Loomis, Steven, IC3

Interior Communications Electrician
 
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Life Member
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Current Service Status
USN Veteran
Current/Last Rank
Petty Officer Third Class
Current/Last Primary NEC
IC-4718-IC Journeyman
Current/Last Rating/NEC Group
Interior Communications Electrician
Primary Unit
1970-1971, SN-9740, Vietnamese Naval Shipyard (VNNSY), Naval Advisory Group Vietnam
Previously Held NEC
SR-0000-Seaman Recruit
SN-0000-Seaman
SN-9740-Seaman - Other Technical and Allied Specialists
IC-0000-Interior Communications Electrician
Service Years
1969 - 1983
Official/Unofficial US Navy Certificates
Kiel Canal
Order of the Rock
Order of the Shellback
Panama Canal
Plank Owner
Voice Edition
IC-Interior Communications Electrician
One Hash Mark

 Official Badges 

Battle E US Navy Honorable Discharge US Naval Reserve Honorable Discharge


 Unofficial Badges 

Order of the Shellback Order of the Golden Dragon SERE Brown Water Navy (Vietnam)

Order of the Ditch (Panama Canal) Engineering/Survivability Excellence Award


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
National Society Sons of the American RevolutionSons of Union Veterans of the Civil WarVeterans Associated With The Department of Veterans AffairsNavy Together We Served
  1950, National Society Sons of the American Revolution - Assoc. Page
  1950, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War - Assoc. Page
  1950, Grand Army of the Republic
  1974, Veterans Associated With The Department of Veterans Affairs
  1975, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW), Post 1530, Thomas Rooney Post (Member) (La Crosse, Wisconsin) - Chap. Page
  1975, American Legion, Post 52 (Member) (La Crosse, Wisconsin) - Chap. Page
  2004, Mobile Riverine Force Association
  2008, Navy Together We Served
  2013, Navy Club of the United States of America
  2017, United States LST Association
  2017, Veterans of the Vietnam War - Assoc. Page


 Additional Information
What are you doing now:

I retired on the last day of June, 2011, the month I turned 61,
and took my Arizona State pension, then Social Security at 62. 
I spent my post-navy life as a photographer and media manager.
The Navy gave me gypsy feet, and I've enjoyed them all my life.
As a result, traveling was not just a bucket list item for me. 
With the way things have gone, it was a good investment.

I'm a direct descendant, tenth generation, of Joseph Loomis.
The Loomis Family arrived in the New World on 17 July, 1638. 
We have defended America ever since. 

   
Other Comments:


"Service included boots-on-the-ground in Viet-Nam"
[ One year, 365 days, 24/7 -- 7 June 1970 to 7 June 1971 ]
U.S. Naval Advisory Group, Vietnamese Naval Shipyard, Saigon RVN.
I am also a Plank Owner and Shellback, USS Harlan County (LST-1196).
During my 4 years of active duty, 3 years were credited as foreign or sea service.

 
Technically, I was on Active Duty, USN, 3 years, 11 months and 16 days. However, I was in the Naval Reserve before that and after that, both Active Reserves and Inactive Reserves. So N/TWS has credited me from April 1969 through April 1983, 4 years active USN plus 4 years USNR and 6 years inactive Naval Reserves, and that is why my profile may occasionally show three hash marks. 1983 was my final Inactive Naval Reserve discharge date. Also, because I worked overseas, I never managed to take the 2nd Class Exam. So, actually I never wore more than one hash mark on my dress blues. And yes... there is a "V" on my Navy Achievement Medal even without having a Combat Action Ribbon because that's the way it was awarded. For more information click on the NAM w/V ribbon in my ribbon rack. 

I am glad, proud, to have been born an American.
I voluntarily joined the armed forces, and for that
matter I volunteered for duty in Viet-Nam. 

What I had hoped for was to not bring the violence,
the lack of value of a human life that I experienced
in Viet-Nam, back to America.  It is that simple.

 
During my civilian career I spent over ten years as a hospital/medical photographer, two years in Saudi Arabia with Lockheed, and then two and a half decades as the media specialist and manager for a 9,000+ student public school district in Phoenix, Arizona. I feel fortunate to have retired without ever having a single unemployment or welfare check. 

   

 Remembrance Profiles -  817 Sailors Remembered

 Tributes from Members  
Vietnam 1 posted by Mundy, Robert, RMC -Deceased 
Congratulations on your outstanding care... posted by Sanderson, Harlan G. (Sandy), AO2 -Deceased 
Bravo Zulu (Well Done) posted by McWatt, Michael (Mike), RM2 -Deceased 
 Photo Album   (More...


  LOOMIS DAY - May 30
   
Date
May 30, 1872

Last Updated:
Apr 30, 2019
   
Comments

LOOMIS DAY

Loomis Day is observed annually across the nation on May 30.

Washington, DC dentist, Mahlon Loomis, received US patent number 129,971 titled "An Improvement in Telegraphing" on wireless telegraphy in July of 1872.

Born on July 21, 1826, Mahlon Loomis was a dentist, the inventor of artificial teeth and one of the earliest inventors of wireless communication. Loomis died on October 13, 1886.

Leading up to his patent, Loomis conducted many experiments in electricity using kites flying miles apart in the mountains of Virginia. Then in 1868 before several scientists and Congressmen, he demonstrated his wireless telegraphic system. While he couldn't explain how he was able to produce the transmission, he appealed to Congress for an appropriation to incorporate the Loomis Aerial Telegraph Company for research. Senator Charles Sumner introduced the bill, and on May 30 in 1872, the Committee on Commerce reported poorly on the measure. Stripped of its appropriations, it eventually passed in 1873 strictly as a bill of incorporation.

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Learn about Loomis Day
There is a man, as there is always a man (or woman), who is responsible for everything we take for granted today. Neither he nor we could have seen the long term effects of what he had done, for many things had to come after it for what he designed to come to pass. In the fullness of time, the creation of the "wireless telegraph" has utterly changed the world, and it took an American dentist in 1886 to set it all in motion. Loomis Day celebrates Mahlon Loomis, a humble Washington, DC Dentist who created something amazing and changed the world.

History of Loomis Day
As with many things, the history of Loomis Day is actually the history of a man, and an event, and how they changed the world to come. Mahlon Loomis was a dentist in the 1800's who had an idea that had nothing to do with teeth. He knew about the electrical properties of the atmosphere, and like Tesla had conceived of an idea to transmit electricity through the air to a distant location. His idea was, perhaps, off a bit. He thought to "charge" a layer of the atmosphere to create an electrical conduit between two metal towers set high on mountaintops (Sound familiar?).

What we find interesting about this entire process is that in the end, most if not all of Loomis's theories on how the atmosphere worked and, indeed, how his own apparatus worked were completely wrong. Loomis was able to successfully transmit information from one location to another, but the reasons it worked were not the reasons he professed. He felt that two kites, however many miles apart, flown at the same altitude, would be able to establish a DC circuit through the ionosphere and transmit information thusly. The results were exactly what he expected.

The reason, however, was completely wrong. We know that his idea of creating an electrical circuit through the DC wouldn't work as he described it, what was likely happening is, since the kites were at the same height the "kite wires" that were being used to transmit and receive information would therefore be of the same size. This means the signal being sent from the transmitting kite would be at the correct frequency to be received on the other end. In short, it worked, but not how he thought it did.


How to celebrate Loomis Day
Loomis Day is best celebrated by taking a little time to consider the way that this mans discovery helped to shape the world you live in today. TV, Radio, even your Wi-Fi signal is all being sent through wireless means, on technology descended from a man standing on a mountaintop with a kite and a bit of wire for string.

   
My Photos From This Event
Dr. Mahlon Loomis
LOOMIS DAY - May 30
LOOMIS WIRELESS TELEGRAPH
Dr. Mahlon Loomis

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