The Anchorage
Personal website of Gregory K. Maxey, Commander USN (Retired)
Only a submariner realizes to what great extent an entire
boat depends on him as an individual. To a landsman, this is not understandable,
and sometimes even difficult for us to comprehend, but it is so!
A submarine at sea is a different world within herself, and in consideration of
the protracted and distant operations of submarines, the Navy must place
responsibility and trust in the hands of those who take such boats to sea.
In each submarine there are men who, in the hour of emergency or peril at sea,
can turn to each other. These men are ultimately responsible to themselves and
each to the other for all aspects of operation of their submarine. They are the
crew. They are the boat.
This is perhaps the most difficult and demanding assignment in the Navy. There
is not an instant during his tour as a submariner that he can escape the grasp
of responsibility. His privileges in view of his obligations are almost
ludicrously small, nevertheless, it is the spur which has given the Navy its
greatest marines - the men of the Submarine Service.
It is a duty which most richly deserves the proud and time-honored title of — "Submariner".