46: A Date With Dad




(RECORD GROUP 24)
1798-1991
(bulk 1798-1956)

Find Death information for people with the Date of Birth and/or Date of Death you specify. Discover Full Names, Dates of Birth and Death, Last Known Residence information, and more. Due to variances in the way the death index was created, some records may have incomplete (partial) Date of Death information. So do you have to have all of these traits in order to be the type of girl a single dad wants to date? But if you read through this list and can check off a good number of them that you think.

Table of Contents

  • 24.1 ADMINISTRATIVE HISTORY
  • 24.2 GENERAL RECORDS OF THE BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL AND ITS PREDECESSORS 1801-1966
  • 24.2.1 Correspondence
  • 24.2.2 Logs
  • 24.2.3 Muster rolls
  • 24.2.4 Records of units attached to the Bureau of Navigation
  • 24.2.5 Other records
  • 24.3 RECORDS RELATING TO NAVAL OFFICERS, ENLISTED MEN, ANDAPPRENTICES1798-1943
  • 24.3.1 Records relating to naval officers
  • 24.3.2 Records relating to enlisted men
  • 24.3.3 Records relating to naval apprentices
  • 24.4 RECORDS OF THE OFFICE OF DETAIL 1865-90
  • 24.5 RECORDS OF THE BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT AND RECRUITING 1856-1928 (bulk 1862-89)
  • 24.6 RECORDS OF THE BUREAU OF NAVIGATION 1804-1946
  • 24.6.1 Records of the Chaplains Division
  • 24.6.2 Records of the Division of Naval Militia Affairs
  • 24.6.3 Records of the Naval Reserve Division
  • 24.6.4 Records of the Division of Officers and Fleet
  • 24.6.5 Records of the Naval Academy Division
  • 24.6.6 Records of the Morale Division
  • 24.6.7 Records of the Training Division
  • 24.7 RECORDS OF OPERATING UNITS OF THE BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL 1940-46
  • 24.8 RECORDS OF FIELD ESTABLISHMENTS 1838-1970 (bulk 1838-1946)
  • 24.8.1 Records of the U.S. Naval Home, Philadelphia, PA
  • 24.8.2 Records of the Naval Hospital, Philadelphia, PA
  • 24.8.3 Records of the Indoctrination School for Officers, Fort Schuyler, NY
  • 24.8.4 Records of the Enlisted Naval Training School (Radio), Bedford Springs, PA
  • 24.8.5 Records of the V-12 Unit, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH
  • 24.8.6 Records of the Naval Midshipmen's School, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL
  • 24.8.7 Records of the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps, Yale University, New Haven, CT
  • 24.9 CARTOGRAPHIC RECORDS (GENERAL) 1898-1944
  • 24.10 MOTION PICTURES (GENERAL) 1917-27
  • 24.11 SOUND RECORDINGS (GENERAL)
  • 24.12 STILL PICTURES (GENERAL) 1892-1945
  • 24.13 MACHINE-READABLE RECORDS (GENERAL)

24.1 ADMINISTRATIVE HISTORY

Established: In the Department of the Navy by an act of May 13,1942 (56 Stat. 276).

Predecessor Agencies:

In the War Department:

  • Office of the Secretary of War (personnel functions, 1789-98)

In the Department of the Navy:

  • Office of the Secretary of the Navy (personnel functions, 1798-1862)
  • Board of Navy Commissioners (personnel functions, 1815-42)
  • Office of Detail (1861-89)
  • Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting (personnel functions, 1862-89)
  • Bureau of Navigation (personnel functions, 1889-1942)

Functions: Exercises oversight responsibility for the NavalMilitary Personnel Command, Navy Recruiting Command, and NavalCivilian Personnel Center. Administers all personnel matters forthe U.S. Navy.

Finding Aids: Virgil E. Baugh, comp., Preliminary Inventory ofthe Records of the Bureau of Naval Personnel, PI 123 (1960); LeeD. Saegesser and Harry Schwartz, comps., 'Supplement toPreliminary Inventory No. 123, Records of the Bureau of NavalPersonnel,' NM 74 (Jan. 1967); supplement in National Archivesmicrofiche edition of preliminary inventories.

Security-Classified Records: This record group may includematerial that is security-classified.

Related Records: Record copies of publications of the Bureau ofNaval Personnel in RG 287, Publications of the U.S. Government.

24.2 GENERAL RECORDS OF THE BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL AND ITSPREDECESSORS
1801-1966

History: War Department, established by act of August 7, 1789 (1Stat. 49), handled personnel functions for the U.S. Navy until aseparate Department of the Navy was established by act of April30, 1798 (1 Stat. 553). Personnel duties centralized in theimmediate office of the Secretary of the Navy, 1798-1862,assisted by the Board of Navy Commissioners, established by actof February 7, 1815 (3 Stat. 202), and abolished by act of August31, 1842 (5 Stat. 579). Responsibility for detailing (assigning)officers delegated to Office of Detail, 1861 (SEE 24.4).Responsibility for enlisting and recruiting navy personnelassigned to Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting, 1862 (SEE 24.5).Personnel functions of Bureau of Equipment and Recruitingtransferred to Bureau of Navigation, 1889. Bureau of Navigationredesignated Bureau of Naval Personnel, 1942. SEE 24.1.

24.2.1 Correspondence

Textual Records: Letters sent to the President, Congressmen, andExecutive departments, 1877-1911; the Secretary of the Navy,naval establishments, and officers, 1850-1911; commandants, 1862-1911; and enlisted personnel and apprentices, 1864-1911. Letterssent concerning civilian personnel, 1903-9; and aviation, 1911-12. General letters sent, 1885-96. Miscellaneous letters sent,1862-1911. Letters received, 1862-89. General correspondence(6,043 ft.), 1889-1945, with record cards, 1903-25; subjectcards, 1903-45; and history cards, 1925-42. Indexes and registersof letters sent and received, and of general correspondence,1862-1903. Correspondence relating to vessels, personnel, andnaval activities, 1885-1921.

24.2.2 Logs

Textual Records: Logs of U.S. naval ships and stations, 1801-1946(72,500 vols., 8,060 ft.), and 1945-61 (12,000 vols., 6,980 ft.);with indexes and lists, 1801-1940. Microfilm copy of log ofU.S.S. Constitution, 1813-15 (1 roll). Logs of the Germanmerchant vessels Prinz Waldemar and Prinz Sigismund, 1903-14.Communication logs and signal record books, 1897-1922. Signallogs and codebooks, 1917-19. Operational and signal logs of U.S.Navy armed guard units aboard merchant vessels, 1943-45. Manuscript ('rough') log and night order book of the U.S.S. Missouri, 1944-45.

Microfilm Publications: M1030.

Finding Aids: Claudia Bradley, Michael Kurtz, Rebecca Livingston,Timothy Mulligan, Muriel Parseghian, Paul Vanderveer, and JamesYale, comps., List of Logbooks of U.S. Navy Ships, Stations, andMiscellaneous Units, 1801-1947, SL 44 (1978).

24.2.3 Muster rolls

Textual Records: Muster rolls of ships, 1860-1900; and ships andstations, 1891-1900. Muster rolls of ships and shoreestablishments, 1898-1939. Civil War muster rolls, 1861, 1863. Microfilm copies of muster rolls of ships, stations, and othernaval activities, 1939-71 (25,279 rolls), with indexes.

24.2.4 Records of units attached to the Bureau of Navigation

Textual Records: Letters sent by the Signal Office, 1869-86.Records of the Coast Signal Service, 1898, consisting ofcorrespondence regarding the establishment of signal stations;headquarters correspondence; correspondence of districtheadquarters with signal stations; letters sent andcorrespondence of the First District Office, Boston, MA (inBoston), Second District Office, New York, NY (in New York),Third District Office, Norfolk, VA (in Philadelphia), FourthDistrict Office, Charleston, SC (in Atlanta), Fifth DistrictOffice, Jacksonville, FL (in Atlanta), Sixth District Office,Pensacola, FL (in Atlanta), and Seventh District Office, NewOrleans, LA (in Fort Worth); and vessel movement telegrams.Personnel jackets of applicants for and appointees to the Boardof Visitors of the U.S. Naval Academy, 1910-13.

24.2.5 Other records

Textual Records: Annual reports of the Chief of the Bureau ofNavigation, 1897-1904. Naval militia bills, 1909-10. Applicationsand registers of employees, 1861-1915. Records showingcomplements of ships and shore units, 1891-1913. Watch, quarter,and station billbooks, 1887-1911.

24.3 RECORDS RELATING TO NAVAL OFFICERS, ENLISTED MEN, ANDAPPRENTICES
1798-1943

24.3.1 Records relating to naval officers

Textual Records: Application, examination, and appointmentrecords, 1838-1940. Commissions and warrants, 1844-1936. Ordersand related records, 1883-1903. Identification, 1917-21, and age,1862-63, certificates. Registers, rosters, and records showingcomplements, 1799-1909. Personnel jackets and other records,1900-25, including a microfilm copy of index to officers' jackets(2 rolls). Service records, 1798-1924. Miscellaneous records,1863-92.

Microfilm Publications: M330, T1102.

Photographs (5,483 images): Navy and Marine Corps commissionedand non-commissioned officers and their families, 1904-38 (P, PP,PA, PB, PC, PD). SEE ALSO 24.12.

24.3.2 Records relating to enlisted men

Textual Records: Records, 1885-1941, relating to enlisted men whoserved between 1842 and 1885 (340 ft.). Correspondence jacketsfor enlisted men, 1904-43. Microfilm copy of an index torendezvous reports, muster rolls, and other personnel records,1846-84 (67 rolls). Registers and lists of recruits, 1861-73.Enlistment returns, changes, and reports, 1846-1942. Continuousservice certificates, 1865-99. Records concerning discharges anddesertions, 1882-1920.

Microfilm Publications: T1098, T1099, T1100, T1101.

24.3.3 Records relating to naval apprentices

Textual Records: Certificates of consent for minors, 1838-67.'Apprentice papers,' 1864-89. Journal of enlistments, U.S.S.Allegheny, 1865-68. General record of apprentices, U.S.S.Portsmouth, 1867-68. Records relating to apprentices andapprentice training methods, U.S.S. Sabine, 1864-68. Register ofenlistments, 1864-75.

24.4 RECORDS OF THE OFFICE OF DETAIL
1865-90

History: Established in Office of the Secretary of the Navy,March 1861, to handle assignment and detailing of officers.Placed under Bureau of Navigation, April 28, 1865. Reverted toOffice of the Secretary by General Order 322, Department of theNavy, October 1, 1884. Restored to Bureau of Navigation byGeneral Order 337, Department of the Navy, May 22, 1885. Absorbedby Bureau of Navigation and superseded by Division of Officersand Fleet (SEE 24.6.4) pursuant to Navy Departmentreorganization, effective June 30, 1889, by General Order 372,Department of the Navy, June 25, 1889.

Textual Records: Letters sent, 1865-90. Letters received, 1865-86, with registers, 1865-90.

24.5 RECORDS OF THE BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT AND RECRUITING
1856-1928 (bulk 1862-89)

History: Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting established by an actof July 5, 1862 (12 Stat. 510), as one of three bureaus createdto supersede the Bureau of Construction, Equipment, and Repair,one of the original Navy Department bureaus established by theact abolishing the Board of Navy Commissioners (5 Stat. 579),August 31, 1842. Initially responsible for recruiting andequipping officers, managing naval enlisted personnel and, after1875, directing the apprentice training system. Acquiredresponsibility for supervision of the Naval Observatory, NauticalAlmanac Office, Office of the Superintendent of Compasses, andOffice of the Inspector of Electrical Appliances in an exchangeof functions with the Bureau of Navigation (SEE 24.6) in the NavyDepartment reorganization of June 30, 1889, by General Order 372,Navy Department, June 25, 1889. Acquired Hydrographic Office fromBureau of Navigation by General Order 72, Department of the Navy,May 9, 1898, implementing an act of May 4, 1898 (30 Stat. 374).Redesignated Bureau of Equipment by the Naval ServicesAppropriation Act (26 Stat. 192), June 30, 1890. Functionallyabolished by redistribution of responsibilities pursuant to anact of June 24, 1910 (36 Stat. 613), effective June 30, 1910.Formally abolished by act of June 30, 1914 (38 Stat. 408).

Textual Records: Letters sent to the Secretary of the Navy, 1862-85; the Fourth Auditor of the Treasury, 1865-85; the Commissionerof Pensions, 1871-85; the Superintendent of the U.S. NavalAcademy, 1865-83; and china, glass, and plated waremanufacturers, 1869-82. General letters sent, 1865-89. Letterssent to commanders of squadrons and naval forces, 1865-83; andcommandants of navy yards and stations and other officers, 1862-85. Letters received from the Secretary of the Navy, 1862-85; theFourth Auditor and Second Comptroller of the Treasury, 1865-86;and the Commissioner of Pensions, 1882-85. Letters received fromofficers, 1862-85; and commandants of navy yards, 1862-85.Miscellaneous letters received, 1862-85, 1889-92. Indexes andregisters of letters sent and received, 1862-90. Conduct reportsand shipping articles, 1857-1910. Records of discharges anddesertions, 1856-89. Continuous service certificates and recordsof merit awards, 1863-1928. Records relating to navalapprentices, 1880-86. Record of vessel complements, n.d.

Related Records: Records of the Bureau of Equipment in RG 19,Records of the Bureau of Ships.

24.6 RECORDS OF THE BUREAU OF NAVIGATION
1804-1946

History: Established in the reorganization of the Navy Departmentunder authority of an act of July 5, 1862 (12 Stat. 510), as oneof three bureaus created to supersede the Bureau of Construction,Equipment, and Repair, one of the original Navy Departmentbureaus established by the act abolishing the Board of NavyCommissioners (5 Stat. 579), August 31, 1842. Initiallyresponsible for providing nautical charts and instruments and forsupervising the Naval Observatory, Hydrographic Office, andNautical Almanac Office. Acquired personnel responsibilities inan exchange of functions with the Bureau of Equipment andRecruiting (SEE 24.5) in the Navy Department reorganization ofJune 30, 1889, by General Order 372, Navy Department, June 25,1889.

Assigned to newly established Division of Personnel in NavyDepartment reorganization pursuant to Changes in Navy RegulationsNo. 6, November 18, 1909. Restored to autonomous bureau statusupon abolishment of Division of Personnel by Changes in NavyRegulations and Navy Instructions No. 1, April 25, 1913. RenamedBureau of Naval Personnel, 1942. SEE 24.1.

Hydrographic Office formally transferred to Bureau of Equipment,successor to Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting, by General Order72, Department of the Navy, May 9, 1898, implementing an act ofMay 4, 1898 (30 Stat. 374). Hydrographic Office and NavalObservatory (which had absorbed the Nautical Almanac Office,1894, and the Office of the Superintendent of Compasses, 1906)returned to Bureau of Navigation, July 1, 1910, pursuant to anact of June 24, 1910 (36 Stat. 613), dispersing the functions ofthe Bureau of Equipment (SEE 24.5). Transferred to Office of theChief of Naval Operations by EO 9126, April 8, 1942.

24.6.1 Records of the Chaplains Division

History: Established 1917 to centralize administration ofexpanded force of navy chaplains.

Textual Records: Correspondence, 1916-40. Biographical data aboutchaplains, 1804-1923. Miscellaneous records, 1898-1946.

Sound Recordings (1 item): 'The Peacemakers,' Memorial Day NavyDepartment broadcast on National Broadcasting Company,commemorating war dead of the U.S. Navy, Coast Guard, and MarineCorps, May 30, 1945.

Photographs (648 images): Of paintings and other graphic mediarelating to navy events, 1917-45 (FP, 64 images). Navy chaplainswho served between 1799 and 1941, n.d. (PNC, NCP; 572 images).Navy religious facilities, 1930-40 (NRF, 12 images). SEE ALSO24.12.

24.6.2 Records of the Division of Naval Militia Affairs

History: Supervision of state naval militias vested in AssistantSecretary of War, 1891-1909. Transferred to Personnel Division,December 1, 1909, where Office of Naval Militia established,1911. Functions assigned to Bureau of Navigation, 1912, whereDivision of Naval Militia Affairs established by General Order93, Department of the Navy, April 12, 1914. State naval militiasenrolled in National Naval Volunteers (NNV) during World War I.Federal laws respecting naval militias and NNV repealed, July 1,1918, and Division of Naval Militia Affairs subsequentlydiscontinued.

Textual Records: General records, 1891-1918. Index tocorrespondence, 1903-10. Letters sent, 1891-1911. Organizationreports, 1913-15. Summaries of units' enrolled forces, 1915-16.Naval militia ratings' qualification certificates, July-December1916. Allowance books, 1912-17.

24.6.3 Records of the Naval Reserve Division

Textual Records: Inspection reports of organized naval reserveunits, 1st and 9th Naval Districts, 1928-40.

24.6.4 Records of the Division of Officers and Fleet

History: Successor in the Bureau of Navigation to the Office ofDetail, 1889.

Textual Records: Letters received, 1887-90. Correspondence, 1891-96. Registers of correspondence, 1891-96. Appointments ofpaymaster clerks, 1889-91; and acceptances of appointments, 1891-98. Lists of naval and marine officers, and civilian officials atyards and stations, 1890-94.

24.6.5 Records of the Naval Academy Division

History: Bureau of Navigation, upon its establishment in 1862,assumed supervision of the U.S. Naval Academy from the Bureau ofOrdnance and Hydrography. Responsibility delegated to NavalAcademy Division, or Naval Academy Section, at an undetermineddate.

Textual Records: General correspondence of the AcademySuperintendent, 1851-58. Appointment letters, 1894-1940.Personnel files (jackets) of naval cadets, principally those whofailed to graduate, 1862-1910. Registers of midshipmen, 1869-96.

Related Records: Records of the U.S. Naval Academy, RG 405.

24.6.6 Records of the Morale Division

History: Established as the Sixth Division by Bureau ofNavigation Circular Letter 33-19, March 11, 1919, uponrecommendation of the Navy Department Commission on Training CampActivities, to maintain morale of naval personnel. RedesignatedMorale Division, 1921. Transferred to the Training Division asthe Welfare and Recreation Section, 1923.

Textual Records: General correspondence, 1918-24. Correspondenceof the Commission on Training Camp Activities, 1918-20.Correspondence with foreign stations, 1920; and relating toports, 1918-20. Recreation expenditure reports, 1920-22.

24.6.7 Records of the Training Division

History: Established April 19, 1917, to administer trainingprograms for enlisted men in World War I. Reduced to sectionstatus in Enlisted Personnel Division, 1919. Restored to divisionstatus, March 1, 1923.

Textual Records: General correspondence, 1918-23. Administrativecorrespondence relating to training units, 1917-22. Records ofthe Welfare and Recreation Section, 1923-40. Morale reports,1924-25. Reports on Naval Reserve training activities in Missouri(in Kansas City) and Indiana (in Chicago), 1923-25.

24.7 RECORDS OF OPERATING UNITS OF THE BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL
1900-86

Textual Records: Regulations maintained in the Office of theChief of Naval Personnel relating to women accepted for volunteeremergency service, 1942-45. Records of the Administrative and Management Division, consisting of Bureau general correspondence, 1946-60; Bureau secret general correspondence, 1957-60; Bureau confidential general correspondence, 1925-60; case files of Bureau of Personnel instructions, 1950-86; and the document collection of the Technical Library, 1900-85. World War II administrative history of the Bureau of Naval Personnel, prepared by the Planning andControl Activity, n.d. Records of the Personnel Diary Section, consisting of microfilm copies of muster rolls, 1948-59. Records of the Training Division, consisting of historical files of Navy training activities, 1940-45; program files relating to the V-12 program, 1942-48; program files relating to officer training, 1928-46; records relating to U.S. Naval Academy expansion, 1962-63; and program files relating to the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps, 1964-68. Records of the Assistant Chief of Naval personnel for Reserve and Naval District Affairs, consisting of Naval Reserve program files, 1946-56. General records of the Physical FitnessSection, 1942-46, and the Recreation Services Section, 1943-46,of the Special Services Division. Records of the Publicity andAdvertising Section, Recruiting and Induction Division, relatingto the navy recruiting program, 1940-45. Records of the Recruiting Division, consisting of issuances relating to recruiting, 1955-68. Records of the Corrections Division, consisting of program files relating to naval corrections policies and facilities, 1944-51. Records of the Policy Division, consisting of case files on changes to the Bureau of Personnel manual, 1948-68; administrative records, 1956-69; daily reports of enlisted personnel, 1914-46; summary periodic statistical reports on military personnel, 1943-71; and operating force plans for the US fleet, 1928-43. Records of the Plans Division, consisting of correspondence relating to mobilization and Naval Reserves planning, 1950-64; and chronological file, 1950-60. Records of the Navy Occupational Classification Systems Management Division, consisting of case files relating to Navy ratings, 1945-78; and board, committee, and other reports relating to Navy ratings and grades, 1945-78. Casualty Branch records relating to casualties, prisoners of war, awards, and administrative matters, 1917-53. Records of the Casualty Assistance Branch of the Personal Affairs Division, consisting of ships, stations, units, and incidents casualty information files, 1941-60; casualty notification case files for Korean War and post-Korean War era Navy POWs/MIAs, 1963-86; alphabetical listing of casualties, 1941-53; casualty lists for World War II battles ('Battle Books'), 1941-45; records relating to the sinking of the U.S.S. Indianapolis, 1945; and VIP and group funeral files, 1940-67. Records of the Decorations and Medals Branch of the Personal Affairs Division, consisting of correspondence relating to US Navy awards to members of armed forces of foreign nations, 1942-63; eligibility lists for service medals and engagement stars, 1942-61; case files for Navy unit commendations and presidential unit citations, 1903-53; case files of World War II awards by delegated authority, 1941-48; Bureau of Navigation file of Navy Department Board of Awards correspondence and recommendations, 1917-20; and decorations and awards records from the Bureau of Personnel central files, 1946-73. Records of the Chief of Navy Chaplains, consisting of correspondence with chaplains, 1941-59; and annual, activity, and trip reports, 1949-57. Records of the Inspector General, consisting of inspection reports of Bureau of Personnel activities, 1959-80. Records of boards and committees, consisting of records of the Navy and Marine Corps Policy Board on Personnel Retention, 1966-69; and records of naval aviator evaluation boards, 1970-80. General records of the Naval Research Personnel Board, 1944-45.

24.8 RECORDS OF FIELD ESTABLISHMENTS
1838-1970 (bulk 1838-1946)

24.8.1 Records of the U.S. Naval Home, Philadelphia, PA

Textual Records (in Philadelphia): Letters sent, 1838-1911.Letters received, 1845-1909. General correspondence, 1910-40.Regulations governing the Naval Home, 1900, 1916. Station logs,1842-1942.

24.8.2 Records of the Naval Hospital, Philadelphia, PA

Textual Records (in Philadelphia): Letters sent and received,1855-63. Journal of activities, 1870-71. Admission and dischargeregisters, 1867-1917.

24.8.3 Records of the Indoctrination School for Officers, Fort
Schuyler, NY

Textual Records (in New York): General correspondence, 1941-46.Subject files, 1941-46. Muster cards, 1942-46.

24.8.4 Records of the Enlisted Naval Training School (Radio),
Bedford Springs, PA

Textual Records (in Philadelphia): General correspondence, 1942-45. Subject files, 1942-45. Muster cards, 1942-44.

24.8.5 Records of the V-12 Unit, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH

Textual Records (in Boston): General correspondence, 1942-46.Subject files, 1942-46.

46: A Date With Dad Daughter

24.8.6 Records of the Naval Midshipmen's School, Northwestern
University, Evanston, IL

46: A Date With Daddy

Textual Records (in Chicago): General correspondence, 1941-45.Records of the supply officer, 1941-45.

24.8.7 Records of the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps, Yale
University, New Haven, CT

46: A Date With Dad Wants

Textual Records (in Boston): Administrative files of thecommanding officer, 1941-70; and the Professor of Naval Scienceand Tactics, 1926-38.

24.9 CARTOGRAPHIC RECORDS (GENERAL)
1898-1944

Maps: Manuscript maps showing American and Spanish navaloperations in Cuban waters during the Spanish-American War, 1898(4 items). Strategic charts of the Atlantic, Pacific, and worldoceans, showing distances between major ports, 1912-13 (4 items).Published maps of the United States, showing naval administrativedistricts and headquarters, 1919, 1935 (2 items). Pictorial wallmap of the South China Sea, showing naval battles (1941-42),Japanese invasion routes, and location of economic products ofinterest to Japan, such as oil, rubber, and tin, 1944 (1 item).

24.10 MOTION PICTURES (GENERAL)
1917-27

World War I naval operations and activities, including anti-submarine patrols, minelaying, convoy and escort duty, submarinemaneuvers, and training; ship launching and maintenance; torpedoproduction and firing; Liberty Loan promotions and patrioticcelebrations; Armistice celebrations; captured German equipment;U.S. and foreign political and military leaders; foreign navalvessels; President Woodrow Wilson's second inauguration; theairship Los Angeles (ZRS-3) over New York; and lighter-than-aircraft rescuing fishermen, 1917-18 (44 reels). Naval activitiesafter World War I, including aerial mapping techniques, rescue ofArmenian refugees from Turkey, evacuation of personnel fromgrounded and burning ships, escort duty, and training, 1918-27(57 reels).

24.11 SOUND RECORDINGS (GENERAL)

SEE UNDER 24.6.1.

24.12 STILL PICTURES (GENERAL)
1892-1945

Photographs (483 images): Artwork on navy subjects, portraits ofFranklin D. Roosevelt, and a bronze relief of George Washingtonat Valley Forge, 1917-45 (PNCP, 13 images). Designs for medalsand awards, views of navy ships and personnel, Egyptian scenes,and portrait and statue of John Paul Jones, 1892-1935 (PM, 70images). Ships, aircraft, recruiting posters, and navy personnel,including the members of the Naval Aeronautical Expedition(1917), 1917-19 (PNA, 400 images).

With

Photographic Prints (4,745 images): President Herbert Hoover andcrews of U.S.S. Saratoga and U.S.S. Mississippi, 1930 (H, 1image). U.S. Navy enlisted personnel who were commended or whodied during World War I, reserve officers, and officers of U.S.S.Arethusa, 1915-19 (CD, RP, RPA; 4,096 images). Aircraft NC-2 andcrew following transatlantic flight, 1919 (GC, 5 images). Navytraining camps and schools, ca. 1916-20 (PAN, TC; 579 images).Spanish naval vessels and damage to ships during the Spanish-American War, 1895-98 (FS, 64 images).

Lantern Slides (78 images): Humorous views of navy life used bythe Navy Recruiting Bureau, New York City, 1925 (RS).

Color Slides: ca. 1860-ca. 1985 Navy recruiting posters, 1985 (NP, 47 images).

Posters (167 images): Recruiting for service in the U.S. CoastGuard, WAVES, Seabees, and other navy units and programs, 1917-87 (bulk 1941-45, 1970-87)(DP, PO).

SEE Photographs UNDER 24.3.1 and 24.6.1.

24.13 MACHINE-READABLE RECORDS (GENERAL)

Navy Military Personnel Command officers master file, FY 1990 (1 data set); officer history file, FY 1991-92 (2 data sets); and officer attrition file, ca. 1977-92 (2 data sets).

Bibliographic note: Web version based on Guide to Federal Records in the National Archives of the United States. Compiled by Robert B. Matchette et al. Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration, 1995.
3 volumes, 2428 pages.

This Web version is updated from time to time to include records processed since 1995.

Living at home with your parents during college and even for a while after is normal. Lots of people do it because they want to save a little money before being on their own. Everyone’s circumstances are different and I’m totally not judging. That being said, I’m 29 and one of my dealbreakers has to be a guy who still lives with his parents — especially if he’s never lived anywhere but his childhood bedroom. I moved out when I was 19, and other than a brief stay with my mom right after I graduated, I haven’t looked back. Is it so much to ask to want a guy who thinks having his own place is as important as I do?

I like privacy.
I like to be able to go grab a glass of water in my underwear and sing really loud when I’m in the shower. Basically, I’m used to being the only one around, and that’s how I like it. I need my space, and I want a guy who understands that.

I don’t want to see his mom every time I see him.
Not that I don’t like his mom — I’m sure she’s lovely! But she’s still a mom. I don’t want to meet his mom the first time I ever go to his house, and I don’t want to “stay for dinner” every time, either. I consider meeting the mom a big deal, but if he lives at home, he probably brings every girl he dates to meet her pretty quickly. That means to him, it doesn’t mean as much.

Does he even know how to take care of himself?
Obviously not every guy who lives with his parents still lets his mom do his laundry, but some do (believe me, I know), and if a guy who’s almost 30 can’t do his own laundry, he’s a certified man-child.

If he’s never had roommates, he might be a nightmare to live with.
People who have never had to be considerate to the different habits of others probably aren’t going to be good roommates. It’s not that they’re purposely trying to be rude, they just have no idea leaving their dirty dishes in the sink for days is frowned upon.

Is he terrible with money?
What possible reason could there be for him to still live in his parents’ house other than he can’t manage his money? There are a lot of variables here. Is he paying them rent, or is he saving up for a down payment on a house? Admittedly, my first thought upon hearing a 30-year-old lives with his parents is that he can’t afford to live anywhere else.

Why doesn’t he want to live on his own?
Most people start thinking about getting their own place by their early 20s, give or take a couple years. So why hasn’t he? It could be for any number of reasons, most of which come back to the fact that he doesn’t want to be an adult.

46: A Date With Dad Gives

Maybe his parents are babying him.
Most parents expect their kids to move out on their own at some point, but if his parents have never mentioned it, don’t ask him to pay rent, and genuinely seem like they want him to stay, why would he ever leave?

I don’t want to worry his parents might hear us having sex.
The rare times I decide to stay overnight there, sex would be out of the question. It’s hard to get in the mood when you know your boyfriend’s mom is right downstairs watching The Ellen Degeneres Show.

I don’t want to be the first person he lives with other than his parents.
I’m too old to be the one teaching a guy how to grocery shop for himself, keep up with all his bills, clean the bathroom on a regular basis, and remember to stock up on toilet paper. I’d end up doing all the stuff his mom used to do, and he’d never learn how to be on his own.

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