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Courtesy of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Museum, National Archives & Records Administ…
Courtesy of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Museum, National Archives & Records Administration.
Hellcats of the Navy
Courtesy of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Museum, National Archives & Records Administ…
Courtesy of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Museum, National Archives & Records Administration.

Hellcats of the Navy

Artifact ID1981.10744.01
Object Type Poster
Maker (Culver City, CA)
Date 1957
Medium Paper, Ink
Dimensions11 × 14 in. (27.9 × 35.6 cm)
Physical DescriptionA lobby card for Hellcats of the Navy. An image on the lobby card features a team of divers working on undersea mines in front of a submarine. In the lower-left corner are two off-white boxes with black borders. The top one says "HELLCATS OF THE NAVY" in black outlined letters with stars inside the word Navy. The bottom box says "starring RONALD REAGAN A COLUMBIA PICTURE" in blue. An off-white border is printed with "Copyright (C) 1957 by Columbia Pictures Corporation. All Rights Reserved. Country of Origin U.S.A. 7 Property of National Screen Service Corp. Licensed for display only in connection with the exhibition of this picture at your theatre. Must be returned immediately thereafter." The lobby card is inscribed in ink, "We all know they couldn't keep a good man down!" on the left side and "Give them H _ _ _ Ronnie" on the right. The verso is blank.
Historical NoteWhile Hellcats of the Navy is best known as the only film starring both Ronald Reagan and Nancy Davis Reagan, it was based on the memoirs of Vice Admiral Charles A. Lockwood of the secret mission known as Operation Barney. On June 9, 1945 nine submarines— the USS Sea Dog, USS Crevasse, USS Spadefish, USS Tunny, USS Skate, USS Bonefish, USS Flying Fish, USS Bowfin, and USS Tinosa set out. The group was known as the Hellcats. They were equipped with a new type of sonar: frequency-modulated (FM) sonar. Rather than “ping”-ing when it reflected on an object, this type of sonar was silent, and it could be used to detect mines. The Hellcats then navigated the minefields in the Sea of Japan and the Tsushima Strait. Over fifteen days, they sunk twenty-eight Japanese ships, but lost one of their own, the USS Bonefish (SS-223). The Hellcats did not undertake any follow-up missions, as the war would soon be over.
In the 1957 film, Commander Casey Abbott (Ronald Reagan) commands the submarine USS Starfish on a mission to map Japanese mines in the Pacific. Nancy Davis also starred as Nurse Lt. Helen Blair. The Department of Defense and the US Navy cooperated on the production. Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz personally introduced the film, and described how he had approved the real-life operation twelve years earlier. The film was dedicated to “the officers and the men who served aboard the Hellcat submarines during World War II.”

Additional Details
Custodial History NoteThe item was a gift from a member of the general public to President Ronald Reagan during the Reagan administration. It was received through the Executive Office of the President Office of Correspondence and maintained there until its transfer to the National Archives in January, 1989 for deposit with the Reagan Presidential Library.
Use Restriction StatusRestricted - Fully
Use Restriction Note© Columbia Pictures 1957
Copyright or other proprietary rights are held by individuals or entities other than the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum. The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum does not warrant that the use of these materials will not infringe on the rights of third parties holding the rights to these works, or make any representations or warranties with respect to the application or terms of any international agreement, treaty, or protections that may apply. It is your responsibility to determine and satisfy any copyright or other use restrictions. Pertinent regulations can be found at 36 C.F.R 1254.62.