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At random: USS R-6 was fitted the first prototype US submarine snorkel at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in the closing months of the European part of WW II in April / May 1945 and successfully tested it off Fort Lauderdale, Fl. as the war against Japan ended in August 1945. The snorkel was removed from the USS R-6 and she was decommissioned and scrapped in September 1945.
Wednesday Obit
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Coyote
Posted 2025-08-27 2:08 PM (#105638)


Master and Commander

Posts: 1275

Location: NE Florida
Subject: Wednesday Obit


https://www.facebook.com/ussvi.eternalpatrol/

The above link goes to the USSVI (United States Submarine Veterans, Inc.) Facebook page where their members who have gone on “Eternal Patrol” are noted.  

I’ll keep my work here going, trying to get others who were not USSVI members. You’re encouraged to look there as well as here! Obviously, there’ll be some I miss and some I duplicate. 

JENNER .. .. .. Robert F. Jenner, son of the late R. Wesley and Ethel Jenner passed peacefully away on August 22, 2025 in his 88th year at the Hildebrandt Hospice Care Center in Rochester, New York. He is survived by his wife, Gloria, of Rochester, his daughter, Elizabeth, of New Jersey and his sister, Ellen, of Canada. He was predeceased by his brother, David, of Marquette, Michigan.
Robert attended Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on a Reserve Officer Training Corp scholarship and graduated from the engineering program. After Naval training missions around the world, he joined the U.S. Navy Submarine Service based in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. His first, and favorite assignment was aboard the submarine USS Archerfish.
Following active duty, he was employed in the engineering division at the Eastman Kodak Company of Rochester where he was chief mechanic and he continued serving in the Naval Reserve. He retired with the rank of LT.-CMDR.
"Bob" was an avid outdoorsman who loved to be out studying stars on the water in a canoe. He frequently took his family camping, skiing, and snowshoeing. In fact, it was his love of skiing which led to the love of his life-Gloria; he met her on the Kodak Ski Club bus.
Bob's careful study of nature translated into art. He enjoyed carving songbirds out of wood and was well known in carving circles across the country and in Canada for his precise craftsmanship. He won many carving awards across the years for his artistry.
Bob was laid to rest, with military honors, at the Western New York National Cemetery in Corfu, New York.
One highlight of Bob's life was his Honor Flight trip-a free trip to monuments and memorials in Washington, D.C. in celebration of his service to our country. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to https://honorflightrochester.org/donations/ so that other veterans can be celebrated as he was.
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