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ID132195
Title ProperProject so unique
LanguageENG
AuthorClift, A Denis
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The headline announced: "Edmond J. Moran is Dead at 96: Admiral Led Tug Fleet on D-Day." It marked the passing of one of the most influential figures in 20th-century U.S. shipping history. 1 The U.S. Naval Institute conducted a series of interviews with Rear Admiral Moran in 1977 and published his oral history in 2004. 2 In it, he traced his childhood in Brooklyn, New York, and his joining the Moran Towing Company in 1915 as a teenager. He worked on board the tugs during summer vacations and then launched a 69-year career that would take him from office boy, to president, to chairman of the Board of Directors. The company had been founded in 1860 by his grandfather, Michael, an Irish immigrant who had had his start in the United States driving mules on the Erie Canal.
`In' analytical NoteUS Naval Institute Proceedings Vol.140, No.6; June 2014: p.72-75
Journal SourceUS Naval Institute Proceedings Vol.140, No.6; June 2014: p.72-75
Key WordsUS Navy ;  United States - US ;  US Marine Corps - USMC ;  Irish Immigrant ;  Shipping History ;  Maritime History ;  Synthetic Harbors ;  Allied Naval Expeditionary Fore ;  Cross Channel Operations ;  Warfare Project ;  Naval Project ;  US Naval Officers