File:US Navy Damage Controlman 1ST Class John Frush assists a diver into his suite during preparations for Surface Decompression on Oxygen dives, at the TWA Flight 800 crash site 120 fee - DPLA - 11875476e075b0273c6ba7611e5487fc.jpeg
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Creator InfoField | Department of Defense. American Forces Information Service. Defense Visual Information Center. 1994 | |||||||||||||||||||
Title |
US Navy Damage Controlman 1ST Class John Frush assists a diver into his suite during preparations for Surface Decompression on Oxygen dives, at the TWA Flight 800 crash site 120 feet below. Although Frush is not a diver, everyone on the Navys salvage rescue ship USS GRASP (ARS 51) assists in the safe "dressing" of divers and the handling of their "umbilicals" as they move about the ocean floor. The boots weigh less than 10 pounds each; most of the diver's weights are carried in his Integrated Diving Vest (IDV), which also holds emergency air, referred to as "come home bottle". TWA flight 800 crahed in the Atlantic Ocean off Long Island, New York, on July 17, 1996 |
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Description |
The original finding aid described this photograph as: Base: USS Grasp (ARS 51) Scene Camera Operator: PH1 Glen J. Hurd, USN Release Status: Released to Public |
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Date |
26 July 1996 date QS:P571,+1996-07-26T00:00:00Z/11 |
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institution QS:P195,Q59661040 |
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Permission (Reusing this file) |
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Image title | US Navy Damage Controlman 1st Class John Frush assists a diver into his suite during preparations for Surface Decompression on Oxygen dives, at the TWA Flight 800 crash site 120 feet below. Although Frush is not a diver, everyone on the NavyÕs salvage rescue ship USS GRASP (ARS 51) assists in the safe "dressing" of divers and the handling of their "umbilicals" as they move about the ocean floor. The boots weigh less than 10 pounds each; most of the diver's weights are carried in his Integrated Diving Vest (IDV), which also holds emergency air, referred to as "come home bottle". TWA flight 800 crahed in the Atlantic Ocean off Long Island, New York, on July 17, 1996. |
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Author | PH1 Glen J. Hurd, USN |
Source | Digital |
Short title | 960726-N-2722H-008 |
Date and time of data generation | 26 July 1996 |
City shown | USS GRASP (ARS 51) |
JPEG file comment | File written by Adobe Photoshop¨ 5.2 |
IIM version | 2 |
Writer | S. Sloan |
Special instructions | RELEASED |
Category | N |
Supplemental categories | UNCLASS |
Keywords | DN-SD-02-00582 |
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Reference
US Navy Damage Controlman 1ST Class John Frush assists a diver into his suite during preparations for Surface Decompression on Oxygen dives, at the TWA Flight 800 crash site 120 feet below. Although Frush is not a diver, everyone on the Navys salvage rescue ship USS GRASP (ARS 51) assists in the safe "dressing" of divers and the handling of their "umbilicals" as they move about the ocean floor. The boots weigh less than 10 pounds each; most of the diver's weights are carried in his Integrated Diving Vest (IDV), which also holds emergency air, referred to as "come home bottle". TWA flight 800 crahed in the Atlantic Ocean off Long Island, New York, on July 17, 1996 (English)
Reference
Reference
Reference
The original finding aid described this photograph as: Base: USS Grasp (ARS 51) Scene Camera Operator: PH1 Glen J. Hurd, USN Release Status: Released to Public (English)
some value
Reference
- Media contributed by the Digital Public Library of America
- Media contributed by the National Archives and Records Administration
- Media contributed by National Archives at College Park - Still Pictures
- PD US Military
- Artworks without Wikidata item
- US National Archives series: Combined Military Service Digital Photographic Files, 1982 - 2007
- Files with no machine-readable author