In each ship there is one man who, in the hour of emergency or peril at sea can turn to no other man. There is one who alone is ultimately responsible for the safe navigation, engineering performance, accurate gunfire and morale of his ship. He is the Commanding Officer. He is the ship!This is the most difficult and demanding assignment in the Navy. There is not an instant during his tour as Commanding Officer that he can escape the grasp of command responsi-bility. His privileges in view of his obli-gations are almost ludicrously small; nevertheless Command is the spur which has given the Navy its great leaders. It is a duty which most richly deserves the highest, time-honored title of the seafaring world…CAPTAIN.

 

CDR Hugh Q. Murray
CDR Delmar F. Quackenbush
CDR William P. Mack
CDR Charles N. Sugarman
CDR Frank P. Whitby
CDR George R. Rhinehart
CDR William R. Barnett
CDR George A. Sullivan
CDR Henry A. Eimstad
LCDR James F. McAvenia
CDR Emmett H. Tidd
CDR Chester L. Peterson
CDR Justin E. Langille III
CDR Edward T. Alberta
CDR Douglas B. Robertson
CDR H. F. Nelson
CDR Joseph A. Felt
CDR Lewis H. Thames
LCDR C. M. St. Laurent