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Samuel Eliot Morison Award Dinner Monday, 8 November 2004 Racquet & Tennis Club, New York City James D. Hornfischer The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors

Morison Award 2004 - NAVAL ORDER NYC Jim Hornfischer is president of Hornfischer Literary Management, and is one of the few agents in the country who is both a licensed attorney and a former New York trade book editor. He lives with his wife, Sharon, and three children in Austin, Texas. The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors is Jim Hornfischer’s first book – and the first book in sixty years to tell the story of the Battle off Samar, where a squadron of small US ships heroically upset a much larger Japanese battleship task force on 25 October 1944, thereby sparing GEN MacArthur’s Philippines invasion force from disaster.

Morison Award 2004 - NAVAL ORDER NYC
Morison Award 2004 - NAVAL ORDER NYC

Douglas Bennett, LCDR Bob Wassman, Teddie & LTjg Bob Hanley
LT William Adelaar, CAPT John Nash, CAPT Austin Volk

Morison Award 2004 - NAVAL ORDER NYC
Morison Award 2004 - NAVAL ORDER NYC

CDR John F. V. Cupschalk, Anna Briskie, Jamie Cupschalk
Jim Hornfischer

Morison Award 2004 - NAVAL ORDER NYC
Morison Award 2004 - NAVAL ORDER NYC

LT Jonathan C. Jones & Jim Hornfischer, receiving the Samuel Eliot Morison Award.
Jim Hornfischer, RD3 Don Schuld






Morison Award 2004 - NAVAL ORDER NYC 1933-1976 At the beginning of World War II, President Roosevelt appointed Samuel Eliot Morison as the nation’s official historian of naval operations during that war. His only restriction was to safeguard information that would endanger national security. He served on eleven different ships in both the Atlantic and Pacific. The result of his work is a unique “shooting history” of 16 extraordinary volumes; the only work of its kind created to date. He was a Pulitzer Prize winning author, a Trumbull Professor of American History Emeritus at Harvard, and a Retired Rear Admiral in the United States Naval Reserve. Admiral Morison died on 15 May 1976 in Boston. The credo borne on his gravestone, at his request reads, “Dream dreams, then write them – aye, but live them first.”


The New York Commandery homepage is maintained under the direction of CDR John F. V. Cuspchalk, USNR


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