This is an excellent and important book. The author, a U.S. Navy Reserve officer, is well qualified to point to the distinction between the visible side of sea power, as reflected in ships and in naval weapons, and the much less visible but absolutely essential side involving the use of information. -- Norman Friedman Proceedings Wolter's familiarity with naval minutiae and procedures leads to a lively and procedures leads to a lively, highly readable narrative that also maintains scholarly depth and thoroughness. Choice Information at Sea is a wonderful book, contributing to our understanding of the evolution of human-machine integration... a 'must read'! -- Mark Hagerott International Journal of Maritime History Both author and publisher have made this an appealing book. Illustrations of key personalities and equipment not only bring the subject to life, but are all the more helpful in understanding the core issues... This book is a must for any serious student of naval operations, platform design and in particular of the USN. Despite its specialised subject matter it will be valuable to military historians in general, especially those looking at the development and problems associated with command in the twentieth century. -- Dr. Marcus Faulkner British Journal of Military History This book will appeal to a broad cross-section of readers with an interest in naval matters and in particular those officers and sailors of the war-fighting community... Wolters has done a fine job in researching and writing this book and the astute reader will recognise that there are important lessons to be learned in it. -- John Perryman Great Circle The reader interested in a broad history of command and control design and innovation aboard US warships from the Civil War to World War II will be well rewarded. Wolters has mastered the sources surrounding this topic and writes in an easy style... This book is most highly recommended. -- John T. Kuehn International Journal of Naval History An outstanding history of the US Navy from the Civil War through the Second World War... Information at Sea has four particular strengths. First, it reveals the connective tissues and nervous system of shipboard command and control across an eighty-year period through extensive pioneering archival research. Second, its well written chronicle of technological investigation, adaptation, innovation, and combat applications will appeal to experts and general readers alike. Third, it seamlessly interweaves bureaucratic decision-making with matters of laboratory research and development, field experimentation, adjustments in training and education, and the new command and control systems; Wolters explains how, why, and to what effect the Navy made changes to improve its combat efficiency. Fourth, the book challenges the longstanding notion that entrenched naval conservatism time and again retarded innovation. Wolters makes abundantly clear that, on the contrary, the Navy regularly listened, learned, and made intelligent decisions about integrating new communications and detection systems... For all these reasons, Information at Sea should stand as a landmark work of military history. -- Branden Little Michigan War Studies Review
作者简介Timothy S. Wolters, an engineer-qualified submariner and captain in the United States Navy Reserve, is an assistant professor of history at Iowa State University. He formerly held the Ramsey Chair of Naval Aviation History at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum.
网友对Information at Sea: Shipboard Command and Control in the U.S. Navy, from Mobile Bay to Okinawa的评论
Disclosure: I only focused on the World War II period when reading Timothy Wolter's excellent book. But, with detail and keen insight, he tells the tale of how Combat Information Centers (CIC) came to be developed, constructed, and put to use on U.S. Navy warships. Thoroughly researched and full of detail, researchers or armchair historians will find this work to be an essential reference. Suggestion: after you read Wolter's work, visit the USS Slater DE 766 in Albany, NY or the National Museum of the Pacific War in Fredericksburg, TX to view a full WWII era CIC.
short, solid and insightful, with many details never published before. very well researched from primary sources. lookinf forward for other books from this author.
Naval communications are described in accordance with the technology of the times.
Beginning with the megaphone, the author traces the progression of items from signal flags,
flares, telegraph, short and long range radios, radar and, finally, the integration of all of the
methods into the Combat Information Center. The CIC provided the commander with the
most up-to-date information on the current situation. In the past information took too much
time to be acted upon. Imagine a letter composed by a shore based admiral. It was taken
to a ship which traveled to the recipient's ship and delivered to him by rowboat !
With the growth of electronics, there developed a shortage of personnel to operate and
maintain them. This topic is covered in SOLVING THE RADAR CRISIS.
For those who enjoy reading footnotes, there are 67 pages of them.
For a small boo, it is rather pricey.
This is an excellent history of the role of information in sea warfare over decades and how this developed into ships command structures. Much insight to be gained from this book!
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