US Navy in 1915 - Restored 35mm Film with New Music Score - USS Wyoming Rowing Crew

  Рет қаралды 1,473

RainScratch

RainScratch

17 күн бұрын

From a 35mm Nitrate film print, segment of a longer production.
Extra restoration, grading, speed normalisation, scratch and blemish reduction and addition of music was done for this channel's unique version.
See the rowing crew of the USS Wyoming.
Thank you to Ihsan Amanatullah and the NFPF for source assistance.
This restoration is meant to be viewed on a large screen (not phone) with good sound -
headphones or sound system (not internal speakers of phone/laptop/monitor) Volume UP ↑↑↑
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We are indebted to independent scholar Charles “Buckey” Grimm for identifying this 11-minute piece of the celebrated “lost” three-reel documentary U.S. Navy of 1915, produced by the Lyman H. Howe Company. (The piece had formerly been known only as “U.S. Navy Fragment.”)
The film was made with the full support of the Secretary of the Navy, Josephus Daniels, who believed in the power of motion pictures to convince isolationists of the importance of building a strong American navy.
A former newspaperman who knew the value of publicity, Daniels allowed Howe’s camera crew remarkable shipboard access. The results show sailors as they go about their day-doing repairs, cleaning the deck, exercising, as well as demonstrating naval might. The film drew praise as capturing “the pulse-beat of the complex life that throbs through our dreadnoughts from reveille to ‘taps.’”
This was not first time the Navy had turned to film to tell its story. Early on, the Navy had collaborated with the Biograph Company on a now-lost series of 60 short films showing sailors and officers at work. The series screened at the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair and 1905 Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in Portland before being put to use in a Midwest recruitment tour. None of those short films are known to still exist.
Naval facilities and ships also figured prominently in early newsreels and narratives. The service took care to ensure that depictions presented it in a favorable light and reserved the right, for commercial films shot with official approval, to reuse them for the Navy’s own purposes.
Buckey identified the fragment through careful detective work involving the ships and ordnance on display in the fragment. For example, the “E-2” class submarine, pictured in the opening scene, was taken out of service in 1915, and the shells mentioned in an inter-title-“It costs the U.S. government $970.00 for each 14 inch projectile fired”-were added to the naval arsenal the year earlier. The clincher was matching a frame from the documentary with an image used in a newspaper piece to illustrate the Howe film. Buckey reported his research at the 2010 Orphan Film Symposium at New York University.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania in 1856, Lyman Hakes Howe got his start as a traveling salesman. In the 1880s he switched to lecturing and demonstrated a miniature working coal mine on the road.
When movies came along, he was among the first to make the transition.
He devised his own projector, the Animotiscope, which upgraded the Edison machine by adding a second reel, and playing a phonograph to add sound. Soon he was making his own travelogues and newsreels. Little survives of his output other than this fragment.
About the Preservation
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia generously lent the nitrate print to make the preservation copies. Edge codes on the source material date from 1917, suggesting this print of an earlier film may have been distributed to demonstrate American naval strength after the United States entered World War I.
New prints are available at the Library of Congress and the NFSA.
Music
Tobin Meegan Brett DeFaria Grounds Jutz

Пікірлер: 6
@rainscratch
@rainscratch 14 күн бұрын
3:16 USS Wyoming (BB-32) 1911 - 1947. Served in the North Sea during WW1. Converted to a training ship early 1930s and trained 35,000 gunners in that role. The rowers at the end of the video were from this ship. The exercises in this film were most likely conducted either in the Caribbean off Cuba or Virginia Capes during 1915.
@greendeane1
@greendeane1 14 күн бұрын
Why not make disc-shaped boats?
@oldgrunt5806
@oldgrunt5806 13 күн бұрын
Excellent.
@rainscratch
@rainscratch 12 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching this rare film.
@greendeane1
@greendeane1 14 күн бұрын
110 years ago, eveyone is either old or dead.
@rainscratch
@rainscratch 13 күн бұрын
Assuming the youngest sailor was 18 - I doubt any of these people would be alive today at 127 years old or older.
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