaty cruisers. Part 1. Robert J. Keith. 8/65:179.

Turncoat carriers. Kenneth R. Macpherson. N4/68:285.

27 Knotters. Derisley Trimingham. N2/67:96. §N1/68:8; §N3/68:170.

U-Boats that survived. Derek M. Waller. N2/70:110. §N4/70:305.

Under two flags (British cruiser HMS Doris). George F. Dale. 10/65:223. §1/66:20; §2/66:122; §(2/66:45).

Warships built by Armstrong – HMS Glatton and Gorgon (ex-Bjoergvin & Niaros). Peter Brook. N2/85:132.

GREECE

The armored cruiser Averof. Luciano Grazioli. N4/88:370.

The Garrett-Nordenfelt submarines. Robert W. Jones. N1/68:26. §N3/68:69; §N1/69:5.

The Naval Museum of Greece. I. A. Sturton. N1/66:20. (2/66:44); §4/66:276.

The Rendel gunboats – Flatirons. Richard M. Anderson. N1/76:49. §N1/77:7(4); §N2/77:95; §N4/77:282; §N3/78:178.

HAITI

The German-Haitian naval clash of 1902. Lloyd P. Simpson. N3/66:216.

HAWAII

The Hawaiian Navy and the hula skirt. Geroge E. Boulter. N2/67:138. §N1/68:7.

INDIA

The naval aspects of the Portuguese-Indian Goa War. Edward C. Fisher, Jr. N1/67:33.

New developments in the Indian Navy. Maurizio del Prete, Hartmut Ehlers, L. van Ginderen and William H. Rau. N1/88:40.

Salute to INS Delhi – or Achilles of the River Plate! Edward C. Fisher, Jr., and Arthur D. Baker III. N2/78:95. §N1/79:14.

INDONESIA

The visit to Australia by three naval vessels of the ALRI, Jan. 74. Graeme K. Andrews. N2/75:196.

IRAN

D-7 and D-9 – Modernizing Iran's guided missile DDs. Staff. N3/73:296.

ISRAEL

Chronology summary of Arab-Israeli fighting, Oct.-Nov. 1973. Staff. N4/73:359.

Guided missile patrol boats for Israel. Karl Lautenschlager. N3/71:277.

ITALY

Air vs. sea in World War I. Richard D. Layman. N3/82:215. §N1/83:6; §N3/83:223(2).

The Allied assault on Aquila – Operation Toast. Mark Grossman. N2/90:166. §N4/90:324; §N2/91:109.

Amerigo Vespucci – A pictorial review. Luciano Grazioli. N2/83:188.

Aviazone della Regia Marina – The story of the Italian Naval Air Arm. Tullio Marcon. N2/67:112. §N3/67:172; §N1/68:9; §N3/68:170(2).

The Commandanti class destroyers of