NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: Frank Reed
Date: 2015 Nov 13, 15:20 -0800
This is a few months off, but I'm posting a notice now for a fun reason (see below). Some of you will recall that Roger Connor has posted here about P.V.H. Weems, and he will be speaking about Weems in March at Mystic Seaport. Details:
Thursday, March 3, 2016, Roger Connor, Curator, National Air and Space Museum
"By the Stars to Victory: Making Aerial Celestial Navigation Practical Between the World Wars:
Although radar and electronic navigation aids came into their own for air navigation during World War II, so did adaptations of maritime celestial navigation techniques. The story of how the tried-and-true celestial navigation techniques of mariners came to play a central role in World War II was not one of simply taking sextants and chronometers aloft. Roger Connor will tell the story of P.V.H. Weems, one of the principal architects of reliable airborne celestial navigation methods and how these techniques took center stage in wartime."
Meanwhile, here's that fun reason for posting about Weems... Jackson McDonald sent me a link a few minutes ago to an item of interest to celestial navigation enthusiasts currently being advertised on the Internet. You won't find this one one ebay:
"Historically significant, stately home, Circa 1830 with two guest houses, 3 tenant houses, 3 bay garage, barn with workshop and deep water pier stands proudly on 150 acres. Designer kitchen, formal parlor, 8 fireplaces, plank wood floors & original windows. Built by John Ridout & the former home of Captain Philip V H Weems, Father of Celestial Navigation who taught Lindbergh to navigate and Admiral Byrd to fly. Annapolis, the state capital of Maryland, is a beautiful historic seaport situated along the Chesapeake Bay and an approximately 36 miles to Washington, DC."
Asking price: $5.7(106)
If anyone would like to buy this for me, that would be oh so nice. I promise you can park your boat at my deep water pier any time you like.
Frank Reed
Conanicut Island USA