Cruise book: Difference between revisions

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* [http://www.ussrankin.org/1970/start.htm  USS Rankin 1970 Cruise Book]
* [http://www.ussrankin.org/1970/start.htm  USS Rankin 1970 Cruise Book]
* [http://www.mwss274ironmen.com/ USMC Motor Transport Ops Company "Ragdolls" MWSS 274 2006 Cruise Book]  
* [http://www.mwss274ironmen.com/ USMC Motor Transport Ops Company "Ragdolls" MWSS 274 2006 Cruise Book]  
* [http://www.fredsplace.org/books/ USCG Cruise Book Preservation Center]
* [http://www.fredsplace.org/books/ USCG Cruise Book Preservation Center][[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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A typical cruise book from the 1950s

A cruise book is a yearbook-style publication often produced by ships of the United States Navy and United States Coast Guard, as well as units of the United States Marine Corps, upon completion of a long deployment (typically six months or more).

On large ships, the books are produced on board by the ship's Morale, Welfare and Recreation department and Public Affairs staff, and then printed ashore by the same printing companies that publish high school and college yearbooks. The cruise book of a Nimitz Class aircraft carrier typically reaches over 600 pages in length, as it includes portraits of the more than 5000 sailors and Marines assigned to the ship's company and embarked carrier air wing.

Cruise books of smaller ships and units are typically much smaller, often 50-100 pages, and are produced informally by volunteers. They are printed ashore by the same companies that serve the larger ships.

The Navy Department Library has a collection of over 8,000 cruise books and similar Navy yearbooks, dating from the Spanish-American War to the present.

See also

Yearbook

External links