Mrs. Hutchinson’s Son – USS Sargo’s (SS-188) Fifth War Patrol

In Ava, Missouri, Mrs. Hutchinson walked into the office of the Douglas County Herald with a request that surprised the editor. She asked them to stop sending her the papers. It wasn’t that she didn’t want to read the news, she read every line about the war as closely as any mother with a son in uniform. Her worries were different. She had been faithfully forwarding the paper to her boy, Fireman Second Class E.E. Hutchinson, serving on a submarine somewhere in the South Pacific. But letters had been few, and she had no way of knowing if the papers ever reached him. More than once, she wondered if stacks of unread issues were piling up in some forgotten postal bag while her son remained cut off from the world back home. In the end, she decided there was no sense in continuing the subscription if she couldn’t be sure he was receiving them.

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41 Cold War Sentinels: USS John Marshall SSBN-611

The Cold War was a strange kind of war. It was fought with maps, speeches, and shadows more than bullets and blood. Yet in those years the world balanced on the edge of nuclear fire. Every night the thought lingered that sirens could wail, missiles could launch, and millions could die in minutes. Against that backdrop the United States built a fleet of forty-one submarines designed to keep the peace by threatening catastrophe. They were called the “41 for Freedom,” a phrase that sounded noble but in reality described one of the most terrifying arsenals ever to slide into the sea. Among them was USS John Marshall (SSBN-611). She was an Ethan Allen-class boat, one of the first submarines built from the keel up to carry ballistic missiles. Her story is unusual even among her sisters. She began life as a Polaris missile boat, prowling the Atlantic and Arctic with a belly full of nuclear warheads. She ended her career not as a missile carrier at all, but as a hybrid, an attack submarine fitted with Dry Deck Shelters to support Navy SEALs and special operations. In her thirty years she served as both deterrent and covert support, a boat that mirrored the changing priorities of the Cold War.

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41 Cold War Sentinels: USS Henry L. Stimson SSBN-655

There are ships that fight in battles, their names carved into the bright lights of history, remembered for decisive cannon fire or desperate torpedo runs. And then there are ships whose purpose was never to fight at all, but to disappear into the world’s oceans, waiting in silence with the power to end civilization. The USS Henry L. Stimson (SSBN-655) belonged to that second group. She was one of the “41 for Freedom,” America’s fleet of nuclear-armed ballistic missile submarines that patrolled the oceans through the Cold War, holding the line by being invisible. Her story is not one of thundering combat but of quiet endurance, of young men living under the sea for months at a time, and of the statesman whose name she bore, a man who wrestled with the morality of nuclear weapons before most of her crew were even born.

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