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Wikimedia Commons/Various/several The Jersey Devil Legend The Jersey Devil roams the Pine Barrens of southern New Jersey.
Iowa-class battleships measured 887 feet long and displaced 58,460 tons, with crews ranging from 2,500 during WWII to 1,573 ...
PH3 BRYANT USS New Jersey USS New Jersey was the only battleship that fought in the Vietnam War. The Navy brought this massive ship back to active duty on April 6, 1968, specifically for the conflict.
The Battleship New Jersey became a floating shooting range as dozens of competitors fired at clay targets soaring over the Delaware River last week. Shot after shot rang out from the deck of the ...
After a $10 million facelift, Battleship New Jersey is ready to show off its new look. Beginning Wednesday and just in time for July 4 celebrations, tours are resuming on Big J, the Navy’s most ...
Philadelphia is one American city where history comes alive in a way the whole family can enjoy. From cobblestone ...
NJ’s wartime legacy Halle also nodded to New Jersey’s wartime legacy. The first USS New Jersey was a battleship commissioned in 1906 as part of the Great White Fleet during World War I.
In preparation for the new submarine's Saturday commissioning, sailors from the ship's Pre-Commissioning Unit last week visited the Battleship New Jersey museum on the Camden waterfront.
Battleship New Jersey will glide into the Camden waterfront in June after nearly three months away from its longtime port. The decommissioned warship and museum is set to return Thursday, June 20.
The Battleship New Jersey, which saw service from World War II to the Vietnam War, sailed from Camden, N.J., to Philadelphia for some touching up that was long overdue. NBC News' Joe Fryer gets a ...
Christened early in World War II, the Battleship New Jersey now is a museum hosting military history tours and private events (to pay the bills).
The most decorated battleship in the history of the United States is done with war. The engines of the vessel, the Battleship New Jersey, are no longer permitted to operate, by order of the U.S. Navy.