Author: Ms Bich

  • USS Green Bay Sailors Showcase Musical Talent as “Port and Starboard” RnB Group

    USS Green Bay Sailors Showcase Musical Talent as “Port and Starboard” RnB Group

    In a heartwarming display of camaraderie and talent aboard the USS Green Bay (LPD 20), sailors have formed a new RnB group dubbed “Port and Starboard.” This musical ensemble, comprised of sailors serving on the forward-deployed amphibious landing dock ship, brings a fresh and uplifting vibe to life at sea.

    The USS Green Bay, a vital component of the America Amphibious Ready Group, is currently operating in the Philippine Sea alongside the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit as part of the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations. This fleet, the largest forward-deployed numbered fleet of the U.S. Navy, plays a crucial role in promoting stability and security in the Indo-Pacific region.

    Có thể là hình ảnh về 3 người và tàu ngầm

    On February 12, 2024, amidst their operational duties, sailors aboard the USS Green Bay took a break from their rigorous routines to showcase their musical talents. Responding to a simulated main space fire exercise, the sailors of “Port and Starboard” infused the atmosphere with their soulful RnB melodies, lifting spirits and fostering a sense of unity among the crew.

    The creation of “Port and Starboard” not only highlights the diverse talents and interests of the sailors but also serves as a reminder of the importance of morale and camaraderie in naval operations. Through music, these sailors find a way to connect, unwind, and bond amidst the demanding responsibilities of serving at sea.

    As the USS Green Bay continues its mission in the Philippine Sea, “Port and Starboard” stands as a testament to the resilience and ingenuity of the sailors who proudly serve their country. Their harmonious melodies serve as a beacon of hope and inspiration, reflecting the unwavering commitment of the U.S. Navy to maintaining a free and open Indo-Pacific region.

    In preserving peace and stability at sea, the sailors of the USS Green Bay and their musical talents remind us of the human element behind the uniform, where creativity and camaraderie flourish even in the most challenging of environments. “Port and Starboard” embodies the spirit of unity and resilience that defines the men and women of the U.S. Navy, showcasing their ability to excel not only in operational duties but also in the arts.

    DVIDS - Images - Daily Operations Aboard USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77)  [Image 14 of 18]

    While the vast expanse of the Philippine Sea might not be the first place that comes to mind when thinking about the next big musical sensation, a group of sailors aboard the USS Green Bay is proving otherwise. These dedicated service members have formed an acapella group called “Port and Starboard,” bringing their musical talents and passion to the high seas.

    More Than Just a Drill:

    The news of Port and Starboard’s formation emerged amidst a seemingly unrelated announcement from the U.S. Navy. A press release detailed a training exercise aboard the USS Green Bay, simulating a main space fire and showcasing the crew’s preparedness. However, nestled within the official statement was a brief but intriguing mention of the ship’s newfound acapella group.

    Harmony Amidst Duty:

    While details about Port and Starboard remain scarce, their existence highlights the diverse talents and interests that flourish within the U.S. Navy. Serving their country undoubtedly takes precedence, but these sailors demonstrate that dedication and service can coexist with artistic expression and a love for music.

    A Glimpse into Navy Life:

    The emergence of Port and Starboard offers a unique glimpse into the lives of sailors beyond their military duties. It showcases their ability to find creative outlets and build camaraderie through shared passions, even amidst the demanding environment of a deployed warship.\

    DVIDS - Images - USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) Daily Operations [Image 3 of  6]

    Intriguing Potential:

    While information is limited at this stage, Port and Starboard’s story has sparked curiosity and garnered attention online. With the growing popularity of acapella groups and the inherent interest in the lives of those serving in the military, there’s a chance this group could gain wider recognition in the future.

    A Call for Further Information:

    The brief mention of Port and Starboard leaves many questions unanswered. What kind of music do they perform? How did the group form? What impact do they have on the morale and spirit of the crew? Hopefully, future updates from the U.S. Navy or the sailors themselves will shed light on these aspects, offering a deeper understanding of this unique musical endeavor at sea.

  • Barry Keoghan as John Lennon? Who Sam Mendes should cast in his Beatles movies

    Barry Keoghan as John Lennon? Who Sam Mendes should cast in his Beatles movies

    Just when we were getting sick of the Marvel Cinematic Universe … Sam Mendes comes along with the Beatles Cinematic Universe. It’s a quartet of interlocking movies about the Fab Four, each centred on one band member, and with the fascinating promise of overlaps and POV shifts, perhaps inspired by Lucas Belvaux’s triple-decker Trilogy pictures or Joao Canijo’s mirror image films Bad Living and Living Bad. Mendes’s moptop movies may tag quadrilaterally around key moments … Shea Stadium, the Maureen Cleave interview, Lennon’s death? But who to cast? Here is my fantasy lineup.

    Barry Keoghan as John Lennon

    Barry Keoghan and John Lennon.

    Keoghan has already played a scouser in Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn, and showed us his dance moves to Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s Murder on the Dancefloor (although Lennon, in fact the Beatles generally, were not dancers as such). The fully nude album cover for Two Virgins should, come to think of it, be no problem either. Keoghan would be excellent at Lennon’s cheeky and insolent grin, with the fierce scepticism, insubordination and the radicalism. His capacity for innocent open-faced guile would have a special complication in the granny specs, and the gradually lengthening hair would create a new gravitas and opaque quality. For Aunt Mimi it would possibly be Emily Watson and for Yoko I’m thinking Tōko Miura from Ryu Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car (but not just because of that film’s title).

    Leo Woodall as Paul McCartney

    Let it be … Leo Woodall and Paul McCartney. Composite: Zoe McConnell, Getty

    Woodall is shattering hearts all over the country with his performance as Dexter in the Netflix version of David Nicholls’ One Day, opposite the excellent Ambika Mod. This casting – Leo would need a dark wig – would tap into the vulnerability combined with ambition that he showed in One Day. But it would also connect with the sly steel that McCartney always had and which Woodall gave us as the lairy and laddish Jack in the second season of the luxury-hotel satire The White Lotus. He would be great opposite Keoghan in the scene where Paul meets John for the first time at the Liverpool church fete in 1957, where Lennon was playing with his skiffle combo the Quarrymen. Boyish Leo/Paul meets tough Barry/John and there is bromance meet-cute electricity. (The Paul and John films could singly play the same scene from reverse angles of course.) For Linda I’m thinking Florence Pugh and for some scenes in Abbey Road where everyone starts quarrelling, it could be Dominic West as George Martin.

    Finn Wolfhard as George Harrison

    Finn Wolfhard and George Harrison. Got my mind set on you … Finn Wolfhard and George Harrison. Composite: Getty

    Canadian star Finn Wolfhard can do the baby-faced quality, the weirdly almost unformed innocence that defines the Beatles in their early years but could also do the watchful detachment and also injured resentment that complicates the George persona, as he had to see his creative contribution overlooked in favour of the Lennon/McCartney double-act. Wolfhard is also in a band himself: initially the Canadian indie rock group Calpurnia and then the Aubreys. The Stranger Things star, playing Mike, started that show as innocent and ingenuous but also as a natural leader who grew to be a more complicated figure as the drama progressed, and this is the energy he would need to play George Harrison. For the sensational love-triangle heartbreak of his later years, I’m thinking Anya Taylor-Joy as Pattie Boyd and Will Poulter as Eric Clapton.

    Harry Melling as Ringo Starr

    Harry Melling and Ringo Starr. Don’t let me down … Harry Melling and Ringo Starr. Composite: Getty

    Ringo has the capability to steal this whole four-movie spectacle from under the noses of everyone else, and Harry Melling (Dudley Dursley from the Harry Potter films) is the actor to upstage everyone: he can play comedy and drama and he can play the bad guy or the misunderstood good guy. As Ringo, Melling could put across the pathos of his early years of illness and educational disadvantage – the years when he got a life-changing copy of the song Bedtime for Drums on his own sickbed. Melling could portray a deadpan insouciance from behind the drum kit, but he could amusingly fabricate Ringo’s wacky performance in the movie Help!, in the various black-and-white pastiche sequences, opposite Ian McKellen as Wilfrid Brambell.

    Robert Pattinson as Pete Best

    Robert Pattinson and Pete Best. A day in the life … Robert Pattinson and Pete Best. Composite: Getty

    This could be a short film to precede each of the main four, with Pattinson as Pete Best, walking moodily and wordlessly around the rainy streets of Hamburg for three minutes in a leather jacket.

  • Paul McCartney has revealed the inspiration behind the lyric “I said something wrong” in the Beatles hit Yesterday

    Paul McCartney has revealed the inspiration behind the lyric “I said something wrong” in the Beatles hit Yesterday

    Beatles singer says the line harks back to time he embarrassed his mother for ‘talking posh’

    Sir Paul McCartney on stage with a guitar

    Paul McCartney has revealed the inspiration behind the lyric “I said something wrong” in the Beatles hit Yesterday.

    McCartney said the line may have been subconsciously inspired by a moment when he mocked his mother for sounding “posh”.

    Many assume the lyric, “I said something wrong, now I long for yesterday”, is about the break-up of a relationship.

    McCartney, however, explained on his A Life in Lyrics podcast that the lyric may actually relate to a conversation in which he embarrassed his mother.

    He said: “Sometimes it’s only in retrospect you can appreciate it. I remember very clearly one day feeling very embarrassed because I embarrassed my mum.

    “We were out in the backyard and she talked posh. She was of Irish origin and she was a nurse, so she was above street level.

    “So she had something sort of going for her, and she would talk what we thought was a little bit posh. And it was a little bit Welshy as well – she had connections, her auntie Dilys was Welsh.

    “I know that she said something like ‘Paul, will you ask him if he’s going … ’

    “I went ‘Arsk! Arsk! It’s ask mum.’ And she got a little bit embarrassed. I remember later thinking ‘God, I wish I’d never said that’. And it stuck with me. After she died I thought ‘Oh fuck, I really wish … ’”

    McCartney wrote the song when he was 24, almost a decade after his mother, Mary, died of cancer.

    Yesterday (With Spoken Word Intro / Live From Studio 50, New York City /  1965) - YouTube

    Yesterday was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1997 and voted the number one pop song of all time by Rolling Stone magazine and MTV in 2000.

    The song is also one of the most covered songs in the history of recorded music with 2,200 versions.

    McCartney has previously said the death of his mother helped him express his sense of loss.

    He said: “It may be that there is so much tumbled into your youth and your formative years that you can’t appreciate it all.

    “I’ve got a couple of those little things that I know that people would forgive me, because they’re not big things – they’re little things – but they’re little things that I just think, ‘If I could just take a rubber, just rub that moment out it would be better’.

    “And when she died, I wonder, ‘I said something wrong’, are we harking back to that crazy little thing.

    “So I don’t know. Does this happen? Do you find yourself unconsciously putting songs into girl lyrics [about a lost lover] that are really your dead mother? I suspect it might be true. It sort of fits, if you look at the lyrics.”

    McCartney’s podcast explores the inspiration behind the singer’s songwriting with the poet Paul Muldoon over two seasons and 24 episodes.

  • Bell P-39 Airacobra fighter plane recovered from the bottom of the lake in Russia (Video)

    Bell P-39 Airacobra fighter plane recovered from the bottom of the lake in Russia (Video)

    Bell P-39 Airacobra fighter plane recovered from the bottom of the lake in Russia (Video)

    It‘s been more than 70 years since the Second World War ended. However, traces of the biggest humanity‘s conflict can still be discovered. Just recently a Bell P-39 Airacobra fighter has been retrieved from the Lake Shukozero in Russia and a year ago a couple of Sherman tanks have been recovered from the bottom of the sea almost in the same place.
    Bell P-39 Airacobra was mid-engined and therefore required a long shaft to spin its propeller. (US government, Wikimedia)
    Bell P-39 Airacobra is a peculiar airplane. It took off for its amiden flight back in 1938 and entered service in 1941. It featured one unusual construction solution – its engine was mounted behind the pilot, which meant that a long shaft was required to spin a traction propeller. However, it was a good fighter plane – it is often said that together with P-63 Kingcobra, the P-39 was one of the most successful fixed-wing aircraft manufactured by Bell. But it did have one issue – its engine was not turbocharged or supercharged.

    It is likely that the plane will go to the museum as is – it is just more authentic that way. (Минобороны России)
    It meant that it could not operate at high altitude very well and therefore RAF did not want it. Meanwhile soviets took it gladly – 4,746 P-39s Airacobras were sent to Soviet Union to aid its efforts of fighting Nazi Germany. However, this one did not fall into a lake because of some intensive fighting – this accident occurred on a training mission.

    As it was said, Fyodor Varavik lost control of his airplane and crashed into Shukozero Lake in northern Russia. Since it was March of 1945, lake was covered with ice so it could’ve been that Varavik performed emergency landing, but at the result is clear – P-39 Airacobra sunk to the depth of 45 metres. Recently this plane has been discovered and Russian Navy personnel assigned to the Northern Fleet organized the recovery operation.

    Divers reached the plane, but no human remains were found – only a boot of the pilot was inside of the plane, together with 37 mm ammunition and oxygen tanks. Bell P-39 Airacobra was retrieved and now will find its way in a museum. Very likely, it will not be restored – it will remain authentic with its own story.

    Plane was found in a lake in Murmansk region. Not too far away last year Russian Navy recovered a couple of American Sherman tanks. They went down with the SS Thomas Donaldson ship, when it was torpedoed by a German U-Boat.  Tanks were also meant to help Soviet Union – in total 4,102 M4 Sherman medium tanks were sent to the Eastern Front. Interestingly, despite spending 71 years in salty water, tanks were in decently good condition. Some say it is because they were packed very good and could resist water damage for some time.

    People love stories about tanks and planes sunken to the bottom of the sea and later discovered by some enthusiasts. But the truth is that most of it is just some legends and myths that are completely made up or got distorted through the years of going from one person to another. However, it is very satisfying to see these gracious machines emerge from their watery grave, because some more years and nature will claim what is hers. Soon all of the lost WW2 weapons will simply be rotten away.

  • Decorated US Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell Avenged Dog’s Death After Unprovoked Shooting

    Decorated US Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell Avenged Dog’s Death After Unprovoked Shooting

    Decorated US Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell Avenged Dog’s Death After Unprovoked Shooting

    Photo Credit: 1. Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images 2. GreatAmericans DotCom / YouTube

    In a move reminiscent of the John Wick films, retired US Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell took extreme measures to corner the men who’d murdered his beloved dog. The entire incident was captured on a phone call to 911, during which the decorated veteran reached speeds of over 100 MPH.

    Marcus Luttrell had a life-long dream of joining the US military

    Close-up of Marcus Luttrell's face

    Marcus Luttrell at the Conservative Political Action Conference, 2021. (Photo Credit: Brandon Bell / Getty Images)
    Marcus Luttrell was born on November 7, 1975 in Houston, Texas. Always destined to serve his country, he began training to become a US Navy SEAL when he was just 14 years old, enlisting the help of US Army veteran Billy Shelton.

    In March 1999, Luttrell enlisted in the US Navy and attended both Boot Camp and Hospital Corpsman A-school. Upon graduating, he was transferred to Basic Underwater/SEAL (BUD/S) Class 226. However, a fractured femur delayed his completion of the program, meaning he graduated with Class 228 on April 21, 2000.

    Luttrell then attended jump school and SEAL Qualification Training (SQT), earning his Navy Enlisted Classification (NEC) 5326 Combatant Swimmer (SEAL) and Naval Special Warfare Insignia on February 2, 2001. To finish his training, he was sent to Fort Bragg, North Carolina to complete the six-month Special Operations Combat Medic (SOCM) course.

    Deployed to Iraq

    US Navy SEAL looking through binoculars

    US Navy SEAL positioned in Ramadi, Iraq, 2007. (Photo Credit: John Moore / Getty Images)
    Marcus Luttrell was deployed to Iraq on April 14, 2003, as part of the US invasion triggered by the 9/11 attacks. Serving from 2003-05, he and SEAL Team 5 were tasked with quelling resistance and searching for weapons of mass destruction (WMDs).

    Once that was completed, the team carried out the capture and elimination of terrorists. Their primary targets were supporters of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, who had since gone into hiding.

    Operation Red Wings

    Matthew Axelson, Daniel R. Healy, James Suh, Marcus Luttrell, Eric S. Patton and Michael P. Murphy standing together in uniform

    US Navy SEALs who took part in Operation Red Wings: Matthew Axelson, Daniel R. Healy, James Suh, Marcus Luttrell, Eric S. Patton and Michael P. Murphy. (Photo Credit: U.S. Navy / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)
    Following his deployment to Iraq, Marcus Luttrell was sent to Afghanistan with SEAL Team 10, as part of SEAL Delivery Vehicle Team 1 (SDV-1). It was during this time that he was involved in Operation Red Wings.

    Luttrell and the men of the SDV-1’s Special Reconnaissance element were searching for Ahmad Shah, and had hunkered down in the rocks along a steep ridge overlooking the militia leader’s position. While they’d hoped their presence would remain unknown, it quickly became clear that they’d been seen, as Taliban fighters took aim with 82 mm mortars, RPK machine guns, RPG-7s and AK-47s.

    All but Luttrell were killed in the assault, including a helicopter crew shot down during an attempted rescue. The US Navy SEAL was left unconscious and severely injured, suffering a broken back, several fractures and shrapnel wounds. Once he’d regained consciousness, he managed to evade the Taliban with the help of local Pashtun villagers, and was eventually rescued by US Army Rangers and the Afghan National Army.

    Ahmad Shah survived Operation Red Wings, but was later killed in a firefight with Pakistani police in 2008.

    Marcus Luttrell recovered from his injuries

    Close-up of Marcus Luttrell's face

    Marcus Luttrell. (Photo Credit: Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times / Getty Images)
    Upon returning from the Middle East, Marcus Luttrell was given a dog – a Labrador Retriever he named DASY, in honor of the comrades he lost during Operation Red Wings. For his actions in Afghanistan, he was awarded the Navy Cross and a Purple Heart. He later published Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10, about his experiences during the deadly mission.

    The book has been shrouded in controversy, with debates over the number of enemy fighters Luttrell and his comrades took on during Operation Red Wings. While he estimated after the fact that the size of the Taliban force was between 20-35 rebels, in Lone Survivor he wrote that their numbers could have been anywhere from 80-200. While official estimates differ, they all present amounts that are far lower than Luttrell’s initial total.

    In 2009, after recovering from his injuries, Marcus Luttrell returned to full duty and was deployed as part of SEAL Team 5 to Ramadi, in Iraq. However, he was formally discharged after suffering another spinal fracture and injuries to both knees.

    Lone Survivor (2013)

    Still from 'Lone Survivor'

    Lone Survivor, 2013. (Photo Credit: waryrwmn / MovieStillsDB)
    In 2013, a movie based on Marcus Luttrell’s book was released. Titled Lone Survivor, it sees actor Mark Wahlberg portray the retired US Navy SEAL, and also stars Eric Bana, Taylor Kirsch, Ben Foster and Emile Hirsch as his comrades.

    Lone Survivor is a dramatic retelling of Operation Red Wings. It was generally well-received upon its release, earning $154.8 million at the box office. Along with being named to the National Board of Review’s (NBR) list of the top 10 films of 2013, it also received two Academy Award nominations, for Best Sound Mixing and Best Sound Editing.

    Marcus Luttrell avenges his dog’s death

    DASY sitting on Marcus Luttrell's lap

    Marcus Luttrell’s dog, DASY. (Photo Credit: GreatAmericans DotCom / YouTube)
    On the evening of April 1, 2009, Marcus Luttrell heard a gunshot. After checking to ensure his mother was okay inside the house, he went outside and saw DASY, his Labrador Retriever, dead from a gunshot wound to her left shoulder. Not far from his home, he noticed a suspicious vehicle parked along the side of the road, which he suspected held those responsible.

    “I could tell [DASY] tried to get away because there was a blood trail,” Luttrell told the Houston Chronicle. “When I saw she was dead, the only thing that popped into my head was, ‘I’ve got to take these guys out.’” His beloved pet had been given to him by America’s VetDogs to help him emotionally recover from his experiences in the Middle East.

    Despite still recovering from surgery, Luttrell grabbed his 9 mm pistol, crawled under a fence and snuck up on the vehicle. As the car sped away, the US Navy SEAL jumped into his pickup truck and began what quickly became a high-speed chase, with both vehicles clocking in at over 100 MPH. Luttrell called 911 during the pursuit and remained on the line as he followed the suspect vehicle. While he eventually lost sight of it, Texas Rangers soon caught up with and arrested those responsible.

    Alfonso Hernandez and Michael Edmonds were charged with cruelty to a non-livestock animal, while the car’s driver was cited for not having a valid license. According to police, they’d been linked to at least five other area killings in the months leading up to the shooting. Edmonds pleaded guilty to the charges against him and received five years probation. Hernandez chose to stand trial, was found guilty and received the maximum sentence of two years in state prison. He was also fined $1,000.

    Marcus Luttrell’s post-war activities

    Marcus Luttrell speaking at a podium

    Marcus Luttrell at the Republic National Convention, 2016. (Photo Credit: Alex Wong / Getty Images)
    Following the war and the incident with DASY, Marcus Luttrell dedicated his life to working with US military veterans. In 2010, he established the Lone Survivor Foundation, whose mission is to “restore, empower, and renew hope for our wounded warriors and their families through health, wellness, and therapeutic support.”

    Luttrell released a second book, Service: A Navy SEAL at War, in May 2012. He has also since found a new furry companion, in the form of another Labrador Retriever named Rigby, who continues to provide the same emotional support DASY did.

  • Pirates Attempted an Abordage on a Danish Frigate Full of Commandos and It Didn’t End Well

    Pirates Attempted an Abordage on a Danish Frigate Full of Commandos and It Didn’t End Well

    Pirates Attempted an Abordage on a Danish Frigate Full of Commandos and It Didn’t End Well

    Photo Credit: 1. Konflikty.pl / Wikimedia Commons / Attribution 2. MagisterYODA / Columbia Pictures / MovieStillsDB

    In November 2021, the Danish military revealed that one of its frigates engaged in a firefight with pirates in the Gulf of Guinea, resulting in the death of four. A fifth pirate suffered undisclosed injuries.

    Sikorsky MH-60R helicopter hovering above the ground

    Sikorsky MH-60R Seahawk. (Photo Credit: U.S. Navy / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)
    The frigate HDMS Esbern Snare (F342) was sailing in the Gulf of Guinea, south of Nigeria, when her crew spotted a fast-moving motorboat near a cluster of commercial ships. After deploying a Royal Danish Air Force Sikorksy MH-60R Seahawk to get a closer look, it was determined the vessel was carrying eight individuals and had onboard it equipment associated with piracy, including ladders.

    The Esbern Snare eventually got close enough to the motorboat to launch rigid-hulled inflatable boats (RHIBs), manned by Danish Special Forces personnel. They called for the boat to halt and permit boarding. When their call went unanswered, they fired warning shots.

    The pirates subsequently opened fire on the inflatable boats that had been deployed by the Danish frigate. The troops shot back, killing four of the assailants and wounding another. None of the Special Forces personnel were injured. As the motorboat sank, the four pirates still alive were taken aboard the Esbern Snare, along with the bodies of those who had been killed. The one who’d suffered injury was treated onboard the vessel.

    Speaking about the incident at a news conference not long after, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said the Special Forces soldiers’ actions “probably prevented concrete pirate attacks against vessels in the region” and that the Esbern Snare “made an important and significant contribution to security in the Gulf of Guinea.”

    HDMS Esbern Snare (F342) docked at port

    HDMS Esbern Snare (F342), 2014. (Photo Credit: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / Getty Images)
    In January 2022, it was announced three of the pirates had been released after the Danish government failed to find a country willing take them. The charges against the trio were dropped, and they were put in a small dinghy with enough food and water to fuel them.

    “They have no relation to Denmark, and the crime they have been charged with was committed far from Denmark,” said Danish Justice Minister Nick Hækkerup in a statement. “They simply do not belong here, and that’s why I think it’s the right thing to do.”

    The injured pirate subsequently had to have his leg amputated as a result of the injuries he’d suffered in the incident. Unlike the others, he was unable to be released at sea due to his medical condition and was brought to Denmark to face charges of attempted manslaughter.

    HDMS Esbern Snare (F342) at sea

    HDMS Esbern Snare (F342), 2014. (Photo Credit: Yiannis Kourtoglou / AFP / Getty Images)
    The HDMS Esbern Snare had been deployed to the Gulf of Guinea as part of an operation to protect shipping activity in the area, as fears are heightened over the security risks posed by pirates. Just under a month prior to the attack on the Danish frigate, the Russian Navy rescued a container feeder after pirates went aboard the vessel. Just a day after that incident, reports surfaced about yet another ship being attacked by the same group.

  • The Beatles, the New York mob and two mysterious d e:a t h s: Sixty years after Beatlemania swept America, PHILIP NORMAN retraces how the unprecedented frenzy led to band manager’s ‘m u:r d e r’ … and one star’s interracial romance being hidden from fans

    The Beatles, the New York mob and two mysterious d e:a t h s: Sixty years after Beatlemania swept America, PHILIP NORMAN retraces how the unprecedented frenzy led to band manager’s ‘m u:r d e r’ … and one star’s interracial romance being hidden from fans

    Sixty years ago, the Beatles were aboard Pan Am Flight 101 on their way to America for the first time – and all feeling thoroughly pessimistic about it.

    The usually unflappable Paul McCartney nervously kept his seatbelt fastened throughout the journey. ‘They’ve got everything over there,’ he fretted to one of the journalists also on the plane. ‘What do they want us for?’

    His bandmates, John LennonGeorge Harrison and Ringo Starr, didn’t say as much but were equally apprehensive. Even John’s relentless clowning and gurning had a slightly desperate air.

    True, their latest single, I Want To Hold Your Hand, was number one in American Billboard magazine’s Hot 100. But several other British musical acts had already managed the same feat, like 13-year-old Laurie London with He’s Got The Whole World In His Hands and the jazz clarinettist Acker Bilk with Stranger On The Shore.

    Such a freak number one couldn’t be called ‘cracking’ America, the birthplace of popular music in all its modern forms, from minstrelsy and jazz to swing and rock and roll, of which Britain had only ever managed thin imitations.

    Nor had it been any help whatever that a major American label, Capitol, was owned by the Beatles’ British record company, EMI.

    As Flight 101 touched down at John F Kennedy Airport an enormous crowd came into view around its main terminal building to greet the Beatles
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    As Flight 101 touched down at John F Kennedy Airport an enormous crowd came into view around its main terminal building to greet the Beatles

    Throughout the previous year, as a shrieking adolescent virus known as Beatlemania engulfed Britain, then Europe, Capitol had repeatedly turned down hit singles like Please Please Me and She Loves You, doggedly maintaining: ‘We don’t think the Beatles will do anything in this market.’

    Instead, the singles had been picked up by obscure American labels and released, in tiny quantities, to disappear without trace.

    Eventually, Beatles manager Brian Epstein and producer George Martin had persuaded Capitol to take I Want To Hold Your Hand for its more ‘American’ sound, albeit with only a modest promotional budget.

    Soon afterwards, the world’s most self-assured nation had suddenly been deflated like a shrivelled Fourth of July balloon.

    On November 22, 1963, a fusillade of rifle shots in Dallas, Texas, had ended the life of its inspirational young president, John F Kennedy.

    Since then, it had been wrapped in a shroud of grief and shame that none of its own vast array of entertainments seemed able to lighten.

    In this susceptible state it first became aware of four young Liverpudlians with fringed foreheads and black polo necks, which – to American eyes – didn’t suggest pop musicians so much as Shakespeare’s Prince Hamlet.

    Police were all but submerged by ululating hordes around the stately Plaza Hotel where the Beatles were holed up on the 12th floor
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    Police were all but submerged by ululating hordes around the stately Plaza Hotel where the Beatles were holed up on the 12th floor

    By the time the Beatles  were back in Britain, their records occupied all five top places in the Billboard Hot 100, an achievement never matched before or since
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    By the time the Beatles  were back in Britain, their records occupied all five top places in the Billboard Hot 100, an achievement never matched before or since

    Amid increasing press reports of something called Beatlemania 4,000 miles away, British copies of I Want To Hold Your Hand began seeping into the country and started being played by radio DJs long before its US release date of December 26.

    The rapturous listener-response finally awoke Capitol Records to what they had. Instead of a planned first pressing of 200,000 copies, three plants began working around the clock to manufacture one million.

    As Flight 101 touched down on February 7 on a snow-flecked runway at newly-sanctified John F Kennedy Airport, an enormous crowd came into view around its main terminal building.

    The Beatles, in their innocence, thought Kennedy’s successor at the White House, Lyndon Johnson, must also be expected that day.

    They realised their mistake when they descended the aircraft steps to hear the crowd erupt into screams and (in those pre-airport security days) a hydraulic platform trundled across the tarmac towards them, festooned with shouting press photographers.

    That image of the Beatles in their shortie overcoats, frozen by astonishment as much as the cold, is perhaps the most famous of their career. Social historians now pinpoint it as the moment when the 1960s – whose youthful thrust in their first three years had been in theatre, films, political protest and satire – finally began to ‘swing’.

    The quartet’s final test was a massive airport press conference where they expected to be slaughtered for presuming to import pop music into America. With their bug-evoking name and busby-like hair, doubly shocking in this continent of crewcuts, they seemed like easy targets. But their whipcrack Scouse wit soon had the toughest New York hack wreathed in indulgent smiles.

    Their last stop was Miami to do a third Ed Sullivan show and a photo-op with a bombastic young heavyweight boxer named Cassius Clay, soon to be remoulded into Muhammad Ali
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    Their last stop was Miami to do a third Ed Sullivan show and a photo-op with a bombastic young heavyweight boxer named Cassius Clay, soon to be remoulded into Muhammad Ali

    ‘What’s your secret?’ one asked John.

    ‘If we knew,’ he said, ‘we’d form another group and be managers.’

    Midtown Manhattan confirmed there had never been Beatlemania like this. Mounted police in elegant cross-buttoning coats were all but submerged by ululating hordes around the stately Plaza Hotel, where the Beatles party had been allocated the entire 12th floor.

    More cops, plus a task force from the Burns Detective Agency, patrolled the corridors to prevent unauthorised persons from using the lifts or attempting to climb up the shafts.

    On arrival, each Beatle had been given a tiny transistor radio, a huge novelty in itself but this one was like a miniature Pepsi-Cola dispensing machine.

    Every radio station they tuned to was playing their records back to back and non-stop. Weather forecasters gave the Arctic temperature in ‘Beatle degrees’.

    The 15-day visit was not a tour in the usual sense, its main event being a television appearance on the hugely popular Ed Sullivan Show two days after their arrival.

    For that and two more Sullivan shows, Brian Epstein had agreed a bargain-basement $2,700 fee because of the publicity they would generate.

    The Beatles perform live on stage at the Washington Coliseum on an American tour in 1964
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    The Beatles perform live on stage at the Washington Coliseum on an American tour in 1964

    The Beatles were to give only two live concerts, one at Carnegie Hall, New York’s famed classical music venue, hitherto not a place accustomed to screams.

    When the promoter Sid Bernstein had rung up to book a slot for what he described only as ‘a British group’, he was assumed to mean some string quartet performing Mozart or Schubert.

    Behind the scenes, 29-year-old Epstein was beset by problems that might have sunk a manager of twice his age and experience.

    All were about gratifying the slightest whim of his ‘Boys’, while guarding the image he’d given these hard-boiled rockers as being simply inoffensive moptops.

    Hence African American Estelle Bennett from the Ronettes vocal trio, whom George Harrison had been dating in London, found herself frozen out of the Beatles Plaza suite so subtly that George never noticed.

    For Epstein knew that in the nakedly racist America of 1964, any hint of an interracial romance around them could be box-office poison.

    John had brought along his wife, Cynthia (the only time he ever would) in defiance of the rule that pop stars should stay unmarried and so theoretically be available to any one of their female fans.

    Even so, Cynthia was under orders to remain as unobtrusive as possible, which sometimes meant appearing in public with a coat over her head like a crime suspect in custody.

    Epstein had a secret of his own as a gay man in an era of rampant homophobia, who sublimated his adoration of John in an almost fatherly devotion to the Beatles as a whole.

    And John, though hetero to the core, would sometimes lead him on (once even holidaying alone with him in Spain) to gain extra rewards for the band or from sheer devilment.

    Producer Phil Spector (sitting) with George Harrison and the Ronettes. Harrison has his arm around the band's Estelle Bennett, who he was dating in London
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    Producer Phil Spector (sitting) with George Harrison and the Ronettes. Harrison has his arm around the band’s Estelle Bennett, who he was dating in London

    Most alarmingly, George, always prone to sudden dramatic illness, developed a severe throat infection on the eve of that crucial first appearance on the Ed Sullivan show.

    The hotel doctor recommended his immediate hospitalisation, which would have meant his missing the Sullivan show – an unthinkable prospect to Epstein with so much riding on it.

    So instead, George’s older sister Louise, who lived in Illinois, was summoned to the Plaza to nurse him and the press were fed a fairytale about ‘mild influenza’. When Ed Sullivan introduced the Beatles to America 24 hours later, George was still running a temperature of 104 genuine ‘Beatle degrees’.

    Their appearance had a nationwide audience estimated at 73million. All across the country, crime virtually came to a standstill, for armed robbers, hijackers and muggers were Beatle converts too. In all New York’s five boroughs, not so much as a car hubcap was reported stolen.

    That night put at end to America’s long-time musical xenophobia.

    Two fans try out their Beatles-style wigs in anticipation of the group's arrival in New York
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    Two fans try out their Beatles-style wigs in anticipation of the group’s arrival in New York

    In the Beatles’ wake, other British bands like the Rolling Stones, the Animals, the Searchers and Herman’s Hermits would soon come pouring across the Atlantic in a literal ‘invasion’.

    At the same time, America’s existing generation of pop artists – with the exception of a few diehards, such as the Beach Boys, Bob Dylan, and the Motown stable – found themselves on the scrap heap.

    In their place came new American bands modelled on the Beatles with similarly misspelt zoological names like the Byrds and the Monkees, sporting Beatle haircuts and Beatle boots, singing Beatley harmonies, even adopting faux-Liverpudlian accents.

    Inevitably, the tour’s final leg was rather an anticlimax, demonstrating that being a Beatle wasn’t always the heaven their public supposed.

    At their second live concert, in Washington DC, they performed in the round and had to help their roadies to keep rotating the stage by hand to give each sector of the audience a fair sight of them.

    Later, they attended a charity event at the British embassy where a group of drunken diplomats snipped off a lock of Ringo’s hair with nail scissors. The black-and-white footage of the episode shows how near John came to losing it.

    Last stop was Miami to do a third Ed Sullivan show (the second having been taped in New York) and a photo-op with a bombastic young heavyweight boxer named Cassius Clay, soon to be remoulded into Muhammad Ali.

    By the time they were back in Britain, their records occupied all five top places in the Billboard Hot 100, an achievement never matched before or since.

    That one short visit should have made them multimillionaires, for American manufacturers now clamoured to produce and department stores to sell Fab Four-themed goods, from bubblegum and plastic guitars to motorscooters with seats like Beatle wigs.

    Unluckily, despite Epstein’s vision in other areas, he failed to spot a moneyspinner potentially rivalling the Disney Corporation.

    Merchandising not having amounted to much in Britain, he looked for a proxy to handle it in America while he focused on more creative matters.

    Epstein’s choice was a rakish character named Nicky Byrne, whose main contact with retailing had been his wife Kiki’s Chelsea boutique.

    Byrne in turn recruited a group of cronies including a genuine English lord, the Earl of St Germans, to set up a company named Seltaeb – ‘Beatles’ spelt backwards – which would take 90 per cent of the proceeds from US merchandising with 10 per cent going to Epstein and the Beatles.

    When Epstein arrived in New York in 1964 and saw the scale of Seltaeb’s business, he’d realised the absurdity of their cut. So back in London he began issuing his own manufacturing licences without telling Nicky Byrne.

    That caused total confusion among the manufacturers and retailers with no one knowing whether Epstein’s or Seltaeb’s licences were valid.

    Fearing legal complications, department stores like Macy’s, Woolworth and J. C. Penney cancelled orders worth $78million and several manufacturers with factories in mid-production lost a fortune.

    Epstein and Byrne became embroiled in a tortuous American lawsuit and Seltaeb went under.

    One man who’d turned over his whole operation to making plastic guitars suffered a fatal heart attack from the stress. His son found out from Byrne, who was ultimately responsible, and vowed to take out a contract on Epstein.

    ‘Wait until I’ve finished with him in the courts,’ Byrne said, not taking it seriously.

    The lawsuit was finally settled in 1967 with a modest payout to Byrne. He claimed he then received an anonymous phone-call saying ‘Mr Epstein was about to meet with an accident’.

    Shortly afterwards, Epstein was found dead at his London home aged only 32. The inquest verdict was accidental death from ‘incautious self-overdoses’ of barbiturates although his younger brother, Clive, would later recall he’d always been notably cautious in his drug use.

    Sixteen months later, his lawyer, David Jacobs, was found hanging from a satin cord in a garage in Hove, Sussex.

    Jacobs’ obituaries dwelt at length on his celebrity clients, like Liberace and Judy Garland, but omitted one highly significant fact.

    He’d been tasked with granting the American merchandise licences from Epstein rather than the Seltaeb company which had scuppered the whole enterprise, bankrupting many small manufacturers including one whose son had vowed revenge for his father’s consequent fatal heart attack.

    Jacobs’ colleagues and friends later recalled that just before his death he’d seemed uneasy about something. Yet he’d made no attempt to beef up his personal security and had continued to lead a busy social life, making lunch appointments far ahead.

    Despite these strong pointers to an unexpected end, the inquest verdict was ‘suicide while the balance of the mind was disturbed’.

    Lately, compelling evidence has come to light that both Epstein and Jacobs could have been victims of Mob hits as Jacobs was considered as much to blame as his client for the Seltaeb fiasco.

    Indeed, the 16-month gap between their deaths suggests the old Sicilian maxim that ‘revenge is a dish best served cold’.

    So far had pop music evolved since those four mould-breakers, shivering in their shortie coats on the aircraft steps, had said ‘Hello, America’.

  • Everything we know about four The Beatles biopics from director Sam Mendes

    Everything we know about four The Beatles biopics from director Sam Mendes


    Everything we know about four The Beatles biopics from director Sam Mendes

    John Lennon, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and Ringo Starr in 1963. Bettmann/Getty Images

    “No Time To Die” director Sam Mendes is working on four biopics about The Beatles.
    Each movie will be from the perspective of a different member of the iconic British band.
    Here’s everything we know about The Beatles movies.

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    “No Time To Die” director Sam Mendes is working on four biopics about The Beatles.

    Mendes, who’s also known for Oscar-winning films including “American Beauty,” “Skyfall,” and “1917,” has partnered with Sony to work on the ambitious slate of movies about the iconic British band.

    In a press release announcing the news, Sony Pictures CEO Tim Rothman said: “Sam’s daring, large-scale idea is that and then some.”

    Here’s everything we know about the four movies about The Beatles.

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    Each movie will focus on a different member of The Beatles

    The Beatles: (left to right) Paul McCartney; George Harrison, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon on their arrival in 1964 at Heathrow Airport from Paris where they appeared at the Olympia Music Hall.

    The Beatles: (left to right) Paul McCartney; George Harrison, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon arriving at Heathrow Airport in 1964. Bettmann/Getty Images

    According to the press release, each movie will be from the perspective of a different member of the band, meaning Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr will each have their own biopic.

    It’s the first time that the band’s company, Apple Corps Ltd., has given permission for the group’s life story and music to be used in a scripted film about them.

    Since 1979, 18 unauthorized biopics have been made about the band including 2009’s “Knowhere Boy” starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Lennon and Thomas Brodie-Sangster as McCartney.

    The release also says that the four movies “will intersect to tell the astonishing story of the greatest band in history.” Yes, Mendes is effectively giving audiences The Beatles Cinematic Universe, so get those “Avengers” jokes out of the way now.

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    Sam Mendes will have ‘no limits’ telling The Beatles’ story

    Sam Mendes at "The Hills Of California" press night at Sophie's Soho  in London.
    Sam Mendes at “The Hills Of California” press night at Sophie’s Soho in London. Jed Cullen/Dave Benett/Getty Images)
    In an interview with Deadline published on Tuesday, Pippa Harris, who will produce the films, said the band’s surviving members, McCartney and Starr, have given their blessing for Mendes to work on the four films.

    “It’s a testament to his creative brilliance and powers of persuasion that Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Sean Lennon, and Olivia Harrison responded with such warmth and enthusiasm as soon as he spoke with them,” she said, referring to John Lennon’s son and George Harrison’s widow.

    Harris went on to say that Mendes will have no restrictions on what he depicts from the band members’ lives.

    She said: “What is truly exciting is for Sam to have the freedom to delve into the lives of each of the Beatles, with nothing off limits and no sense of the band wanting him to tell a particular ‘authorised’ version of their rise to success.”

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    Starr also gave his blessing on Tuesday via a post on X.

    Have you heard the news? Oh boy. We all support the Sam Mendes movie project. Yes, indeed. peace and love.😎🎶🌈✌️🌟❤️☮️ pic.twitter.com/byhnmVqsHY

    — #RingoStarr (@ringostarrmusic) February 20, 2024

    Nobody has been cast yet, but The Beatles movies should be released in 2027

    the beatles
    The Beatles photographed in 1966. Clockwise from top left: Paul MacCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr. Roger Viollet Collection/Getty Images
    Mendes is currently the only big name attached to all four movies as director, and no actors have been cast as Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, or Starr as of yet.

    Per the press release, Sony is looking to release all four movies about The Beatles in 2027, which gives Mendes plenty of time to find the right people to play the Liverpudlian superstars.

  • These rare photographs show the last Civil War veterans, 1890-1950

    These rare photographs show the last Civil War veterans, 1890-1950

    At the 50th anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg, Union (left) and Confederate (right) veterans shake hands at a reunion, in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. 1913.

    At the 50th anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg, Union (left) and Confederate (right) veterans shake hands at a reunion, in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. 1913.

    The 1.5 million Union and perhaps 600,000 Confederate veterans were very visible members of post-war society. For one thing, they dominated political offices in both the North and the South. Most U. S. presidents during this period had fought for the Union, and scores of veterans from both sides served as governors, senators, and congressmen, while countless thousands served in state and local offices. But veterans’ importance to American society and to the legacies of the Civil War transcended their political influence.

    By the 1880s, many Americans would have walked past monuments to Civil War soldiers in town squares, cemeteries, or other public places in the North and South. But the “old soldiers,” as they were already being called, were still only in their forties or fifties and still very much a part of the communities in which they lived.

    They were most prominent as members of veterans’ organizations and as participants in Memorial Day commemorations and July Fourth celebrations.

    Civil War veterans formed many different veterans’ associations. Some consisted of all the men living in a single town or county, while others were formed by survivors of specific armies, corps, regiments, or even companies, and still, others were formed by unique groups like prisoners of war or members of the signal corps. But two organizations dominated.

    By the 1880s, as many as 400,000 former Yankees belonged to the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), which was founded in 1866 and reached its membership peak twenty years later.
    A veteran of the Union Army shakes hands with a Confederate veteran at the Gettysburg celebration, in Pennsylvania. 1913.

    A veteran of the Union Army shakes hands with a Confederate veteran at the Gettysburg celebration, in Pennsylvania. 1913.

    The United Confederate Veterans (UCV) grew out of a number of smaller associations in 1889 and boasted 160,000 members by 1900. The GAR and UCV organized at the national, state, and local levels, with the local “posts” named after famous generals or local heroes.

    A number of “soldiers’ newspapers” were published to support the activities of the GAR and UCV. Papers like the American Tribune, National Tribune, and Ohio Soldier published war memoirs, reports from soldiers’ reunions, and information about pensions for GAR members, while the Confederate Veteran was the official publication of the UCV for forty years.

    Memorial Day parades and speeches made it easy for Americans to think of Civil War veterans as distinguished old men with gray beards, elegant bearings, and bittersweet memories of lost comrades.

    In fact, the lives of Union and Confederate veterans were much more complicated. They were often able to blend back into families and communities fairly easily, but, like veterans of any war, some found it more difficult to readjust to civilian life.

    Although many Civil War veterans were very successful after the war in business, politics, and life, many believed that the war had prevented them from meeting their expectations for economic success.
    Civil War veterans on Fourth of July, or Decoration Day, on review on the main street of Ortonville, Minnesota. 1880.

    Civil War veterans on Fourth of July, or Decoration Day, on review on the main street of Ortonville, Minnesota. 1880.

    They had spent the best years of their young manhood in the army. Union soldiers had been away while the men who remained at home profited from the booming economy, while Confederate soldiers saw family fortunes and farms crumble under the pressure of invasion and the collapse of the slave economy.

    Although the term “post-traumatic stress” is a modern way of describing the effects of war on some individuals, the condition was certainly known during and after the Civil War.

    The failure of a man’s courage in the face of combat or when confronted with having to support a hard-pressed family after the war was usually attributed to a failure of will or masculinity rather than to a medical condition.

    But “soldier’s heart,” as some people called it, clearly affected countless soldiers on both sides, who ended up in state asylums for the insane suffering from delusions, insomnia, paranoia, and other symptoms that were just beginning to be understood in the latter part of the nineteenth century.

    About 617,000 Americans were killed during the Civil War. The number is equal to the entire number of Americans who had died in all wars up to that point, including both the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812.
    Marion, Indiana — Veterans eat their meals in the dining hall of the National Soldiers' Home, a facility for the care of disabled American veterans, many from the Civil War. 1898.

    Marion, Indiana — Veterans eat their meals in the dining hall of the National Soldiers’ Home, a facility for the care of disabled American veterans, many from the Civil War. 1898.

    Manassas, Virginia — Veterans of the Civil War meet on the Bull Run Battlefield for a reunion celebration. 1913.

    Manassas, Virginia — Veterans of the Civil War meet on the Bull Run Battlefield for a reunion celebration. 1913.

    Parade of the Grand Army of the Republic during the 1914 meeting in Detroit, Michigan. 1914.

    Parade of the Grand Army of the Republic during the 1914 meeting in Detroit, Michigan. 1914.

    Civil War veterans attend the funeral of General Horace C. Porter. 1921.

    Civil War veterans attend the funeral of General Horace C. Porter. 1921.

    Chattanooga, Tennessee — A group of Confederate cavalry veterans gather at a reunion. 1921.

    Chattanooga, Tennessee — A group of Confederate cavalry veterans gather at a reunion. 1921.

    Richmond, Virginia — J. F. Griffin, at 81 the last surviving member of the Louisiana Tigers, holds a Second Naval Jack flag at the 32nd Annual Reunion of the United Confederate Veterans at Richmond.

    Richmond, Virginia — J. F. Griffin, at 81 the last surviving member of the Louisiana Tigers, holds a Second Naval Jack flag at the 32nd Annual Reunion of the United Confederate Veterans at Richmond. 1922.

    Washington, D.C. — President Harding receives veterans of the Confederate Army who have been attending their annual reunion at Richmond, Virginia. Old soldiers who fought under the Stars and Bars during the Civil War are shown here with the president, who welcomed them to the White House. 1922.

    Washington, D.C. — President Harding receives veterans of the Confederate Army who have been attending their annual reunion at Richmond, Virginia. Old soldiers who fought under the Stars and Bars during the Civil War are shown here with the president, who welcomed them to the White House. 1922.

    Elderly Civil War veterans playing cards together. 1930.

    Elderly Civil War veterans playing cards together. 1930.

    Gettysburg National Military Park, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania — Veterans of the Civil War pose at High Water Mark Memorial. 1931.

    Gettysburg National Military Park, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania — Veterans of the Civil War pose at High Water Mark Memorial. 1931.

    Gettysburg National Military Park, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania — Union Civil War veterans stand in front a monument at Gettysburg. 1931.

    Gettysburg National Military Park, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania — Union Civil War veterans stand in front a monument at Gettysburg. 1931.

    Rochester, New York — The Grand Army of the Republic Civil War Veterans join a parade down main street during Rochester's centennial. 1934.

    Rochester, New York — The Grand Army of the Republic Civil War Veterans join a parade down main street during Rochester’s centennial. 1934.

    Washington, D.C. - Captain R.D. Parker, age 90, who played a drum at Lincoln's inauguration, as he took part in the final parade of the Grand Army of the Republic in Washington, D.C., closing the 70th annual encampment. The Grand Army of the Republic was an organization founded in 1866 for veterans of the Civil War. 1936.

    Washington, D.C. – Captain R.D. Parker, age 90, who played a drum at Lincoln’s inauguration, as he took part in the final parade of the Grand Army of the Republic in Washington, D.C., closing the 70th annual encampment. The Grand Army of the Republic was an organization founded in 1866 for veterans of the Civil War. 1936.

    At the Memorial Day parade, Civil War veteran, George W. Collier, 97, shows Alwin Sharr, 9, a boy scout cub, how he aimed his rifle during the war. 1939.

    At the Memorial Day parade, Civil War veteran, George W. Collier, 97, shows Alwin Sharr, 9, a boy scout cub, how he aimed his rifle during the war. 1939.

    John S. Dumser, 101-year-old veteran of the Civil War. 1949.

    John S. Dumser, 101-year-old veteran of the Civil War. 1949.

    Elderly Civil War veteran Thomas Evans Riddle. 1953.

    Elderly Civil War veteran Thomas Evans Riddle. 1953.

    Self-proclaimed

    Self-proclaimed “Confederate Civil War veteran” William Lundy sitting on his porch. 1956.

    Self-proclaimed

    Self-proclaimed “Confederate Civil War veteran” sitting on his porch. 1956.

    Self-proclaimed

    Self-proclaimed “Confederate Civil War veteran” walking through his yard. 1956.

    Self-proclaimed

    Self-proclaimed “Civil War veteran” Walter W. Williams. 1953.

    Serenaded Walter Williams lying in bed with a cigar. 1959.

    Serenaded Walter Williams lying in bed with a cigar. 1959.

    Williams with friends. 1959.

    Williams with friends. 1959.

    Walter Williams lying in bed with cigar, surrounded by family and friends. 1959.

    Walter Williams lying in bed with cigar, surrounded by family and friends. 1959.

    107 years old last remaining GAR Civil War Veteran Albert Woolson, relaxing on the couch while a little girl helps him sort through some mail. 1954.

    107 years old last remaining GAR Civil War Veteran Albert Woolson, relaxing on the couch while a little girl helps him sort through some mail. 1954.

    107 years old last remaining Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) Civil War Veteran Albert Woolson (seated) sitting in the front porch wearing a military hat and blanket while people and photographers are passing by. 1954.

    107 years old last remaining Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) Civil War Veteran Albert Woolson (seated) sitting in the front porch wearing a military hat and blanket while people and photographers are passing by. 1954.

    Boys standing at attention for the funeral of a Civil War veteran who was the last member of the Grand Army of the Republic. 1956.

    Boys standing at attention for the funeral of a Civil War veteran who was the last member of the Grand Army of the Republic. 1956.

    (Photo credit: The LIFE Picture Collection / Library of Congress / National Geographic Creative / Corbis. Text: James Marten / Union and Confederate Veterans).

  • Captain America’s Army Unit Is Real And Still Active Today

    Captain America’s Army Unit Is Real And Still Active Today

    In 1941 beloved superhero Captain America appeared in a Marvel comic book for the first time. Shown punching the Führer on his debut comic cover, Captain America started out as the humble Steve Rogers, a scrawny man who is too weak to fight in WWII. However, after he is amped up by a special serum, he becomes the perfect soldier. Rogers was then given the rank of Captain and assigned to the 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division.

    While Captain America is a fictional character, his unit was not, and it’s still active today.

     

    Photo Credits: MovieStillDB (left) / US Army (right)

    The 26th Infantry Regiment

    26 Infantry

    The 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry passing through the railway viaduct north of Bütgenbach, Belgium, on the Monschauer St. (N647) towards Bütgenbach. The railway viaduct was part of the line running from Losheim/Eifel (Germany) to Trois-Ponts, Belgium, and had been blown up by the retreating German troops. (Photo Credit: U.S. Army / Wikipedia / Public Domain)
    The 26th Infantry Regiment was created in the early years of the 20th century to bolster the overextended US Army conducting operations in the Philippines, Cuba, and Puerto Rico. The 26th began its service in the Philippines and soon earned its first battle streamer. It would spend most of its existence before WWI in the Southwest Pacific, the Indian frontier, and the Mexican frontier.

    When WWI came around the 26th Infantry Regiment was one of the only US Army units ready to be immediately sent overseas. They departed for France as the first American Expeditionary Division in June 1917. Later, the division would be renamed the First Division, which would famously become known as the Big Red One.

    The Blue Spaders

    The 26th Infantry Regiment’s unit insignia features a blue Indian arrowhead, which resembles a spade. As a result, the regiment earned the nickname “Blue Spaders.”

    WWI

    When the regiment reached France they were quickly sent to the frontlines, where they fought in vicious combat and received heavy losses. Over 900 Blue Spaders were lost in just six months.

    At the Battle of Soissons the 26th started with 3,100 men but were left with just 1,500 at the battle’s conclusion. The regiment also lost its regimental commander, executive officer, regimental command sergeant major, and two of its three battalion commanders in the battle.

    But the Blue Spaders fought heroically and were awarded more battle streamers than any other US regiment that participated in the war. When the war ended the 26th spent a short amount of time in Germany as an occupying force.

    WWII

    The 26th Infantry Regiment was once again readied for war after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in December 1941. The Blue Spaders was assigned to the 1st Infantry Division and were extremely busy throughout the Second World War, participating in some of the conflict’s most famous battles.

    To begin with, they fought in North Africa, leading the US’ first-ever amphibious assault. Following this, they fought at Kasserine Pass. In the summer of 1943, they invaded Sicily, and a year later landed on Omaha Beach during the D-Day invasion.

    They captured the first German city at Aachen, fought through the Battle of the Bulge, and crossed the Rhine.

    The Blue Spaders ended the war with seven battle streamers, five foreign awards, and a Presidential Unit Citation. They then spent more time in Germany as an occupying force for the second time. Germany would become like a second home for the regiment.

    Vietnam

    During the Vietnam War, the 26th Infantry Regiment was once again assigned to the 1st Infantry Division and deployed to Vietnam. They arrived in the country in 1965 as part of America’s first division-sized unit to reach Vietnam.

    The Blue Spaders fought hard, earning eleven battle streamers, two foreign awards, and a Valorous Unit Award before being pulled out of the country in 1970. In total, they spent five years in the region.

    The 26th were sent back to Germany after Vietnam.

    Blue Spaders in the Balkans and modern-day

    Captain America Regiment

    Soldiers from C Company, 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, conduct a Cordon and Search operation in Al Adhamiya, Baghdad, Iraq, Feb. 21, 2007. (Sergeant Jeffrey Alexander / U.S. Army / Dvidshub / Public Domain)
    In 1996, nearly a century after the regiment was formed, the Blue Spaders were deployed to the Balkans and served in Bosnia, the Republic of Macedonia, and Kosovo, adding more awards to their impressive record.

    In the early 2000s, the 26th were sent to Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom and then to Afghanistan for Operation Enduring Freedom.

    It is no surprise that such a well-decorated and highly experienced unit was chosen to be to Captain America’s comrades. However, while in Marvel’s fictional universe the 26th was aided by a superhuman, the superhuman-like achievements of the real-life 26th were accomplished by ordinary men doing an extraordinary job.