WRECK DIVING. AN UPCOMING NOVA/ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC DOCUMENTARY The U-166 and her final victim, the Robert E Lee. Issue 34.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "WRECK DIVING. AN UPCOMING NOVA/ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC DOCUMENTARY The U-166 and her final victim, the Robert E Lee. Issue 34."

Transcription

1 WRECK DIVING MAGAZINE WRECK DIVING...uncover the past Magazine In This Issue: Fokker S6 Francisco Morazan George M. Cox Jana s Wreck Mikhail Lermontov U-166/Robert E. Lee U-352 USS North Carolina AN UPCOMING NOVA/ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC DOCUMENTARY The U-166 and her final victim, the Robert E Lee Issue 34 US$12.99 Issue 34 A Quarterly Publication

2 USS North Carolina The Showboat - The Most Highly Decorated American Battleship of WWII Text and Photographs by Barbara Buchanan The USS North Carolina in her new berth in Wilmington, NC Photograph courtesy of Battleship North Carolina The second name was Armored Cruiser 12, commissioned on May 7, She was the first to launch an aircraft by catapult while underway. Photograph courtesy of Battleship North Carolina Kwajalein Atoll lagoon is a historical underwater museum full of ships that sank during the invasion of the Marshall Islands. Having had the opportunity to dive several of these shipwrecks, I have a special memory of one wreck, the Eiko Maru, that brings me to where I live in Wilmington, North Carolina. You ask, what is the connection between the Marshall Islands and Wilmington, North Carolina? The Japanese shipwreck Eiko Maru No. 2 was sunk on January 29, 1944, off Roi-Namur Island in Kwajalein Atoll by the USS North Carolina. The sinking of this ship would prove to be invaluable. The Navy salvaged navigational charts to the sea approaches and anchorages of many Japanese-held islands in the Pacific. The charts provided accurate data needed for future coordinated actions of land, sea and air operations in the advancement towards Japan.

3 The USS North Carolina is the most highly decorated American battleship of WWII. She served in every major naval battle in the Pacific Theater of Operations, earning her 15 battle stars. The battleship was honored with eight battle ribbons and her kill board displays 33 Japanese Ensign Flags and 1 Japanese National flag.the 33 Ensign Flags represent the nine shore bombardments against Japanese-held islands, and 24 downed enemy aircraft. The Japanese National Flag signifies the sinking of the Japanese freighter, Eiko Maru No. 2. The Ensign Flag, which has a red sun with rays, flies from military ships and installations. The National Flag flies from everywhere else and has a plain, red sun. This ship was the fourth in the U.S. Navy bearing the name in honor of the State of North Carolina. Her origins go back through many years of naval history and predecessors in warship design that she followed. The first USS North Carolina, launched on September 7, 1820, was a 74-gun, three-mast, square rigger, mounting 42 and 32-pound cannons, and having an overall length of 196 feet 3 inches. She was the pride of the Navy and envy of foreign navies because of her impressive qualities and powerful armament, and, for half a century, she was master of world ships. During the Civil War, the Confederate States Navy built an ironclad named North Carolina. She was 174 feet in length, with four 8-inch guns and canted armor above the waterline. She served as a guard ship near the mouth of Cape Fear River to help keep the port of Wilmington open to confederate blockade runners. Due to structural imperfections, she developed a leak and sank in September, 1864, near Southport, North Carolina. The second one named USS North Carolina was commissioned on May 7, 1908, a 504-foot-long Armored Cruiser 12, with four 10-inch guns, sixteen 6-inch guns, twenty-two 3-inch rapid fire guns and four underwater torpedo tubes. On November 5, 1915, she became the first ship ever to launch an aircraft, the AB-2 Curtiss, by catapult from her stern, while underway, making her a pioneer of naval aviation. The third with the name was Battleship BB-52, (BB stands for battleship), laid down in Unfortunately, she was never completed and was sold for scrap in 1923 because of the Washington Naval Treaty of 1921, also known as the Five-Power Treaty. The provisions of the treaty limited naval armament, demanded scrapping of existing or conversion to aircraft carriers, and established a 10-year pause, or holiday, where no new capital ships (battleships and battle cruisers) could be built. If completed, the third North Carolina would have been a monster ship of the 1920 s era, with twelve 16-inch guns, several smaller caliber guns, two torpedo tubes and an overall length of 684 feet. After WWI, the Washington treaty was to prevent an upward movement of naval construction and ship size. The treaty was signed by the five major nations that had won the war, the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, France and Italy. The Washington treaty strictly limited capital ships to 35,000 tons standard displacement (a ship fully manned and equipped ready for sea) and guns no larger than 16-inch caliber. But before the 10 year holiday limitation expired, the five nations agreed and signed the Treaty for Limitation and Reduction of Naval Armament, also known as the London Naval Treaty of This regulated gun calibers of submarines and limited naval shipbuilding. On December 9, 1935, a conference was held to modify the previous London Naval Treaty, extending the conditions agreed to until 1942 and reducing the caliber to 14 inches. However, because Japan and Italy refused to sign the Second London Naval Treaty, it prevented an agreement on the ceiling of the number of warships, but did limit the maximum size of ships and caliber of guns. Because there was an escalator clause in the Washington Treaty which stated that if any of the five nations that had signed the Washington Treaty didn t adhere to the new limits, the other signatory countries could raise the caliber to 16 inches. In the early 1930 s with the Washington Naval Treaty still in effect, the U.S. Congress authorized the building of new battleships. This was a challenge for the U.S. Navy architects to meet the treaty limitations. The important requirements in battleship design were armament, armor, speed, and durability to withstand major battle. On October 27, 1937, the keel of the fourth ship named USS North Carolina, BB-55, was laid down at the New York Shipyard. She was launched on June 13, 1940, and commissioned on April 9, 1941, and became the first, fast, heavily armed U.S. Navy battleship to be built in 16 years. Her length of 729 feet was armed with nine 16-inch guns, twenty twin-mount 5-inch guns, sixteen 28-mm antiaircraft guns (later replaced by fifteen quadruple 40-mm antiaircraft guns) and forty-six single and twinmount 20-mm guns. Powered by four sets of General Motors geared turbines, her maximum speed recorded was 27.3 knots in Subsequently, the increase in weight of 40-mm guns reduced her speed to 26.8 knots. She was designed to carry three OS2U Vought-Sikorsky float planes. The letter O stands for observation, the S for scouting, the 2 for second version, and the U for the manufacturer, Vought-Sikorsky. The float planes, aka Kingfisher, were intended to be catapulted off the fantail on either side of the stern s main deck. Before her service at sea, the North Carolina

4 underwent an exhaustive shakedown, involving operations south into the Caribbean and as far north as Maine. A shakedown cruise is an intense schedule of months of testing all elements of the ship s array of weapons, machinery, equipment, and drills of every crew member carried out day and night. The constant drills transform the men into a team of readiness for combat, able to cope with any emergence of a coming war. On August 29, 1941, to test the ship s structural strength, all nine 16-inch guns, along with all ten 5-inch guns, were fired simultaneously in one thunderous blast in the night sky. There was no obvious damage topside and only a few shaken light bulbs below. A ship going through a shakedown repeatedly returns to harbor for modifications and improvements. The shiny, new North Carolina would return to the New York Shipyard so often that New Yorkers, including radio commentator Walter Winchell, witnessed the battlewagon entering and departing the harbor. They called her Showboat, after the popular Rogers and Hammerstein Broadway musical of the same name. Soon after, the crew of the USS Washington teased the North Carolina crew because of the not-so-flattering name. On one occasion when the North Carolina entered port in Hampton Roads, VA, the Washington crew s band greeted her sister ship with strains of Here Comes the Showboat, a popular song from the musical. From that moment on, the North Carolina crew were proud to call her by that name and so she is known to this day. A whimsical North Carolina song written by Lt. Commander John Zahm (Assistant Damage Control Officer) was printed in the ship s paper, Tarheel, Vol. 1, No. XIX, August 16, I Tarheels we--in the New North C, Will sweep the foemen from the sea, We ll chase them down- And watch them drown- In every ocean where they re found, We ll give them hell- With every shell- And drive them to perdition; We ll make them sweat, And all regret The day we were commissioned. II The New North C will rule the sea, From the river Platte to the old North Sea, From Iceland s shore To Singapore; Throughout the world our guns will roar, Our sixteen-inch, In every pinch Will so control conditions, No ship may sail the seven seas, Except with our permission. When Japan stealthily attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec 7, 1941, the North Carolina was in the New York Shipyard with most her crew on shore or liberty leave. After initial word of the attack, Captain Oscar C. Badger ordered all hands to return and ready the ship for war. With most of the U.S. Pacific battleship fleet sunk or severely damaged, the Showboat would now face the Imperial Japanese Navy and defend America against it. Captain Badger was so concerned with such a fiercely aggressive opponent that he demanded the Navy yard commander install more antiaircraft guns at once. Forty 20-mm guns were promptly mounted and additional men ordered aboard to man them. The Showboat and crew spent the next several months in the Atlantic practicing gunnery drills and war exercises, preparing for battle. Meanwhile, the devastation at Pearl Harbor left the U.S. Pacific Fleet with three aircraft carriers: Lexington (CV-2), Saratoga (CV-3), Enterprise (CV-6), and one, slow, operational battleship, Colorado, which was in Bremerton, Washington, undergoing an overhaul at the time of the Japanese attack. (CV stood for aircraft carrier, and the numbers following meant second, third and sixth carriers ever built by the U.S. Navy). In January, 1942, reinforcements from the Atlantic arrived: aircraft carrier Yorktown (CV-5), and three, rusty, old battleships, New Mexico, (BB-40), Mississippi (BB- 41) and Idaho (BB-42). However, the opposing Japanese forces began the war with ten aircraft carriers and twelve battleships. Within the first six months, the Japanese seized Wake Island, Guam, the Philippines, Indo-China, Borneo, Singapore, Malaya, the Dutch East Indies, the Gilbert Islands, Nauru and Rabual. The U.S. Pacific Fleet struggled for survival with small task groups, usually a single aircraft carrier protected by a few, inept, old cruisers and destroyers, taking chances and delaying action with hit-and-run tactics. Sometimes the crew was kept at sea for over three months at a time, and they d return to port, exhausted men, and without a crumb of food left on board. The desolate crews desperately needed help to arrive, but this would take months. When Japan annihilated the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, the U.S. was caught unprepared for war. It would become the Atlantic Theater war versus the Pacific Theater war. Even though the U.S. officials understood the demand in the Pacific, the Atlantic war against Germany was considered more urgent. The two battleships, North Carolina and Washington, were needed in the Atlantic to protect Allied convoys. The Washington was sent to operate with the British Home Fleet on the Arctic coast of the Soviet Union. The North Carolina, practicing intense war exercises, was held in the Atlantic in case the new German battleship, Tirpitz, should intercept convoys from America to Britain. In July, 1942, the USS North Carolina was ordered to make way to Pearl Harbor to join the Pacific Theater. Arriving, the new, shiny battleship towered over the harbor amongst the charred wreckage still present. The Americans, once referred to as a sleeping giant, had awakened, giving hope to all stationed there. This is the

5 beginning of her epic story that reads like the history of the war itself. The thing I remember most distinctly was the day we arrived at Pearl Harbor. Even with all the movies and pictures you saw, you couldn t appreciate the devastation that had taken place there. As we arrived and I looked at the oil-covered harbor and the broken rows of ships, I choked up. There were all the sailors who had seen nothing but the damage that the Japanese caused here, who had gotten a very sharp kick in the teeth at Pearl Harbor and who had, in months that followed, lost other ships in battle, And these crews, they cheered and cheered us. I couldn t help saying to myself, they re cheering us for nothing, we hadn t done anything. We had not fired a shot yet. But to them, we were the symbol of help finally arriving in force. It broke me up, I admit to being a misty-eyed 18-year old. --Larry Resen, Fire Controlman First Class Before war s end, the U.S. Armed Forces continued to leapfrog from one Japanese island territory to another, advancing towards Japan s mainland and prevailing in victory under vigorous circumstances with horrific casualties. The closer the U.S. approached the Japanese shoreline, the more there grew a high degree of apprehension towards Japan s savage Kamikaze Corps, suicidal fanatics. The U.S. planned a massive invasion on Japan with delivery of two atomic bombs. The first bomb, known as Little Boy, a gun-type fission weapon was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6 and the second bomb, known as Fat Man, an implosion-type nuclear weapon, on Nagasaki on August 9. Japan surrendered on August 15, 1945 after the two atomic bombs caused utter destruction. On September 2, 1945, aboard the battleship USS Missouri, the official surrender documents were duly signed. On that day the Showboat s Captain, B. Hall Hanlon, announced the war was over. I was below decks when Captain Hanlon announced the war was over, and I still to this day remember him saying Now hear this, this is the captain and then he went into telling us. Boy, you talk about a roar that went up! I think the whole ship jumped about two feet out of the water! --Robert Palomaris, Gunner s Mate First Class After the war, on September 6, 1945, she was home bound. Having departed from Okinawa on a long voyage, she arrived at Boston on October 17 to a hero s celebration with bands playing, people cheering and a message from the President of the United States, Harry S Truman: No vessel of America s World War II battleship fleet served as long in combat or with greater distinction than the USS North Carolina, from Guadalcanal to Tokyo Bay. The whole nation is proud of her. Her remaining service was short lived due to the post-war disarmament agreement. Before inactivation, Enterance Sign The USS North Carolina today in Wilmington, NC. BB-55 bow was armed with six 16-inch guns in two 3-gun turrets.

6 Clockwise: View on starboard side with a quadruple 40 mm and five twin mounted 5-inch guns. The USS North Carolina kill board and battle ribbons. Third & Forth Photographs: The third name was USS North Carolina launched June 13, She is the most highly decorated American battleship of WWII. Photograph courtesy of Battleship North Carolina Another view of 40mm twin mounted 5-inch guns. BB-55 carried a OS2U Vought-Sikorsky, aka Kingfisher float plane on her stern. in the summer of 1946, she carried two Naval Academy midshipmen on training cruises in the Caribbean. On June 27, 1947, she was decommissioned and placed in the Reserve Fleet at Bayonne, New Jersey. On June 1, 1960, the Navy announced the honorable ship was to be stricken from the Naval Vessel Register and scrapped, when James S. Craig and Hugh Morton from Wilmington, NC, decided to rescue her. A huge Save our Ship campaign started with endorsements from North Carolina Governor Luther Hodges and other prominent citizens. The campaign went viral, and thousands of citizens contributed money, including school children saving lunch money and spare change in efforts to save her. They raised $330,000 to purchase her from the U.S. Navy and towed her to her new berth in Wilmington, NC. On April 29, 1962, she was dedicated as a memorial to North Carolinians who served in the United States Armed Forces during WWII and in memory of thousands who lost their lives. During her three years service at sea, only 10 were killed in action and 67 wounded. In 1986, the USS North Carolina was declared a National Historic Landmark. Right: Diver Charles George exploring the two motorized barges hanging over portside railing. Opposite Page Inset: Fires burning on Roi after the BB-55 bombardment.

7 The Invasion of the Marshall Islands - USS North Carolina s sinking of the Eiko Maru The U.S. strategic plan in the Pacific involved the assault on the Marshall Islands (codenamed Operation Flintlock ), with the ultimate goal of advancing toward Japan. Kwajalein, the largest and strongest Japaneseoccupied atoll, was a key target. Admiral Chester Nimitz two objectives were: first, to gain control of the entrance to the deep-water lagoon near Roi-Namur Island in the northern part of the chain of atolls, and second, to seize the southern and weakest part of Kwajalein Island. Early in the morning of January 29 th, carrier-based Navy Hellcats and Avenger torpedo bombers took off in force and destroyed all the Japanese aircraft on Roi-Namur. Since this rendered the atoll helpless against close-range naval bombardment, the North Carolina moved into position to begin her assault. The Eiko Maru, anchored in the lagoon, fired on the battleship and launched antiaircraft fire on the Kingfisher spotting plane. Returning fire with her main battery, the North Carolina scored direct hits on the bow and stern of the Japanese freighter with her second salvo. The Eiko Maru exploded, burst into flames, and sank after the North Carolina let loose with her second battery. The battleship maneuvered closer and blasted the shoreline throughout the night. The next day the Above: The 3-inch gun mounted on the bow of Eiko Maru. Below: The bridge area is gutted from the fires before she sank.

8 barrage continued as other battleships joined her. The U.S. Marines landed on the beach, and after battling their way across the island, won a quick victory within six hours. Roi-Namur was laid waste by the two days of relentless bombardment by the American ships, but the Japanese refused to surrender. The toll was 3,472 Japanese killed and 91 prisoners captured while the Americans lost 190 Marines and 547 wounded. The battle of Roi-Namur in the Marshall Islands resulted in the first piece of prewar, Japanese real estate that was captured in combat by the US during WWII. The Marshall Islands location meant the seizure of Roi-Namur was the first milepost, astride the sea lanes to Japan. Roi-Namur originally was two separate islands, but during their occupation, the Japanese built a causeway connecting them. Today Roi-Namur is an occupied U.S. territory, part of the Ronald Reagan Test Site and home to four radar tracking stations, ALCOR, ALTAIR, MMW, and TRADEX. Roi-Namur is a registered National Historic Landmark. The WWII Battlefield Tour consists of 17 stops around the island including several Japanese blockhouses, pillboxes, air raid shelters, ammunition, bomb and fuel storage, the support complex, airfield headquarters, and Japanese cemetery. Touring several of the damaged remnants gives you a sense of the merciless battle that took place. Standing on the dock of Roi-Namur Dolphin Scuba Club, I thought of the USS North Carolina back home and all her glory. That day was a very special day; diving the Eiko Maru is going back in time, connecting the past and present, bringing a piece of history back to life. It was a fairly calm day, and the boat ride out to the dive site was very short, for the wreck is in close proximity to shore and in shallow water. The Eiko Maru was a 3,535-ton cargo ship, 340 feet in length. The visibility was a good 70 feet as I reached the deck area at 60 feet and started swimming towards the stern. As I passed by the superstructure, it was very obvious the ship was on fire before she sank because the bridge is eviscerated. Only the bare, structural framing remains were standing. Reaching the stern, I saw the propeller and rudder were intact and that her keel at 118 feet rested upright on the ocean floor. In Hold 4 were stacks and stacks of rusting, 50-gallon drums, and most appeared to have been squeezed and crushed due to pressure. Heading back towards the superstructure, I saw that the bridge was gutted, and was just a few walls with port holes and collapsed, twisted framing. The decks below could be entered through the aft door; the rooms appeared empty except for the foot of silt that covered them. Since the rooms were open, you could easily swim around. This area once was the pharmacy, latrine and storage. I didn t dare to shift through the silt to find medicine bottles or serving platters, although it was tempting. Hold 1 was also filled with piles of crushed, 50-gallon drums and silt covering the bottom. On the port side of Hold 1 was a huge hole most likely from one of the North Carolina s shells. There were two motorized barges leaning against the port side hull and one across Hold 2. The barges were connected together and tied to the ship when she sank, taking them with her. A towing barge lay on the starboard side of the ship. On the bow was a 3-inch deck gun pointing out towards the bow tip. Looking over the railing, one could see the anchor chain stretched out across the sea floor in the very spot the day the battle took place. Over time, some areas of the chain have been buried from shifting sand. WWII changed naval warfare operations, replacing the battleships and their big guns with aircraft carriers and their planes. Nevertheless, the battleships tremendous firepower helped with shore bombardment and halted air attacks, protecting the carriers from damage or loss of life. The USS North Carolina and her crew proved to play a significant role during WWII, a symbol of honor, courage, and inspiration for generations to come. Even though Eiko Maru may not have been honored with 15 battle stars for her service at sea or war, I am fortunate to dive the one ship the North Carolina sank, a memorable experience that will not be forgotten. Even though the USS North Carolina battleship BB-55 was the fourth ship so named, she was actually the third commissioned into service. The fourth and current USS North Carolina is a submarine (SSN-777), commissioned on May 3, 2008, in Wilmington, NC. Special thanks to the folks who helped make it happen: Dan Farnham, Bob Greene, John Cassidy Jr., Bridget Rankin, Roi-Namur Dolphins Scuba Club and to the employees and volunteers at Battleship North Carolina.

9 About the Author: Barbara Buchanan is a photographer and videographer who travels the globe. She has worked on expeditions with archeologists on Blackbeards shipwreck Queen Anne s Revenge documenting the excavation for the Dive Down project. Her most recent project is filming the wrecks of Kwajalein in the Marshall Islands. She is owner of Scuba Planners Dive Travel and has arranged many expeditions including the Japan trip with Wreck Diving Magazine where she filmed the expedition. You can view her photos and video work at: USS North Carolina WWII Asiatic-Pacific Campaigns: She served in every major naval battle in the Pacific Theater of Operations, earning her 15 battle stars. The pile of crushed drums in hold 4. Shell damage from the BB inch guns. *Landings on Guadalcanal and Tulagi August 7-9, 1942 *Capture and Defense of Guadalcanal August 16, February 8, 1943 *Battle of Eastern Solomons August 23-24, 1942 *New Georgia Group Operations June 30 - August 31, 1943 New Guinea, Rendova, Vangunu invasion *Gilbert Islands Operations November 19 - December 8, 1943 Tarawa and Makin *Bismark Archipelago Operations December 25, 1943 Kavieng strike *Marshall Islands Operation January 29 February 8, 1944 Invasion of Kwajalein and Majuro Atoll *Task Force Strikes Truk February 16-17, 1944 Marianas February 21-22, 1944 Palau, Yap Ulithi and Woleai March 30 - April 1, 1944 Truk, Satawan and Ponape April 29 - May 1, 1944 *Western New Guinea Operations April 21-24, 1944 Hollandia *Marianas Operation Invasion of Saipan June 11-24, 1944 Battle of Philippine Sea June 19-20, 1944 *Leyte Operation Nov , & Dec , 1944 Attacks on Luzon *Luzon Operation Luzon January 6-7, 1945 Formosa January 3-4, 9, 15 and 21, 1945 China coast January 12 and 16, 1945 Nansei Shoto January 22, 1945 *Iwo Jima Operation February 15 - March 1, 1945 Invasion, assault and occupation of Iwo Jima Raids against Honshu and Nansei Shoto in support *Okinawa Operation March 17 - April 27, 1945 Invasion, assault and occupation of Okinawa Capture of the Kerama Islands Raids against Kyushu and Inland Sea targets *Third Fleet Operations July 10 - August 15, 1945 Bombardment of and air strikes on Japanese Home Islands

10

WWII The War in the Pacific

WWII The War in the Pacific WWII The War in the Pacific Japan controls the Pacific Japan attacks various Pacific locations late 1941 Japan controlled Hong Kong, Thailand, Guam, Wake, Burma, Malaya Japan attacks Philippines pushes

More information

The Personal War History by Robert Bob Carlile as provided by his Surviving Wife Olga Carlile

The Personal War History by Robert Bob Carlile as provided by his Surviving Wife Olga Carlile 0 The Personal War History by Robert Bob Carlile as provided by his Surviving Wife Olga Carlile We obtained this diary primarily through the efforts of Michael Verville who contacted Olga Carlile shortly

More information

The End of WWII & The Dropping of the Atomic Bombs

The End of WWII & The Dropping of the Atomic Bombs The End of WWII & The Dropping of the Atomic Bombs The Beginning of the end Big three Stalin (Soviet Union), FDR (USA), and Churchill (Great Britain) Meetings 1. Tehran 1943 plan the war/ unconditional

More information

John Thomas DeVaney. U.S. Navy WWII & Korean War USS Nevada Pearl Harbor. extremely noteworthy and John DeVaney was part of that history.

John Thomas DeVaney. U.S. Navy WWII & Korean War USS Nevada Pearl Harbor. extremely noteworthy and John DeVaney was part of that history. 1 extremely noteworthy and John DeVaney was part of that history. Background USS Nevada USS Nevada (BB-36), the second United States Navy ship to be named after the 36th state, was the lead ship of the

More information

JAPAN S PACIFIC CAMPAIGN. Chapter 16 section 2

JAPAN S PACIFIC CAMPAIGN. Chapter 16 section 2 JAPAN S PACIFIC CAMPAIGN Chapter 16 section 2 Surprise Attack on Pearl Harbor October 1940 the U.S. had cracked one of the codes that the Japanese used in sending secret messages. Which meant the U.S.

More information

B I K I N I A T O L L

B I K I N I A T O L L Dive the Wrecks of B I K I N I A T O L L Special Group Departure 16-26 July 2019 11 days / 10 nights Ex Kwajalein from USD $6,300 per Diver Includes: Accommodation & Liveaboard details Return airport transfers

More information

World War II in Asia. AP World History Chapter 21 Collapse and Recovery in Europe s

World War II in Asia. AP World History Chapter 21 Collapse and Recovery in Europe s World War II in Asia AP World History Chapter 21 Collapse and Recovery in Europe 1914 1970s Japanese Imperialism In the 1930s = Japan had seized much of China Japan now set its sights on French, British,

More information

World War II in Japan:

World War II in Japan: World War II in Japan: 1939-1945 The Japanese Empire Japan wanted to expand to obtain more raw materials and markets for its industries/population 1931: Japan seized Manchuria 1937-40: Japan seized most

More information

IPMS Toronto Presents:

IPMS Toronto Presents: IPMS Toronto Presents: November Special Guest Speaker Mr. Nori Harry Yoshida Veteran WW2 Japanese Imperial Navy Heavy Cruiser MAYA November 1, 2010 7pm, 2901 Bayview Avenue (Loblaws Community Room) Heavy

More information

2/6/11! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater!

2/6/11! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater! 1! 2/6/11! Pacific Theater! Pacific Theater! MacArthur & Minitz! General Douglas MacArthur commander of all US Army units in Pacific! Admiral Charles

More information

World History since Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History

World History since Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History World History since 1500 Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History History 104 World History since 1500 April 23 Article Review Four Due April 24 Online Quiz Chapters 26-27 April 30 Exam Four (Chapters 25-27)

More information

3.2.5: Japanese American Relations U.S. Entry into WWII. War in the Pacific

3.2.5: Japanese American Relations U.S. Entry into WWII. War in the Pacific 3.2.5: Japanese American Relations 1937-1942 U.S. Entry into WWII War in the Pacific 1920s 1930s Review USA Wilson s 14 Points...League of Nations Isolationism Economic Depression FDR Japan Emerging world

More information

International Journal of Naval History December 2005 Volume 4 Number 3

International Journal of Naval History December 2005 Volume 4 Number 3 A Global Forum for Naval Historical Scholarship International Journal of Naval History December 2005 Volume 4 Number 3 William Thomas Generous, Sweet Pea at War: A History of USS Portland (CA-33) University

More information

USS Genesee (AOG-8) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

USS Genesee (AOG-8) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia USS Genesee (AOG-8) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia USS Genesee (AOG-8) was a Patapsco-class gasoline tanker acquired by the U.S. Navy for the dangerous task of transporting gasoline to warships

More information

In Memory of Norbert Eugene Rau Our Father. April 24, 1924 August 8, 2008

In Memory of Norbert Eugene Rau Our Father. April 24, 1924 August 8, 2008 In Memory of Norbert Eugene Rau Our Father April 24, 1924 August 8, 2008 Our father, Norbert Eugene Rau G39-75-26, served on the USS Essex for three years and two months during World War II. Dad was an

More information

Stories from Maritime America

Stories from Maritime America Spud Campbell Spud Campbell describes the sinking of the Liberty ship SS Henry Bacon by German aircraft on February 23, 1945. Sixteen merchant mariners and twelve members of the Navy Armed Guard were killed

More information

Major Battles During WWII Events that Changed the Course of the War

Major Battles During WWII Events that Changed the Course of the War The Battle of Britain Major Battles During WWII Events that Changed the Course of the War With all of Europe under its control, as the last hold out The English Channel is only at the most narrow point

More information

World War II. Major Events and U.S. Role

World War II. Major Events and U.S. Role World War II Major Events and U.S. Role Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact Hitler and Stalin signed a Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact in August 1939. They agreed not to go to war with each other. The Russians

More information

Station One: Creating the bomb

Station One: Creating the bomb Station One: Creating the bomb After considering what Einstein recommended, Roosevelt was persuaded that if the bomb could be built, the United States should be the first nation to build it. The development

More information

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII Battle of the Atlantic (1939-1945) Struggle between the Allied and German forces for control of the Atlantic Ocean. The Allies needed to keep the vital flow of men and

More information

A Brief History of the USS Blenny (SS-324)...

A Brief History of the USS Blenny (SS-324)... A Brief History of the USS Blenny (SS-324)... Blenny: Any of numerous small, elongated, and often scaleless fishes living along rocky shores. (SS-324: dp. 1,525 (surf.), 2,415 (subm.); l. 311'9"; b. 27'3";

More information

USS PERCH (SS 176) began her second combat cruise in February Initially patrolling off Celebes, she received damage in an attack on an enemy

USS PERCH (SS 176) began her second combat cruise in February Initially patrolling off Celebes, she received damage in an attack on an enemy 1 USS PERCH (SS 176) began her second combat cruise in February 1942. Initially patrolling off Celebes, she received damage in an attack on an enemy ship on the 25th, and was then transferred to the waters

More information

D-Day. June 6th, 1944

D-Day. June 6th, 1944 D-Day June 6th, 1944 The Move on to France Because the Germans were being fought in Italy, the allies planned to move forward with their plan to open up the western front in Europe The Plan Winston Churchill

More information

The disposal of all nine true Leahy Class ships went like this:

The disposal of all nine true Leahy Class ships went like this: The disposal of all nine true Leahy Class ships went like this: 1998 - USS Richmond K. Turner DLG/CG-20 2000 - USS Dale DLG/CG-19 2000 - USS Worden DLG/CG-18 2001 - USS Reeves DLG/CG-24 2002 - USS Harry

More information

Director of Naval History (OP-09B9), Washington Navy Yard, Washington, DC

Director of Naval History (OP-09B9), Washington Navy Yard, Washington, DC DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY USS CLEVELAND (LPD-7) FLEET POST OFFICE SAN FRANCISCO 96662-1 71 0 J From: To : Commanding Officer, USS CLEVELAND (LPD-7) Director of Naval History (OP-09B9), Washington Navy Yard,

More information

The North Africa Campaign:

The North Africa Campaign: The North Africa Campaign: The Battle of El Alamein October 1942 General Rommel, The Desert Fox General Montgomery ( Monty ) North Africa Before 1942, the Axis suffered only 3 major defeats: Commonwealth

More information

Navy Cross Citation Awarded to Admiral Visser for role in Battle of Surigao Straits

Navy Cross Citation Awarded to Admiral Visser for role in Battle of Surigao Straits A Semi - annual publication dedicated to the memory of the those who served aboard the USS Daly DD 519 Navy Cross Citation Awarded to Admiral Visser for role in Battle of Surigao Straits In the 2009 Fall

More information

Beasts of the Atlantic. Game Book

Beasts of the Atlantic. Game Book Beasts of the Atlantic Game Book Contents 1. Ships a. U-Boats b. Destroyers c. Transports d. Battleships 2. Order of Play 3. Scenarios a. The hunt for the Bismarck b. Attack on Convoy HX 229/SC 122 1.

More information

Taking a Stand in The Pacific: Fighting The Empire of Japan During World War II Patrick Fisher Senior Division Historical Paper Paper Length: 2044

Taking a Stand in The Pacific: Fighting The Empire of Japan During World War II Patrick Fisher Senior Division Historical Paper Paper Length: 2044 Taking a Stand in The Pacific: Fighting The Empire of Japan During World War II Patrick Fisher Senior Division Historical Paper Paper Length: 2044 Words On December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy

More information

In The Shadow Of The Battleship: Considering The Cruisers Of World War II By Richard Worth READ ONLINE

In The Shadow Of The Battleship: Considering The Cruisers Of World War II By Richard Worth READ ONLINE In The Shadow Of The Battleship: Considering The Cruisers Of World War II By Richard Worth READ ONLINE In WWII, the UK used cruisers, with radar and greater speed than battleships, to shadow capital ships

More information

The Atomic Bombs and the End of WWII

The Atomic Bombs and the End of WWII The Atomic Bombs and the End of WWII U-235 atomic bomb / Little Boy U-235 bomb was a fission bomb. A mass of uranium 235 is fired into another mass of U-235 to create fission. Little Boy fission reaction

More information

USS Salt Lake City at Wake Island, 1942

USS Salt Lake City at Wake Island, 1942 UTAH SHIPS USS Salt Lake City at Wake Island, 1942 United States Navy ships are named using rules established by law, custom, and tradition. They may honor states, cities, counties, distinguished people

More information

Use pages to answer the following questions

Use pages to answer the following questions Use pages 569-573 to answer the following questions 1.Why was winning the Battle of the Atlantic so crucial to the fortunes of the Allies? 2.Why was the Battle of Stalingrad so important? 3.Why did you

More information

LITERALLY ARISING OUT OF THE ASHES OF THE SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 ATTACKS, A POWERFUL NEW WARSHIP IS COMING THAT WILL BEAR A PROUD AND ILLUSTRIOUS NAME.

LITERALLY ARISING OUT OF THE ASHES OF THE SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 ATTACKS, A POWERFUL NEW WARSHIP IS COMING THAT WILL BEAR A PROUD AND ILLUSTRIOUS NAME. USS NEW YORK LITERALLY ARISING OUT OF THE ASHES OF THE SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 ATTACKS, A POWERFUL NEW WARSHIP IS COMING THAT WILL BEAR A PROUD AND ILLUSTRIOUS NAME. BY RICHARD H. WAGNER (Originally published

More information

The Battle of Quebec: 1759

The Battle of Quebec: 1759 The Battle of Quebec: 1759 In the spring of 1759, the inhabitants of Quebec watched the river with worried eyes. They waited anxiously to see whether the ships of the French, or those of the British fleet,

More information

THE COMMAND SHIP CONCEPT

THE COMMAND SHIP CONCEPT THE COMMAND SHIP CONCEPT What makes WRIGHT radically different from the rest o( America's fighting ships, and what is the role she plays ia preseyia& the security and strength of our nation? The Command

More information

RoR Step-by-Step Review * USS Lionfish Submarine 1:180 Revell Review

RoR Step-by-Step Review * USS Lionfish Submarine 1:180 Revell Review RoR Step-by-Step Review 20120926* USS Lionfish Submarine 1:180 Revell 85-5228 Review The USS Lionfish (SS-298), a Balao-class submarine, was the only ship of the United States Navy named for the lionfish.

More information

Command Ship. USS WRIGHT (CC-2)

Command Ship. USS WRIGHT (CC-2) ' Command Ship. USS WRIGHT (CC-2) GUIDE.............. 11 NAVY...... 12 A Word Fron1 The fjaptain As commanding officer of USS WRIGHT (CC-2), I welcome you aboard the ship. While aboard WRIGHT, I hope your

More information

USS AVC-1. Unnamed ~ Unpowered ~ Underutilized

USS AVC-1. Unnamed ~ Unpowered ~ Underutilized USS AVC-1 Unnamed ~ Unpowered ~ Underutilized In the late 1930s, the US Navy was engaged in the development of flying boats for long range patrol and bombing purposes. However, the amount of fuel and bomb

More information

HISTORY U.S.S. OKLAHOMA CITY (CLG-5)

HISTORY U.S.S. OKLAHOMA CITY (CLG-5) Official ship's history 1942 through 1961: HISTORY U.S.S. OKLAHOMA CITY (CLG-5) U.S.S. OKLAHOMA CITY (CLG-5), a guided missile light cruiser, is named for the capital city of Oklahoma She was originally

More information

The U.S.S. Constitution A Virtual Tour

The U.S.S. Constitution A Virtual Tour The U.S.S. Constitution A Virtual Tour Prepared by SR Staley, author of The Pirate of Panther Bay and Tortuga Bay (Southern Yellow Pin Publishing) Cover Photo: Castle Island (downloaded from wikepedia)

More information

US HEAVY CRUISERS

US HEAVY CRUISERS US HEAVY CRUISERS 1941 45 Pre-war Classes MARK STILLE ILLUSTRATED BY PAUL WRIGHT NEW VANGUARD 210 US HEAVY CRUISERS 1941 45 Pre-war Classes MARK STILLE ILLUSTRATED BY PAUL WRIGHT CONTENTS INTRODUCTION

More information

4 Picture of USS BREMERTON (SSN698) ( 5 ) USS BREMERTON (SSN698 ) Commissioning Program

4 Picture of USS BREMERTON (SSN698) ( 5 ) USS BREMERTON (SSN698 ) Commissioning Program DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY USS BREMERTON (SSN 698) FPO SAN FRANCISCO 96661 SSN698:KAJ:hs 5750 Ser* 073 4 March 1982 From: Commanding Officer, USS BREMERTON (~~~698) To: Director of Naval History (OP-09~~)

More information

S.S. JOSHUA TREE. By Jeff Ohlfs & Todd Swain Joshua Tree National Park July 2005

S.S. JOSHUA TREE. By Jeff Ohlfs & Todd Swain Joshua Tree National Park July 2005 S.S. JOSHUA TREE By Jeff Ohlfs & Todd Swain Joshua Tree National Park July 2005 Little did Jeff know in his periodic searching of ebay, for Joshua Tree National Park memorabilia, that he would run across

More information

Japanese Potentially Polluting Wrecks in the Pacific Ocean

Japanese Potentially Polluting Wrecks in the Pacific Ocean Japanese Potentially Polluting Wrecks in the Pacific Ocean By Ryo Sato 1. Executive Summary This paper assesses the location and potential dangers of contaminant associated with Japanese sunken ships and

More information

Us navy decommissioned ships for sale

Us navy decommissioned ships for sale Us navy decommissioned ships for sale The Borg System is 10 Us navy decommissioned ships for sale These 6ï ½Fast Patrol Boats were in service for the Italian Navy, made in 1990. The displacement at full

More information

Honoring the value, accomplishments and contributions of U.S. Navy aircraft carriers, and the men and women who serve aboard them.

Honoring the value, accomplishments and contributions of U.S. Navy aircraft carriers, and the men and women who serve aboard them. Honoring the value, accomplishments and contributions of U.S. Navy aircraft carriers, and the men and women who serve aboard them. U.S. NAVY AIRCRAFT CARRIERS U.S. Navy aircraft carriers are floating,

More information

USS VESTAL (AR-4)...

USS VESTAL (AR-4)... USS VESTAL (AR-4)......and Cassin Young Synopsis: When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on Sunday, December 7, 1941, the repair ship VESTAL was tied up to the ill-fated USS ARIZONA (BB-39). The VESTAL

More information

TECHNICAL & TACTICAL INFORMATION

TECHNICAL & TACTICAL INFORMATION By Sam185 TECHNICAL & TACTICAL INFORMATION CONTENTS R CLASS DESTROYER Page 2 TYPE 15 FRIGATE Page 4 Sam185 2012 Page 1 R CLASS DESTROYER A Rotherham Class ( R Class) destroyer initially ordered as part

More information

The Battle for Louisbourg- 1758

The Battle for Louisbourg- 1758 The Battle for Louisbourg- 1758 Situated on Cape Breton Island, the fortress town of Louisbourg was held by the French. It was an important location because it controlled the entrance to the St. Lawrence

More information

On this day in the Canadian Navy! MAY

On this day in the Canadian Navy! MAY On this day in the Canadian Navy! MAY In May 1914 The establishment of a Naval Volunteer Force by Order-in- Council. Three subdivisions are ordered with a total strength of 1,200 men. Annual cost estimated

More information

Packet B: Submarine Technology

Packet B: Submarine Technology Packet B: Submarine Technology During WWI Matthews, Alex. (1 February, 2017). The U-boat graveyard. Daily Mail. Retrieved from www.dailymail.co.uk The Germans ran the U-Boat campaign throughout World War

More information

A veteran's family discovers what most in the city don't know the war relics living around us

A veteran's family discovers what most in the city don't know the war relics living around us 1 of 5 9/21/2009 12:57 PM A veteran's family discovers what most in the city don't know the war relics living around us BY JIM REDDEN The Portland Tribune, Jun 4, 2009 Barry Clock was shocked to learn

More information

John Henry Burrows Flowers naval record (notes and photographs from various Wikipedia web pages)

John Henry Burrows Flowers naval record (notes and photographs from various Wikipedia web pages) John Henry Burrows Flowers naval record (notes and photographs from various Wikipedia web pages) John signed on for 12 years on 11 th November 1917 aged 18. Before then he seems to have been classed as

More information

SOURCE: The Canberra Times, Thursday December 4, 1941, pages 1 and 2

SOURCE: The Canberra Times, Thursday December 4, 1941, pages 1 and 2 ACTIVITY: World War II CASE: GSAF 1941.11.19 DATE: Wednesday November 19, 1941 LOCATION: Off Shark Bay, Western Australia NAME: Unknown DESCRIPTION: He was one of the men from the German raider Kormoran

More information

Stories from Maritime America

Stories from Maritime America Sam Casarez Sam Casarez describes his experiences as a junior engineer aboard a Liberty ship during World War II. Engine room training I trained for the engine room. You could train for the engine room

More information

Larne man survived sinking of destroyer which was almost called HMS Larne

Larne man survived sinking of destroyer which was almost called HMS Larne remembrance ni Larne man survived sinking of destroyer which was almost called HMS Larne Larne man Tommy Shields, a survivor of HMS Gurka off Norway. And on duty in the Red Sea in 1939. Tommy died 18/07/2005

More information

AMERICAN MARINER. Sturdy Ship of Several Services Still Survives

AMERICAN MARINER. Sturdy Ship of Several Services Still Survives AMERICAN MARINER Sturdy Ship of Several Services Still Survives SYNOPSIS: A vessel built in haste in 1941 has had an amazing journey over the past three-quarters of a century. Along the way, she became

More information

Lavern Meemken. Vern at Great Lakes, Ill.

Lavern Meemken. Vern at Great Lakes, Ill. Lavern Meemken Lavern (Vern) Herman Meemken (3352273) entered the US Navy on 19 July 1950. Of the six Meemken boys all served in the military. Four served in the Army, 1 in the Marines, and Vern in the

More information

War Begins. p

War Begins. p War Begins p. 758-763 War Begins September 1, 1939, Hitler sent his armies into Poland. Two days later, Great Britain & France declared war on Germany & WWII began. Sep. 1 Germany invades Poland Sep. 3

More information

Jump Chart Main Chart flagship Ship List

Jump Chart Main Chart flagship Ship List Getting Started This file helps you get started playing the game Jutland. If you have just finished installing the game, then the Jutland main program should be running soon. Otherwise, you should start

More information

00- Was One Person Responsible for the Titanic Disaster- Preview of Tim

00- Was One Person Responsible for the Titanic Disaster- Preview of Tim 00- Was One Person Responsible for the Titanic Disaster- Preview of Tim Building the Ship: 30 Apr 1907 J Bruce Ismay and William James Pirrie come up with the idea to build Olympic, Titanic and Brittanic

More information

Subj: SUBMISSION OF BASIC HISTORICAL NARRATIVE FOR CALENDAR YEAR 1997

Subj: SUBMISSION OF BASIC HISTORICAL NARRATIVE FOR CALENDAR YEAR 1997 DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY USS HONOLULU (SSN-718) FPO AP 96667-2398 Ser SS~718/124 6 Mar 98 From: Commanding Officer, USS HONOLULU (SSN 718) To : Director of Naval History (NOgBH), Washington Navy Yard, 901

More information

Lighthouses Hot Chocolate & You 2010

Lighthouses Hot Chocolate & You 2010 New England Lighthouse Lovers NELL Lighthouses Hot Chocolate & You 2010 This year the State of Connecticut, the state most NELL members call home, was our host for LHHC&Y. Members started arriving at the

More information

Submersible Goliath Dispatched by Down-Under Davids

Submersible Goliath Dispatched by Down-Under Davids Submersible Goliath Dispatched by Down-Under Davids January 29, 1943: Night Action off Guadalcanal The Record: On the night of 29 January 1943, the large Japanese submarine I-1 was intercepted and destroyed

More information

The Hiroshima City Council s Statement on March 1, 1958 and President Truman's Response to the Hiroshima City Council, March 12, 1958

The Hiroshima City Council s Statement on March 1, 1958 and President Truman's Response to the Hiroshima City Council, March 12, 1958 1 The Hiroshima City Council s Statement on March 1, 1958 and President Truman's Response to the Hiroshima City Council, March 12, 1958 Letter from City of Hiroshima, March 1, 1958 2 Hiroshima City Council

More information

Battle of the Eastern Solomons

Battle of the Eastern Solomons Battle of the Eastern Solomons Background. By August 20, 1942, US Marines had been ashore on Guadalcanal Island for almost two weeks. In that time, they had suffered supply shortages, bombing raids and

More information

AT THE OUTBREAK of World War II, Evolution of Aircraft Carriers 44 NAVAL AVIATION NEWS

AT THE OUTBREAK of World War II, Evolution of Aircraft Carriers 44 NAVAL AVIATION NEWS Evolution of Aircraft Carriers THE EARLY ATTACK CARRIERS We have hit the Japanese very hard in the Solomon Islands. We have probably broken the backbone of the power of their Fleet. They have still too

More information

LAST OF THE Dreadnoughts

LAST OF THE Dreadnoughts LAST OF THE Dreadnoughts USS TEXAS (BB-35) ~ nns Hull #147 ~ INTRODUCTION ~ The term dreadnought symbolized early twentieth century battleships which featured an 'all-big-gun' armament scheme and dreaded

More information

CARRIER STRIKE GROUPS

CARRIER STRIKE GROUPS CARRIER STRIKE GROUPS A carrier strike group (CSG) can be tasked to accomplish a variety of wartime missions, as well as missions other than war. During peacetime operations, a CSG typically conducts forward-presence

More information

VITP KOTH Rd 42 Game 15 Summary Daniel Blumentritt (IJN Bid 4) Mark Traylor (USN)

VITP KOTH Rd 42 Game 15 Summary Daniel Blumentritt (IJN Bid 4) Mark Traylor (USN) VITP KOTH Rd 42 Game 15 Summary Daniel Blumentritt (IJN Bid 4) Mark Traylor (USN) Turns 1-2. IJN made a fairly clean sweep of Pearl Harbor, but the British are doing relatively OK. IJN is working a dual

More information

BEDWELL BAY WRECK WESTERN DISPATCHER

BEDWELL BAY WRECK WESTERN DISPATCHER BEDWELL BAY WRECK WESTERN DISPATCHER Official Number: 190573 Registry: Canada CONSTRUCTION This vessel was built as a submarine-chaser by the Quincy Adams Yacht Yard in Quincy, Massachusetts. The keel

More information

U.S. HISTORY CHAPTER 16 SECTION 2 EARLY YEARS OF THE WAR

U.S. HISTORY CHAPTER 16 SECTION 2 EARLY YEARS OF THE WAR U.S. HISTORY CHAPTER 16 SECTION 2 EARLY YEARS OF THE WAR BOARD QUESTIONS 1) WHAT IS A BLOCKADE? 2) WHAT WAS THE AVERAGE AGE OF A SOLDIER IN THE CIVIL WAR? 3) WHO WON THE BATTLE OF BULL RUN AND HOW? 4)

More information

Lost Submarines September

Lost Submarines September Lost Submarines September USS Grayling (SS-209) USS GRAYLING (SS-209) stood out from Fremantle, Australia, on her eighth war patrol on 30 July 1943. The boat was fresh off a 24-day refit and had a brand-new

More information

History of the USS DeHaven (DD-469)

History of the USS DeHaven (DD-469) History of the USS DeHaven (DD-469) From Ships Data Section, Public Information Division, Office of Public Relations, Navy Department. It is the fortune of some ships to fight valiantly and victoriously

More information

2. Name and birth date of the veteran or civilian being interviewed at is appears on the Biographical Data Form:

2. Name and birth date of the veteran or civilian being interviewed at is appears on the Biographical Data Form: 1. Name and address of collector of interviewer. Name of Donor/Interviewer: H.F. Williamson Address: 300 N. Goodwin Ave. City: Urbana State: IL Zip: 61801 Telephone: 217-333-7300 Email: billw@illinois.edu

More information

Date Radar Picket Station Note Mar 24 Station 5,9 Roll 1 die: 1-3=Station 5; 4-6=Station 9

Date Radar Picket Station Note Mar 24 Station 5,9 Roll 1 die: 1-3=Station 5; 4-6=Station 9 Version 2 1-1 Basic Game Station Assignment PICKET DUTY 2d6 Result 2 Radar Picket Station 1, 2 again: (1-3=Station 1; 4-6=Station 2) 3 Radar Picket Station 3 4 Radar Picket Station 4 5-6 Radar Picket Station

More information

Spike. by Don Branson January 7, 2006

Spike. by Don Branson January 7, 2006 Spike by Don Branson January 7, 2006 A Surprise Answer A few years back my parents met a new couple, the Moldanes. The four of them were having dinner out one evening. It might have been the second or

More information

The Hiroshima bombing: What you need to know about the nuclear attack

The Hiroshima bombing: What you need to know about the nuclear attack The Hiroshima bombing: What you need to know about the nuclear attack By Los Angeles Times, adapted by Newsela staff on 06.02.16 Word Count 845 In this Sept. 8, 1945, file photo, a correspondent stands

More information

The Spanish-American War

The Spanish-American War Warm-Up 1. List three reasons why the United States desired to become an Imperial Power. 2. What are the costs of Imperialism? 3. How did we convince Japan to trade with us in the 1850s? 4. What is the

More information

Subject of the book: The book consists of:

Subject of the book: The book consists of: Subject of the book: Title: Expedition to the Golden Horn. Military Operations in the Dardanelles and on the Aegean Sea (August 1914 March 1915), Wydawnictwo Arkadiusz Wingert, Krakow 2008; 373 pages including:

More information

SOLACE for the Suffering

SOLACE for the Suffering SOLACE for the Suffering The USS SOLACE was the only hospital ship at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. What she and her crew managed to accomplish that fateful and fearful day is the crowning achievement

More information

A statistical portrait of USAF in the first hot conflict of the Cold War.

A statistical portrait of USAF in the first hot conflict of the Cold War. WAN 60 MR FORCE Magazine / April 1996 A statistical portrait of USAF in the first hot conflict of the Cold War. Within minutes of taking off, US airmen could have their RF-80s (right) over MiG Alley (opposite),

More information

Captain Robert Norman A desire to see the world through a porthole, landed him right in the middle of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.

Captain Robert Norman A desire to see the world through a porthole, landed him right in the middle of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Captain Robert Norman A desire to see the world through a porthole, landed him right in the middle of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Chapter 01 1:04 Introduction Announcer: December 7, 1941, Petty Officer

More information

1945 BROCHURE TELLS MISSY S STORY

1945 BROCHURE TELLS MISSY S STORY Volume 9, Issue 4 September 2006 Special Points of Interest We think you ll enjoy Earl Slattum s submission of the history of the USS Mississippi found on the first three pages. Welcome Mat on page three

More information

Our Class. More Complicated. What We Believe About End. The Fall of Imperial Japan and The Rise of Modern Japan

Our Class. More Complicated. What We Believe About End. The Fall of Imperial Japan and The Rise of Modern Japan The Fall of Imperial Japan and The Rise of Modern Japan Our Class Begins with a brief history of Japan 800-1945 Discusses the factors leading to World War II Closely reviews the events ending the war describing

More information

HMS Hood Sinking. How Hitler's Most Powerful Battleship Sunk the Pride of the Royal Navy

HMS Hood Sinking. How Hitler's Most Powerful Battleship Sunk the Pride of the Royal Navy HMS Hood Sinking How Hitler's Most Powerful Battleship Sunk the Pride of the Royal Navy To this day, the cause of the sinking of the HMS Hood during the hunt for the Bismarck is still disputed. The British

More information

The Alliance System. Pre-WWI. During WWI ENTENTE ALLIANCE. Russia Serbia France. Austria-Hungary Germany. US Canada. Italy CENTRAL POWERS

The Alliance System. Pre-WWI. During WWI ENTENTE ALLIANCE. Russia Serbia France. Austria-Hungary Germany. US Canada. Italy CENTRAL POWERS WWI: The Great War? The Start of the War WWI started with the advance of the Germans into Belgium. The alliance system kicked into full steam. Confident that the Schlieffen Plan would lead to a quick takeover

More information

Okinawa: The Last Battle Of World War II By Robert Leckie READ ONLINE

Okinawa: The Last Battle Of World War II By Robert Leckie READ ONLINE Okinawa: The Last Battle Of World War II By Robert Leckie READ ONLINE United States Army in World War II. The War in the Pacific. Okinawa: The Last Battle. by Roy E. More Reviews on The Second World War

More information

MERCHANT UNTERSEEBOOTS

MERCHANT UNTERSEEBOOTS MERCHANT UNTERSEEBOOTS In the long history of submarines, only two full-sized submersibles have ever been built and operated as commercial vessels. Constructed without any offensive or defensive armaments,

More information

Historic Dockyard Tour in Portsmouth

Historic Dockyard Tour in Portsmouth Copyright by GPSmyCity.com - Page 1 - Historic Dockyard Tour in Portsmouth Naval life has played a crucial role in the development and in the existence of the city. Most of the events that the area experienced

More information

USS Colorado (SSN 788) Commissioning Committee. Presentation to Pueblo City Council March 28, 2016 John J. Mackin, CAPT USN (Ret.

USS Colorado (SSN 788) Commissioning Committee. Presentation to Pueblo City Council March 28, 2016 John J. Mackin, CAPT USN (Ret. USS Colorado (SSN 788) Commissioning Committee Presentation to Pueblo City Council March 28, 2016 John J. Mackin, CAPT USN (Ret.) Chairman USS Colorado (SSN 788) On June 25, 2012 Secretary of the Navy

More information

The Bombings. Section 1 THE ROAD TO MANHATTAN

The Bombings. Section 1   THE ROAD TO MANHATTAN The Bombings Section 1 www.atomicbombmuseum.org/2_manhattan.shtml THE ROAD TO MANHATTAN The U.S. had been at war with Japan since the Japanese air attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the day Japan

More information

Yorktown Revisited By DM1 (AW/PJ) Erick M. Murray 22 Naval Aviation News September October 1998

Yorktown Revisited By DM1 (AW/PJ) Erick M. Murray 22 Naval Aviation News September October 1998 Naval Aviation News September October 1998 1 Yorktown Revisited By DM1 (AW/PJ) Erick M. Murray 22 Naval Aviation News September October 1998 As the sun set on 4 June 1942, planes from Yorktown (CV 5),

More information

North Africa and Italy Campaigns

North Africa and Italy Campaigns North Africa and Italy Campaigns Why Fight in North Africa? The North African military campaigns of World War II were waged between Sept. 1940 and May 1943 were strategically important to both the Western

More information

REVIEW (warm up)! Review the major battles of the Pacific Theater. - Battle of the Coral Sea - Battle of Midway - Battle of Iwo Jima

REVIEW (warm up)! Review the major battles of the Pacific Theater. - Battle of the Coral Sea - Battle of Midway - Battle of Iwo Jima REVIEW (warm up)! Review the major battles of the Pacific Theater - Battle of the Coral Sea - Battle of Midway - Battle of Iwo Jima Pacific Theater!" Battle of the Coral Sea! New naval warfare with aircraft

More information

Maritime Archaeology Survey Initial Report M.A.S.T. Field School

Maritime Archaeology Survey Initial Report M.A.S.T. Field School Maritime Archaeology Survey Initial Report M.A.S.T. Field School Maritime Archaeology Survey Techniques Course BIOL 400 Summer Session June 23rd July 3rd, 2014 2014 BY: GEORGE HUSS & SEAN DIMOFF MAST Field

More information

Gloria Steinem is an author, an activist and a co-founder of the Women s Media Center.

Gloria Steinem is an author, an activist and a co-founder of the Women s Media Center. By Gloria Steinem, The New York Times, 8/7 Gloria Steinem is an author, an activist and a co-founder of the Women s Media Center. THERE are some actions for which those of us alive today will be judged

More information

LIST OF REPORTS. European War. (Omitted) Pacific War OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN

LIST OF REPORTS. European War. (Omitted) Pacific War OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN LIST OF REPORTS European War (Omitted) Pacific War OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN 1 Summary Report (Pacific War) 2 Japan's Struggle to End The War 3 The Effects of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki CIVILIAN

More information