Playships of the world : the naval diaries of Admiral Dan Gallery, 1920-1924
"These recently discovered diaries chronicle Admiral Dan Gallery's shipboard tours on the Pittsburgh and four other vessels during the early 1920s, following his graduation from the Naval Academy." "The diaries record Gallery's experiences aboard battleships, cruisers, and a destroyer as these ships steamed to exotic ports in South America, northern Europe, and the Mediterranean during an era when the U.S. Navy's mission was to be highly visible and when an officer might expect, as the recruitment motto promised, to see the world. Gallery's diaries serve as a travelogue through foreign ports, bars, and nightclubs and record a variety of sports competitions - ranging from Gallery's participation as a wrestler in the 1920 Antwerp Olympic Games, to baseball games with a ship's crew in ports from Cairo to Constantinople, to fleetwide athletic contests sponsored by the navy in Panama and Guantanamo Bay." "The diaries also recount the coming of age of a naval legend. Gallery describes grappling with shipboard difficulties and contemplates the various directions his career might lead. He also recalls romances with young women in ports across the globe and attempts to maintain his moral and religious principles in the face of temptations of lust and liquor abroad." "Throughout the episodes recorded here, Gallery's spirits and hopes are high, his friendships numerous, and his outlook both clear and unpretentious. Peppered with companionable wit and burgeoning literary talent, the diaries illustrate the humble beginnings of a fledgling officer who would become an inspirational figure in military lore."--BOOK JACKET
Print Book, English, ©2008
University of South Carolina Press, Columbia, S.C., ©2008