41 Cold War Sentinels – USS Daniel Boone SSBN-629

The USS Daniel Boone was born into a world balanced on the edge of annihilation. When her keel was laid down on February 6, 1962, at Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, California, the United States and the Soviet Union were locked in a Cold War that relied as much on unseen submarines as on visible missiles and soldiers. The Navy’s new fleet ballistic missile program had already begun to take shape, and the Boone was part of that second generation of boats that would carry America’s most destructive weapons into the deep. She was designed to remain hidden, to roam the world’s oceans in silence, unseen but always present, serving as a reminder that any attack on the United States would come with unbearable consequences.

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The Northern Star

In the shadowy chess game of the Cold War, the move that changed everything did not come from a missile silo in Kansas or a bomber base in England. It came from beneath the waves, out of sight and far beyond reach. On July 20, 1960, deep beneath the Atlantic Ocean, the USS George Washington unleashed the first Polaris ballistic missile from a submerged submarine. That launch did not just mark a technical milestone. It transformed the rules of deterrence, and in many ways, helped hold off the unthinkable, even into the 21st century.

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