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Ship Ahoy #1 (1944)

Spotlight Publishers [1940s] · 1944 · 52 pages

Free to read · restored edition by comicbooks.com · Issue details →

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Contains 9 stories
Anchors Aweigh
8 pp · non-fiction; history; military

This story traces the U.S. Navy from its makeshift beginnings in 1775—when Admiral Esek Hopkins commanded a force converted from merchant ships—through pivotal moments like John Paul Jones's defiant stand against the H.M.S. Serapis and the ironclad clash between the Monitor and Virginia during the Civil War. Moving forward through the Spanish-American War and into the early twentieth century, it shows how the Navy evolved from a scattered commerce-raiding force into a modern, strategically organized sea power that pioneered naval aviation and adapted to technological breakthroughs. The story celebrates the ingenuity and courage that transformed America's maritime defense from humble origins into one of the world's mightiest naval forces by 1944.

Navy Air Medic
6 pp · non-fiction; military

In this 1944 account, Navy flight surgeons emerge as the unsung guardians of naval aviation—carefully screening candidates for the physical and mental demands of flight, monitoring pilots' health and readiness, and even testing experimental equipment at extreme altitudes to keep aircrews safe and combat-effective. Through a series of real-world examples, we see how these medical officers detect everything from subtle nervous-system deficiencies to equipment failures and personal crises that could ground a pilot, proving that vigilance in the air starts on the ground.

Untitled story
8 pp · adventure; aviation; war
Coast Guard to the Rescue
6 pp · non-fiction

The U.S. Coast Guard's air arm performs three critical wartime duties: hunting enemy submarines, escorting convoys through dangerous waters, and executing daring rescues of survivors from torpedoed vessels. This 1944 account follows real rescue missions—from a pilot dropping a "food bomb" to stranded sailors, to Lt. D.O. Reed stretching his plane's capacity to save 21 survivors from a sunken Norwegian ship, to Lt. Pritchard's harrowing ice-cap landing in Greenland and the service's pioneering use of helicopters for mercy flights. Through these extraordinary acts, the Coast Guard's expanding air fleet proves itself indispensable to preserving life on the high seas.

Leave It to the SPARS
2 pp · non-fiction; military

When the U.S. Coast Guard expanded dramatically during World War II, it turned to an unlikely solution: the SPARS, a new women's reserve unit whose name comes from the Coast Guard motto "Semper Paratus" (Always Ready). This two-page feature follows recruits through their training at Palm Beach and beyond, showcasing the fifty-plus critical roles these women fill—from parachute maintenance and radio operation to flight instruction and beyond—all designed to free up male sailors for active combat duty. It's a straightforward, pride-filled look at how the SPARS stepped up to serve their country on the home front and overseas.

Highlights of U.S. Naval History
6 pp · non-fiction; history; military

A sweeping look at how the U.S. Navy evolved from the Civil War's Monitor-Merrimac clash into the formidable fighting force of World War Two, showcasing everything from convoy escorts and minesweepers to submarines, destroyers, aircraft carriers, and amphibious landing craft battling Axis forces across the globe. With contributions from Admiral Ernest J. King and other naval leadership, this panoramic review captures the Navy's essential role in protecting American troops, merchant shipping, and supply lines while taking the fight to enemy vessels and shore positions from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

Girls in Navy Blue
2 pp · non-fiction; military

When women join the WAVES—the Navy's female auxiliary service—they embark on a path of rigorous training and meaningful work that helps keep America's fighting forces in the field. From basic training in New York City through specialized instruction in radio operation, communications, and mechanical skills, these women in Navy Blue prove themselves essential to the war effort, taking on critical roles from aircraft maintenance to parachute inspection to around-the-clock communications duty. It's a portrait of service and sacrifice during wartime, showing how women are stepping up to answer their country's call.

Boots-Boots-Boots
6 pp · war

Follow a young recruit nicknamed "Boots" through eight weeks of rigorous Marine Corps training at Parris Island in 1944, from his first nervous moments through drill, weapons instruction, jujutsu combat training, and rifle qualification. Watch as Joe Marine transforms from a gum-chewing civilian into a disciplined leatherneck, mastering everything the Corps demands before his final inspection and march away from camp as a full-fledged member of the United States Marine Corps.

Calvin Graham
1 pp · non-fiction; biography; military

Able Seaman Calvin Graham saw combat as a twelve-year-old sailor, serving aboard ship during the battles of Savo and Santa Cruz and earning his place in naval history through courage under fire. When shrapnel struck him down while delivering a crucial message, the young sailor refused to let his wound stop him from completing his duty. His service came to an end only when his true age was revealed to Navy personnel, though with three brothers already in uniform, Graham's heart remains fixed on returning to the Navy as soon as he's old enough.

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