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Summary of James D. Hornfischer's Who Can Hold the Sea

E-book


Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book.

Sample Book Insights:

#1 Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr. , was the leading public face of the Navy, and he was quick to command a crowd. His peers during the war were disinclined to speak of their work, and thus secretive.

#2 The United States Navy ended World War II with nearly 1,200 combatant ships, 41,000 planes, and 3. 4 million personnel. It had 758,000 civilians on its worldwide payroll, more than half of them at the government-owned naval shipyards at Bremerton, Boston, Charleston, Mare Island, New York, Norfolk, Pearl Harbor, Philadelphia, Portsmouth, San Francisco, and San Pedro.

#3 The push to cut costs fell upon the Pentagon like a weather front. The Senate was considering a bill to unify the Navy and War departments, along with a new department designating the Air Force as a single administrative entity.

#4 The Navy was able to save the country 25 percent of the $265 billion it had cost to fight the war. The Navy’s budget writers considered this a lurid fantasy. The senator who had been impressed by Army presentations said to a Navy official, Atomic energy has driven ships off the surface of the sea. I don’t see how a ship can resist the atomic bomb.