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" THE YEAR OF THE POLARIS " POLARIS NUCLEAR SUBMARINE USS GEORGE WASHINGTON PART 1 22384 

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Reel 2: • " THE YEAR OF THE POLA...
This 1960 black and white installment of the newsmagazine “See It Now” produced and edited by Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly (Part 1 of 2) presents a behind-the-scenes overview of initial testing for the UGM-27 Polaris missile, a two-stage solid-fueled nuclear-armed submarine-launched ballistic missile, the United States Navy's first SLBM (TRT: 26:58).
Title card: “Unclassified.” Opening titles: “See It Now Presents The Year of the Polaris” (0:08). Empty missile hatches open on the USS George Washington (SSBN-598) ballistic missile submarine (0:46). Standing aboard the docked craft, Edward Murrow interviews Admiral William Raborn (1:52). Murrow addresses the camera in a medium shot (2:22). A hatch closes. A submarine’s POV as the camera goes underwater (2:43). Inside a submarine, men wearing headphones speak into radio microphones (2:59). Murrow speaks. Open sea, with the subtle outline of a submerged submarine (3:15). A Jupiter missile in transit, preparing for a launch at Cape Canaveral (3:57). Mission Control. A truck transporting a tank of liquid oxygen. Admiral Raborn’s interview continues (4:44). A surfacing nuclear submarine, the USS Nautilus (SSN-571) (5:17). Hyman G. Rickover of the U.S. Navy. The USS Barbero (SSG-317) prepares and launches an SSM-N-8 Regulus, a ship-and-submarine-launched, nuclear-capable turbojet-powered second generation cruise missile (5:30). Murrow speaks with a model of a submarine in the background (6:27). Admiral Arleigh Burke speaks (6:59). A hydrogen bomb warhead is constructed. Solid fuel is mixed (8:10). Polaris rockets explode during testing (8:54). A swimming pool test shows a model rocket shooting to the water’s surface (9:18). Stanley Burris of Lockheed Martin uses a model to explain air compression during an interview (9:32). A wave is generated in the test pool, simulating real-life conditions (12:00). A montage of test rocket launches (12:38). A nuclear submarine under construction (13:08). Murrow uses the model submarine to show the placement of 16 Polaris launching tubes (13:38). A launching system under development by Westinghouse. A guidance system under construction by General Electric in Massachusetts (13:57). The first Polaris test missile (AX-1) launches from pad 25-A at Cape Canaveral, then explodes in flight (14:55). A second failed launch (AX-2) splits the first and second stages of the rocket (15:41). The AX-3 in a tailspin and the AX-4, also a failure (16:14). AX-6 launches successfully (17:14). Missiles under construction at the Electric Boat Shipyards in New London, Connecticut (17:30). The USS George Washinton is christened and laid down (17:45). A sign: “XN Service Training School.” Naval students in a classroom. Men train using the cutaway model (18:02). Commander James Osborne, skipper of the Washington (18:38). A ship launcher simulator test at Cape Canaveral (19:15). The USNS Observation Island (T-AGM-23) launches a Polaris missile (19:45). San Clemente Island. Skin divers jump into the water from a small motorboat and prepare a submerged launch tube (20:25). Inside a subterranean control center. Men on radio headsets initiate a launch sequence. A launch key is inserted into a control panel socket. The block house exterior. A video camera monitor shows fish at the underwater launch site (21:08). A final countdown and a successful launch. Crew members shake hands (23:04). The first Polaris missile launches in slow motion (23:41). Engineers at work (24:23). Gordon Pearson, a civil service employee and manager of the Polaris project, is interviewed by Murrow (25:06). A submarine surfaces (26:37).
“See It Now” was a newsmagazine documentary series broadcast by CBS from 1951 to 1958, created by Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly, with Murrow serving as the show’s host From 1952 to 1957, “See It Now” won four Emmy Awards and was nominated three additional times.
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5 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 55   
@paulprouddadgrandad5121
@paulprouddadgrandad5121 3 года назад
What amazes me about these old videos is how these men speak in matter of fact ways and seek to explain facts contrasted to our current “men” in those similar positions who specialize in jibberish and misdirection
@capriracer351
@capriracer351 3 года назад
Unfortunately, too many "men" today might be theoretically men by birth age, but emotionally still boys.
@loganmpe7559
@loganmpe7559 3 года назад
My brother served as lead sonarman on Nautilus, Patrick Henry and George Washington, stupid of me but I never realized the later two were Polaris boats!
@matthewmoore5698
@matthewmoore5698 Год назад
A little gem , these periscope films are awesome!
@allandavis8201
@allandavis8201 3 года назад
It must seem strange to be in awe of a missile designed to destroy so much, however the engineering behind Polaris is without doubt some of the finest ever devised,developed and perfected, as an engineer myself I totally understand the brilliance behind it.
@darklordojeda
@darklordojeda 3 года назад
My great grandfather worked for Westinghouse and was part of the development of these subs.
@Omegaman1969
@Omegaman1969 Год назад
My Father was the longest serving Englishman that worked on the Polaris guidance systems.
@postal_the_clown
@postal_the_clown 3 года назад
Gave it a "like" simply because it's Ed Murrow.
@andrewsmactips
@andrewsmactips 3 года назад
"You can get more done from one man who is over-worked, than you can from two men who are under-worked." "And so, this great project was brought to fruition." (Puffs on Chesterfield). God, I love this stuff.
@jerrynewberry2823
@jerrynewberry2823 3 года назад
Pall Mall. Oh, you meant him! Sorry, two of the most popular brands back then. Still smoke Pall Mall, but menthol, filtered nowadays.
@vingotaq777
@vingotaq777 3 года назад
Who better than Ed. R. Murrow to narrate this classic documentary
@TheJstewart2010
@TheJstewart2010 3 года назад
Lockheed was an amazing company in the late 1950's. On one side, they were developing a ballistic missile that could be tossed out of the water and hit a target 1,500 miles away with a nuclear payload. At the same time, Kelly Johnson was leading the team that developed the SR-71 Blackbird.
@bryanguzik
@bryanguzik 3 года назад
So great. Aside from that, thank you.
@leonisilva5571
@leonisilva5571 3 года назад
I grew up by that time and was always astonished by the USA scientific and military power. God Bless America and its People for evermore.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 3 года назад
Fantastic......
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 3 года назад
Thanks! Love our channel? Help us save and post more orphaned films! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
@Madness832
@Madness832 3 года назад
"...a squat, 28-foot champagne bottle...(15:07)" And it looked like there was no toast after that launch!
@jerrynewberry2823
@jerrynewberry2823 3 года назад
Fissile material wasn't much larger than your fist.
@franklinsmith6583
@franklinsmith6583 3 года назад
My dad served on the Thomas Edison in the 70s. He said that they all believed that they would be dead before or by the time they got their 3rd Polaris launched n
@charliepearce8767
@charliepearce8767 3 года назад
We're they all worried ww3 would start before they had a chance to get in the water?
@Oksobasically2
@Oksobasically2 Год назад
Launching the slbms is loud. Back then there were ruskies everywhere hunting for them so yeah it doesnt surprise me that they thought it would be painting a giant target on their back
@matthewmoore5698
@matthewmoore5698 Год назад
So important the nuclear fist went from the airforce to the navy and in the UK where I’m from the navy still have it
@glowheat4469
@glowheat4469 3 года назад
Wow! Great stuff.
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 3 года назад
Glad you enjoyed it
@charliepearce8767
@charliepearce8767 3 года назад
@@PeriscopeFilm Yep. Very informative.
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 3 года назад
Two completely different parallel secret projects at the same time...nuclear ballistic submarines and anti gravity spacecraft
@a-fl-man640
@a-fl-man640 3 года назад
the plural of spacecraft is spacecraft, same is true of aircraft. tin foil doesn't change that.
@abundantYOUniverse
@abundantYOUniverse 3 года назад
First! Fantastic thanks!
@allgood6760
@allgood6760 Год назад
Terrifying isn't it! .... more firepower than all the bombs dropped in WW2! 💣
@wonniewarrior
@wonniewarrior 3 года назад
Never realised the first SSBN was actually a attack submarine stretched into a missile carrying Mama Bear.
@jerrynewberry2823
@jerrynewberry2823 3 года назад
Not stretched. Added in. Fast attack cut in half and the Forrest added between. Worked on all the early ones, Washington, Lincoln, Madison, Teddy Roosevelt, Patrick Henry, Casimir Pulaski, USA Simon Lake AS-33 67-69 Rad-Con
@NoOne-zo6gj
@NoOne-zo6gj 3 года назад
The 608 Class, SSBN's were the first one's specifically designed and build ansan SSBN.
@wonniewarrior
@wonniewarrior 3 года назад
@@jerrynewberry2823 My apologies, I think I used the wrong term. I was trying to use the explanation for a Limo, where they cut it, add a section and weld it all together. Like a stretched Limo. But this time to a sub.
@stifledvoice
@stifledvoice 3 года назад
Maybe if they had some more money back there in the waning days of the Eisenhower Admin., they could have developed the "flying sub" technology too, just like on the tv show Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (ping)! Heady days of the military-industrial complex. Money+talent can six sigma just about anything.
@matthewmoore5698
@matthewmoore5698 Год назад
How do they decommission the old nukes?
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm Год назад
The U.S. Navy and Dept. of Energy have recycling programs. www.usace.army.mil/Missions/Environmental/DNPPP/
@NoOne-zo6gj
@NoOne-zo6gj 3 года назад
Factoid, the Entire idea and plan for SSBN's was done on a bar napkin, 1 requirement, underwater mobile platform to launch ICBM's from anywhere in the world and hit any target in the world. Best and mot successful program in US military history, still going today, yet few know about it or understand it.
@muchadoaboutnothing6196
@muchadoaboutnothing6196 3 года назад
US Navy 1950s: Give this man what he wants so he can do something no else has ever done to defend freedom against our greatest threat communism. US Military 2020s: Give us your preferred pronouns to defeat our greatest threat our fellow Americans who dare to question our elites.
@kaptainkaos1202
@kaptainkaos1202 3 года назад
Here’s the thing. Have you been with the military in 2020? I have and do every day. I stand shoulder to shoulder with today’s warriors. Yes they learn how to be kind and courteous to those who don’t conform to your view of the world. I have stood in the control centers like shown in the video since I’m an USN USMC flight test engineer. The warriors I work with are ready to go in harms way and deal violence to those opposed to us. Oh and I’m a transgendered person and I’m treated as courteous as should be to another person. What have YOU done to better the world today?
@wolfhawg
@wolfhawg 3 года назад
Back when government people were concerned about the security of the country.
@fromthesidelines
@fromthesidelines 3 года назад
3:15 "CBS REPORTS"/"THE YEAR OF THE POLARIS" (originally telecast on October 11, 1960).........."Brought to you tonight by PHILIP MORRIS, INC., maker of MARLBORO- 'Filter Cigarette With the Unfiltered Taste'........now, EDWARD R. MURROW........" "This is 'CBS REPORTS': 'The Year of the Polaris'............" In fact, Philip Morris tried to capitalize on the subject by having a model of the Polaris missle on the desk of an announcer pitching Marlboro in a commercial. Murrow and Friendly were outraged, and insisted the commecial be filmed again *without* the model. Philip Morris begrudigngly complied {it cost them several thousand dollars to reshoot that commercial}. You can imagine how upset they were over the next "CBS REPORTS" they sponsored- "Harvest of Shame", a month later. They actually sent a representative to most of the migrant farms to apologize for sponsoring that broadcast, assuring them it wouldn't happen again- and didn't sponsor any further "CBS REPORTS" programs after that.
@rexremedy1733
@rexremedy1733 3 года назад
One of the guys has my haircut. Guess who...
@matthewmoore5698
@matthewmoore5698 Год назад
He couldn’t believe the destructive power of the sub. Well ask a silly question get a very sobering answer
@rexremedy1733
@rexremedy1733 3 года назад
1933-1945; 2020-?
@darrylanderson2149
@darrylanderson2149 Год назад
Keep them out of the hands of Trump
@jonasthemovie
@jonasthemovie 3 года назад
This piece of film is a bit of a mess isn’t it?
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