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Word: steamer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...frigate, with a small steamer, a few gunboats, a fort, a slight military force, and the English union jack, would constitute an establishment powerful enough, not only to protect the place, but to control all the neighboring evildoers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Battlefronts: Life and Death on Borneo | 1/5/1942 | See Source »

...Jutland she was a newfangled seaplane tender named Engadine. Now she was the Corregidor, a dumpy, inter-island steamer, and doom hung above her as she pulled away from the dock at Manila...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Corregidor's Doom | 12/29/1941 | See Source »

...midnight with a party of Cubans he spirited beautiful 18-year-old Evangelina Cisneros, daughter of a Cuban revolutionary, out of a Havana jail cell. Her window bars were filed, she was hoisted to the roof by rope and taken in boy's clothing to a chartered steamer. On her arrival in Manhattan she got a heroine's reception, and she and Decker were later feted at the White House...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Dec. 15, 1941 | 12/15/1941 | See Source »

...aircraft carrier has come a long way since the experimental Engadine, a converted Channel steamer, first sent aloft an observation plane to find out for Admiral Beatty what was going on at the beginning of the Battle of Jutland. (The plane wobbled home with a broken gas pipe and the news that the Germans were heading south, but the Engadine failed to get this intelligence to the Fleet.) Throughout the early '20s U.S. Navy men agitated for first-class carriers, got two of the best when the Lexington and Saratoga were commissioned in 1927. First U.S. ship specifically designed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NAVY: Floating Airfields | 11/3/1941 | See Source »

...victory of World War II late in September, but the announcement was not made until last week. No Jutland or Trafalgar was this engagement: a U.S. warship patrolling Greenland waters to protect the huge Navy and Army air bases now nearing completion at Newfoundland, captured a 60-ton Norwegian steamer. Aboard was a crew of 20, including an agent of the German Gestapo. Their mission: to establish radio stations on the fjord-fissured, thousand-harbored Greenland Coast, keep Germany advised of the most vital of all information in the Battle of the Atlantic, the weather. One of the stations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World War: AT SEA: No Trafalgar, No Jutland | 10/20/1941 | See Source »

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